Com. v. Delaney, 92-P-1723

Decision Date09 March 1994
Docket NumberNo. 92-P-1723,92-P-1723
Citation629 N.E.2d 1007,36 Mass.App.Ct. 930
PartiesCOMMONWEALTH v. Michael A. DELANEY.
CourtAppeals Court of Massachusetts

John J. Ruby, Jr., Dedham, for the defendant.

Robert C. Cosgrove, Asst. Dist. Atty., for Commonwealth.

RESCRIPT.

A jury of six in Dedham District Court on October 3, 1991, found the defendant Michael Delaney guilty of a violation of the Abuse Prevention Act, G.L. c. 209A, § 7, and of assault and battery, both offences committed upon the defendant's ex-wife Janet Delaney. The defendant received concurrent sentences of two years' confinement at a house of correction, suspended, with probation to April 3 1993. On March 27, 1992, the defendant was "surrendered" by a Quincy probation officer for alleged violation of probation. A revocation hearing was held in Quincy District Court on April 7, 1992. 1

The claimed violation 2 was that the defendant, sometime after 9:00 P.M., on a day in the latter part of December, 1991, was present for some moments in a car in the driveway of Janet Delaney's house, and was thereby in alleged breach of a condition of his probation, namely, that he have no contact, direct or indirect, with his ex-wife. 3

Here is the episode from which the surrender arose. Danielle Delaney, an eleven year old, one of the four Delaney children, was to dance in a Nutcracker play to be performed at a local school auditorium on two successive nights. To avoid an embarrassing meeting of the parents, it was arranged, evidently through the Department of Social Services, that Janet Delaney would attend on the first night and the defendant on the second. Janet Delaney attended as arranged. The following night the defendant attended with his mother, Geraldine Moran, his new wife, Loretta, and a small child of Loretta's former marriage. Danielle had been instructed by her mother to call home when the play ended; she would then be picked up at the auditorium. In fact Danielle did not call. At the curtain, about 9:00 P.M., seeing her father in the audience, Danielle came off the stage and spoke to him and the grandmother. According to the defendant, Danielle asked for a ride home, saying she did not feel well; her mother, she said, would not be home until 9:30 (hence, we gather, no chance of confrontation and no use telephoning).

At all events, Danielle was taken in the defendant's car, with Loretta driving, and brought home, a distance of a mile to a mile and a half from the auditorium.

We reach the question who was in the car as it reached the driveway.

Janet Delaney, called by the Commonwealth, said that, sitting in her dining room, having tea while awaiting Danielle's call, she saw a car, which she recognized as the defendant's, enter her driveway. She recognized Loretta and Ms. Moran in the car. She saw vaguely a third adult figure, but she did not make out who it was. Also in the car was an infant in a car seat. As the witness proposed to say what Danielle, on arrival, told her about the car's occupants, defendant's counsel objected on hearsay grounds. The testimony was indeed hearsay, and not admissible under any conventional exception to the hearsay exclusionary rule, but the judge admitted it because, he said, it was "reliable hearsay." The witness testified that Danielle told her the defendant was in the car in the driveway.

The defendant, testifying in his own behalf, said that, for fear of violating probation, he had Loretta drive the car and set him down some blocks before it reached Janet Delaney's house. He left the car and waited at the spot. After delivering Danielle, the car returned and picked him up. The next stop was at Ms. Moran's house.

Defendant's counsel asked the judge for an order that Danielle be brought to court to testify. The judge said, "Absolutely not."

Loretta and Ms. Moran testified to the conversation with Danielle after the play and also in accord with the defendant about his leaving the car before it reached the driveway: at the driveway the occupants of the car, besides Danielle, were Loretta, Ms. Moran, and the child.

The judge found that the defendant had violated the condition of probation. He revoked probation, lifted the suspension of sentence, and sentenced the defendant to the two-year term in a house of correction.

The defendant appealed. The judge denied a stay of sentence, but a single justice of our court allowed it pending appeal.

There is a difficulty with the admission of hearsay at the revocation proceedings.

Ordinarily our courts apply the rule that bars hearsay testimony unless it falls within a conventional exception to the rule, e.g. an exception for dying declarations. Our courts do not accept a so-called "innominate" exception to the rule like that recognized by the Federal courts (see Fed.R.Evid. 803 ) under which hearsay testimony having certain circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness may be admitted by a judge if stated conditions are met. For our rejection of the innominate exception, see Commonwealth v. Costello, 411 Mass. 371, 377, 582 N.E.2d 938 (1991); Liacos, Massachusetts Evidence § 8.21 at 529-530 (6th ed. 1994).

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15 cases
  • Commonwealth v. PATTON
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
    • September 28, 2010
    ...see id. at 800-801, are nonexclusive, and are derived from Commonwealth v. Durling, supra, and Commonwealth v. Delaney, 36 Mass.App.Ct. 930, 932 n. 4, 629 N.E.2d 1007 (1994). There is no requirement that hearsay satisfy all the above criteria to be trustworthy and reliable. The probationer ......
  • Commonwealth v. Medeiros
    • United States
    • Appeals Court of Massachusetts
    • April 4, 2019
    ...is seen by protected individual more than one block away from her, jumping up and down and waving at her); Commonwealth v. Delaney, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 930, 931, 629 N.E.2d 1007 (1994) (implicitly recognizing that probationer violates no contact condition where protected individual sees defen......
  • Commonwealth v. Leopold L.
    • United States
    • Appeals Court of Massachusetts
    • January 8, 2020
    ...458 Mass. 119, 132-133, 934 N.E.2d 236 (2010) (nonexclusive list of factors derived from Durling and Commonwealth v. Delaney, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 930, 932 n.4, 629 N.E.2d 1007 [1994] bearing on reliability of hearsay).2. Continuances. The juvenile argues that the probation violation hearing w......
  • Commonwealth v. Foster.
    • United States
    • Appeals Court of Massachusetts
    • August 24, 2010
    ...Such statements have been found reliable when they come from a disinterested witness. See ibid. Contrast Commonwealth v. Delaney, 36 Mass.App.Ct. 930, 932 n. 4, 629 N.E.2d 1007 (1994). Here, there is no allegation that either this witness or the police officer was anything but a disinterest......
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