Commonwealth, Aplt. v. Hvizda, J. , 632 Pa. 3 ( 2015 )


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  •                                    [J-72B-2014]
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    MIDDLE DISTRICT
    CASTILLE, C.J., SAYLOR, EAKIN, BAER, TODD, MCCAFFERY, STEVENS, JJ.
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, :                  No. 6 MAP 2014
    :
    Appellant      :                  Appeal from the Order of the Superior
    :                  Court at No. 2695 EDA 2012 dated
    :                  6/25/13 which vacated and remanded the
    v.                  :                  judgment of sentence of the Chester
    :                  County Court of Common Pleas, Criminal
    :                  Division, at No. CP-15-CR-0001350-2012
    :                  dated 8/27/12
    :
    JAMES JOHN HVIZDA,            :
    :
    Appellee       :                  ARGUED: September 10, 2014
    OPINION
    MR. CHIEF JUSTICE SAYLOR1                                      DECIDED: June 15, 2015
    The issue presented concerns whether a common pleas court was required to
    permit withdrawal of a guilty plea, upon the defendant-appellee’s assertion of
    innocence. The appeal is a companion case with Commonwealth v. Carrasquillo, ___
    Pa. ___, ___ A.3d ___ (2015).
    Appellee stabbed his estranged wife, Kimberly, to death.        He immediately
    surrendered to police and confessed.        Subsequently, he pled guilty to first-degree
    murder and possession of an instrument of crime.           In exchange for the plea, the
    1
    This matter was reassigned to this author.
    Commonwealth was to recommend that Appellee would receive the mandatory
    sentence of life imprisonment for first-degree murder and a consecutive term of
    incarceration pertaining to the possessory offense.
    Just over two months later, when Appellee appeared for sentencing, he advised
    the common pleas court that he wished to withdraw his plea, stating: “I’m here to
    maintain my innocence in the charge of murder in the first degree.” N.T., July 9, 2012,
    at 3. His counsel explained:
    There needs to be a fair and just reason [in support of a
    motion to withdraw a plea]. As stated previously in response
    to Your Honor’s inquiry, his fair and just reason is that he
    maintains his innocence on the charge of first degree murder
    and possessing an instrument of crime.
    
    Id. at 6.
    The court listed the matter for hearing.
    At the hearing, Appellee again stated that he was innocent, but he offered no
    evidence.     The Commonwealth presented audiotapes of Appellee’s telephone
    conversations from prison, in which he stated that, although he “did it” and knew that he
    “deserve[d] what [he was] gonna get,” he wished to stand trial to “get some of the story
    out.”   N.T., Aug. 20, 2012, at 10-11.         On this basis, and more generally, the
    Commonwealth took the position that Appellee’s assertion of innocence was implausible
    and insincere.
    The common pleas court denied Appellee’s motion, applying the standard
    derived from Commonwealth v. Forbes, 
    450 Pa. 185
    , 
    299 A.2d 268
    (1973), which
    requires a court to accept a presentence withdrawal of a plea upon presentation of a
    fair-and-just reason, and in the absence of substantial prejudice to the Commonwealth.
    See 
    id. at 191,
    299 A.2d at 271. The court relied on Commonwealth v. Tennison, 
    969 A.2d 572
    (Pa. Super. 2009), for the proposition that it had the ability to adjudge the
    sincerity of the innocence claim in the assessment of fairness and justice.         See
    [J-72B-2014] - 2
    Commonwealth v. Hvizda, No. 1350-2012, slip op. at 2-3 (C.P. Chester Aug. 22, 2012)
    (citing 
    Tennison, 969 A.2d at 573
    ).         According to the common pleas court, the
    Commonwealth had “presented compelling and unique evidence to establish
    [Appellee’s] bald assertion of innocence was at best pretextual and an attempt to
    manipulate the system.” 
    Id. at 3.
    After sentencing ensued in accordance with the plea agreement, Appellee lodged
    an appeal. In its brief, the Commonwealth argued for the first time that the Forbes
    standard did not govern Appellee’s motion. Rather, the Commonwealth observed, in
    Commonwealth v. Lesko, 
    502 Pa. 511
    , 
    467 A.2d 307
    (1983), this Court had substituted
    a requirement that a defendant subject to a mandatory life sentence should establish a
    manifest injustice to support presentence plea withdrawal. See 
    id. at 517,
    467 A.2d at
    310.
    In a divided, memorandum decision, the Superior Court vacated the common
    pleas court’s ruling and instructed that court to accept the plea withdrawal. The majority
    related that, in the en banc decision in Commonwealth v. Katonka, 
    33 A.3d 44
    (Pa.
    Super. 2011), the intermediate court had explained that Tennison was limited to its facts
    and that credibility assessments relative to a defendant’s claim of innocence were
    impermissible. See 
    id. at 49-50.
    Accordingly, the majority determined that the common
    pleas court should have accepted Appellee’s assertion of innocence as a fair-and-just
    reason in support of withdrawal.
    The majority also declined the Commonwealth’s invitation to apply Lesko. In this
    regard, it distinguished the case on several grounds, including because Appellee was
    not only required to receive a life sentence for first-degree murder but was also subject
    to a term of incarceration for his possessory offense, and since Appellee was subject to
    fines, costs, and restitutions in the discretion of the sentencing court.
    [J-72B-2014] - 3
    Then-President Judge Stevens dissented, essentially on the basis of the
    common pleas court’s reasoning.
    The Commonwealth lodged a petition for allowance of appeal, which we
    accepted to exercise plenary review over the legal issues presented.
    The Commonwealth first argues that Lesko is controlling and required the
    Superior Court to apply a manifest injustice standard.              In the alternative, the
    Commonwealth contends that Katonka’s proscription against credibility assessments
    relative to innocence claims does not fairly derive from the decisions of this Court.
    Appellee finds Lesko to be outdated, poorly reasoned, difficult to apply, and
    factually distinguishable. In terms of the appropriate application of the Forbes standard,
    Appellee maintains, consistent with Superior Court precedent, that his bare assertion of
    innocence is enough to establish a fair-and-just reason supporting presentence
    withdrawal of a plea.
    Initially, we agree with Appellee that the Lesko decision is incompletely reasoned
    on the relevant point and should not remain controlling authority. In Lesko, this Court
    recognized the prevailing liberal standard for presentence withdrawal as established in
    Forbes. See Lesko, 502 Pa. at 
    517, 467 A.2d at 310
    . The Court observed, however,
    that the standard for post-sentence withdrawal is a stringent one, requiring the
    defendant to establish manifest injustice. The remainder of the Lesko Court’s reasoning
    is as follows:
    The basis for the difference between these two standards is
    clear. Allowing an accused to withdraw his guilty plea after
    imposition of sentence requires a stricter standard to prevent
    defendants from using a guilty plea as a tool for previewing
    the sentencing by the court. Such a misuse does not occur
    when withdrawing a guilty plea prior to sentencing.
    [J-72B-2014] - 4
    The lower court applied the “manifest injustice” standard,
    reasoning that the [a]ppellant was pre-advised of the only
    possible sentence. Therefore, the [a]ppellant’s petition was
    akin to a post-sentencing petition. Because the [a]ppellant
    was well aware of the only possible sentence imposable for
    the crime to which he pled guilty, we find no error in applying
    the “manifest injustice” standard. In any event, applying the
    “fair and just reason” standard will not give the Appellant the
    requested relief.
    
    Id. (emphasis in
    original).
    Unfortunately, the Lesko Court did not discuss all of the policies underlying the
    Forbes rule. Indeed, the main reason the Court has repeatedly invoked in support of
    the liberal allowance of presentence withdrawal of pleas is to safeguard defendants’ trial
    rights. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Santos, 
    450 Pa. 492
    , 494-95, 
    301 A.2d 829
    , 830
    (1973) (“[S]ince guilty pleas involve the simultaneous waiver of so many constitutional
    rights, we have recently emphasized ‘that a request [to withdraw] made before
    sentencing . . . should be liberally allowed.’” (quoting 
    Forbes, 450 Pa. at 190
    , 299 A.2d
    at 271 (emphasis added; footnote omitted))). Moreover, Lesko’s rationale centered on
    “sentence-previewing” is strained. While Lesko correctly recognized that a defendant
    pleading guilty to an offense triggering a mandatory life sentence has no need to
    preview the sentencing result (as he already knows that he will receive a life sentence
    at the time the plea is accepted), Lesko used this premise to reach the opposite
    conclusion of that to which it logically leads. Contrary to the Lesko Court’s reasoning, if
    preventing previewing were the only reason supporting implementation of an elevated
    standard, there would be no reason to apply the higher standard at all to a defendant
    who has pled guilty to an offense triggering a mandatory life sentence.2            Lesko,
    2
    Of course, there are other justifications for the elevated standard governing post-
    sentence withdrawal motions, also not recognized in Lesko. See, e.g., Commonwealth
    v. Gunter, 
    565 Pa. 79
    , 84, 
    771 A.2d 767
    , 771 (2001) (“The different treatment of pre-
    (Mcontinued)
    [J-72B-2014] - 5
    however, upended this logic to conclude that the liberal standard should not apply in the
    first instance, again, without any acknowledgement of the driving justification for
    liberality in the presentence period, i.e., safeguarding defendants’ trial rights.
    We also agree with Appellee that the Lesko approach is problematic in its
    application, as it yields distinctions and variations such as are reflected in the opinion of
    the Superior Court majority here. Accordingly, while we recognize the importance of
    adhering to precedent, we disapprove Lesko’s idiosyncratic approach to presentence
    withdrawal. See generally Ayala v. Phila. Bd. of Pub. Ed., 
    453 Pa. 584
    , 606, 
    305 A.2d 877
    , 888 (1973) (“[T]he doctrine of stare decisis is not a vehicle for perpetuating error,
    but rather a legal concept which responds to the demands of justice and, thus, permits
    the orderly growth processes of the law to flourish.”).
    In the companion case of Carrasquillo, however, we have determined that a
    bare assertion of innocence – such as Appellee provided as the basis for withdrawing
    his guilty plea – is not, in and of itself a sufficient reason to require a court to grant such
    a request. See Carrasquillo, ___ Pa. at ___, ___ A.3d at ___. Accordingly, and for the
    reasons set forth more fully in that case, the common pleas court did not err in denying
    Appellee’s withdrawal motion.
    The order of the Superior Court is reversed, and the matter is remanded for
    reinstatement of the judgment of sentence.
    Former Chief Justice Castille and former Justice McCaffery did not participate in
    the decision of this case.
    (continuedM)
    and postsentence motions reflects the tension in our jurisprudence between the
    individual’s fundamental right to a trial and the need for finality in the proceedings.”).
    [J-72B-2014] - 6
    Messrs. Justice Eakin and Baer, Madame Justice Todd and Mr. Justice Stevens
    join the opinion.
    Mr. Justice Stevens files a concurring opinion.
    [J-72B-2014] - 7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 6 MAP 2014

Citation Numbers: 116 A.3d 1103, 632 Pa. 3, 2015 Pa. LEXIS 1280

Judges: Castille, Saylor, Eakin, Baer, Todd, McCaffery, Stevens

Filed Date: 6/15/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/13/2024