Passarella, W. v. PBPP ( 2019 )


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  •               IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    William Passarella,                      :
    Petitioner            :
    :   No. 146 C.D. 2019
    v.                           :
    :   Submitted: July 12, 2019
    Pennsylvania Board of Probation          :
    and Parole,                              :
    Respondent              :
    BEFORE:     HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    OPINION BY
    JUDGE McCULLOUGH                                          FILED: August 29, 2019
    William Passarella petitions for review of a January 16, 2019 decision of
    the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole (Board) denying his request for
    administrative relief and affirming its June 4, 2018 decision to recommit Passarella as
    a convicted parole violator (CPV). In these decisions, the Board revoked sentencing
    credit that Passarella received for days spent in good standing at liberty on parole,
    otherwise known as “street time,” that it had previously awarded him in a prior
    recommitment as a technical parole violator (TPV).
    Factual and Procedural Background
    Passarella was found guilty of aggravated assault, two counts of access
    device fraud, and identity theft and was sentenced to a term of incarceration of three
    years and one month to seven years. (Certified Record (C.R.) at 1.) Passarella’s
    minimum sentence date was November 10, 2015, and his maximum sentence date was
    October 10, 2019. 
    Id. Passarella was
    paroled on October 3, 2016, and, as a condition of his
    parole, was required to reside at the Gaudenzia Community Corrections Residence
    (Gaudenzia) in Philadelphia. (C.R. at 1-2.) On January 13, 2017, Passarella left
    Gaudenzia and failed to return. (C.R. at 25.) On January 28, 2017, the Board issued a
    warrant to commit and detain Passarella. (C.R. at 6.) Passarella was arrested by the
    Haverford Police Department that same day. (C.R. at 25.)
    In February 2017, Passarella was provided a notice of charges and
    hearing, informing him that he was being charged with multiple technical parole
    violations. (C.R. at 19-20.) Passarella signed a waiver of his right to a violation hearing
    and admitted to violating the conditions of his parole. (C.R. at 7.) The Board issued a
    decision on June 15, 2017, recommitting Passarella as a TPV for leaving his district
    without permission, changing his residence without permission, and failing to
    successfully complete the Gaudenzia program. (C.R. at 28-30.) The Board extended
    Passarella’s maximum sentence date to October 25, 2019, to account for the 15 days
    he spent in delinquency. (C.R. 26-30.) In making the new computation, the Board
    credited Passarella for the 102 days of street time that he spent in good standing before
    absconding. 
    Id. Following the
    recalculation, Passarella had 819 days remaining on his
    sentence. 
    Id. Meanwhile, in
    the interval before the Board adjudicated Passarella a TPV,
    Passarella was charged in Delaware County for the crimes of access device fraud,
    receiving stolen property, and theft of services. (C.R. at 72-85, 91.) These charges
    stemmed from Passarella’s conduct during the 15-day period when he was delinquent
    on parole. 
    Id. 2 On
    July 28, 2017, Passarella was released on reparole to the Gaudenzia
    program. (C.R. at 36-39.) However, Passarella failed to report to Gaudenzia that day
    as instructed. (C.R. at 60.) Thereafter, on August 28, 2017, the Board issued a warrant
    to commit and detain Passarella and Board agents arrested him that same day. (C.R. at
    44, 60.) In September 2017, the Board again charged Passarella with multiple technical
    violations of his parole and Passarella waived his right to a violation hearing and
    admitted to violating the technical conditions of his parole. (C.R. at 45, 54-55.) The
    Board issued a decision on October 6, 2017, recommitting Passarella as a TPV for
    leaving his district without permission, changing his residence without permission,
    failing to successfully complete the Gaudenzia program, and failing to take
    psychotropic medication as prescribed by his doctor. (C.R. at 68-70.) The Board also
    extended Passarella’s maximum sentence date to November 25, 2019, to account for
    the 31 days he was delinquent on parole.         (C.R. at 61.)    Thus, following the
    recalculation, Passarella still had 819 days remaining on his sentence.
    Subsequently, on January 10, 2018, Passarella pled guilty to the Delaware
    County charges of access device fraud, receiving stolen property, and theft of services
    and was sentenced by the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas to a term of 6
    months to 24 months. (C.R. at 71, 80-81.) In February 2018, the Board provided
    Passarella with a notice of charges and hearing regarding the revocation of his parole
    for having new criminal convictions. (C.R. at 87.) Passarella waived his right to a
    revocation hearing and admitted to the new criminal convictions. (C.R. at 95.) By
    decision issued June 4, 2018, the Board recommitted Passarella as a CPV, to serve 12
    months of backtime. (C.R. at 108-109.) The Board also recalculated Passarella’s
    maximum sentence date to July 19, 2020. 
    Id. To calculate
    Passarella’s new maximum
    sentence date, the Board revoked the 102 days of street time it had previously awarded
    3
    him in connection with his recommitment as a TPV and added these days to the 819
    days left remaining on his sentence. See C.R. at 106. This meant that after the
    recalculation, Passarella had a total of 921 days remaining on his sentence. 
    Id. Passarella filed
    an administrative remedies form in response to the
    Board’s June 4, 2018 decision. (C.R. at 110.) In the “Administrative Appeal” section
    of the form, Passarella checked the box titled “Recommitment Challenge (Time/term
    given by Board, automatic reparole, return to custody, etc.),” and provided the
    following written explanation: “Custody return should be August 28, 2017, and not
    January 10, 2018; maximum sentence improperly re-computed.” 
    Id. Further, in
    the
    section of the form titled, “Petition for Administrative Review (appeal of a revocation
    decision regarding sentence calculations),” Passarella checked the box titled “Sentence
    Credit Challenge,” and provided the following explanation: “Not given credit for time
    served exclusively pursuant to board warrant; not given credit for all periods of
    incarceration on this sentence.” Id.1
    On January 16, 2019, the Board mailed its response to Passarella’s
    administrative appeal, affirming its decision.              The Board explained that when
    Passarella was paroled on July 28, 2017, he had a total of 819 days remaining on his
    sentence. (Board decision at 1.) The Board noted that its decision to recommit
    Passarella as a CPV “authorized the recalculation of [his] sentence to reflect that [he]
    receive no credit for the time [he was] at liberty on parole.” 
    Id. The Board
    decided not
    to award Passarella “credit for time at liberty on parole from October 3, 2016 to January
    13, 2017 (102 days).” 
    Id. The Board
    explained that “[a]dding this time together
    1
    We note that although Passarella argued in his administrative remedies form that the Board
    used the wrong return to custody date when calculating his maximum sentence and that he had not
    been given credit on his original sentence for time in which he was incarcerated exclusively pursuant
    to the Board’s warrant, Passarella has not raised this issue or argument in his brief filed with this
    Court.
    4
    mean[t] [he] still had a total of 921 days remaining on [his] sentence based on [his]
    recommitment.” 
    Id. Further, the
    Board found that Passarella did not post bail after he
    was arrested for the Delaware County criminal charges and that he had been sentenced
    on January 10, 2018, to a new term of state confinement. 
    Id. The Board
    noted that
    “[b]ased on these facts, [it] did not award backtime credit,” meaning he “had a total of
    921 days remaining on [his] original sentence.” 
    Id. The Board
    determined that
    Passarella did not become available to commence serving his original sentence until
    January 10, 2018, when he was sentenced on the Delaware County convictions, and
    that adding 921 days to this date resulted in a new maximum sentence date of July 19,
    2020. (Board decision at 2.)
    Discussion
    On appeal,2 the sole issue raised by Passarella is that the Board abused its
    discretion by failing to give him credit for all time spent in good standing on parole
    and, thus, improperly recomputed his maximum sentence. Passarella argues that
    pursuant to Penjuke v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, 
    203 A.3d 401
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019) (holding that when the Board recommits a CPV, it cannot revoke
    credit that a parolee was granted in a previous parole that resulted in recommitment as
    a TPV), petition for allowance of appeal pending (Pa., No. 92 EAL 2019, filed March
    1, 2019), when the Board recalculated his maximum sentence following his
    recommitment as a CPV it was prohibited from revoking the 102 days of street time it
    previously awarded him when he was recommitted as a TPV. In response, the Board
    2
    Our scope of review is limited to determining whether constitutional rights were violated,
    whether the decision was in accordance with the law, or whether the necessary findings of fact were
    supported by substantial evidence. Kerak v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, 
    153 A.3d 1134
    , 1138 n.9 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016).
    5
    argues that Passarella waived this issue and that Penjuke should not be applied
    retroactively.
    A. Statutory and Legal Background
    Initially, we note that under section 6138(a)(2) of the Pennsylvania
    Prisons and Parole Code (Code), where the Board decides to recommit a parolee as a
    CPV, “the parolee shall be reentered to serve the remainder of the term which the
    parolee would have been compelled to serve had the parole not been granted and,
    except as provided under paragraph (2.1), shall be given no credit for the time at liberty
    on parole.” 61 Pa.C.S. §6138(a)(2). Section 6138(a)(2.1) of the Code, which was
    added to the Code by the Act of July 5, 2012, P.L. 1050, states that with the exception
    of certain violent crimes, “[t]he Board may, in its discretion, award credit to a parolee
    recommitted [as a CPV] for the time spent at liberty on parole.”              61 Pa.C.S.
    §6138(a)(2.1) (emphasis added). Conversely, section 6138(c)(2) of the Code provides
    that “[i]f the parolee is recommitted under this subsection [as a TPV], the parolee shall
    be given credit for the time served on parole in good standing but with no credit for
    delinquent time and may be reentered to serve the remainder of the original sentence
    or sentences.” 61 Pa.C.S. §6138(c)(2) (emphasis added).
    In Penjuke, the parolee spent 793 days on parole in good standing before
    being declared 
    delinquent. 203 A.3d at 404
    . When the Board recommitted Penjuke as
    a TPV, it did not add the 793 days he spent in good standing to his maximum sentence
    date. 
    Id. After Penjuke
    was reparoled, he was convicted of several crimes and
    recommitted as a CPV. 
    Id. In recalculating
    Penjuke’s maximum sentence date
    following his recommitment as a CPV, the Board revoked the credit for the 793 days
    6
    he had been awarded in his prior recommitment as a TPV and added that amount to his
    maximum sentence date. 
    Id. We noted
    that the General Assembly amended the Code to add section
    6138(a)(2.1) in 2012 and that, in doing so, “the General Assembly, for the first time in
    the history of the [Code], vested the Board with discretion to grant a CPV with credit
    for time spent at liberty on parole.” 
    Penjuke, 203 A.3d at 409
    . We explained that in
    stark contrast to the former section of the Code, “a parolee who is recommitted as a
    CPV no longer forfeit[ed], automatically and unconditionally, credit for days spent
    during the parole period in which the crime was committed.” 
    Id. at 408-09.
    Therefore,
    we concluded that the 2012 amendment rendered earlier precedent interpreting the
    former section of the Code of little value. 
    Id. at 411-13.
                 Turning to the current iteration of the Code, we explained that “the clauses
    ‘had the parole not been granted’ and ‘at liberty on parole’ in section 6138(a)(2) cannot
    reasonably be interpreted to permit the Board to go beyond the ‘parole period’
    mentioned in that section, which is couched solely in relation and reference to the
    ‘parolee’s recommitment’ as a CPV.” 
    Penjuke, 203 A.3d at 415
    (quoting 61 Pa.C.S.
    §6138(a)(2)). We held that the clause “shall be given no credit” applied “only to the
    single and specific period of parole that led to recommitment as a CPV.” 
    Id. We also
    explained that “section 6138(c)(2) positively states that a TPV ‘shall be given credit
    for the time served on parole in good standing,’” and that “[t]hrough this directive of
    the General Assembly, the Board has no choice over the matter and must grant credit
    to the parolee who is recommitted as a TPV.” 
    Penjuke, 203 A.3d at 416
    (emphasis
    added) (quoting 61 Pa.C.S. §6138(c)(2)). Consequently, we determined that “the
    General Assembly [had] not entrusted the Board with the authority to revoke sentence
    credit granted by section 6138(c)(2) of the [Code].” 
    Penjuke, 203 A.3d at 417
    .
    7
    In sum, we held that “the only time that remains eligible for forfeiture for
    a parolee recommitted as a CPV is the limited period of ‘time that falls between the
    parolee’s most recent reparole and his recommitment.’”          
    Id. (quoting Young
    v.
    Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, 
    189 A.3d 16
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018), appeal
    granted, 
    200 A.3d 5
    (Pa. 2019)). We further concluded that “in recommitting Penjuke
    as a CPV, the Board could not reach back . . . into the past periods of parole and also
    take away or revoke credit that was previously granted to Penjuke as a TPV—credit
    which . . . should have already been applied to his original sentence.” 
    Penjuke, 203 A.3d at 417
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Because “the Board lacks the statutory
    authority to revoke street time credit previously granted to a parolee as a TPV when it
    subsequently recommits the parolee as a CPV,” we decided that the Board erred when
    it revoked the 793 days of good standing street time that Penjuke had acquired in the
    parole period leading to his recommitment as a TPV. 
    Id. at 420.
    B. Waiver
    Turning to the instant matter, we first address the Board’s waiver
    argument. The Board argues that Passarella waived his claim that he is entitled to credit
    for the 102 days he was on parole by failing to raise the issue in his petition for
    administrative review. The Board contends that the claim is waived pursuant to both
    section 703(a) of the Administrative Agency Law, 2 Pa.C.S. §703(a) (providing that a
    party may not raise upon appeal any question not raised before the agency), and Rule
    1551(a) of the Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure, Pa.R.A.P. 1551(a)
    (providing that “no question shall be heard or considered by the court which was not
    raised before the government unit”). The Board argues that Passarella waived the
    argument that the Board failed to provide him 102 days of street time credit for the
    8
    period from October 3, 2016, to January 13, 2017, when he was in good standing on
    parole because his petition for administrative review failed to raise this issue.
    Here, on the administrative remedies form, Passarella checked the box
    titled “Recommitment Challenge (Time/term given by Board, automatic reparole,
    return to custody, etc.).” (C.R. at 110.) Passarella also provided the following written
    explanation: “Custody return should be August 28, 2017, and not January 10, 2018;
    maximum sentence improperly recomputed.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    By stating that
    his maximum sentence was improperly recomputed, Passarella put the Board on notice
    that he challenged the calculation of his maximum sentence date, including the
    forfeiture of 102 days of street time. While Passarella may not have explicitly stated
    that he was challenging the Board’s forfeiture of his previous street time credit, this
    issue was subsumed within the issue of whether the Board improperly recomputed his
    maximum sentence. In fact, based on the detailed explanation in the Board’s decision
    for revoking Passarella’s 102 days of street time, the Board appears to have assumed
    that Passarella challenged the forfeiture of the same. Accordingly, we conclude that
    Passarella preserved the street time credit revocation issue for our review.3
    3
    However, even if Passarella had failed to raise the issue in his administrative appeals form,
    we would still conclude that an exception to the general waiver rule applies. Section 703 of the
    Administrative Agency Law provides that a party may not raise any issue in an appeal that was not
    raised before an agency “unless allowed by the court upon due cause shown.” 2 Pa.C.S. §703(a).
    Further, Rule 1551(a) of the Rules of Appellate Procedure provides, in part, that “[n]o question shall
    be heard or considered by the court which was not raised before the government unit except . . .
    [q]uestions which the court is satisfied that the petitioner could not by the exercise of due diligence
    have raised before the government unit.” Pa.R.A.P. 1551(a) (emphasis added). In Penjuke, we held
    for the first time that when the Board recommits a parolee as a CPV, it cannot revoke credit that the
    parolee was previously granted in a previous parole that resulted in recommitment as a 
    TPV. 203 A.3d at 420
    . Penjuke, however, was issued after Passarella had already submitted his administrative
    remedies form. Thus, even if Passarella had not raised the forfeiture of his street time credit in his
    administrative remedies form, because this Court issued its new rule of law regarding street time
    credit after Passarella already submitted his form, we would conclude that Passarella “could not by
    9
    C. Retroactivity
    The Board next argues that, even if the street credit issue is not deemed
    waived, Penjuke should not be applied retroactively to Passarella’s case. The Board
    argues that, in determining whether a new decision should be applied retroactively,
    Pennsylvania courts employ a three-factor test that examines (1) the purpose of the new
    rule; (2) the extent of reliance by courts and litigants upon the old rule; and (3) the
    effect the new rule will have on the fair administration of justice. The Board argues
    that under the previous rule, requiring parolees to forfeit credit previously spent on
    parole acted as a strong deterrent to prevent parolees from returning to criminal
    behavior while enjoying the conditional liberty of parole. Because the old rule was
    heavily relied upon by the Board for nearly four decades and Penjuke was a “sea
    change” in the law, the Board maintains that it should not be applied retroactively.
    (Board’s Br. at 13.)
    Regarding retroactivity, “[t]he general rule in Pennsylvania is that
    appellate courts apply the law in effect at the time of appellate review.” Passarello v.
    Grumbine, 
    87 A.3d 285
    , 307 (Pa. 2014). Thus, “we adhere to the principle that a party
    whose case is pending on direct appeal is entitled to the benefit of changes in law which
    occur[] before the judgment becomes final.” Id.; see also Fetherman v. Department of
    the exercise of due diligence have raised” the issue before the Board, Pa.R.A.P. 1551(a), and also that
    he had “due cause,” 2 Pa. C.S. §703(a), for not raising the issue sooner and, therefore, that he could
    raise the issue for the first time on appeal to this Court. See, e.g., Thompson v. Workers’
    Compensation Appeal Board (Exelon Corp.), 
    168 A.3d 408
    , 412 n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017) (concluding
    that because a court decision issuing a new rule of law was not issued until after the claimant had
    already appealed, claimant was permitted, pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1551(a), to raise the issue affected
    by the new rule of law for the first time on appeal to this Court); Heugel v. Workers’ Compensation
    Appeal Board (U.S. Airways) (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 703 C.D. 2016, filed January 12, 2017), slip op. at
    7-8 (same). Pursuant to this Court’s Internal Operating Procedures, an unreported opinion of the
    Court filed after January 15, 2008, may be cited for its persuasive value. 210 Pa. Code §69.414(a).
    10
    Transportation, Bureau of Driver Licensing, 
    167 A.3d 846
    , 854 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017)
    (same). However, the Supreme Court has cautioned against applying this general rule
    “rotely.” 
    Passarello, 87 A.3d at 307
    . Instead, “whether a judicial decision should
    apply retroactively is a matter of judicial discretion to be decided on a case-by-case
    basis.” 
    Id. To determine
    whether a decision announcing a new rule of law should be
    applied retroactively, the court should “consider whether: (1) retroactive effect will
    further or hinder the purpose of the new rule; (2) the parties will be unfairly prejudiced
    because they relied on the old rule; and (3) giving the new rule retroactive effect will
    detrimentally affect the administration of justice.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
                 It is beyond cavil that Penjuke announced a new rule of law, holding for
    the first time that when the Board recommits a parolee as a CPV, it cannot revoke credit
    that the parolee was granted in a previous parole that resulted in recommitment as a
    TPV. Employing the retroactivity test in the instant matter, we first observe that the
    purpose of our decision in Penjuke was to ensure this Court’s fidelity to the language
    of the amended Code and the General Assembly’s intent in enacting the amendments.
    Because “the 2012 Amendment destabilize[d] the raison d’être that once constituted
    and sustained the considered judgment of our precedent,” we were willing to overturn
    our earlier decisions interpreting former section 6138 of the Code. 
    Penjuke, 203 A.3d at 414
    . Since the purpose of Penjuke was to interpret the 2012 amendments to the
    Code, we can discern little to no utility in adhering to overturned precedent that relied
    on an obsolete version of the Code. Applying the new rule of law from Penjuke
    retroactively furthers the purpose of the new rule by guaranteeing that the 2012
    amendments are correctly interpreted with respect to parole revocations and the
    granting of credit for street time that is accumulated during a parole period that results
    in recommitment as a TPV.
    11
    As for the second factor of the retroactivity test, i.e., “whether the parties
    will be unfairly prejudiced because they relied on the old rule,” 
    Passarello, 87 A.3d at 307
    , the Board argues that the old rule was heavily relied on by the Board and this
    Court for nearly four decades. While it is true that the old rule was longstanding, our
    Supreme Court has noted that, in assessing parties’ reliance on a prior rule of law, a
    court may balance “the relative hardships that would be imposed upon the respective
    parties.” Dercoli v. Pennsylvania National Mutual Insurance, 
    554 A.2d 906
    , 910 (Pa.
    1989). Specifically, a court may weigh whether the hardships imposed upon those who
    relied upon the prior precedent are less than or greater than “the hardships that would
    inure to those who would remain saddled with a bad precedent under a prospective
    overruling only. . . [T]he outworn precedent may be so badly worn that whatever
    reliance it engendered would hardly be worthy of protection.” 
    Id. Here, although
    the hardship faced by the Board in having to change its
    longstanding practice should not be discounted, any hardship faced by the Board in
    retroactively applying the new rule is undoubtedly less than that faced by parolees.
    This is because, by only applying the new rule prospectively, a parolee who was
    recommitted as a CPV before the new rule was issued “would remain saddled with
    [the] bad precedent” of losing credit previously awarded as a result of recommitment
    as a TPV, which ultimately would result in a longer incarceration period. 
    Id. Because the
    possibility of a longer and unnecessary incarceration period is a greater hardship
    than any inconvenience faced in applying a new law, we conclude that the Board will
    not be unfairly prejudiced by its prior reliance on the old law.
    Finally, we address whether “giving the new rule retroactive effect will
    detrimentally affect the administration of justice.” 
    Passarello, 87 A.3d at 307
    . The
    Board argues that if the new rule of law is given retroactive application it will
    12
    overwhelm the Board and this Court “with an immense flood of litigation,” because
    “[i]t would allow countless [CPVs] to challenge the Board’s decisions to deny them
    credit for prior periods of parole they spent at liberty on parole.” (Board’s Br. at 14.)
    The Board asserts that this would further result in a large number of defense counsel
    seeking to withdraw from litigation brought by CPVs seeking to challenge decisions of
    the Board.
    While we understand the Board’s concerns, we find them unpersuasive.
    Passarella’s case was on appeal to this Court at the time Penjuke was decided. The
    general rule is that we apply the law in effect at the time of appellate review, meaning
    that “a party whose case is pending on direct appeal is entitled to the changes in the
    law which occur before final judgment.” 
    Passarello, 87 A.3d at 307
    . We see no reason
    to deviate from the general rule here.4 Although the Board argues that applying
    Penjuke retroactively to Passarella’s situation will result in a flood of litigation, our
    decision to apply the general retroactivity rule only affects cases with similar
    procedural situations; i.e., those cases still pending on appeal to this Court since
    Penjuke was decided, which represent a relatively finite number of cases. See, e.g.,
    Dana Holding Corporation v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Smuck), 
    195 A.3d 635
    , 641 & n.9 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018) (applying general retroactivity rule only to
    those cases still being actively litigated at the time the new rule of law was issued and
    not deciding whether the new law applied to other factual scenarios not before the
    Court). Thus, because we conclude that applying Penjuke to cases pending on appeal
    4
    In fact, in the unreported decision of Zalewski v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and
    Parole (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 836 C.D. 2018, filed February 26, 2018), slip op. at 7, we noted that
    although the Board had revoked a parolee’s time earned on parole as a TPV before our decision in
    Penjuke, because that case was decided while the parolee’s case was pending on direct appeal to this
    Court the parolee was entitled to the benefit of changes in the law occurring before final judgment.
    13
    since it was decided will not detrimentally affect the administration of justice, we will
    apply Penjuke to the instant case.
    D. Application of Penjuke
    Turning to the merits, we first observe that the Board does not attempt to
    argue that, in the event we apply Penjuke, the Board should not have revoked credit for
    good standing on parole that Passarella earned in his previous recommitment as a TPV.
    As discussed, when the Board recommitted Passarella as a TPV on June 15, 2017, it
    initially awarded him credit for the 102 days he spent at liberty on parole from October
    3, 2016 to January 13, 2017, when recalculating his maximum sentence date. After
    Passarella was given credit for the 102 days, he had 819 days remaining on his
    sentence. However, when the Board later recommitted Passarella as a CPV on June 4,
    2018, it revoked the 102 days of street time it had previously awarded him, thus, adding
    102 days to his maximum sentence date. See C.R. at 106. Accordingly, after being
    recommitted as a CPV, Passarella had a total of 921 days remaining on his sentence,
    instead of 819 days.
    Penjuke held that under Section 6138(c)(2) of the Code, the Board must
    grant credit for time served on parole in good standing to a parolee who is recommitted
    as a TPV. 
    Penjuke, 203 A.3d at 416
    . Further, Penjuke held that when recommitting a
    parolee as a CPV, the Board may not “reach back” into past periods of parole and take
    away or revoke credit that was previously granted to a parolee as a TPV. 
    Id. at 416.
    Here, however, the Board did just that. Under Penjuke, the Board was not permitted
    to “reach back” and revoke the 102 days it previously awarded to Passarella as a TPV
    when recommitting him as a CPV.
    14
    Conclusion
    Because the Board erred in revoking the 102 days of street time credit it
    previously awarded to Passarella as a TPV, we reverse this portion of the Board’s order
    and remand for the Board to reinstate the 102 days of credit and recalculate Passarella’s
    maximum sentence date to account for this time.
    ________________________________
    PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    15
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    William Passarella,                      :
    Petitioner            :
    :    No. 146 C.D. 2019
    v.                           :
    :
    Pennsylvania Board of Probation          :
    and Parole,                              :
    Respondent              :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 29th day of August, 2019, the January 16, 2019
    decision of the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole (Board) is reversed to
    the extent that it revoked 102 days of street time credit it previously awarded to
    William Passarella (Passarella) as a technical parole violator.     The matter is
    remanded to the Board to reinstate the 102 days of credit to Passarella and issue a
    new adjudication that makes the necessary adjustment to Passarella’s maximum
    sentence date.
    Jurisdiction relinquished.
    ________________________________
    PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    William Passarella,                       :
    Petitioner      :
    :
    v.                     :
    :
    Pennsylvania Board of Probation           :
    and Parole,                               :   No. 146 C.D. 2019
    Respondent        :   Submitted: July 12, 2019
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    DISSENTING OPINION
    BY JUDGE COVEY                                        FILED: August 29, 2019
    For the reasons set forth in the dissenting opinion in Penjuke v.
    Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, 
    203 A.3d 401
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019), in
    which I joined, I respectfully dissent here since the Majority relies on Penjuke.
    __________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 146 C.D. 2019

Judges: McCullough, J. ~ Dissenting Opinion by Covey, J.

Filed Date: 8/29/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/29/2019