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SJC-11998
COMMONWEALTH vs. MICHAEL S. BOYD.
Middlesex. January 11, 2016. - April 8, 2016.
Present: Gants, C.J., Spina, Cordy, Botsford, Duffly, Lenk,
& Hines, JJ.
Firearms. Practice, Criminal, Sentence, Nolle prosequi.
Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
Department on October 28, 2008.
The cases were tried before Sandra L. Hamlin, J., and a
motion to correct sentence, filed on May 4, 2014, was heard by
her.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative
transferred the case from the Appeals Court.
James M. Fox for the defendant.
KerryAnne Kilcoyne, Assistant District Attorney, for the
Commonwealth.
Chauncey B. Wood & Timothy St. Lawrence, for Massachusetts
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, amicus curiae,
submitted a brief.
CORDY, J. The defendant, Michael Boyd, was convicted on
counts of an indictment charging two sentencing enhancements,
2
one as a second-time offender, see G. L. c. 269, § 10 (d), and
one under the Massachusetts armed career criminal (ACC) statute,1
see G. L. c. 269, § 10G (c), both premised on an underlying
conviction of unlawful possession of a sawed-off shotgun, in
violation of G. L. c. 269, § 10 (c). The Commonwealth moved for
sentencing consistent with the fifteen- to twenty-year term of
imprisonment required by the ACC statute, while the defendant
recommended a lesser punishment, also within the range afforded
by the ACC statute.2 See G. L. c. 269, § 10G (c). The defendant
was sentenced to a term of from fifteen to seventeen years in
State prison on the ACC enhancement and was not sentenced on the
second offender enhancement.
The defendant appealed from the ACC conviction, arguing
that the Commonwealth's evidence was insufficient to support a
sentence enhancement under that provision. In an unpublished
memorandum and order pursuant to its rule 1:28, the Appeals
Court agreed, reversing the conviction and remanding the case
for resentencing. See Commonwealth v. Boyd, 85 Mass. App. Ct.
1106 (2014). The Appeals Court's decision ostensibly left the
defendant with convictions of unlawful possession of a sawed-off
1
The armed career criminal indictment charged that the
defendant had been previously convicted of three violent crimes,
subjecting him to an enhanced sentence.
2
The Commonwealth moved for a sentence of from eighteen to
twenty years, and the defendant recommended a term of from
fifteen years to fifteen years and one day.
3
shotgun, which carries a sentencing range of from eighteen
months to life, see G. L. c. 269, § 10 (a), (c); and the second
offender enhancement conviction for the same offense, which
carries a mandatory term of imprisonment in State prison of
between five and seven years, see G. L. c. 269, § 10 (d).
On remand, the case presented a unique circumstance: a
statute that affords greater potential punishment for an
underlying crime than for a subsequent offense. Consequently,
at the resentencing hearing, the defendant argued that he should
be sentenced under the enhancement statute, while the
Commonwealth sought the imposition of a longer sentence on the
underlying crime. The Commonwealth, over defense objection,
entered a nolle prosequi of the second offender enhancement
charge,3 and the judge sentenced the defendant to a term of from
twelve to fifteen years on the underlying conviction of unlawful
possession of a sawed-off shotgun.
In his present appeal, the defendant argues that it was
error for the resentencing judge to allow the Commonwealth to
avail itself of the nolle prosequi procedure after the initial
sentencing had already occurred, particularly where such a
decision exposed him to a greater potential punishment.
3
The defendant argued that allowing the Commonwealth to
enter a nolle prosequi on a conviction after both verdict and
sentence had been entered would subject him to double jeopardy.
4
In Commonwealth v. Richardson, 469 Mass. 248, 249 (2014),
decided one month after the resentencing in the present case, we
established that, absent legislative intent to the contrary, "a
defendant may be sentenced under only one sentencing enhancement
statute," even if he or she was convicted pursuant to multiple
such provisions. The Commonwealth, however, is free to charge a
defendant under multiple sentencing enhancement statutes, and if
it secures multiple convictions, it may, prior to sentencing,
"exercise its prosecutorial prerogative to decide which
enhancement provision will apply . . . by entering a nolle
prosequi of all but one sentencing enhancement count." Id. at
254. Because in Richardson the Commonwealth had not exercised
its nolle prosequi authority prior to sentencing, and because
the judge sentenced the defendant under two sentencing
enhancement provisions, we remanded the case for resentencing,
concluding that, "[w]here . . . the Commonwealth did not
exercise its authority to enter a nolle prosequi of one of the
enhancement counts before sentencing, the decision regarding
which sentence will survive on remand rests with the sentencing
judge." Id. at 249, 251-252, 254-255.
Consistent with our holding in Richardson, we conclude that
the judge's original sentencing on one of two possible
enhancement convictions (ACC enhancement) effectively acted as a
dismissal of the other (second offender enhancement). Thus, the
5
Commonwealth's attempt to enter a nolle prosequi with respect to
the second offender enhancement conviction, after the remand, is
moot as duplicative. The underlying conviction of possession of
a sawed-off shotgun, however, remained viable, and where the
judge on resentencing sentenced the defendant on that
conviction, we affirm the sentence as imposed.4,5
1. Background. a. Underlying crimes. The circumstances
underlying the defendant's conviction are not in dispute, and
they also are not at issue in his appeal. To give context, we
present a brief recitation of the facts precipitating the
defendant's arrest and his subsequent convictions.
On September 24, 2008, the Framingham police responded to a
report of a domestic dispute involving the defendant and his
pregnant girl friend. The officers discovered that the
defendant had taken custody of the couple's two children, so
they proceeded to the defendant's apartment to remove the
children and to arrest the defendant. The defendant refused to
come outside, and the officers heard children screaming. When
the police sought to enter the home by force, the defendant
4
See Commonwealth v. Woodward, 427 Mass. 659, 683 (1998),
quoting Commonwealth v. Coleman, 390 Mass. 797, 804 (1984) ("it
is not within [our] power . . . to review an otherwise lawful
sentence").
5
We acknowledge the amicus brief submitted by the
Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
6
fired a shotgun through the window. The police returned fire,
wounding the defendant. They subsequently arrested him.
b. Procedural history. The defendant was named in
indictments setting forth a total of ten different offenses. In
addition to the conviction of unlawful possession of a sawed-off
shotgun, in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 10 (c), the jury
returned guilty verdicts on indictments charging unlawful
possession of ammunition without a firearm identification card,
in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 10 (h); two counts of reckless
endangerment of a child, in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 13L;
unlawful possession of a loaded sawed-off shotgun, in violation
of G. L. c. 269, § 10 (n); and unlawful discharge of a firearm,
in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 12E.6
After evidence was presented at a separate jury-waived
portion of the bifurcated trial that established the defendant's
prior criminal history, the defendant was convicted of two
separate sentencing enhancements (as a subsequent offender and
as an armed career criminal) for both the shotgun possession
conviction and the ammunition possession conviction. The
6
The defendant was found not guilty on one indictment
charging assault and battery of a pregnant person and two
indictments charging assault by means of a dangerous weapon.
The jury were unable to reach a unanimous verdict on the charge
of armed assault with intent to murder, in violation of G. L.
c. 265, § 18 (b). The judge declared a mistrial with regard to
that indictment, and the Commonwealth subsequently entered a
nolle prosequi, dismissing the charge.
7
defendant was sentenced to concurrent terms of from fifteen to
seventeen years on those convictions, consistent with the
provisions of the ACC statute, and to a subsequent ten years of
probation for each of the remaining charges, to run concurrently
with each other and from and after the prison sentence. No
sentence was imposed on the second offender enhancement
convictions.
At the resentencing hearing on July 10, 2014, after the
defendant had successfully challenged his armed career criminal
status, see Boyd, 85 Mass. App. Ct. at 1106, the parties
mutually agreed to dismiss the possession of ammunition charge
as duplicative. The Commonwealth also sought to enter a nolle
prosequi of the subsequent offender enhancement portion of the
indictment charging possession of a sawed-off shotgun. The
defendant objected, but the resentencing judge allowed the nolle
prosequi and sentenced the defendant to a term of from twelve to
fifteen years in State prison for the underlying crime.7 The
defendant appealed.8 We transferred the case from the Appeals
Court on our own motion.
7
The ten-year probation sentences imposed on other
convictions, to run from and after the prison sentence, were not
addressed at resentencing.
8
The defendant subsequently filed a motion to revise and
revoke the sentence, again arguing that it was improper to enter
a nolle prosequi after the imposition of a sentence.
Specifically, the defendant argued that the new sentence
8
The defendant argues that it was error for the resentencing
judge to allow the Commonwealth to exercise its nolle prosequi
authority at the resentencing hearing for two reasons, and the
resentencing judge was therefore required to sentence the
defendant under the subsequent offender enhancement provision on
the charge of possession of a sawed-off shotgun: first, that
the nolle prosequi was time barred because sentencing had
already occurred; and, second, that the Commonwealth's nolle
prosequi circumvented legislative intent in establishing the
penalty structure for the underlying charge and the enhancement
of which the defendant was convicted.
2. Discussion. Generally speaking, the Commonwealth has
"absolute" authority "to enter a nolle prosequi" at any point
"before sentencing," see Mass. R. Crim. P. 16 (a), 378 Mass. 885
(1979) ("prosecuting attorney may enter a nolle prosequi on
pending charges at any time prior to the pronouncement of
sentence"), "either as to an entire indictment or . . . count
thereof, or any distinct and substantive part of it."
Commonwealth v. Massod, 350 Mass. 745, 748 (1966).9 Where the
"diverges from legislative intent and the interests of justice."
The motion judge (who was different from the trial judge, who
had retired in the interim period) denied the motion. The
defendant did not file a notice of appeal with regard to the
motion.
9
The defendant argues that the Commonwealth, if it were to
enter a nolle prosequi on any portion of the conviction against
9
Commonwealth does not exercise its authority to enter a nolle
prosequi prior to sentencing, the judge "must exercise
discretion to craft the most appropriate individualized sentence
within the bounds of the applicable criminal statutes"
(quotations omitted). Commonwealth v. Rivas, 466 Mass. 184,
190-191 (2013).
In the context of multiple convictions under sentencing
enhancement statutes, the Commonwealth's prosecutorial
prerogative over which enhancement is available for sentencing
ends when the defendant appears before the judge for sentencing.
See Richardson, 469 Mass. at 254. At that point, in the absence
of a nolle prosequi, the sentencing judge has the discretion to
select one enhancement conviction before levying a punishment.
Id. at 254-255. The judge's decision has the effect of
determining which sentence enhancement "survive[s]" for purposes
of appeal and any potential remand. See id. at 255. The
adverse effect is that the sentencing enhancement not selected
by the judge is dismissed, similar to when a nolle prosequi is
entered prior to sentencing.
The result in the present case is that the defendant was no
longer subject to the second offender sentence enhancement after
the defendant, was required to dismiss it in its entirety. This
argument is rendered moot by our holding, see note 11, infra,
but we note that the Commonwealth is entitled to enter a nolle
prosequi as to discrete portions of charges.
10
the case was remanded. See Boyd, 85 Mass. App. Ct. 1106.10 That
is, the judge's initial sentencing of the defendant under the
ACC statute effectively dismissed the second offender portion of
the indictment. Therefore, after the ACC charge had been
reversed, the resentencing judge was left to craft a sentence
based on the only remaining charge associated with G. L. c. 269,
§ 10: the underlying crime. As a result, the Commonwealth need
not have -- and indeed could not have -- exercised its nolle
prosequi authority to dismiss the second offender enhancement in
order to subject the defendant to punishment under the
underlying crime.11
10
The same is not true of the underlying charge, under
which the judge was still permitted to sentence the defendant.
See Commonwealth v. Johnson, 447 Mass. 1018, 1019 (2006)
(sentencing enhancement statutes "do not create independent
crimes"). The underlying crime and the sentencing enhancement
statute were not duplicative, so dismissal of one was not
required, compare Commonwealth v. Rivas, 466 Mass. 184, 185
(2013), nor was it incumbent on the sentencing judge to select
which of the convictions would "survive," see Commonwealth v.
Richardson, 469 Mass. 248, 255 (2014).
11
Our conclusion renders moot the defendant's concerns
related to elective dismissal at resentencing. The defendant
argues that the Commonwealth's ability to nol pros was time
barred after resentencing, and also asserts that allowing the
Commonwealth to nol pros the subsequent offender enhancement
provision on remand offends the notion of double jeopardy.
Because we conclude that there was no subsequent offender
enhancement available for the Commonwealth on which to enter a
nolle prosequi at the resentencing hearing, and it was therefore
error for the sentencing judge to accept entry of that nolle
prosequi, we need not reach these issues.
11
This case presents the circumstance in which our holding
will inure to the benefit of the Commonwealth. Due to the
peculiarity of the sawed-off shotgun possession statute, G. L.
c. 269, § 10, which affords a greater potential punishment for
first-time offenders than does the second offender charge for
the same offense, the Commonwealth was able to secure a more
severe penalty after the second offender charge had been vacated
than it would have been able to had the charge remained. In a
more common scenario, the dismissal on appeal of the sentencing
enhancement provision under which a defendant has been sentenced
would protect the defendant from an enhanced punishment on
remand, based on the same underlying offense.
The defendant argues that, even if it was appropriate to
sentence him for the underlying crime, his sentence under that
statute was excessive. The defendant contends that a closer
reading of the tiered penalty structure for possession of a
sawed-off shotgun under G. L. c. 269, § 10 (c), reveals that the
Legislature intended a first-time offender to have a sentence of
less than five years. The argument implies that, because the
subsequent offender provisions for the underlying crime each
subject an offender to a progressively serious potential
penalty, based on the number of offenses, the Legislature must
have intended a first-time offender to be subject to less
punishment than any subsequent offender.
12
We conclude that the defendant's statutory interpretation
argument is inapt; the statute is not ambiguous, nor was the
judge's interpretation of that statute in handing down a
sentence in excess of seven years inappropriate. While the
statute is no doubt unusual, there can be no misconstruing the
language of the Legislature: first-time offenders in the
possession of sawed-off shotguns are subject to "imprisonment in
the state prison for life, or any term of years," with a minimum
sentence of eighteen months. G. L. c. 269, § 10 (c). The
weapons listed in § 10 (c) (machine gun and sawed-off shotgun)
are the only "dangerous weapons" listed in § 10, the possession
of which subjects the possessor to a term of up to life
imprisonment. The following section, § 10 (d), is an omnibus
clause of the statute, allowing for subsequent offender sentence
enhancements for violations not only of § 10 (c) but also of
§ 10 (a) (possession of other types of firearms) and § 10 (b)
(encompassing a wide variety of handheld, nonfirearm weapons,
including knives, chains, and nunchaku). A single violation of
neither § 10 (a) nor § 10 (b) subjects an offender to life
imprisonment. This clear differentiation by the Legislature
indicates that offenses under § 10 (c) are more grievous than
those under § 10 (a) or (b). The inconsistent penalty system by
which second offenders may (at least with respect to offenses
under § 10 [c]) receive a lesser punishment than first-time
13
offenders may seem illogical, but it is not ambiguous. We
therefore conclude, contrary to the defendant's recitation of
the rule of lenity, that there is nothing ambiguous about the
statute in question.
3. Conclusion. The Commonwealth was unable to exercise
its nolle prosequi authority as to the second offender
enhancement because that conviction was no longer available.
Given that the judge had initially sentenced the defendant under
the ACC enhancement provision, the second offender enhancement
was effectively dismissed. Our conclusion that the defendant
was no longer subject to the second offender enhancement
conviction, however, leaves the resentencing judge in the same
position in which she had been on the initial remand: able to
craft a sentence, pursuant to G. L. c. 269, § 10 (c), based on
the underlying crime, with a potential term of from eighteen
months to life. We therefore affirm as imposed the defendant's
sentence of from twelve to fifteen years in State prison.
So ordered.