Com. v. A.G. ( 2015 )


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  • J. A25045/15
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,               :     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :          PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant         :
    :
    v.                      :
    :
    A.G.                                        :
    :
    Appellee          :     No. 476 EDA 2015
    Appeal from the Order February 17, 2015
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County
    Criminal Division No(s).: CP-48-CR-0002181-2014
    BEFORE: DONOHUE, MUNDY, and FITZGERALD,* JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY FITZGERALD, J.:                     FILED DECEMBER 11, 2015
    The Commonwealth appeals from the order of the Northampton
    County Court of Common Pleas precluding, on retrial, evidence of Appellee
    A.G.’s prior bad acts.1 The Commonwealth claims the trial court misapplied
    Pa.R.E. 404(b) by (1) discounting the similarities between the prior and
    present allegations, (2) focusing on the passage of thirty years between the
    prior and present allegations, and (3) finding undue prejudice outweighed
    the probative value of the prior allegations. We affirm.
    *
    Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    1
    The Commonwealth has taken this interlocutory appeal as of right based
    on its certification that the trial court’s ruling will substantially handicap the
    prosecution. See Pa.R.A.P. 311(d). We have amended the caption of this
    appeal given the nature of the charges.
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    The trial court summarized the case against Appellee as follows:
    [Appellee] herein is charged with the crimes of criminal
    attempt to commit aggravated indecent assault,[2] indecent
    assault of a person less than 13 years of age,[3] and
    corruption of minors,[4] arising out of allegations that he
    sexually molested his granddaughter between 2001 and
    2007, when she was between the ages of four and 10.
    The complainant in this case, M.G. [(“Complainant”)],
    alleges: during those years, on innumerable occasions
    while she was visiting the home of [Appellee], when she
    would be alone with him for brief periods of time,
    [Appellee] would take her into his bedroom, have her lie
    down on his bed, and he would use his fingers to touch her
    vagina underneath her clothing.
    Trial Ct. Op., 3/16/15, at 2.
    The charges against Appellee were filed on June 19, 2014.          On
    November 20, 2014, the Commonwealth filed a notice and motion in limine
    seeking admission of evidence that Appellee, approximately thirty years
    earlier,5 abused his daughter, the Complainant’s aunt (“Aunt”), from “as far
    back as she could remember,” until she was eleven. Commonwealth’s Mot.
    in Limine to Introduce Prior Bad Acts, 11/20/14, at 2.        On December 9,
    2
    18 Pa.C.S. §§ 901, 3125.
    3
    18 Pa.C.S. § 3126(a)(7). Appellee was initially charged under subsections
    (a)(1), (a)(7), and (a)(8) of the indecent assault statute, but the charges
    under (a)(1) and (a)(8) were withdrawn with the consent of the trial court.
    See Order, 1/20/15.
    4
    18 Pa.C.S. § 6301(a)(1).
    5
    Aunt was eleven years old between 1970 and 1971, when the prior abuse
    allegedly ended.   The instant criminal complaint alleged the abuse of
    Complainant began in 2001.
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    2014, the trial court granted the Commonwealth’s motion, concluding the
    proffer contained sufficiently similar allegations to establish a common
    scheme, plan, or design. Order, 12/9/14, at 4-5; Trial Ct. Op. at 2.            The
    court also found the proffer was relevant to show the history of the case,
    because Complainant allegedly reported the abuse to her Aunt, after her
    Aunt revealed her own history of abuse to Complainant. Order, 12/9/14, at
    6; Trial Ct. Op. at 3; see also N.T. Mot. in Limine/Pre-Trial Conference,
    12/5/14, at 6.
    A jury trial commenced on February 2, 2015, the relevant parts of
    which we summarize for the purposes of this appeal.6 The Commonwealth,
    in its opening statement, asserted Appellee assaulted Complainant at his
    home, when Complainant was between four and ten years old. N.T. Trial,
    2/2/15, at 21-22.        The Commonwealth suggested Complainant did not
    initially disclose the abuse because Appellee threatened to kill her family and
    she was afraid the disclosure would upset her father. Id. at 23. According
    to the Commonwealth, Complainant initially reported being abused to her
    mother, but gave a false account of the assault.         Id. at 24.       She later
    reported being abused to Aunt. Id.
    Appellee,   in   his   opening    statement,    asserted   all     of   the
    Commonwealth’s witnesses had motives to fabricate the allegations. Id. at
    27.    Complainant’s parents were divorced and suggested Complainant had
    6
    Complainant was seventeen years old at the time of the first trial.
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    difficulties living with her mother during and after the divorce.    Id.   Aunt
    wanted Appellee’s rental properties and became upset when he transferred
    the properties to Complainant’s father in 2001. Id. 27-28. Complainant’s
    father owed Appellee money for the rental properties and a loan for his
    divorce totaling $1,100 per month.      Id. at 32. Complainant, he asserted,
    was not credible.
    On the first day of trial, Complainant testified as follows. Her father
    took her to Appellee’s home every two weeks to cut the grass. Id. at 39-40.
    While her father went to the backyard to do the yardwork, Appellee would
    take her back to his bedroom and put his hand on her vagina—sometimes
    over, sometimes under her clothes. Id. at 43, 45. She indicated Appellee
    did not touch any other part of her body or force her to touch his body. Id.
    at 45. She did not know if he put his fingers inside her vagina. Id. at 46.
    Sometimes, she heard the zipper of Appellee’s pants, but could not see what
    he was doing with his other hand.      Id. at 46.   These assaults would stop
    when Appellee could no longer hear the mower7 or when he was “done.” Id.
    at 47. These assaults occurred regularly, but would not happen if Appellee’s
    girlfriend was there.   Id. at 49.   Complainant stopped going to Appellee’s
    house when she was ten. Id. at 48-49. She did not report the assaults to
    her father because Appellee threatened to kill her family. Id. at 47.
    7
    Father testified it took approximately twenty minutes to mow the backyard.
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    Complainant first disclosed the abuse to her mother when she was
    twelve, but stated the abuse occurred in the bathroom, which she conceded
    was untrue.8 Id. at 49-50. Later, when she was thirteen or fourteen years
    old, she sent a text message to Aunt reporting Appellee abused her. 9 Id. at
    51.   She testified she knew Aunt was abused by Appellee because she
    overheard her parents discussing it. Id. at 54. Complainant then reported
    the abuse to a schoolteacher and a guidance counselor, who, in turn,
    8
    Complainant’s mother testified that Complainant initially disclosed being
    abused, but did not tell anyone because she was scared “of them taking her
    from me if I told somebody” and because she was going through a bitter
    divorce from Complainant’s father. N.T. Trial, 2/2/15, at 107.
    9
    A copy of Complainant’s text message to Aunt was marked as
    Commonwealth’s Exhibit 1 and read by Complainant at trial:
    After everything that had happened to me at the [church]
    revival tonight, I figured I’d better tell you [Aunt] . . .
    When the man was saying how I need to let people in and
    stop building walls and let go of all my secrets and I didn’t
    need to be so strong all the time, I think I should tell you
    something that has been heavy on my heart for a long
    time. I’m sorry I’ve never told you, I haven’t told you
    sooner, but I think I may just be coming to terms with it,
    too, so I would really like if this stayed between us
    because as of right now, the only people that know are my
    mom, Trisha, and soon to be you.
    Okay. So when I was little, I was molested by [Appellee].
    I wanted to tell you in person but I never got the courage.
    He told me if I were to ever tell anyone, that he would kill
    my family and I believed him for years, but I’m not afraid
    of him anymore.       I’m not going to let it bother me
    anymore, but I thought you should know, considering it
    happened to you too. . . . .
    Id. at 53-54.
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    contacted Children and Youth Services. Id. at 55; N.T. Trial, 2/3/15, at 26.
    She did not remember speaking with Aunt after sending her the text
    message.10 N.T. Trial, 2/2/15, at 54.
    Aunt testified on the second day of trial.     She stated she warned
    Complainant’s father not to take Complainant to Appellee’s house because
    he was a “molester.” Id. at 90. She acknowledged receiving Complainant’s
    text message and testified they subsequently talked about the abuse. Id. at
    89.   Aunt told Complainant to seek counseling.          Id.    She testified
    Complainant did not disclose the details of the abuse, but when she asked
    whether Appellee penetrated her, the Complainant replied, “No.” Id.
    The Commonwealth then asked Aunt to describe Appellee’s abuse.
    She testified the abuse occurred from when she was “five, six, maybe four”
    years old and stopped when she was ten or eleven years old and began
    sleeping with a knife under her pillow. Id. at 94. She would be in her bed
    sleeping, and Appellee would be out drinking. Id. He would come into her
    room, get in her bed, and call her by her mother’s name.       Id. at 95. He
    fondled her chest and her vagina. Id. He would touch her, sometimes over
    her clothes, and sometimes under her clothes.             Id. at 96.      The
    Commonwealth asked, “Did he ever stick his finger in your vagina?”        Id.
    Aunt responded, “Occasionally.” Id.
    10
    The trial court issued a cautionary instruction on the use of prior bad acts
    evidence immediately after the Commonwealth concluded its direct
    examination of Complainant. N.T., Trial, 2/2/15, at 57-58.
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    Appellee’s counsel objected and requested a mistrial.              Id. at 97, 99.
    The court granted mistrial, reasoning:
    As the case progressed since yesterday, it started out
    that there was some variation of the facts and that was
    that [Complainant] did not testify that [Aunt] had confided
    in her about what happened to her, but rather that
    [Complainant] had overheard her mother and her father
    having some discussion about what had happened to
    [Aunt] and although that wasn’t factually identical or
    similar to what had been proffered, I did not feel that it
    was a problem and I continued to allow that evidence to
    come in.
    [W]hen [Aunt] began to testify and she testified that
    [Appellee] also touched her breasts, I thought that that
    was slightly dissimilar, but not sufficiently so as to change
    my ruling. When [Aunt] testified that [Appellee] had, in
    fact, penetrated her vagina, that was not only sufficiently
    dissimilar, but it changed the entire weight of the
    probative versus prejudicial value of the testimony and its
    probative value was far outweighed by its potential for
    unfair prejudice.
    Id. at 100-01. The court determined the Commonwealth would be “entitled
    to ty this case again,” but that the Commonwealth’s prior bad acts motion
    would have to be reevaluated before retrial. Id. at 102.
    After the declaration of mistrial, the Commonwealth filed a new motion
    in limine to introduce prior bad acts on February 11, 2015. The motion was
    substantially similar to its initial motion but incorporated the allegations of
    vaginal   penetration   testified   to   by    Aunt   at   the   first    trial.   See
    Commonwealth’s Mot. in Limine to Introduce Prior Bad Acts, 2/11/15, at 2.
    Additionally, the Commonwealth asserted Appellee “threaten[ed] to kill
    [Complainant’s] immediate family, if [Complainant] told about the abuse,”
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    and also “threaten[ed] to kill [Aunt’s] mother, if [Aunt] told about the
    abuse.”11 Id.
    The trial court held a conference on the motion on February 13,
    2015.12   The court observed Complainant and Aunt’s trial testimony “were
    more factually distinct” than presented in the Commonwealth’s initial proffer.
    Id.     The court remarked it was “no longer convinced that they were
    sufficiently factually similar,” but the trial evidence “tip[ped] the balance[,]
    and the prejudicial impact outweighs the probative value.” Id. at 4-5.
    On February 17, 2015, the trial court entered a written order denying
    the   Commonwealth’s      motion   in    limine.   The    following   day,   the
    Commonwealth filed its notice of appeal, which contained a Pa.R.A.P. 311(d)
    certification.   The Commonwealth subsequently complied with the court’s
    order to submit a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement.13
    11
    Although Aunt did not have an opportunity to testify regarding Appellee’s
    threats at trial, it appears Aunt revealed the existence of the threats “last
    Friday” before trial. N.T. Trial, 2/3/15, at 92.
    12
    The transcript of the February 13, 2015 conference was not included in
    the certified record. However, the Commonwealth included a complete copy
    of the transcript in its reproduced record, and Appellee did not object to the
    copy’s accuracy. Thus, we rely upon the copy in the reproduced brief. See
    Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    52 A.3d 1139
    , 1145 n.4 (Pa. 2012).
    13
    The Commonwealth’s Rule 1925(b) statement takes the form of a six page
    brief that sets forth a factual background and citations to law related to its
    “issue,” namely, “[t]he trial court erred when it entered an order denying
    the Commonwealth’s Motion in Limine which sought to present Prior Bad
    Acts of [Appellee], pursuant to Pa.R.E. 404(b).”    Commonwealth’s Concise
    Statement of Matters Complained of on Appeal Pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925,
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    The Commonwealth’s sole contention is the trial court erred in
    precluding the prior bad acts evidence in anticipation of a second trial. See
    Commonwealth’s Brief at 4.     It first argues there are “unique similarities”
    between Appellee’s abuse of Aunt and Complainant, including (1) the familial
    relations among the parties, (2) the gender of the alleged victims, (3) the
    location of the assaults–i.e., a bedroom, (4) the victims’ ages at the time of
    the assaults, (5) the manner of the assaults, and (6) Appellee’s threats to
    harm the victims’ families if they reported the abuse. 
    Id.
     at 12-13 (citing,
    inter alia, Commonwealth v. Newman, 
    598 A.2d 275
     (Pa. 1991),
    Commonwealth       v.   Aikens,   
    990 A.2d 1181
       (Pa.   Super.     2010),
    Commonwealth v. O’Brien, 
    836 A.2d 966
     (Pa. Super. 2003), and
    Commonwealth v. Smith, 
    635 A.2d 1086
     (Pa. Super. 1993)).               It claims
    the “[r]emoteness in time of the two crimes from each other does not bar
    the admission of the prior bad acts . . . .” 
    Id.
     at 14 (citing Commonwealth
    v. Luktisch, 
    680 A.2d 877
     (Pa. Super. 1996), and Commonwealth v.
    Shively, 
    424 A.2d 1257
     (Pa. 1981)). Lastly, it asserts the proffered prior
    2/27/15, at 3 (unpaginated). We further note the Commonwealth framed its
    legal discussion in terms of the substantial similarity between the incidents,
    but did not address the court’s discretion in balancing the probative versus
    prejudicial effects. See id. at 6; cf. Commonwealth’s Brief at 15 (arguing
    Aunt’s “testimony is not unduly prejudicial”). However, the Commonwealth’s
    issues were readily discernible under the circumstances, and all of its
    present arguments were fairly subsumed within the claimed error.
    Therefore, we decline to find waiver under Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(4)(vii).
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    bad acts evidence is “more probative than prejudicial.” Id. at 16. No relief
    is due.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has summarized the principles
    governing our review.
    Appellate courts typically examine a trial court’s
    decision concerning the admissibility of evidence for abuse
    of discretion. “An abuse of discretion may not be found
    merely because an appellate court might have reached a
    different conclusion, but requires a result of manifest
    unreasonableness, or partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill-will,
    or such lack of support so as to be clearly erroneous.”
    Typically, all relevant evidence, i.e., evidence which tends
    to make the existence or non-existence of a material fact
    more or less probable, is admissible, subject to the
    prejudice/probative value weighing which attends all
    decisions upon admissibility.
    A long-accepted exception to this general rule of
    admissibility, which is reflected in Rule 404(b)(1)[14] of the
    Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence, states that “[e]vidence of
    14
    The current version of Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 404(b), which
    applies in this case, states, in relevant part:
    (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.
    (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.
    Pa.R.E. 404(b)(1), (2) (eff. Mar. 18, 2013).
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    other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove
    the character of a person in order to show action in
    conformity therewith.” Character evidence (whether good
    or bad) is, of course, relevant in criminal prosecutions;
    that is why an accused has the right to introduce evidence
    of good character for relevant character traits. Evidence of
    separate or unrelated “crimes, wrongs, or acts,” however,
    has long been deemed inadmissible as character evidence
    against a criminal defendant in this Commonwealth as a
    matter not of relevance, but of policy, i.e., because of a
    fear that such evidence is so powerful that the jury might
    misuse the evidence and convict based solely upon
    criminal propensity. Because the fear against which this
    exception to the general rule of relevance/admissibility is
    aimed concerns use of prior crimes to show bad
    character/propensity, a series of “exceptions to the
    exception” (to the rule of relevance) have been
    recognized. Thus, as Rule 404(b)(2) reflects, evidence of
    “other crimes, wrongs, or acts” may be admitted when
    relevant    for   a    purpose     other     than    criminal
    character/propensity,    including:    proof    of   motive,
    opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity,
    or absence of mistake. This list is not exhaustive. For
    instance, this Court has recognized a res gestae exception
    to Rule 404(b) which allows admission of other crimes
    evidence when relevant to furnish the context or complete
    story of the events surrounding a crime.
    Commonwealth v. Dillon, 
    925 A.2d 131
    , 136-37 (Pa. 2007) (citations and
    emphasis omitted). Further,
    Finding that the evidence is relevant to the
    Commonwealth’s case-in-chief does not end the inquiry.
    In instances where evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or
    acts is offered for a purpose other than to show conformity
    of action, such evidence may still be excluded if the
    probative value of the evidence is outweighed by its
    potential for prejudice.      The probative value of the
    evidence might be outweighed by the danger of unfair
    prejudice, confusion of the issues, misleading the jury,
    undue delay, pointlessness of presentation, or unnecessary
    presentation of cumulative evidence. The comment to
    Pa.R.E. 403 instructs that: “‘Unfair prejudice’ means a
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    tendency to suggest decision on an improper basis or to
    divert the jury’s attention away from its duty of weighing
    the evidence impartially.” Additionally, when weighing the
    potential for prejudice, a trial court may consider how a
    cautionary jury instruction might ameliorate the prejudicial
    effect of the proffered evidence.
    Evidence will not be prohibited merely because it is
    harmful to the defendant. This Court has stated that it is
    not “required to sanitize the trial to eliminate all
    unpleasant facts from the jury’s consideration where those
    facts are relevant to the issues at hand and form part of
    the history and natural development of the events and
    offenses for which the defendant is charged.”
    Id. at 141 (citations omitted).
    In Aikens, this Court reiterated that “remoteness is merely one factor
    to be considered in determining admissibility” of a proffer of prior bad acts
    evidence. Aikens, 
    990 A.2d at 1186
    . However, “‘while remoteness in time
    is a factor to be considered in determining the probative value of other
    crimes evidence under the theory of common scheme, plan or design, the
    importance of the time period is inversely proportional to the similarity of
    the crimes in question.’” 
    Id. at 1185
     (quoting Luktisch, 
    680 A.2d at 879
    ).
    The Aikens Court concluded that evidence that the defendant sexually
    assaulted one of his daughters seventeen years earlier was “markedly
    similar” to the trial evidence that he assaulted another daughter.        
    Id.
    Specifically, this Court noted both incidents involved the defendant’s
    biological daughters when they were of a similar age—fifteen years old in the
    prior instance and fourteen years old in the case at trial.   Id. at 1185-86.
    Both assaults began when, in his daughters’ presence, the defendant
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    watched pornography at his apartment.          Id. at 1186.       Both assaults
    occurred in a bed at night. Id. In the prior instance, the defendant raped
    his daughter.      Id. at 1183.   In the case at trial, he exposed his penis,
    attempted to disrobe the complainant, and grinded himself against her
    buttocks, before the complainant fled to another room.        Id.     As to the
    greater offense of rape alleged in the prior incident, the Aikens Court noted,
    “the victim herein was able to stop the abuse from escalating.”            Id.   at
    1186.    Thus, we held that the evidence of the defendant’s prior bad acts
    constituted evidence of a common plan and the probative value of the
    evidence outweighed its prejudicial impact. Id.
    Instantly, we have reviewed the Commonwealth’s arguments and the
    record as a whole. The Commonwealth emphasizes the similarities between
    the alleged abuse of Aunt and Complainant. Our review confirms that the
    trial court considered those similarities and determined the proffer was
    relevant. However, the court found critical several differences between the
    prior and instant allegations of abuse, namely, the time of day at which the
    abuse occurred, the manner in which Appellee was alleged to have initiated
    the abuse, and the extent of the alleged abuse. Trial Ct. Op. at 7-8.
    Contrary   to   the   Commonwealth’s   arguments,   the    trial   court’s
    consideration of the differences between that the prior and present
    allegations of abuse did not relate to trivial details, and the court did not
    unduly rely upon the passage of thirty years between the prior and present
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    allegations. Rather, the court appropriately considered factors distinguishing
    the prior and present allegations to conclude the Commonwealth’s proffer of
    a common plan, scheme, or design was less probative than the evidence
    admitted in Aikens.       Trial Ct. Op. at 5-6. Moreover, the court was in a
    unique position to weigh the relevance and undue prejudice of the
    Commonwealth’s proffer, having presided at the first trial at which the
    pertinent testimony was actually received.         Thus, we conclude the
    Commonwealth’s arguments fail to establish an error of law or abuse of
    discretion in the trial court’s application of Rule 404(b).   See Dillon, 925
    A.2d at 136.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 12/11/2015
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