Com. v. Birch, D. ( 2019 )


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  • J-S72011-18
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA            :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    :
    DEVIN AVERY BIRCH                       :
    :
    Appellant             :   No. 1290 MDA 2018
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 7, 2017
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-22-CR-0001350-2017
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., SHOGAN, J., and KUNSELMAN, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                        FILED FEBRUARY 19, 2019
    Devin Avery Birch appeals from the judgment of sentence of eighteen
    months of probation imposed for his simple assault conviction. We affirm.
    The charges against Appellant stem from a February 21, 2017
    altercation with Jenica Price, his paramour, in the home they share with their
    three-year-old child. At trial, Ms. Price testified that she had worked until
    4:00 a.m., had drinks afterwards celebrating a friend’s birthday, and arrived
    home between 5:00 and 5:30 a.m. Appellant, awakened by the dog’s barking,
    confronted Ms. Price about her intoxication and late arrival. The two argued
    for approximately ten minutes until Appellant pushed her, causing her to fall
    onto her stomach in the kitchen.      Ms. Price stated that Appellant then
    proceeded to stomp on her back until he decided to go outside for a cigarette,
    at which time Ms. Price went upstairs and locked herself in her room. Upon
    awakening at 8:30 or 9:00 a.m., Ms. Price was unable to move due to the
    J-S72011-18
    pain in her back. She described it as an eight or nine out of ten on the pain
    scale. After Appellant left for work, Ms. Price called her friend Jocelyn Lopez
    for help. Ms. Lopez and her husband took Ms. Price to the hospital, where she
    was “cleared” after undergoing x-rays and a urine test.
    Ms. Lopez was another witness at Appellant’s trial. Ms. Lopez confirmed
    that she received a call from Ms. Price on the morning of February 21, 2017,
    causing her and her husband Chad to go to Ms. Price’s home. Of import to
    this appeal, the following exchange took place during direct examination:
    Q.  Well, what happened, starting with the first thing you can
    remember that was out of the ordinary[?]
    A.    . . . I was headed to my photography studio in Reading, and
    I got a phone call from [Ms. Price] and she said --
    [Appellant’s counsel]:   Objection; hearsay.
    The Court:         Overruled. No, it’s not. Overruled.
    [Commonwealth]:          Thank you, your honor.
    [Ms. Lopez]:     I got a phone call from [Ms. Price] and she said
    hey, can you please come over here I need your help. I think that
    something in my back is broken. I think [Appellant] broke my
    back is the phone call I got.
    N.T. Trial, 12/6-7/17, at 35 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    Ms. Lopez continued to recount that it took her and her husband twenty
    minutes to get Ms. Price into their car due to Ms. Price’s painful condition. Ms.
    Lopez and her husband drove Ms. Price to the hospital, where Ms. Lopez
    witnessed Ms. Price “tell her side” of how the injuries were sustained to
    hospital personnel. Id. at 38.
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    J-S72011-18
    The Commonwealth called Office Mark Snyder of the Swatara Township
    Police Department as a witness.       He indicated that, on the morning in
    question, he was dispatched to the hospital “to make contact with an assault
    victim which was reported to be related to domestic violence.”        Id. at 49.
    Officer Snyder testified that he found Ms. Price in obvious pain, had a nurse
    take photos of Ms. Price’s back, and took both oral and written statements
    from Ms. Price concerning how she sustained her injuries.             On cross-
    examination, counsel for Appellant asked Officer Snyder: “she told you she
    was assaulted by her boyfriend?” He answered “That’s correct.” Id. at 51.
    Appellant testified in his defense. The version of events he relayed to
    the jury was that Ms. Price was very intoxicated when she came home, the
    two of them argued, Ms. Price threw a ten-pound step stool at him, came at
    him with arms flailing, and fell face first onto the floor, scraping her back on
    a cabinet on the way down.      Appellant denied having kicked, stomped, or
    made “any assaultive, like, movements towards” Ms. Price. Id. at 58.
    A jury convicted Appellant of simple assault on December 7, 2017, and
    he was sentenced that day to eighteen months of probation after waiving a
    presentence investigation.    Appellant filed a timely post-sentence motion
    which was denied on January 3, 2018.         Appellant filed a timely notice of
    appeal, and both Appellant and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    The appeal was dismissed for failure to file a brief, but this instant, timely
    appeal was filed following the reinstatement of Appellant’s direct appeal rights.
    -3-
    J-S72011-18
    Appellant presents one question for our review: “Did not the court err
    in permitting a Commonwealth witness over [Appellant’s] objection to refer to
    a statement by the complainant attributing her injuries to an assault by
    [Appellant] when such references were not relevant for the non-hearsay
    purpose of explaining the witness’s course of conduct?” Appellant’s brief at 4
    (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    We consider Appellant’s issue mindful of our standard of review:
    The admissibility of evidence is a matter addressed solely to the
    discretion of the trial court, and may be reversed only upon a
    showing that the court abused its discretion. For there to be abuse
    of discretion, the sentencing court must have ignored or
    misapplied the law, exercised its judgment for reasons of
    partiality, prejudice, bias or ill will, or arrived at a manifestly
    unreasonable decision.
    Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    179 A.3d 1105
    , 1119-20 (Pa.Super. 2018)
    (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
    Appellant’s challenge is based upon the trial court’s admission of the
    above-quoted hearsay testimony of Ms. Lopez that Ms. Price stated that she
    thought Appellant broke her back. Appellant’s brief at 15. The trial court
    opined that the out-of-court statements were properly admitted not for the
    truth of the matter asserted (i.e., that Ms. Price believed that Appellant broke
    her back), but to explain Ms. Lopez’s course of conduct in going to Ms. Price’s
    home to find her in need of medical care. Trial Court Opinion, 3/14/18, at 8
    (citing, inter alia, Commonwealth v. Weiss, 
    81 A.3d 767
    , 806 (Pa. 2013)
    (holding out-of-court statements that the victim was at the defendant’s home
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    were properly admitted not to show that the victim was there, but to explain
    why the victim’s mother went to the defendant’s residence).
    Appellant contends that when such course-of-conduct evidence is
    admitted, it “should be sanitized to the largest extent possible.” Appellant’s
    brief at 14 (citing, inter alia, Commonwealth v. Yates, 
    613 A.2d 542
    , 543
    (Pa. 1992) (“It is the prosecutor’s duty to avoid the introduction of out-of-
    court statements that go beyond what is reasonably necessary to explain
    police conduct.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). He maintains that “there
    was absolutely no need for Ms. Lopez” to say more than that Ms. Price
    requested help for her back pain; it “was entirely unnecessary” for her to refer
    to the cause of the pain to explain why she went to Ms. Price’s home that
    morning. Id. at 14.
    We agree with Appellant that the statement “I think [Appellant] broke
    my back” was not required to explain Ms. Lopez’s course of conduct.
    Indication that Ms. Price had called complaining of severe pain would have
    sufficed. As such, the testimony that Ms. Price implicated Appellant in her
    request for assistance was not properly admitted as course-of-conduct
    evidence. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Mosley, 
    114 A.3d 1072
    , 1079-80
    (Pa.Super. 2015) (holding allegations of drug activity in content of complaints
    received by police to explain why police went to particular apartment was
    error).
    -5-
    J-S72011-18
    However, we conclude that the error was harmless. As our Supreme
    Court has explained,
    the doctrine of harmless error is a technique of appellate review
    designed to advance judicial economy by obviating the necessity
    for a retrial where the appellate court is convinced that a trial error
    was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Its purpose is premised
    on the well-settled proposition that a defendant is entitled to a fair
    trial but not a perfect one.
    Commonwealth v. Allshouse, 
    36 A.3d 163
    , 182 (Pa. 2012) (cleaned up).
    Harmless error will be found where the Court concludes beyond a reasonable
    doubt that (1) the error resulted in no more than de minimis prejudice; (2)
    “the erroneously admitted evidence was merely cumulative of other untainted
    evidence which was substantially similar to the erroneously admitted
    evidence;” or (3) the error could not have contributed to the verdict because
    “the properly admitted and uncontradicted evidence of guilt was so
    overwhelming.” Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    185 A.3d 316
    , 330 (Pa. 2018).
    Appellant argues that, because he contradicted the evidence of guilt with
    his testimony, the error cannot be deemed harmless. Appellant’s brief at 16
    (citing Commonwealth v. Fulton, 
    179 A.3d 475
    , 494 (Pa. 2018)
    (“[O]verwhelming evidence of a defendant’s guilt is never harmless unless
    that evidence is uncontradicted.”). Be that as it may, we nonetheless hold
    that the error was harmless under the other two possible bases.
    First, the jury heard Ms. Price’s claim that Appellant caused her injuries
    from Ms. Price herself.   As such, any prejudice was de minimis. See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Jones, 
    658 A.2d 746
    , 751 (Pa. 1995) (distinguishing
    -6-
    J-S72011-18
    Yates because the concern about prejudice is not present “where, as in this
    case, the declarant did in fact testify and the subsequent police testimony
    merely related matters that were covered in the declarant’s own testimony”).
    Moreover, the statement from Ms. Lopez was merely cumulative of the
    properly-admitted testimony of Ms. Price and Officer Snyder that Ms. Price’s
    injuries were caused by Appellant.     See, e.g., Allshouse, supra at 183
    (finding harmless error where improperly-admitted statement was merely
    cumulative of properly-admitted statement); Mosley, supra at 1080
    (concluding erroneous admission of assertions of criminal conduct as course-
    of-conduct evidence was harmless where it was substantially similar to
    properly-admitted evidence).
    Although Appellant’s trial may not have been perfect, we have
    determined beyond a reasonable doubt that it was fair. Accordingly, no relief
    is due.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 2/19/2019
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1290 MDA 2018

Filed Date: 2/19/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/13/2024