Com. v. Smith, L. ( 2015 )


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  • J-S19001-15
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    LEE SMITH
    Appellant               No. 2509 EDA 2012
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered July 31, 2012
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Criminal Division at Nos: CP-51-CR-0014959-2008 and CP-51-CR0014960-
    2008
    BEFORE: STABILE, JENKINS, and MUSMANNO, JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.:                            FILED JUNE 23, 2015
    Appellant, Lee Smith, appeals from the July 31, 2012 judgment of
    sentence imposing consecutive sentences of twenty to forty years of
    incarceration for two counts of attempted first-degree murder1 and a
    consecutive sentence of ten to twenty years of incarceration for burglary. 2
    We affirm.
    The trial court summarized the pertinent facts in its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a)
    opinion:
    On the evening of August 21, 2008, Complainant Sierra
    Richards [(“Richards”)] resided with her cousin, Lechole Brame,
    ____________________________________________
    1
    18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 901 and 2502(a).
    2
    18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3502.
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    and Brame’s mother at 3470 Joyce Street, Philadelphia, PA.
    Richards and her friend, Complainant Gary Montgomery,
    [(“Montgomery”)] were asleep in Richards’ second floor bedroom
    and Appellant unlawfully entered the home and shot the
    complainants multiple times.
    […]
    Richards testified that she was awakened when she felt the
    first gunshot to her stomach and that she then jumped up
    screaming. She stated Montgomery jumped up and asked what
    was wrong whereupon she looked into the hallway and that she
    observed Appellant continue to shot [sic] multiple times.
    Richards got up and, leaning on the wall for support, walked to
    her cousin’s front bedroom. Brame asked Richards about the
    gunshots and Richards told her Appellant shot her. Richards
    then became unconscious. Brame called police. Brame’s mother
    then observed that Montgomery had also been shot and he
    confirmed that to her. Richards explained that she and Appellant
    were in the process of ending a romantic relationship and that
    she was still seeing him on occasion.
    Debra Thompson, another cousin of Richards, testified and
    described the relationship between Appellant and Richards. She
    stated that in April of 2008, while Appellant, Richards and
    Thompson were at a bar located 32nd [sic] and York Streets,
    Philadelphia, PA, she observed Appellant assault Complainant
    Richards. She testified:
    Well, I seen my little cousin balled up on the
    steps and screaming, ‘Please don’t hit he [sic],
    please don’t hit me, please don’t hit me again,
    please don’t hit me, please don’t hit me.’ And I said,
    ‘Lee, don’t hit my cousin no more.’ I said, ‘Lee,
    don’t hit my cousin no more. That’s what I said.
    And he hit her again. And I jumped. I went to get
    my little cousin. And when I went and got my little
    cousin, he her [sic] again. That’s when I jumped
    over her and jumped on him. You know it’s true. I
    jumped on him and I got a scratch right here. My
    little cousin was laying in nothing but blood. She
    was saying, ‘Oh my goodness, Debra, help me, help
    me, help me, help me.’
    [Quoting N.T. Trial, 4/20/12, at 38].
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    Thompson further testified that she was with Appellant on
    the evening immediately prior to the shooting. She stated that
    she and Montgomery were outside when Appellant arrived and
    asked to speak with Montgomery. After the conversation she
    got into Appellant’s car and observed that Appellant was enraged
    and that he stated to her that Richards had betrayed him.
    Montgomery testified that in that conversation he had with
    Appellant, Appellant assured Montgomery that Richards wanted
    to be with Montgomery, and that was alright with Appellant.
    Trial Court Opinion, 1/18/13, at 2-3 (record citations omitted).
    On April 17, 2012, the trial court conducted a hearing on Appellant’s
    motion in limine to exclude evidence. The Commonwealth’s notice of intent
    to present prior acts evidence, per Pa.R.E. 404(b) prompted Appellant’s
    motion.   The Commonwealth explained its intent to offer the testimony of
    the female victim, Richards, concerning Appellant’s abuse of her during the
    spring and summer leading up to the shooting:
    It would be her testimony that she starting in really May of
    2008, leading to August of 2008, that summer, he had just
    routinely and consistently terrorized her emotionally and
    verbally, but seriously hurt her leading up to the time when he
    tried to take her life. He broke her jaw, literally, hi [sic] within
    weeks of this shooting. He punched her in the face repeatedly.
    Judge, in the time when he broke her jaw, that was April of
    2008.
    […]
    Prior to the shooting there was an argument that they had
    that [Appellant] told her that he was not going to be broken up
    with. This is not something that was going to happen to him,
    and he let her know that. Then within hours he come over and
    shot her repeatedly, along with the boyfriend who slept in bed.
    N.T. Motion, 4/17/14, at 5-7. Appellant’s counsel argued the prior bad acts
    evidence was irrelevant and more unfairly prejudicial than probative, but
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    counsel acknowledged he would present an identity defense.           
    Id. at 8-10.
    The trial court held the prior acts evidence admissible. 
    Id. at 11.
    After a seven-day trial, the jury found Appellant guilty of the
    aforementioned counts of attempted first-degree murder and burglary, as
    well as two counts of aggravated assault and one count of possessing an
    instrument of crime.3       The trial court imposed sentence on July 31, 2012.
    Appellant filed this timely appeal on August 15, 2012. This Court dismissed
    the appeal for failure to file a brief on April 10, 2013. One week later, on
    April 17, 2013, we granted Appellant’s motion to reinstate the appeal and for
    appointment of new counsel.            We remanded to the trial court to permit
    Appellant to file a supplemental Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement and instructed
    the trial court to prepare a supplemental opinion.        The trial court filed its
    supplemental opinion on September 12, 2014.
    Appellant asserts two trial court errors.      First, Appellant argues the
    trial court erred in admitting Richards’ testimony about Appellant’s prior
    assaults.4     Second, Appellant argues the trial court erred in denying
    Appellant’s motion for a mistrial after Debra Thompson (“Thompson”)
    testified that Richards refused to go to the hospital after the prior assault,
    ____________________________________________
    3
    18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2702 and 907, respectively.
    4
    Appellant’s motion in limine pertained only to Richards’ testimony.
    Appellant objected at trial to Thompson’s prior acts testimony. In his brief,
    Appellant argues without specificity against the admission of all prior acts
    evidence.
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    claiming Appellant said he would kill her if she did so.         The trial court
    sustained Appellant’s objection to that portion of Thompson’s testimony and
    ordered it stricken from the record, but the court declined to declare a
    mistrial. We will address these issues in turn.
    Appellant’s first argument implicates the trial court’s evidentiary ruling.
    We therefore review the trial court’s order for an abuse of discretion.
    Commonwealth v. Miles, 
    846 A.2d 132
    , 136 (Pa. Super. 2004), appeal
    dismissed, 
    871 A.2d 1248
    (Pa. 2005). An abuse of discretion occurs where
    “the law is overridden or misapplied, or the judgment exercised is manifestly
    unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill-will, as shown
    by the evidence or the record.”      Commonwealth v. Busanet, 
    817 A.2d 1060
    , 1076 (Pa. 2002), cert. denied, 
    540 U.S. 869
    (2003).
    The Commonwealth introduced the prior acts evidence pursuant to
    Rule 404(b) of the Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence:
    (a) Character Evidence.
    (1) Prohibited Uses. Evidence of a person’s character
    or character trait is not admissible to prove that on a
    particular occasion the person acted in accordance with the
    character or trait.
    […]
    (b) Crimes, Wrongs or Other Acts.
    (1) Prohibited Uses. Evidence of a crime, wrong, or
    other act is not admissible to prove a person’s character in
    order to show that on a particular occasion the person
    acted in accordance with the character.
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    (2) Permitted Uses.         This evidence may be
    admissible for another purpose, such as proving motive,
    opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity,
    absence of mistake, or lack of accident. In a criminal case
    this evidence is admissible only if the probative value of
    the evidence outweighs its potential for unfair prejudice.
    (3) Notice in a Criminal Case. In a criminal case the
    prosecutor must provide reasonable notice in advance of
    trial, or during trial if the court excuses pretrial notice on
    good cause shown, of the general nature of any such
    evidence the prosecutor intends to introduce at trial.
    Pa.R.E. 404(a), (b). “The Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable
    doubt that a defendant has committed the particular crime of which he is
    accused, and it may not strip him of the presumption of innocence by
    proving that he has committed other criminal acts.”      Commonwealth v.
    Ross, 
    57 A.3d 85
    , 98-99 (Pa. Super. 2012) (en banc).
    Pursuant to Rule 404(b), the Commonwealth must establish a
    legitimate purpose for the prior acts evidence. One such legitimate purpose
    is to establish motive. In Commonwealth v. Albrecht, 
    511 A.2d 764
    (Pa.
    1986), cert. denied, 
    480 U.S. 951
    (1987), our Supreme Court upheld the
    trial court’s admission of the perpetrator’s persistent abuse of his wife,
    whom he eventually murdered.      The Court wrote:     “the trial court ruling
    admitting evidence of Appellant’s actions towards his wife for a period of
    seven months prior to the house burning was proper as it went to showing
    his ill-will and malice towards her, establishing homicidal motive, and
    culminated in murdering her.” 
    Id. at 772.
    Similarly the Supreme Court in
    Commonwealth v. Drumheller, 
    808 A.2d 893
    (Pa. 2002), cert. denied,
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    539 U.S. 919
    (2003), held that a thirty-four month history of abusive
    conduct “shows the chain of events that formed the history of the case, is
    part of the natural development of the case, and demonstrates [the
    defendant’s] motive, malice, intent, and ill-will toward [the murder victim].”
    
    Id. at 905.
    The instant record indicates Appellant abused Richards on several
    occasions in the months leading up to the attempted murder.          The first
    incident occurred in January of 2008, when Appellant smacked Richards
    because he believed she took too long to return from the Walmart
    pharmacy.     N.T. Trial, 4/20/12, at 83-84.    In April of 2008, Appellant
    punched her in the face and broke her jaw.       
    Id. at 84.
      She lied to the
    doctors about the cause of the injury so Appellant would not be “locked up.”
    
    Id. at 86.
       Shortly after learning of Richards’ relationship with the male
    victim, Montgomery, Appellant went into a “rage.” 
    Id. at 43-45.
               He
    committed the attempted murders shortly thereafter. Pursuant to Albrecht
    and Drumheller, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding the
    prior acts evidence admissible for a proper purpose under Rule 404(b).
    Specifically, the other acts evidence established the chain of events that
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    formed the history of this case,5 and it established Appellant’s motive for
    shooting Richards and Montgomery while they were in bed together.
    Next, Appellant argues the trial court erred in finding the probative
    value of the other acts evidence outweighed the potential for unfair
    prejudice, in accord with Rule 404(b)(2).        He argues this evidence invited
    the jury to infer Appellant’s guilt based on his violent character, in violation
    of Rule 404(a). Appellant also argues the prior acts were too remote in time
    from the attempted homicide.           Also, Appellant argues the Commonwealth
    had other competent evidence available and therefore did not need to
    introduce evidence of his prior acts. Appellant’s Brief at 20-21.
    Concerning the first of those arguments–inviting the jury to infer guilt
    from Appellant’s violent character–we have already explained that the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence for the purpose
    of establishing Appellant’s motive and establishing the history of the case.
    Concerning the remoteness in time, the Drumheller Court rejected
    the defendant’s assertion that PFA orders from 1996 and 1997 were too
    remote in time from a murder that occurred in April of 1999. 
    Drumheller, 808 A.2d at 905
    . The Supreme Court noted it has never set an express time
    period within which admissible prior acts must occur.        
    Id. Further, “it
    is
    ____________________________________________
    5
    Though not specifically identified in Rule 404(b), events comprising the
    complete story of the offense are admissible, as Rule 404(b) contains a non-
    exhaustive list of permissible uses of other acts evidence. Pa.R.E. 404,
    Comment; Commonwealth v. Dillon, 
    925 A.2d 131
    , 137 (Pa. 2007).
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    generally true that remoteness of the prior instances of hostility and strained
    relations affects the weight of the evidence and not its admissibility.”
    
    Id. (quoting Commonwealth
    v. Ulatoski, 
    371 A.2d 186
    , 191 (1976))
    (emphasis added in Drumheller). Likewise, the Albrecht Court found no
    error in the trial court’s admission into evidence of a series of events that
    commenced seven months prior to the homicide.         
    Albrecht, 511 A.2d at 772
    . Here, as in Albrecht, the earliest act of prior abuse occurred roughly
    seven months prior to the crime for which Appellant stood trial.           We
    therefore reject Appellant’s argument that the prior acts were too remote in
    time from the attempted homicide.
    Finally, we consider Appellant’s argument that the other acts evidence
    was unnecessary given other evidence available to the Commonwealth. For
    this argument Appellant cites Commonwealth v. Mitchell, 
    460 A.2d 1182
    (Pa. Super. 1983). The Mitchell Court wrote:
    The court must balance on the one side the actual
    need for the evidence of other crimes in light of the issues
    and the other evidence available to the prosecution, the
    convincingness of the evidence that the other crimes were
    committed by the accused, the strength or weakness of
    the other crimes evidence in supporting the issue, and on
    the other side, the degree to which the jury will probably
    be prejudiced by the evidence.
    
    Id. at 1184.
    Regarding the Commonwealth’s need for the evidence, we note
    that evidence of motive is always relevant and admissible. Commonwealth
    v. Ward, 
    605 A.2d 796
    , 797 (Pa. 1992).          Furthermore, the other acts
    evidence helped the Commonwealth refute Appellant’s argument that he was
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    not the perpetrator. For these reasons, we conclude the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in finding that the Commonwealth had need for the other
    acts   evidence,    and    that   this   evidence    strongly    supported    the
    Commonwealth’s case.
    To preclude the possibility of unfair prejudice, the trial court instructed
    the jury as follows:
    You have heard evidence tending to show the
    defendant engaged in prior improper conduct with regard
    to Ms. Richards for which he is not on trial. This evidence
    is before you for a very limited purpose. That is, for the
    purpose of tending to show motive, course of conduct,
    common plan, scheme or design with regard to Ms.
    Richards.      Also, to rebut any defense of mistaken
    identification is offered by the defense as to the shooter.
    This evidence must not be considered by you in any
    way other than for those purposes that I just stated. You
    must not regard this evidence as showing that the
    defendant is person [sic] of bad character or with criminal
    tendencies for which you might be inclined to infer guilt.
    If you find the defendant guilty, it must be because
    you’re convinced by the evidence that he committed the
    crimes charged, and not because you believe he is wicked
    or has committed other improper conduct.
    N.T. Trial, 4/24/12, at 59-60. A proper instruction on the purpose of other
    acts evidence minimizes any prejudicial effect. Commonwealth v. Kinard,
    
    95 A.3d 279
    , 287 (Pa. Super. 2014). For all of the foregoing reasons, we
    conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting other acts
    evidence pursuant to Rule 404(b).
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    Next, Appellant argues the trial court erred in denying his motion for a
    mistrial after Thompson testified that Richards refused to go to the hospital
    after Appellant broke her jaw because Richards was afraid Appellant would
    kill her. As set forth above, Thompson was an eyewitness to the April 2008
    incident in which Appellant broke Richards’ jaw.       She gave the following
    account of her attempt to take Richards to the hospital afterward:
    Q.   Did your cousin, [Richards], go to the hospital
    after that?
    A.      No. I tried to take her to the hospital. He [sic]
    was so afraid of him. She tried to get out my boyfriend
    car. She tried to get out my boyfriend car. When she got
    out I was taking her to the hospital and she said, ‘No, I
    just want my mom. Y’all don’t understand. He will kill me.
    He will kill me.
    [Defense Counsel]: Objection. Motion to strike.
    THE COURT: Stricken. The jury will disregard.
    N.T. Trial, 4/20/12, at 40-41. A sidebar immediately followed, during which
    Appellant’s counsel moved for a mistrial. 
    Id. at 41.
    The trial court denied
    the motion. 
    Id. at 42.
    We review an order denying a mistrial for abuse of discretion.
    Commonwealth v. Fortenbaugh, 
    69 A.3d 191
    , 193 (Pa. 2013). A mistrial
    is unnecessary where the trial court offers an adequate cautionary
    instruction. 
    Id. At the
    outset, the trial court instructed the jury as follows:
    The admission of evidence at trial is governed by
    rule of law. It is my duty to rule on objections to the
    evidence made by the attorneys. If I overrule an objection
    to a question, that means the witness is required to
    answer. You, of course, are entitled to consider that
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    answer as evidence. If I sustain an objection, the witness
    is not permitted to answer, and you have nothing to
    consider because all you have heard is the question, and
    as I’ve said, questions are not evidence, only the answers
    are evidence.
    At times you may hear the answer before I rule on
    the objection. For example, a witness may answer at the
    same time that the objection is made. If I sustain that
    kind of objection, the evidence is stricken from the record.
    Whenever I order evidence stricken from the record,
    you must completely disregard that evidence in
    deciding the case.
    N.T. Trial, 4/19/12, at 19-20 (emphasis added).
    Thus, the trial court properly instructed the jury on disregarding
    evidence. We presume the jury followed the trial court’s proper instruction.
    Commonwealth v. Bedford, 
    50 A.3d 707
    , 713 (Pa. Super. 2012), appeal
    denied, 
    57 A.3d 65
    (Pa. 2012). In addition, the Bedford Court noted that
    where a substantial body of evidence supports a finding of guilt, the trial
    court does not abuse its discretion in declining to award a mistrial based on
    a single piece of evidence that has been stricken from the record.           
    Id. Instantly, the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in declining to declare a
    mistrial.
    For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude Appellant’s assertions of
    error lack merit. We therefore affirm the judgment of sentence.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
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    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 6/23/2015
    - 13 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2509 EDA 2012

Filed Date: 6/23/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/13/2024