522 N.E.2d 2
No. 87-1150.Appeals Court of Massachusetts. Berkshire.March 15, 1988.
April 27, 1988.
Present: DREBEN, CUTTER, KASS, JJ.
Assault and Battery by Means of a Dangerous Weapon. Intent. Practice, Criminal, Instructions to jury.
At the trial of two indictments for assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, in which the defendant claimed that the victim was injured accidently, there was no error in the judge’s instruction to the jury, based on Commonwealth v. Bianco, 388 Mass. 358 (1983), that if by a wrongful act a person creates in another’s mind an immediate sense of danger which causes the other to try to escape and in so doing he injures himself, then the person who creates such a state of mind is criminally responsible, where, on the evidence presented, the jury could determine that the victim, when assaulted by the defendant, believed her situation to be desperate, resisted, and attempted to escape, and that her resulting injuries from a razor and lighted cigarette wielded by the defendant were therefore not accidental. [733-734]
INDICTMENTS found and returned in the Superior Court Department on September 26, 1986.
The cases were tried before Charles R. Alberti, J.
Richard D. LeBlanc, Committee for Public Counsel Services, for the defendant.
Robert J. Carnes, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
CUTTER, J.
The following findings could have been made by the jury on the evidence at the trial of indictments[1] on which
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Parker was found guilty. He was found not guilty on other charges.[2] We affirm the judgments.
Parker and his wife (Donna) had been living with their two children in a house on Chapel Street, Pittsfield (the premises). During the summer of 1986, marital difficulties arose. A District Court order was obtained by Donna directing Parker to vacate and remain away from the premises and prohibiting him from abusing her. The order had been extended to September 5, 1986.
At some time after 9 P.M. on August 22, 1986, Donna had been talking by telephone with her aunt. As she hung up the telephone, she saw Parker “crouched at the end of the hallway.”
Donna requested Parker to leave and screamed. She tried to use the telephone. Parker prevented her from doing so. He told her he wanted to talk with her. She refused to do so. She (without knowing just what happened) then found herself half on and half off a couch in the living room with Parker on top of her blaming her for their marital discord. He would hit her “every time . . . [she] opened . . . [her] mouth” in the face, on the side of her head, and in the shoulder. During this time, Donna and Parker “were . . . struggling with each other.” Among other things, he told her that, if he was not able to get the family situation straightened out, “he was going to kill himself” by pouring “gasoline on himself and make the kids watch him die.”
Parker put a cigarette in his mouth and lit it. Donna said, “Please don’t burn me.” Parker replied, “It’s something I have to do. I must do it.” She “knocked the cigarette out of his hand. . . . [She] didn’t know . . . [she] even got burned by it, but he did hit . . . [her] with it.” He kept hitting her, and
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told her she “would be dead before the night was over.” She, naturally, was scared by this behavior.
At one point, Parker “took some little thing out of his pocket.” She did not know “exactly what it was because it was dark” with light only from a television. Whatever it was, “he opened it up.”[3]
Donna testified that her six year old daughter Shana entered the room while she was struggling with Parker on the couch. Donna asked her to run for help. Shana started for the back door. Parker rose to stop her and Donna seized the chance to escape by the front door to a neighbor’s house. There she noticed for the first time that her hand was bleeding. The neighbor called the police and Donna went to the neighbor’s kitchen to put cold water on her hand which was bleeding and badly cut. When the police arrived she was taken by ambulance to a hospital where she was subjected to surgery about 2 A.M., and was required to remain for four days.[4]
Parker left the premises shortly after Donna did. Police searched the area and found Parker away from the house near a pool of blood. A burnt cigarette was found in the living room area. A sharp razor blade and holder were found between the house on the premises and where Parker was discovered. A
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handwritten note from Parker entitled a “last will and testament,” written on the morning or early afternoon of August 27, 1986, was received by the police from a nurse who attended Parker at the hospital. This reasonably could be regarded as a “suicide note.” In any event, Parker did cut his wrist after leaving the house and after Donna had gone to the neighbor’s house.[5] The evidence suggests that he nearly succeeded in his suicide attempt. He was taken to a different hospital.
Parker, by his counsel, makes as his principal contention that the judge improperly instructed the jury on assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon and Parker’s argument that any injury to Donna by such a weapon was an accident. The prosecutor requested an instruction which led the judge to charge (with some variations) in the form set out in the margin.[6]
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The portion of this instruction to which defense counsel makes primary objection is the language following the bracketed letter [F] which, in the Commonwealth’s original request for instruction, apparently was based on the language i Commonwealth v. Bianco, 388 Mass. 358, 362-363, S.C., 390 Mass. 254 (1983), reading, “There is considerable authority for the principle that if, by a wrongful act, a man `creates in another man’s mind an immediate sense of danger which causes such person to try to escape, and in so doing he injures himself, the person who creates such a state of mind’ is criminally responsible for those injuries. Regina v. Halliday, 61 L.T.R. (n.s.) 701, 702 (1889). See generally United States v Guillette, 547 F.2d 743, 749 (2d Cir. 1976), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 839 (1977)” (other citations omitted).[7] That portion of the charge was the subject of defense objections. In any event, the judge proceeded to explain to the jury the various indictments, including the two indictments for assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon (i.e., by either a lighted cigarette or a razor blade).[8]
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The judge told the jury to deal with each of these indictments separately. He then described a “dangerous weapon” as “any item so constructed or used so as to be likely to produce death or great bodily injury.”[9]
The jury during their deliberations asked a question not directly related to the two indictments for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. Defense counsel then said in a bench conference, “[S]ince the jury seems to be confused about intent, I would . . . note . . . that under the assault and battery with a dangerous weapon offenses, it is not listed under one of the elements that there be an intentional touching with the dangerous weapon.” The judge asked defense counsel, “What do you want me to say?” Counsel replied, “All I’m looking for is [that] everybody is sure that in order to find an assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon they [must] find that there is an intentional touching, i.e., not an accidental touching with a razor blade.” Counsel denied that he wanted “anything else.” After the bench conference, the judge gave a further instruction.[10]
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In testing the judge’s instructions which led to the convictions of Parker, there is one basic issue common to each offense of which he was convicted. The judge certainly made it clear to the jury that, if Parker intentionally cut Donna with the razor blade or burned her with the lighted cigarette, he could be found guilty of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. As was said in Commonwealth v. Burno, 396 Mass. 622, 625 (1986), “An assault and battery is `the intentional and unjustified use of force upon the person of another, however slight’ . . . or the intentional commission of a wanton or reckless act causing physical or bodily injury to another . . .” The injuries to Donna here were clearly proved and were substantial enough to cause her to be confined in a hospital for four days or more. These injuries certainly were significant enough to interfere “with the health or comfort of the victim.” See Burno at 627.[11]
The trial judge (see, e.g., note 3 at [A], [B], and [E]supra) adequately charged the jury that they must acquit Parker if they found the cutting of Donna by the razor blade or the burning of her by the lighted cigarette to be accidental. Either of these or both of these reasonably could be found by the jury to have been the particular weapons that caused significant injuries to her hand and face. See Commonwealth v. Appleby, 380 Mass. 296, 306-308 (1980). See also Commonwealth v Farrell, 322 Mass. 606, 614-615 (1948); Commonwealth v Welch, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 271, 276-277 (1983). Nevertheless,
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the instructions (in fact given about the contention that the wounding of Donna was an “accident”) would have been too favorable to Parker, if the judge had not given also the instruction (see note 6 at [F], supra) in view of Parker’s unlawful activities on August 22, 1986, leading to that wounding.
Parker, despite his back injuries, had violated a still effective restraining order, to which he admitted that he gave no thought. He had broken into the house where Donna and their children were living. He had surprised and scared his wife, who was seeking a divorce from him. He intentionally had placed Donna under him on the couch and had lighted a cigarette and displayed the razor blade to her. These reasonably could be found by the jury to have caused Donna (1) to believe her situation was desperate, (2) to resist Parker, and (3) to attempt escape from him.
If they so found, they could also conclude that what Donna did as a reaction to Parker’s behavior (if it brought her hand in contact with the razor or led to her face being burned by the cigarette) was caused by Parker as fully as if he intentionally had pressed the cigarette on to her face or had struck her hand with the razor. On the evidence and applying the principle discussed in the Bianco case, 388 Mass. at 362-365, the jury could determine beyond a reasonable doubt that Parker had committed an intentional assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. Such a determination that her injuries were the result of her attempts to push away the razor blade or the burning cigarette would be decisive that her injuries were not an “accident.” The disputed instruction was proper.
We think that this determination deals with all the indictments before us (see note 1, supra) on which Parker was convicted.
Judgments affirmed.
The judge in the present case did not instruct the jury that they could find Parker guilty because his conduct involved wanton and reckless use of a dangerous weapon which resulted in serious (and not “trifling”) bodily injury to Donna. See the Burno
case, 396 Mass. at 625, 627. On the evidence before the jury on the physical injuries to Donna, such an instruction would have been justified. The instruction actually given, however, based on the theory and language of the Bianco case, 388 Mass. at 362-363, may have had much the same practical effect.
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