Com. v. Foster
Decision Date | 09 June 1975 |
Citation | 368 Mass. 100,330 N.E.2d 155 |
Parties | COMMONWEALTH v. Robert FOSTER. |
Court | United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court |
Francis John Stolarz, Brookline, for defendant.
Lance J. Garth, Second, Asst. Dist. Atty., for the Commonwealth.
Before TAURO, C.J., and BRAUCHER, HENNESSEY, KAPLAN and WILKINS, JJ.
Some five months after the decision of Boykin v. Alabama, 395 U.S. 238, 89 S.Ct. 1709, 23 L.Ed.2d 274 (June 2, 1969), the defendant in the present case, Robert Foster, after standing jury trial for two days in Bristol Superior Court, changed his pleas and pleaded guilty to indictments for assault with intent to murder, assault with intent to commit rape, and unarmed robbery. The presiding judge, in accepting the guilty pleas, made no inquiry whether the defendant was entering his pleas voluntarily or knowingly; indeed, the only interrogation at the time was by the clerk of court, as follows: Q. 'Indictment 31969, assault with intent to murder, how do you now plead to this indictment?' A. 'Guilty.' Q. A. 'Guilty.' Q. 'Indictment 31972, unarmed robbery, how do you plead to this indictment?' A. 'Guilty.' The defendant was sentenced to twelve to fifteen years on the charge of assault with intent to commit rape, with concurrent terms of six to eight years for the assault with intent to murder, and three to five years for the unarmed robbery.
Basing himself on Boykin v. Alabama, supra, the defendant on June 28, 1972, filed a petition for a writ of error in this court. The single justice, applying Earl v. Commonwealth, 356 Mass. 181, 248 N.E.2d 498 (1969), on August 9, 1972, denied the writ but ordered that the case be remanded to the judge who had conducted the trial, to be heard by him as a motion for a new trial. The motion was heard by the trial judge on August 23, 1972. Specifically, the defendant's claim was that the judge had erred in accepting the guilty pleas 'without making a record or an affirmative showing that such guilty pleas were intelligent and voluntary.' New counsel representing the defendant offered in evidence a copy of the trial transcript, pointing to the portion quoted above. The defendant was not present at the hearing. The Commonwealth called as its only witness the attorney who had represented the defendant at the trial. He testified, over objection and exception, that he had had conversations with the defendant on several occasions, that he had discussed with the defendant the possibility of a life sentence, and that, when he informed the defendant that the district attorney was prepared to recommend a twelve to fifteen year sentence if the defendant would plead guilty, the defendant understood and had no objections and said he wanted to plead guilty and was pleased with that sentence.
On November 17, 1972, the judge denied the new trial motion, taking no action on several requests by the defendant for rulings of law. The judge entered an 'Order on Motion For New Trial' in which he stated that during a recess on the third day of trial the defendant's counsel 'explained in detail all possible vardicts, the sentences that could be imposed 1 and the position of the District Attorney on the case.' The judge said he was satisfied that the defendant's pleas were his own free act. As to Boykin v. Alabama, supra, the judge said it was inapplicable to the present case because it involved Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, 18 U.S.C. Appendix (1970). The defendant duly excepted to the denial of his motion, and the case is here on a bill of exceptions.
It is evident, in the first place, that the judge misunderstood the Boykin case. That case was not one arising from a trial in a Federal Court, to which Rule 11 would apply; rather it arose from a trial in a State court. It held that, as a matter of constitutional due process, a guilty plea should not be accepted, and if accepted must be later set aside, unless the record shows affirmatively that the defendant entered the plea freely and understandingly. The trial record in the present case, with its total lack of inquiry at the time of acceptance of the guilty pleas, surely does not in itself begin to disclose voluntariness or understanding. The defendant contends that under Boykin this is the end of the matter. The Commonwealth, on the contrary, seeks to maintain the position that no showing need be made contemporaneously with the plea, that the whole showing to meet its burden under Boykin may be made after the event in postconviction proceedings--for example, on motion for a new trial--and that such a showing was made here. This issue has appeared in other cases and there is some division of opinion about it, as the cases cited in the margin will indicate. 2 This court noted such a question but did not answer it in Huot v. Commonwealth, --- Mass. ---, ---, a 292 N.E.2d 700 (1973).
The question naturally centers on the meaning of the Boykin case itself. A defendant, on arraignment on five charges of common law robbery, pleaded guilty to all of them. This was three days after counsel had been appointed for him. The presiding judge who accepted the pleas put no questions to the defendant. Under the law of Alabama, punishment on a guilty plea was for determination by a jury; the jury sentenced the defendant to death. On direct appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States from the highest Alabama court, which had considered and rejected the argument that the convictions should be set aside because the record did not show a voluntary and knowing plea, the Supreme Court decided that '(i)t was error, plain on the face of the record, for the trial judge to accept petitioner's guilty plea without an affirmative showing that it was intelligent and voluntary.' 395 U.S. at 242, 89 S.Ct. at 1171.
The quoted language suggests forcefully that the necessary minimal showing must be made at the time the trial judge accepts the plea. See In re Tahl, 1 Cal.3d 122, 130, 81 Cal.Rptr. 577, 460 P.2d 449 (1969); People v. Taylor, 383 Mich. 338, 355, 175 N.W.2d 715 (1970); Commonwealth v. Godfrey, 434 Pa. 532, 533--534, 254 A.2d 923 (1969). But critics have pointed out that Boykin may not be dispositive of that point because the court was not confronted with a testing case where the trial record was defective but the State attempted to make the necessary showing in the course of a postconviction proceeding brought by the defendant to set aside the judgment on the plea. 3
Nevertheless, the direction of thought of the Supreme Court in the Boykin case seems to us fairly clear. Two justices (Harlan and Black, JJ.) argued in their dissenting opinion that the majority should not have set aside the judgment of conviction on the appeal but should have remitted the defendant to a postconviction proceeding in which the State would have an opportunity to show that the pleas were in fact voluntary and deliberated (a proposition that the defendant had not denied, resting as he did on the insufficiency of the record made on the acceptance of the plea). In taking the action they did over the dissenters' explicit contention, the majority were apparently intending to decide that the necessary showing must be made in the contemporaneous record.
The meaning of the Boykin case is further clarified by considering a decision handed down two months earlier, McCarthy v. United States, 394 U.S. 459, 89 S.Ct. 1166, 22 L.Ed.2d 418 (1969). This dealt with what was to follow upon the failure of a Federal District Court judge to comply with Rule 11 when he was accepting a guilty plea. Rule 11 states that The problem, then, where the Federal judge had not made the personal inquiries or explored the basis for the plea, was whether the judgment was to be set aside or the government was to have an opportunity in an evidentiary hearing to demonstrate that, notwithstanding the record, the defendant's rights had been respected. The question was put as one involving the supervisory power of the court. In the McCarthy decision the court stressed that Rule 11 was intended to assist the trial judge in deciding whether the plea was voluntary and considered, and also to produce a sound contemporaneous record of the factors bearing on the defendant's mental attidude, so as to discourage, or at least speed the disposal of, defendant's postconviction challenges to the judgment. To look beyond a fatally defective record made at the time of sentencing, and allow the government to piece it out by introducing evidence at a later evidentiary hearing, would be unwise as a matter of judicial administration. It would also tend to deprive the defendant of genuine procedural safeguards. For, even taking into account that the burden of proof would be on the government in a Rule 11 case, the defendant in the usual position would be sorely embarrassed by the fact of having made the plea: the 'prima facie case for voluntariness,' said the court, that arose from 'the defendant's statement that he desired to plea guilty and frequently a statement that the plea was not induced by any threats or promises,' ...
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