Commonwealth v. Baez , 2017 Pa. Super. 258 ( 2017 )


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  • J-S34006-17
    
    2017 PA Super 258
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                      IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    v.
    JUAN BAEZ
    Appellant                     No. 199 EDA 2016
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence November 23, 2015
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0004678-2014
    BEFORE: BOWES, SOLANO, AND PLATT,* JJ.
    OPINION BY BOWES, J.:                                 FILED AUGUST 10, 2017
    Juan Baez appeals from the November 23, 2015 judgment of sentence
    of five to ten years imprisonment followed by ten years probation.        The
    sentence was entered after Appellant tendered a negotiated guilty plea to
    rape of a child and unlawful contact with a minor. We affirm.
    In this action, Appellant was arrested on April 1, 2014, and he
    subsequently was charged with involuntary deviate sexual intercourse,
    aggravated indecent assault of a child, unlawful contact with a minor, sexual
    assault, endangering the welfare of a child, corruption of a minor, indecent
    assault of a person less than thirteen years old, indecent exposure, rape of a
    child, and aggravated assault. The matter proceeded to a jury trial on April
    27, 2015.   The jury was chosen, opening arguments were made, and the
    victim, her mother, and a police officer testified.
    * Retired Senior Judge specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S34006-17
    On April 28, 2015, the court was about to proceed to a hearing on the
    admissibility of certain scientific evidence and had already conducted a
    colloquy on the expert witness offered by the Commonwealth. Appellant’s
    counsel indicated that Appellant decided to accept a plea offer made by the
    Commonwealth.      The terms of the plea deal involved a guilty plea by
    Appellant to rape of a child and unlawful contact with a minor, the remaining
    charges would be nolle prossed, and the Commonwealth would recommend
    a sentence of five to ten years imprisonment followed by ten years
    probation.    The jury was recessed while Appellant executed a written
    colloquy with the aid of his lawyer and the plea court conducted a full oral
    colloquy.
    The factual basis for the plea in question was as follows.      K.I., the
    victim, had testified that between October 2013 and March 2014, when she
    was eleven years old, Appellant had, on multiple occasions, vaginally
    penetrated her with his penis and fingers.      K.I. also said that Appellant
    placed his mouth on her vagina.      K.I. disclosed the sexual abuse to her
    mother, who reported it to police. The record also establishes that, during
    the pertinent time frame, Appellant was forty-years old and a friend of K.I.’s
    mother. When the abuse occurred, K.I. was staying at Appellant’s home on
    the weekends.
    At one point in the colloquy, Appellant consulted with his lawyer off the
    record about his defenses. The elements of each crime were set forth on the
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    record, including that rape of a child was “sexual intercourse with a child
    who is less than 13 years of age” and that sexual intercourse meant
    penetrating her vagina with his penis, even slightly.        N.T. Guilty Plea,
    4/28/15, at 14-15. After Appellant indicated that he had “[n]ot really”
    penetrated K.I.’s vagina with his penis, and had not had sexual intercourse
    with K.I., the plea court immediately ceased the colloquy and offered to
    continue with the trial. Id. at 15. Appellant responded, “No.” Id. The court
    then explained that pleading guilty was the same as an adjudication of guilt
    by a jury. Appellant said that he understood that his plea would be treated
    as a guilty verdict on the two charges in question.              Id. at 15, 16.
    Thereafter, Appellant tendered a guilty plea to rape of a child.      Id. at 18
    (“THE COURT CRIER: Juan Baez, . . . you’re being charged with rape of a
    child, how do you plead? THE DEFENDANT: Guilty.”).
    At the conclusion of the guilty plea, Appellant was referred to the
    Sexual   Offenders   Assessment    Board    (“SOAB”)   for   a    Megan’s   Law
    assessment. Approximately three months later, on July 17, 2015, Appellant
    wrote a letter to his lawyer asking to withdraw his guilty plea and claiming
    that he was innocent and pled guilty solely because he was going to receive
    a sentence of sixty-five years if convicted. Counsel thereafter filed a written
    pre-sentence motion to withdraw the guilty plea asserting that Appellant was
    entitled to withdraw the guilty plea because he was innocent of the charges.
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    Sentencing was scheduled for November 23, 2015. At the inception of
    the proceeding, the court heard argument on the question of withdrawal.
    The court first clarified that the plea in question was actually a negotiated
    guilty plea, stating “And we’re here for sentencing, it’s just a matter of
    imposing the sentence that was negotiated, five to ten, followed by ten
    years probation.” N.T. Sentencing, 11/23/15, at 10.      When asked why he
    wanted to withdraw the plea, Appellant said, “Because I’m not—I’m not
    guilty, I’m innocent.”   Id. at 14.   The Commonwealth then indicated that
    Appellant was offered the same plea on June 24, 2014, and rejected it.
    Appellant denied hearing about the plea offer prior to trial. Speaking directly
    to the court, Appellant said, “That’s the only time I found out [about the plea
    offer], the day you told me, 65 years. And if I don’t plead guilty, I’ll get 65
    years.” Id. at 15.
    To refute this assertion that the guilty plea was accepted based upon
    the court’s threat to impose sixty-five years upon conviction, the court
    corrected Appellant. It stated, “No, what I told you was that the maximum
    sentence for these charges was 140 years. So I don’t know what you were
    listening to or where you got 65 from.”      Id. at 15-16.    The guilty plea
    colloquy confirms that Appellant was told that he could be “sentenced up to
    140 years in prison” if he was convicted of all the charged offenses. N.T.
    Guilty Plea, 4/28/15, at 7 (emphasis added). After discussions concerning
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    whether withdrawal of the guilty plea would permit Appellant to engage in
    jury shopping, the court denied the motion.
    The SOAB board had concluded that Appellant was not a sexually
    violent predator, and the court proceeded to impose the negotiated term of
    five to ten years in jail followed by ten years probation.       This appeal
    followed. Appellant presents this question for our review:
    1. Did the Lower Court err and/or abuse its discretion when it
    denied the Appellant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea prior
    to sentencing when the motion to withdraw a guilty plea prior
    to sentencing is to be liberally granted for any fair and just
    reason unless the prosecution has suffered substantial
    prejudice?
    Appellant’s brief at 5.
    Our Supreme Court disseminated the case Commonwealth v.
    Carrasquillo, 
    115 A.3d 1284
     (Pa. 2015), on June 15, 2015, five months
    before the hearing on Appellant’s pre-sentence motion to withdraw.         That
    decision clarified the parameters of when a pre-sentence motion to withdraw
    is to be granted based upon an assertion of innocence.          Therein, our
    Supreme Court re-affirmed that the trial court is imbued with the discretion
    to deny a defendant permission to withdraw a guilty plea, whether that
    request is tendered before or after sentencing, and we, as an appellate
    court, can reverse its decision only when that discretion is abused.
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 591(A) (emphasis added) (“At any time before the imposition
    of sentence, the court may, in its discretion, permit, upon motion of the
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    defendant, or direct, sua sponte, the withdrawal of a plea of guilty or nolo
    contendere and the substitution of a plea of not guilty.”).      While a pre-
    sentence motion to withdraw is to be liberally allowed,
    there is no absolute right to withdraw a guilty plea; trial courts
    have discretion in determining whether a withdrawal request will
    be granted; such discretion is to be administered liberally in
    favor of the accused; and any demonstration by a defendant of a
    fair-and-just reason will suffice to support a grant, unless
    withdrawal    would    work    substantial  prejudice    to    the
    Commonwealth.
    Carrasquillo, supra at 1291–92 (footnote omitted).1
    The Carrasquillo Court, breaking with prior precedent, held that a
    bare assertion of innocence is no longer a fair and just reason permitting a
    pre-sentence withdrawal of a guilty plea. Instead, “a defendant's innocence
    claim must be at least plausible to demonstrate, in and of itself, a fair and
    just reason for presentence withdrawal of a plea.” Id. at 1292. Our High
    Court outlined that the correct inquiry “on consideration of such a withdrawal
    motion is whether the accused has made some colorable demonstration,
    under the circumstances, such that permitting withdrawal of the plea would
    ____________________________________________
    1
    The pre-sentence standard starkly contrasts with the one applicable to a
    defendant’s post-sentence motion to withdraw. “Post-sentence motions for
    withdrawal are subject to higher scrutiny since courts strive to discourage
    entry of guilty pleas as sentence-testing devices.      A defendant must
    demonstrate that manifest injustice would result if the court were to deny
    his post-sentence motion to withdraw a guilty plea.” Commonwealth v.
    Islas, 
    156 A.3d 1185
    , 1188 (Pa.Super. 2017) (citation omitted; emphasis in
    original)
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    promote fairness and justice.”    
    Id.
       In that decision, our Supreme Court
    ruled that the defendant had not offered a plausible innocence claim given
    that it was rather bizarre--a “devil made me to it” claim of innocence--and
    since the innocence claim was offered just prior to sentencing.      See also
    Commonwealth v. Hvizda, 
    116 A.3d 1103
     (Pa. 2015) (companion case to
    Carrasquillo).
    In this case, the plea court concluded that Appellant’s assertion of
    innocence was not plausible since he failed to offer “any additional testimony
    establishing the basis of a ‘fair and just reason’ justifying the withdrawal of
    his guilty plea.”   Trial Court Opinion, 9/2/16, at 9.   We concur with this
    assessment. Relying extensively upon pre-Carrasquillo case law, Appellant
    first maintains that his bald assertion of innocence was sufficient to mandate
    withdrawal. He attempts to distinguish Carrasquillo on the ground that the
    assertion of innocence therein was not leveled until sentencing and that it
    was unusual in nature.
    Appellant overlooks our Supreme Court’s companion case in Hvizda,
    where the defendant’s claimed innocence was straightforward, but refuted
    by the Commonwealth’s proof. In Hvizda, the defendant entered a guilty
    plea to first degree murder in connection with the stabbing death of his
    estranged spouse. Prior to imposition of his sentence, he asked to withdraw
    the plea claiming that he was innocent. The trial court conducted a hearing
    on the request to withdraw, where the defendant again asserted that he was
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    innocent but failed to proffer any support for that claim. On the other hand,
    the Commonwealth produced recorded telephone conversations that the
    defendant made from jail; in the tapes, the defendant admitted that he
    killed his wife and indicated that he wanted to go to trial to tell his side of
    the story.
    The trial court denied the motion to withdraw finding that, given the
    Commonwealth’s tapes, the assertion of innocence was pretextual and
    designed      to   manipulate   the   judicial   system.   In   an   unpublished
    memorandum, we reversed based upon Commonwealth v. Katonka, 
    33 A.3d 44
    , 49 (Pa.Super. 2011) (en banc), wherein the en banc court held that
    “credibility assessments relative to a defendant's claim of innocence were
    impermissible.” 
    Id.
     Our High Court reversed the panel’s holding in Hvizda,
    noting that, under its companion decision in Carrasquillo, a bald assertion
    of innocence is no longer sufficient grounds to permit withdrawal of a guilty
    plea.     The Hvizda Court upheld the trial court’s refusal to permit the
    defendant to withdraw his guilty plea because his innocence assertion was
    implausible as it was unsupported and rebutted by the Commonwealth’s
    proof.
    In the present case, at the hearing on his pre-sentence motion to
    withdraw, Appellant offered a bald claim that he was innocent that was
    unaccompanied by assertions that he had defenses to the charges.            The
    guilty plea colloquy refuted his secondary position that he pled guilty
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    because the trial court told him that it would impose a sentence of sixty-five
    years in jail if the jury convicted him.    On the other hand, the record
    establishes that the victim testified that Appellant penetrated her vagina
    with his penis and fingers and that he placed his mouth on her vagina.
    Indeed, the present case stands in stark contrast to our recent decision in
    Commonwealth v. Islas, 
    156 A.3d 1185
     (Pa.Super. 2017), where we
    concluded that the trial court had abused its discretion in denying the
    defendant’s pre-sentence motion to withdraw his guilty plea. The defendant
    in Islas was charged with three counts of indecent assault on a camper who
    attended a camp where he was a counselor, and he pled guilty to one count.
    One month after pleading guilty and immediately after procuring a new
    lawyer, the defendant moved to withdraw his plea.
    Not only had the trial court in Islas employed the incorrect standard in
    assessing the defendant’s motion by utilizing the more-stringent rules
    applicable to post-sentence motions to withdraw, see footnote 2, supra, the
    defendant therein had offered significant support for his position that he was
    actually innocent of the charged sexual contact with the victim.           We
    observed:
    At the hearing on his motion to withdraw, Islas testified that: he
    did not engage in the charged conduct; he had maintained his
    innocence when interviewed by law enforcement; had the
    conduct occurred as alleged, it would have been witnessed by
    other campers and counselors in the cabin at the time; the
    victim had a motive to fabricate the charges; the victim had
    delayed in reporting the first incident; and Islas was of good
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    character, had no criminal record, and had never received a
    similar complaint in the many years he had been working in the
    field.
    Id. at 1191.    As those assertions constituted valid defenses against the
    charges leveled by the victim, we reversed the trial court’s denial of Islas’
    pre-sentence motion to withdraw his guilty plea.
    In this case, Appellant simply insisted that he was innocent, and
    incorrectly represented that the plea was coerced by trial-court threats to
    impose a sixty-five year jail term. The fact remains that Appellant faced 140
    years in jail, his negotiated sentence was ninety percent less, and his desire
    to avoid a more lengthy prison term is not grounds for withdrawing the plea.
    Commonwealth v. Dosch, 
    501 A.2d 667
    , 670 (Pa. 1985) (“a plea is not
    rendered involuntary merely because it is prompted by a belief that it will
    enable a defendant to obtain a more lenient sentence”); see also
    Commonwealth v. Blango, 
    150 A.3d 45
     (Pa.Super. 2016) (upholding trial
    court’s conclusion that the defendant had not leveled a plausible claim of
    innocence given Commonwealth’s evidence, and where withdrawal request
    was leveled after the defendant observed sentencing memorandum prepared
    by the Commonwealth in which it requested lengthy sentence).       Under the
    circumstances, we cannot find that the trial court abused its discretion in
    characterizing Appellant’s innocence claim as falling short of the mark under
    Carrasquillo.
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    On appeal, Appellant does not contend that he proffered defenses in
    support of his pre-sentence withdrawal such that his innocence claim should
    be considered plausible. Instead, in his brief, he relies upon certain events
    occurring at the guilty plea colloquy.   Specifically, Appellant outlines the
    portion of the colloquy where he denied that he penetrated K.I.’s vagina with
    his penis. As noted, supra, after Appellant articulated that denial, the trial
    court immediately ceased the proceeding.          It offered Appellant the
    opportunity to continue with the trial, but Appellant declined that offer. At
    that point, the trial readily could have resumed since the witness on the
    admissibility of scientific evidence was present, and the jury had been
    recessed but remained empaneled.      The guilty plea court then articulated
    that a guilty plea was the same as a guilty verdict, and Appellant entered a
    guilty plea to rape of a child. Furthermore, Appellant never balked at the
    representations that he digitally penetrated K.I. and that he placed his
    mouth on her vagina.
    Until this appeal, Appellant never asserted that this momentary denial
    of penile penetration at the guilty plea colloquy constituted a plausible pre-
    sentence claim of innocence.     It was not raised in Appellant’s letter to
    counsel, in the motion to withdraw the guilty plea, in the memorandum in
    support of that motion, or at the hearing on the pre-sentence motion to
    withdraw. This basis for withdrawal was never presented to the trial court;
    it is thus waived for purposes of this appeal. Commonwealth v. Wanner,
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    158 A.3d 714
    , 717 (Pa.Super. 2017) (defendant waived position that there
    was an affirmative defense to crime “by failing to rise it before the trial”)
    (citing Pa.R.A.P. 302(a) (“Issues not raised in the lower court are waived
    and cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.”)). “This requirement bars
    an appellant from raising a new and different theory of relief for the first
    time on appeal.”     
    Id.
     (citation and quotation marks omitted).        Since
    Appellant never asserted before the plea court that his denial of penile
    penetration at the plea colloquy was a plausible claim of innocence requiring
    grant of his pre-sentence motion to withdraw the guilty plea, it may not be
    advanced now as grounds for reversal of the decision in question.
    The plea court also concluded that Appellant’s guilty plea could not be
    withdrawn because the Commonwealth would suffer substantial prejudice
    from withdrawal.     The Commonwealth had already picked a jury and
    presented three of its witnesses, including the child victim.   In addition, a
    scientific witness had been colloquied and was present to offer additional
    testimony.    We conclude that the court’s ruling in this respect is legally
    sound.
    In Commonwealth v. Cole, 
    564 A.2d 203
     (Pa.Super. 1989), the
    Commonwealth brought a key witness from Georgia to testify against the
    defendant.    The defendant entered a guilty plea, the witness returned to
    Georgia, and before sentence was imposed, the defendant sought to retract
    his plea. We affirmed the trial court’s denial of that request. We concluded
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    that if the defendant were allowed to rescind the plea, it would have
    permitted the defendant to use his motion for the “improper purpose of
    gambling on the Commonwealth's ability to produce the witness for a second
    trial.” 
    Id. at 206
    . We observed that “[t]his is the type of prejudice to the
    Commonwealth against which the rule was intended to protect.” 
    Id.
    Similarly, in Commonwealth v. Ross, 
    447 A.2d 943
     (Pa. 1982), in a
    per curiam opinion, our Supreme Court upheld a trial court’s refusal of the
    defendant’s pre-sentence request to withdraw his guilty plea.      The court
    ruled that the “request to withdraw the plea, which had been made after the
    dismissal of numerous key Commonwealth witnesses in reliance on the plea,
    was properly denied[.]” Id.; see also Commonwealth v. Prendes, 
    97 A.3d 337
    , 353 (Pa.Super. 2014) (substantial prejudice exists if a defendant
    obtains “a full preview of the Commonwealth's evidence before deciding” to
    seek withdrawal and could engage in jury shopping if he decides the selected
    jury seems unfavorably inclined towards him).2
    ____________________________________________
    2
    In Commonwealth v. Prendes, 
    97 A.3d 337
     (Pa.Super. 2014), we
    opined that the standards applicable to post-sentence motions to withdraw a
    guilty plea, see footnote 2, supra, should be applied when a negotiated
    guilty plea has been entered. We stated therein:
    If the appellant knows the only possible sentence he can get for
    the crime to which he pled guilty, then any pre-sentence motion
    to withdraw the plea is akin to a post-sentence motion to
    withdraw the plea, and the “manifest injustice” standard will
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    In this case, three witnesses had already testified.         The guilty plea
    colloquy indicates that the Commonwealth also had another witness present
    who was going to offer testimony on scientific evidence when Appellant
    elected to tender a guilty plea.          Hence, we cannot conclude that the trial
    court abused its discretion in finding that the Commonwealth would be
    substantially prejudiced if Appellant were permitted to enter his guilty plea.
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    apply to the pre-sentence motion. Commonwealth v. Lesko,
    
    502 Pa. 511
    , 517, 
    467 A.2d 307
    , 310 (1983).
    Id. at 352.
    In Lesko, our Supreme Court ruled that it was proper to utilize the
    manifest injustice standard in assessing whether a pre-sentence motion to
    withdraw should be granted when the plea agreement includes a negotiated
    sentence. Lesko, however, was overruled in Commonwealth v. Hvizda,
    
    116 A.3d 1103
    , 1106 (2015), wherein our High Court announced: “we
    disapprove Lesko's idiosyncratic approach to presentence withdrawal.”
    Since Prendes relied upon Lesko for the stated proposition and since
    Lesko was subsequently overruled by Hvizda, we cannot utilize the
    manifest injustice standard in assessing the validity of Appellant’s guilty
    plea.   This Court has previously reached the same conclusion in two
    unpublished memoranda.       See Commonwealth v. Wright, 
    2016 WL 7079767
     (Pa.Super. 2016); Commonwealth v. Cross, 
    2015 WL 6114603
    ,
    (Pa.Super. 2015).
    Additionally, in Commonwealth v. Islas, 
    156 A.3d 1185
     (Pa.Super.
    2017), we observed that the Prendes Court indicated that a bald assertion
    of innocence constituted a fair and just reason to permit pre-sentence
    withdrawal of a guilty plea. This precept was, of course, abrogated by
    Carrasquillo and Hvizda after Prendes was decided
    Nevertheless, the Prendes ruling remains undisturbed on the question
    of whether the Commonwealth is prejudiced when a defendant seeks to
    withdraw a guilty plea after the Commonwealth has presented its case.
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    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 8/10/2017
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Document Info

Docket Number: Com. v. Baez, J. No. 199 EDA 2016

Citation Numbers: 169 A.3d 35, 2017 Pa. Super. 258, 2017 WL 3428847, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 604

Judges: Bowes, Solano, Platt

Filed Date: 8/10/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/26/2024