Commonwealth v. Howes
Commonwealth v. Howes
Opinion of the Court
The defendant, David G. Howes, appeals from the order denying his motion to vacate his guilty pleas to two counts of indecent assault and battery on a person fourteen years of age or older.
Background
. In May, 2016, the parties appeared for trial before a District Court judge. When the case was called, both the Commonwealth and defense counsel (later, plea counsel) answered ready for trial. At a sidebar conference, defense counsel requested that the case be resolved with a continuance without a finding.
In July, 2016, the defendant filed the motion to vacate his guilty pleas. In September, 2016, the same judge who accepted the pleas denied the motion without an evidentiary hearing, largely for the same reasons previously stated on the record before the pleas. The judge did not credit the claim that the attorney-client relationship irretrievably had broken down in the short time after the rejection of the proposed disposition at sidebar. In November, 2016, the defendant moved for reconsideration of the order denying the motion, which the judge denied. The defendant timely appealed both orders.
Discussion
. A motion to vacate a guilty plea is treated as a motion for new trial.
Commonwealth
v.
Hiskin
,
A plea is voluntary when it is "free from coercion, duress, or improper inducements."
The judge was not obligated to credit or to give weight to either affidavit. See
Commonwealth
v.
Pingaro
,
Plea counsel's statements on the record contradict the defendant's assertions on appeal, where plea counsel told the judge that he "[c]ertainly" was ready for trial, and later stated that this was the first time that the defendant indicated a breakdown in communication. Moreover, the defendant did not submit an affidavit from plea counsel or the defendant's expert,
Furthermore, the defendant now contradicts his sworn responses during the plea colloquy, where he had the opportunity to raise any issues. The defendant responded affirmatively when asked if he was "giving up all these rights voluntarily, no one's forced you, threatened you, coerced you, you're doing this of your own free will." See
Hiskin
,
The defendant's case was pending for more than one year on the day of the scheduled trial, and plea counsel appeared on behalf of the defendant on past court dates, filed pretrial conference reports, arranged an expert, and previously communicated with the defendant. The judge did not abuse his discretion in denying the defendant's motion to vacate his guilty pleas without an evidentiary hearing.
Order denying motion to vacate guilty pleas affirmed .
Order denying consolidated motion for reconsideration affirmed .
The complaint charged the defendant with one count of indecent assault and battery and one count of rape. The second count was reduced to indecent assault and battery during a pretrial conference.
The defendant also appeals from the order denying his consolidated motion for reconsideration.
The sidebar conference was not recorded. However, the judge summarized the discussion in the memorandum of decision denying the motion to vacate and the defendant does not dispute that summary.
The defendant's proposed attorney later represented the defendant on the motion to vacate the guilty pleas and currently represents him on appeal.
The defendant had an expert witness on standby to testify if a trial started that day.
A guilty plea must be both intelligently and voluntarily made. See
Commonwealth
v.
Furr
,
The defendant contends that the expert was contacted only shortly before the scheduled trial date and would testify at an evidentiary hearing and confirm plea counsel's unpreparedness.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.