Commonwealth v. Tracy , 349 Mass. 87 ( 1965 )


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  • Kirk, J.

    The defendant was tried and found guilty of murder in the first degree of John J. Gallagher. The jury did not recommend that the death sentence not be imposed. G. L. c. 265, § 2. The trial was made subject to G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G, as amended. Sentence of death was imposed, and execution of the sentence has been stayed. G. L. c. 279, § 4. The case is here on the defendant’s appeal, which is accompanied by a summary of the record, a transcript of the evidence and the assignment of errors. The alleged errors relate to rulings on evidence and to the denial of motions for directed verdicts.

    We approach our consideration of the case having in mind the duty which devolves upon us by G. L. c. 278, § 33E, as amended by St. 1962, c. 453. The broad scope of our responsibility under the statute, as amended, was fully expounded in Commonwealth v. Baker, 346 Mass. 107, 108-109, and need not be repeated.

    The gravity of the offence, the sentence imposed, and the discharge of our duty under the statute move us to set out the evidence in detail.

    The scene of the alleged crime was the basement of the Kenmore Square office of the National Shawmut Bank of *89Boston (the bank) located at 542 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston. The bank is on the south side of the avenue, facing north. To the east it abuts upon a commercial building. To the west, there is a parking lot, also used by the bank’s “drive-in” customers for whose convenience there are windows on the west side of the building facing the lot. To the rear of the building is an alley. The alley is L-shaped. The long leg of the “L” abuts upon the rear of the bank and upon the rear of adjoining buildings to the east. The short leg of the “L” runs perpendicularly from the west end of the rear of the bank to Newbury Street which runs generally parallel to the alley to the west end of the rear of the bank.

    At approximately 4:30 p.m., closing time, on May 24, 1962, one Savage, a guard at the bank, went to his closet located on a landing of the main staircase leading from the main floor to the basement of the bank. The door to the closet, when closed, was flush with the wall of the stairwell. Savage removed his fully loaded (six cartridge) thirty-eight calibre Special Smith & Wesson revolver from the holster attached to his belt, and placed the revolver on the high shelf of the closet and covered it with some laundry and his uniform cap. It was ‘ ‘ hidden. ’ ’ He then hung his belt on a hook in the closet, changed to civilian clothing, and left the bank.

    At about the same time, between 4:30 p.m. and 4:45 p.m., the assistant manager of the bank adjusted the American District Telegraph Co. (ADT) alarm switch on the main vault and on the night deposit vault to the “on” position. Both vaults are in the basement. Both switches must be operated manually to actuate the alarm. There is no alarm system connected with the exterior doors or windows of the bank. When the assistant manager left the bank, the doors and the windows of the bank were secure. One of the windows, when viewed from the interior of the building, was nine feet above the floor of the ladies’ room at the rear of the basement of the building. Viewed from the outside, the lower edge of the window was about a foot above the sur*90face of the L-shaped alley at the rear óf the building. The window was visible from the intersection of Newbury Street and the short leg of the “L.” The window was three feet high and two feet wide, made of glass interwoven with wire mesh set in a metal frame. When unlocked, it swung open horizontally on a swivel bar across its middle.

    The cleaning man, who reported for work at 3:30 p.m., left the bank at 7 p.m. When he left, the premises, both main floor and basement, had been cleaned, the building was secure, and all lights were extinguished except one over the main stairway leading from the first floor to the basement. The door of the closet where the guard kept his gun, clothing, and so forth was closed. The cleaning man did not open it, and never had opened it on, before or since May 24,1962.

    At 2:39 a.m. on May 25, 1962, an alarm from the bank was received at the ADT office on State Street, Boston. An ADT guard, Gillette, armed, and wearing a uniform similar to that of Boston police officers, was immediately dispatched to the bank. Simultaneously, the Bostón police were notified. When Gillette arrived at the bank at 2:48 a.m., several Boston police officers were already busy outside the bank. Officer Stanton, proceeding along the parking lot (west) side of the bank, noted lights on the first floor. At the rear of the building, using his flashlight, he saw that the window in the alley which opened into the basement ladies’ room was smashed and open. The ladies’ room was “well lit.” In the meantime, Officers Gallagher (the deceased) and Oesero, who had arrived shortly after Stanton and before Gillette, proceeded together to check the outside of the building. While checking the doors and windows on the parking lot side of the bank, Oesero noticed a shadow moving in one of the teller’s windows. Thereafter he saw the reflection of a man “from the neck down”; there was something in the man’s right hand. After a few words, Gallagher left Oesero and went around to the front of the bank. Guard Gillette then arrived. He had the keys to the bank. He opened the front door and entered *91the main floor accompanied by Officers G-allagher, Donelan and Vance. The main floor was searched but no one was found. The party then went to the basement which was a maze of utility rooms, small conference rooms, and cubicles for the use of depositors in the vaults. There were two narrow corridors in the basement, both of which ran north-south. One was referred to as the “east corridor”; the other as the “west corridor.” The named officers searched the east half of the basement, and then proceeded to the steps leading to the door which opens on the alley at the rear of the building. They admitted Officers Madden and Stanton, and re-secured the rear door.

    Then some shots rang out; that is, one shot, a very brief pause, and then two or three shots in rapid succession. The sounds came from behind a closed metal sheathed door which separated the place where the officers were standing from the supply room. Officer Gallagher was not with them. Gillette and the Boston officers moved through several rooms and reached the west corridor, at the south end of which there were two doors. On the west side of the corridor a door admitted to the ladies’ room; on the east side there was an opening to the supply room. When Gillette and Donelan came to the opening to the supply room, they saw Gallagher lying on his back, his body parallel to the closed metal door. His right leg was “kind of bent up, ’ ’1 ‘flexed, ” “ upright, ” “ raised. ’ ’ At this moment, Gillette was shot in the thigh. The shot came from a recess in the north wall of the supply room, against which were two long cabinets eighteen inches deep. The recess was formed by a space between the cabinets. In the space was a doorway between the supply room and a conference room. Gillette and Donelan then backed up along the west corridor. Officer Stanton saw “a colored man, about six feet two,” standing in the doorway of the supply room pointing a gun at him. The man wore a short sleeve sport shirt. He did not appear to be injured in any way. Stanton fired at the man and backed into the ladies’ room across the corridor. Officer Vance, standing with Officer Madden in *92an alcove in the west corridor, saw, at the same time, a “light-skinned, colored male” standing at the door of the supply room with a gun clenched in his hand.

    Sergeant Barry then arrived at the bank. He came through the open window in the alley. He conferred with Stanton in the ladies’ room. Immediately, Sergeant Barry dropped to one knee and yelled or called out in a loud voice, through the partly opened door, three or four times over a period of ten minutes, with minor variations: “I am Sergeant Barry of the Boston Police. Put your gun out. Give yourself up. We are only interested in the wounded officer.” When Sergeant Barry called out these words, he was five or six feet away, measured diagonally, from the opening to the supply room. His words were clearly heard and understood by officers who were at the other end of the west corridor, at least thirty feet away from Sergeant Barry.

    During the period that Sergeant Barry was in the ladies’ room, the bare arm of a “light skin colored male” appeared four times from the opening to the supply room, with a gun in his hand pointed down the west corridor. The gun was fired at least twice down the corridor. The officers returned the fire every time the hand appeared. The hand and gun were low, near the floor, perhaps a foot above it. The hand and gun appeared again, and the gun was pushed or slid along the floor of the corridor for a distance of approximately six to eight inches. The officers then emerged from their covered positions at the far end of the corridor. The hand thereupon suddenly reappeared from the supply room, snatched up the gun, and fired at the oncoming officers.

    A tear gas shell was fired. Detective Cunningham went to the conference room adjoining the supply room. Through the closed door which separated the two rooms he heard Gallagher’s voice, with which he was familiar, say, “Come in; please come in.” The door was locked. Cunningham kicked open the door, saw Gallagher lying on his back, his right leg up, with gun in hand, pointed at the defendant. *93Gallagher spoke to Cunningham and then became unconscious. There was a red mark right in the center of his white, regulation police shirt. Gallagher’s gun was empty of bullets. The defendant’s gun was kicked out of his left hand. The defendant was in a prone position, ‘ ‘ lying on his belly”; his body was partly out in the corridor; his head was not touching the floor; his face was up, looking down the corridor. He was wearing a gun belt, with holster, around his waist. All bullets in the gun had been discharged.

    Gallagher, Gillette and the defendant were taken to the Boston City Hospital. Lieutenant Donovan of the homicide unit, accompanied by a police stenographer, arrived at the hospital at 4:30 a.m. Donovan was in civilian clothes. After a delay of twenty minutes, he was admitted to a room fourteen by twenty feet in area. The defendant was on a stretcher. The questioning began at 4:55 a.m. Two doctors “and probably a nurse” were in the room. Lieutenant Donovan identified himself to the defendant. The questioning lasted seven or eight minutes. The defendant grunted or groaned two or three times and, when he did, Lieutenant Donovan waited. The questioning in its entirety is set out in the footnote.* 1

    *94Officer Gallagher died at approximately 6 a.m. May 25, 1962. Dr. Luongo, medical examiner, performed the autopsy. There were two wounds of entrance; none of exit. The first wound was three inches below the left nipple. It “was a distant type gun shot wound, "without the deposit of powder residue from the muzzle blast of the gun. ’ ’ This bullet, in its course through the body, perforated the aorta, the main blood vessel, so that a massive amount of blood escaped into the body, perforated the liver, stomach and small intestine, and then lodged next to one of the vertebrae. The second bullet entered the right leg, at the level of the knee joint, on the inner side of the knee, passed up the thigh, slithering along above the muscle and lodged near the groin at a point twelve and one-half inches from the point of entrance. Firing tests and comparative microscopic examinations of the two bullets removed from Gallagher’s body disclosed that they had come from the bank guard’s thirty-eight calibre Special Smith & Wesson revolver, which had been kicked from the defendant’s hand in the supply room.

    During the defendant’s surgery, five bullets were removed from his body. Tests disclosed that three of these had been fired from Gallagher’s thirty-eight calibre Colt police revolver. The other two bullets removed from the *95defendant were too distorted to permit positive identification. Of the three identifiable bullets, one was removed from the defendant’s abdomen, one from his left leg, and one from his rectum. Of the two unidentifiable bullets, one was removed from his right wrist and the. other from Ms left leg.

    It was Dr. Luongo’s opinion that the point of entry and the course of the bullet along Gallagher’s thigh was consistent with it having been fired by a man who was standing while Gallagher was flat on his back with his right leg flexed.

    The defendant took the stand. His testimony disclosed that he had worked in the vicinity of Kenmore Square for a number of years, that he was very familiar with the area, that for two years prior to May 24, 1962, he had lived at 536 Commonwealth Avenue and that he had used the alley in the rear of the bank a number of times. He had opened a checking account at the bank in April. He knew there was a deposit box somewhere in the bank. He remembered roaming around in the bank. He opened a door and saw a belt and holster with a gun. He had the gun in Ms hand. He heard someone tell him to throw the gun out, to come out and he would not be hurt. He was lying on his stomach. But he could not let go of the gun. He could not get it out of Ms hand.

    We consider the assignments of error. Of these, assignment 6 has been waived.

    There was no error in permitting Officer Donelan to testify that after the gas gun had been fired he heard the “sound of a door being broken.” It has long been held that summary descriptions of tMngs, if based on the sensory reactions of men in general and not requiring special learning or experiment, may be admissible as statements of observed facts. A witness “may state his opinion in regard to sounds, their character, from what they proceed, and the direction from which they seem to come.” Commonwealth v. Sturtivant, 117 Mass. 122,133,137. Commonwealth v. Moore, 323 Mass. 70, 76, 77. Kane v. Fields Cor*96ner Grille, Inc. 341 Mass. 640, 647, and cases cited. There was no error (assignment 1).

    Assignments 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 related to the judge’s rulings permitting several police officers to testify to what they heard Sergeant Barry call out or yell from the ladies’ room. The testimony was admitted de bene. We do not rely on the fact that the defendant made no motion to strike the testimony (see Commonwealth v. Johnson, 199 Mass. 55, 59; Commonwealth v. Sheppard, 313 Mass. 590, 596, and cases cited) since other evidence made the evidence admissible. Sergeant Barry’s relative proximity to the defendant and to the officers, as set out in the evidence, could raise in the minds of the jury the strong likelihood that, if the officers heard Barry’s words, the defendant heard them also; the fact that the defendant did slide the gun into the corridor, although as a ruse, showed that he heard and understood the words; his testimony on the stand was an admission that he heard and understood the words spoken by Sergeant Barry and is conclusive of the issue. It was for the jury to consider what inference, if any, should be drawn from the defendant’s response to Sergeant Barry’s words. Commonwealth v. Simpson, 300 Mass. 45, 51. Commonwealth v. Moore, 323 Mass. 70, 77.

    Assignments 9,10, and 11 are based upon the defendant’s exceptions to the admission of Sergeant Barry’s testimony as to what he did say. These assignments are without merit in view of what we have already said with respect to assignments 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7.

    Assignment 8 is based upon the defendant’s exception to the admission of Detective Cunningham’s testimony that, through the door of the supply room, he heard Officer Gallagher say, ‘ ‘ Come in; please come in. ’ ’ The defendant argues that the testimony was inadmissible because there was no showing that the defendant heard Gallagher’s words. Whether the defendant heard these words is altogether immaterial. Gallagher’s words were a verbal act, an oral signal of distress to his brother officers, and plainly admissible. [S]uch expressions are the natural and necessary *97language of emotion, of the existence of which, from the very nature of the case, there can be no other evidence.” Bigelow, J., in Bacon v. Charlton, 7 Cush. 581, 586. See Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) § 1718.

    Assignment 13 concerns a restriction which the judge imposed upon the testimony given by a thirteen year old girl who said that she had a telephone conversation with the defendant during the “late show” on television on the night of May 24,1962. The question asked was, “And how did he [the defendant] sound to you, Catherine?” The judge permitted the girl to answer, “He sounded funny; he didn’t sound right.” The judge declined to permit her to testify, as the offer of proof said she would, that she ‘ asked him whether or not he was drunk. ’ ’ The judge was right on the ground, expressly stated, that he found the witness too immature to form an opinion by a telephone conversation whether the defendant was drunk.

    Assignment 14 is based on the judge’s denial of the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict of not guilty of murder in the first degree. The motion was rightly denied. The evidence fully supported the conclusion implicit in the verdict of the jury: That the defendant murdered Officer Gallagher and murdered him with deliberately premeditated malice aforethought as that phrase has been used and applied in this Commonwealth for more than a century. Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. 295. Commonwealth v. York, 9 Met. 93. Commonwealth v. Tucker, 189 Mass. 457, 487. Commonwealth v. Brooks, 308 Mass. 367, 369, 370.2

    Specifically, the jury could find on the evidence that the defendant having broken into a building, had armed himself with a deadly weapon. They could find that he was so *98armed before any police officer, in the performance of his duty, had entered the bank. They could find that he so armed himself with the purpose of using the weapon to prevent his capture or to effect his escape. They could find that he had formed a judgment that the supply room was best adapted to achieve his purpose, in that it was accessible through one open door and had a recess between the large cabinets along the walls, affording concealment to him and observation of movements of others toward him. They could find that, as in the case of the wounding of Gillette, the defendant stationed himself between the cabinets and that, when Officer Gallagher entered the supply room, he deliberately fired the “distant” shot which proved mortal. They could reasonably infer from the evidence that Gallagher advanced, returned the fire with a bullet to the defendant’s abdomen and then slumped to the floor on his back near the metal door. They could find that when Gallagher was on his back the defendant with deliberate premeditation fired the bullet which coursed along the inner aspect of Gallagher’s right thigh from the knee to the groin. The physical facts warranted the inference that, when the defendant was in the prone position pointing his gun down the west corridor at the other officers, Gallagher, still on his back, fired the bullet which entered the defendant’s rectum.

    Since the verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree was clearly warranted, it is unnecessary to discuss the denial of the motion for a directed verdict of not guilty of murder in the second degree (assignment 15).

    The defendant argues further, however, under assignment 12, that Lieutenant Donovan’s testimony of his interview with the defendant at the Boston City Hospital at 4:55 a.m. on May 25, 1962, was inadmissible. He relies upon Escobedo v. Illinois, 378 U. S. 478, decided after the trial of the case. We do not read the Escobedo case as requiring or indicating a reversal of the judgment in the case before us.

    The majority opinion in the Escobedo case was careful to point out that the decision was limited to the circumstances *99of the case. 378 U. S. 478 at 479, 490-491. The aggravating factors with which the court was concerned there (see 378 U. S. 478 at 490-491) are not present in the case at bar. The ascertainment of the defendant’s identity required that he be questioned as soon as possible. The whole interview was brief and simple. The defendant was treated with consideration and with an awareness of his physical condition. A violation of the defendant’s right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution is not shown. Nor did the fact that the defendant made the statements while in a wounded state require their exclusion. See Commonwealth v. Harrison, 342 Mass. 279, 284-285. The testimony concerning the interview was admissible and the defendant’s assignment 12 shows no error.

    The jury obviously rejected as incredible the defendant’s repeated statements at critical points in his testimony that he was “floating” as the result of drinking a grape flavored concoction at his work in the evening of May 24. It is difficult to see how it could be viewed as other than incredible. Commonwealth v. Payne, 307 Mass. 56, 58. We adopt the jury’s view.

    There was no exception to the judge’s charge. It was accurate, complete and fair.

    Upon consideration of the whole case we are convinced that the verdict of the jury was eminently just. Commonwealth v. McNeil, 328 Mass. 436, 442.

    Judgment affirmed.

    Lieutenant Donovan: “What is your name?” A. “diaries Tracy.” Q. “Do you have a middle name?” A. “Edmund.” Q. “How old are you?” A. “36.” Q. “Where do you live?” A. “536 Commonwealth Avenue.” Q. “Married?” A. “Ho.” Q. “Who do you live with there?” A. “My mother.” Q. “What is her name?” A. “Lydia.” Q. “Do you work?” A. “Tes.” Q. “Where?” A. “Kenmore Hotel.” Q. “What happened this morning?” A. “I don’t know.” Q. “The officers took you out of the .Shawmut Bank?” A. “Tes.” Q. “How did you get in there?” A. “I don’t know, through a door.” Q. “Which door?” A. “The back door.” Q. “How did you get in the door?” A. “Just walked through. ” Q. “Did you break the door open?” A. “Ho, I didn't.” Q. “Was the door open?” A. “Tes.” Q. “What did you do when you got inside?” A. “I just sat down.” Q. “What did you have with you, did you have anything on you?” A. “A gun.” Q. “What kind of a gun?” A. “A .22.” Q. “A revolver?” A. “Tes.” Q. “Where did you get it?” A. “It was already in there.” Q. “Whereabouts was it in there?” A. “On a shelf.” Q. “What did you do with it?” A. “Hothing, I fired some shots.” Q. “Tau fired some shots at somebody?” A. “Tes.” Q. “How many shots did you fire?” A. “One.” Q. “Which gun did you use to fire that shot?” A. “.22.” Q. “Who did you fire it at?” A. “I don’t know.” Q. “Did someone come in after you?” A. “Tes.” Q. “Whowasthat?” A. “Anofficer.” Q. “Was *94he alone?” A. “Yes.” Q. “Is that when you fired the shot?” A. “Yes.” Q. “Did you fire it at the officer?” A. “I don’t know.” Q. “How do you know it was'a .22?” A. “It was a short one.” Q. “Was the light on in the bank?” A. “Yes.” Q. “Who put the lights on?” A. “I don’t know.” Q. “Was the light on when you got there?” A. “Yes.” Q. “Did you go into Some room?” A. “Yes.” Q. “What part of the bank were you in?” A. “In the inside mear the door.” Q. “In the rear or front :of the bank?” A. “Bear.” Q. “Just whereabouts was it, if you know?’’ A. “On a shelf.” Q. “How did you get the belt and holster that you had on when you were brought in here?” A. “That was in the bank.” Q. “Why did you put that on you?” A. “Oh, I — I don’t know.” Q. “That belt and holster belonged to a police officer?” A. “Ho, it don’t.” Q. “Why did you ,put it on you?” A. “I don’t know.” Q. “They found some cheeks on you.” A. “Those were mine.” Q. “Did you get them in the bank?” A. “Ho.” Q. “Did you have them with you when you went into the bank?” A. “Yes.” Q. “How did you happen to have them on you?” A. “I don’t know.” Q. “Do you have a checking account in that bank?” A. “Yes, I do.” Q. “Do you have anything else to. say as to what happened this morning?” A. “Ho.” Q. “Is this statement you have given me been a true statement?” A. “Yes.”

    “After the exhaustive discussion of this statutory phrase in Commonwealth v. Tuclcer, 189 Mass. 457, at pages 486-496, it would be superfluous to attempt further definition. We merely quote the summary of the court’s conclusions as expressed by the court itself on pages 494 and 495 of that case: ‘In substance . . . while it must be shown that a plan to murder was found after the matter had been made a subject of deliberation and reflection, yet in view of the quickness with which the mind may act, the law cannot set any limit to the time. It may be a matter of days, hours, or even seconds. It is not so much a matter of time as of logical sequence. First the deliberation and premeditation, then the resolution to kill, and lastly the killing in pursuance of the resolution; and all this may occur in a few seconds.’ ”

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 207 N.E.2d 16, 349 Mass. 87

Judges: Kirk, Reardon, Spalding, Whittejioke, Whittemore, Wilkins

Filed Date: 4/26/1965

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/7/2023