Commonwealth v. Teixeira ( 2019 )


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    18-P-658                                            Appeals Court
    COMMONWEALTH    vs.   ISMAEL D. TEIXEIRA.
    No. 18-P-658.
    Plymouth.    April 2, 2019. - May 24, 2019.
    Present:   Rubin, Henry, & Wendlandt, JJ.
    Motor Vehicle, Operating to endanger. Alcoholic Liquors, Motor
    vehicle. Practice, Criminal, Required finding.
    Complaint received and sworn to in the Brockton Division of
    the District Court Department on August 21, 2017.
    The case was tried before Michael A. Vitali, J.
    Jason C. Howard for the defendant.
    Danny F. Soto, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    HENRY, J.   The facts in this case differ from those in many
    of our cases concerning convictions of negligent operation of a
    motor vehicle under G. L. c. 90, § 24 (2) (a), because here the
    defendant's car did not drift, weave, or swerve; the defendant
    did not drive at an excessive speed, and there was no accident.
    However, the defendant, after having consumed alcohol, was
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    driving well below the posted speed limit while holding a cell
    phone approximately one foot from his face, and while showing
    some signs of intoxication when stopped by a State trooper.
    These facts are sufficient to prove that the defendant operated
    his vehicle negligently "so that the lives or safety of the
    public might be endangered."     G. L. c. 90, § 24 (2) (a).     We
    affirm.
    Background.    On August 19, 2017, State Trooper Gregory
    Furtado observed the defendant driving between five and ten
    miles per hour in an area with a posted speed limit of thirty
    miles per hour.   The defendant was manipulating a cell phone one
    foot away from his face and appeared to be reading something on
    the screen.   Trooper Furtado "ran the license plate" and learned
    "there was no inspection results on the vehicle."     Trooper
    Furtado followed the defendant for approximately one block.
    During this time, the defendant turned left onto a residential
    street.   Trooper Furtado then activated his emergency lights to
    initiate a motor vehicle stop.     The defendant immediately
    reduced his speed and safely brought his car to a complete stop.
    In the time the trooper observed the defendant operating a motor
    vehicle, the defendant did not weave, drift, or swerve; he did
    not strike any curb or another vehicle.     There was nothing out
    of the ordinary in how the defendant made the left turn.
    3
    Upon approaching the car, Trooper Furtado observed the
    defendant's cell phone on the defendant's lap with the "GPS"1
    function open.   The defendant explained that he was using the
    cell phone's GPS to find his friend's house.2   Trooper Furtado
    detected the smell of alcohol coming from inside the car and
    noted that the defendant's eyes were bloodshot and his speech
    was slurred.   After requesting the defendant's license and
    registration, Trooper Furtado observed the defendant fumble with
    his wallet and pass over his license several times.
    The defendant admitted to having consumed two beers that
    evening and agreed to perform field sobriety tests.   When
    exiting the vehicle, defendant was unbalanced and swayed back
    and forth.   When performing the one-leg stand, the defendant did
    not keep his foot six inches above the ground as instructed and
    placed his foot on the ground after eight and then eleven
    seconds, rather than after thirty seconds as instructed.      On the
    nine-step walk and turn, the defendant had difficulty following
    instructions, did not touch his heel to his toe on some steps,
    stepped on his own toes, and took ten steps instead of nine.
    1 The term "GPS" was never defined.   We assume it means
    global positioning system.
    2 Throughout his communication with Trooper Furtado, the
    defendant provided a total of four contradictory answers as to
    where he was going: (1) to his friend's house; (2) to pick up
    his brother; (3) to his girlfriend's house; and (4) to his
    house.
    4
    The defendant was tried by a jury on a complaint charging
    him with (1) operating a motor vehicle while under the influence
    of intoxicating liquor (OUI), G. L. c. 90, § 24 (1) (a) (1), and
    (2) negligent operation of a motor vehicle.    The jury acquitted
    the defendant of OUI and convicted him of negligent operation.3
    On appeal the defendant challenges the sufficiency of the
    evidence supporting that conviction.
    Discussion.   1.   Standard of review.   At the close of the
    Commonwealth's case, the defendant moved for required findings
    of not guilty, which the judge denied.    When reviewing the
    denial of a motion for a required finding of not guilty, we must
    determine "whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could
    have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a
    reasonable doubt" (quotation omitted).    Commonwealth v.
    Latimore, 
    378 Mass. 671
    , 677 (1979).     "The inferences that
    support a conviction 'need only be reasonable and possible;
    [they] need not be necessary or inescapable.'"    Commonwealth v.
    Waller, 
    90 Mass. App. Ct. 295
    , 303 (2016), quoting Commonwealth
    v. Woods, 
    466 Mass. 707
    , 713 (2014).
    3 Following the jury verdict, the judge found the defendant
    not responsible for two civil infractions, including sending an
    electronic message while operating a motor vehicle, in violation
    of G. L. c. 90, § 13B, and failing to have a valid motor vehicle
    inspection sticker, in violation of G. L. c. 90, § 20.
    5
    2.   Sufficiency of the evidence.     To sustain a conviction
    of negligent operation, the Commonwealth must prove that the
    defendant (1) operated a motor vehicle, (2) on a public way, and
    (3) negligently, so that the lives or safety of the public might
    be endangered.    See G. L. c. 90, § 24 (2) (a).   Only the third
    element is at issue in this appeal.     The statute requires proof
    that the defendant's conduct might have endangered the safety of
    the public, not that it, in fact, did.     See Commonwealth v.
    Duffy, 
    62 Mass. App. Ct. 921
    , 923 (2004).     "Negligence in this
    context is determined by the same standard that is employed in
    tort law."   
    Id.
     at 922 n.2.
    This case, unlike many negligent operation cases, does not
    involve evidence of a collision, a near collision, a swerve, a
    departure from marked lanes, or any erratic movement of the
    motor vehicle other than speed significantly lower than the
    speed limit.     See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Charland, 
    338 Mass. 742
    , 743-744 (1959) (affirming negligent operation conviction
    after head-on collision while defendant was traveling wrong way
    on rotary traffic circle); Commonwealth v. Ferreira, 
    70 Mass. App. Ct. 32
    , 33-35 (2007) (operating to endanger where, despite
    no pedestrians nearby, defendant accelerated in manner that
    caused tires to spin, car to "fishtail," and "screeching
    noise"); Commonwealth v. Daley, 
    66 Mass. App. Ct. 254
    , 256
    (2006) (affirming negligent operation conviction where erratic
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    swerving while intoxicated such that defendant "nearly struck a
    large road sign").     Likewise, negligence per se does not apply
    here; a civil infraction alone is not sufficient to constitute
    negligent operation.     See Duffy, 62 Mass. App. Ct. at 922
    (evidence of speeding alone insufficient to support negligent
    operation conviction).
    On the other hand, this court has sustained a conviction in
    the absence of a collision or near collision.     In Commonwealth
    v. Ross, 
    92 Mass. App. Ct. 377
    , 377 (2017), this court held that
    evidence of the defendant's excessive speed at night on a narrow
    residential road -- after he had consumed alcohol -- was
    sufficient to prove that the defendant operated negligently so
    as to endanger the public.
    In this case, after having consumed alcohol, the defendant
    was driving twenty to twenty-five miles per hour below the
    posted speed limit with his cell phone held one foot in front of
    his face.4   See Ross, 92 Mass. App. Ct. at 380 ("The fact that
    4 General Laws c. 90, § 13B, prohibits an operator of a
    motor vehicle from "us[ing] a mobile telephone, or any handheld
    device capable of accessing the internet, to manually compose,
    send or read an electronic message while operating a motor
    vehicle" unless "the vehicle is stationary and not located in a
    part of the public way intended for travel." In its brief, the
    Commonwealth refers to a violation of G. L. c. 90, § 13B, as a
    crime; it is a civil infraction. Section 1 of G. L. c. 90
    defines "[e]lectronic message" as "a piece of digital
    communication that is designed or intended to be transmitted
    between a mobile electronic device and any other electronic
    device; provided, however, that electronic message shall
    7
    the jury ultimately did not convict the defendant of OUI does
    not preclude their consideration of the evidence of intoxication
    in considering the negligent operation charge").   A defendant's
    driving need not have been erratic to support a conviction of
    negligent operation, so long as the conduct, taken as a whole,
    might have endangered the lives and safety of the public.    See
    Commonwealth v. Sousa, 
    88 Mass. App. Ct. 47
    , 51 (2015) ("The
    question is whether the defendant's driving had the potential to
    cause danger to the public, not whether it actually did").     Even
    without any evidence of erratic driving, a reasonable jury could
    conclude that the defendant drove negligently so as to put the
    lives or safety of the public in danger when he had consumed
    alcohol and drove substantially below the speed limit while
    holding a cell phone one foot from his face.
    Judgment affirmed.
    include, but not be limited to, electronic mail, electronic
    message, a text message, an instant message, a command or
    request to access an internet site, or any message that includes
    a keystroke entry sent between mobile devices." Accordingly,
    § 13B does not prohibit passive cell phone Internet use, such as
    the use of GPS.
    In this case, distraction can be inferred from the
    defendant's holding his cell phone so close to his face. The
    trooper also testified, without objection, that based on the
    position of the cell phone in relationship to the defendant's
    face, the cell phone "was definitely a distraction."
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 18-P-658

Filed Date: 5/24/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/24/2019