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COMMONWEALTH v. BONUGLI (2021)

Appeals Court of Massachusetts.2021-10-12No. 20-P-788

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Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0

After a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of violating an abuse prevention order. The conviction stemmed from the victims observations of the defendant driving by her home, despite an abuse prevention order that was in place requiring him to stay one hundred yards away. On appeal the defendant argues that the trial judge erroneously sustained three objections made by the prosecutor during defense counsels examination of the witnesses.

The defendant first argues that the judge improperly limited defense counsels cross-examination of the investigating officer. After establishing that the officer had spoken to the victims fiancé as part of the investigation, defense counsel asked, “And what did he tell you?” The prosecutor objected, and the judge sustained the objection. This was not an abuse of discretion as the question appeared on its face to call for a hearsay response. Although the defendant now contends that the purpose of the question “was to show [the fiancé’s] demeanor,” he did not offer this explanation at trial, and so we do not consider it. “Where the materiality of the evidence is unclear, the record must disclose the cross-examiners reason for seeking an answer to the excluded question․” Commonwealth v. Cheek, 374 Mass. 613, 615 (1978), quoting Commonwealth v. Caine, 366 Mass. 366, 370 n.4 (1974). Here, defense counsel simply moved on to his next question without making a proffer as to why the witnesss answer would be admissible. The record therefore does not reveal any abuse of discretion by the judge. See Cheek, supra, quoting Pires v. Commonwealth, 373 Mass. 829, 838 n.5 (1977) (“consideration of the alleged error in excluding the question would defeat ‘an important policy which requires parties to give sufficient notice so that the trial judge may reconsider his or her ruling’ ”); Caine, supra at 370 (“In failing to demonstrate on the record the particular relevance of the line of questioning sought to be pursued, the defendant is unable to carry his burden of showing abuse of discretion”).

The defendants next argument fails for the same reasons. During defense counsels direct examination of the defendant, defense counsel asked whether the victims fiancé had threatened the defendant the day before the incident in question. When the defendant responded affirmatively, defense counsel asked, “What did he say?” The judge sustained the prosecutors objection, and defense counsel again failed to explain why the answer would be admissible for a nonhearsay purpose. The defendants claim on appeal that the answer would have shown “the motivation of the [victim] to lie” was not raised to the judge and thus cannot be a basis for reversal. See Cheek, 374 Mass. at 615; Caine, 366 Mass. at 370.

The defendants last argument concerns the following question asked by defense counsel to the defendant on direct examination: “When you have your children, what do you do?”

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As the relevance of this question was unclear, the judge did not abuse her discretion in sustaining the prosecutors objection. While the defendant now appears to argue that the question was relevant to the victims credibility, once again, he made no such claim at trial, nor did he proffer any other reason why the judge should reconsider her ruling. See Cheek, 374 Mass. at 615; Caine, 366 Mass. at 370.

In addition, not only has the defendant failed to demonstrate an abuse of discretion, he has not shown that he was prejudiced by the exclusion of the testimony. The judge did not preclude defense counsel from inquiring into the victims purported bias. See Cheek, 374 Mass. at 615 (question potentially relevant to witnesss bias properly excluded, where judge did not prohibit inquiry into bias altogether). “Defense counsel could have pursued the point, but he chose not to.” Id. Thus, contrary to the defendants contention, the judges rulings did not impair the defendants right to present evidence in his own defense.

Judgment affirmed.

FOOTNOTES

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.   The defendant and the victim have three children together.