Com. v. Glaze, C. ( 2019 )


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  • J-A22029-19
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF                         :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA,                           :          PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    Appellee               :
    :
    v.                            :
    :
    CHARLES GLAZE,                          :
    :
    Appellant              :    No. 355 EDA 2019
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 10, 2018
    in the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-46-CR-0005345-2018
    BEFORE: MURRAY, J., STRASSBURGER, J.* and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY STRASSBURGER, J.:                FILED NOVEMBER 19, 2019
    Charles Glaze (Appellant) appeals from his December 10, 2018
    judgment of sentence imposed after he was found guilty of false identification
    to a law enforcement officer. Upon review, we reverse Appellant’s judgment
    of sentence.
    We glean the following facts from the record. On July 31, 2018, at about
    1:00 p.m., Appellant was a passenger in a vehicle driven by Tanisha Chandler.
    Chandler’s boyfriend, Damond Dade, was also in the vehicle. At some point,
    Chandler and Dade began to argue. At about the same time, the vehicle broke
    down and Chandler pulled it into the parking lot of a local establishment.
    Chandler exited the vehicle and walked away, taking Appellant’s cell phone
    with her. Chandler used Appellant’s phone to call police, and during her call,
    * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A22029-19
    she reported a verbal altercation between her and her boyfriend and requested
    assistance.
    Police Officer Brian Makowski responded to the scene.1 He observed
    Dade and Appellant in the parking lot, but did not see Chandler. At some
    point while Officer Makowski was at the scene, Police Chief Miller 2 arrived to
    assist. According to Officer Makowski, Chief Miller spoke with Chandler nearby
    since she had walked down the street. Officer Makowski first spoke with Dade.
    Dade confirmed the verbal altercation was between Chandler and Dade. After
    investigating for about 15-20 minutes, including speaking with Chief Miller,
    Officer Makowski determined that no charges would be filed against Chandler
    or Dade.
    Next, Officer Makowski turned his attention to Appellant.         Officer
    Makowski confirmed during his testimony that he did not suspect Appellant of
    violating the law.    Nonetheless, Officer Makowski asked Appellant for
    identification. Appellant responded that “he didn’t want to be involved” and
    ultimately provided a false name, birthdate, and social security number. N.T.,
    1/16/2019, at 20. Officer Makowski searched the information in his vehicle’s
    computer system, and it returned a result of no records found.       From his
    1Officer Makowski testified that he works part-time as a police officer for the
    Borough of Rockledge, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania and at that time,
    had been an officer for about six months. N.T., 1/16/2019, at 6.
    2 The notes of testimony do not indicate Miller’s first name. Miller did not
    testify at trial.
    -2-
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    vehicle, Officer Makowski contacted the county dispatch radio with the same
    information, which also returned negative results.
    Officer Makowski returned to Appellant and advised him that none of his
    identification information was located. At this point, which was after Appellant
    had already given false identification for the first time, Officer Makowski
    testified that he “advised [Appellant] that he was under official investigation,
    and if he continued to provide false information[,] he would be charged
    criminally.” Id. at 18; see also id. at 100.
    Appellant then provided false identification to Officer Makowski a second
    time. That computer search likewise returned no information. According to
    Officer Makowski, after the second negative records search, Appellant insisted
    he had provided the correct identification, so Officer Makowski “instructed
    [Appellant] at that time that he had to be identified.” Id. at 21. He then
    placed Appellant in the back of the police vehicle and transported him to the
    police station for fingerprint identification. At the station, Appellant provided
    false identification a third time, but eventually, when Appellant was asked to
    sign his fingerprint card, he gave his correct name and other identifying
    information.
    Officer Makowski testified that he was at the scene for about an hour.
    He stated that he spent the first 15-20 minutes of his investigation “focusing
    on the domestic incident and the remaining time was spent trying to identify
    [Appellant].” Id. at 23.
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    Based on the foregoing, Appellant was charged with false identification
    to a law enforcement officer. After a nonjury trial held on January 16, 2019,3
    the trial court found Appellant guilty and sentenced him the same day to a
    term of time served to 12 months of incarceration. Appellant timely filed a
    notice of appeal. Both Appellant and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P.
    1925.
    On appeal, Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting his conviction for false identification to a law enforcement officer.
    Appellant’s Brief at 2. Accordingly, the following principles apply.
    The standard of review for a challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence is to determine whether, when viewed in a light most
    favorable to the verdict winner, the evidence at trial and all
    reasonable inferences therefrom is sufficient for the trier of fact to
    find that each element of the crimes charged is established beyond
    a reasonable doubt. The Commonwealth may sustain its burden
    of proving every element beyond a reasonable doubt by means of
    wholly circumstantial evidence.
    The facts and circumstances established by the Commonwealth
    need not preclude every possibility of innocence. Any doubt raised
    as to the accused’s guilt is to be resolved by the fact-finder. As
    an appellate court, we do not assess credibility nor do we assign
    weight to any of the testimony of record. Therefore, we will not
    disturb the verdict unless the evidence is so weak and inconclusive
    that as a matter of law no probability of fact may be drawn from
    the combined circumstances.
    3 At the close of the Commonwealth’s case, Appellant moved for judgment of
    acquittal. N.T., 1/16/2019, at 45. After an off-the-record discussion among
    the trial judge and counsel for the parties, as well as on-the-record argument
    by both counsel regarding the applicability of Commonwealth v. Kitchen,
    
    181 A.3d 337
     (Pa. Super. 2018) (en banc), and Commonwealth v. Barnes,
    
    14 A.3d 128
     (Pa. Super. 2011), the trial court denied the motion. N.T.,
    1/16/2019, at 45-54.
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    Commonwealth v. Wanner, 
    158 A.3d 714
    , 717-18 (Pa. Super. 2017)
    (quoting Commonwealth v. Vogelsong, 
    90 A.3d 717
    , 719 (Pa. Super. 2014)
    (citations and quotations omitted)).
    To sustain a conviction for the crime of false identification to a law
    enforcement officer, the Commonwealth must prove that Appellant
    furnishe[d] law enforcement authorities with false information
    about his identity after being informed by a law enforcement
    officer who is in uniform or who has identified himself as a law
    enforcement officer that [Appellant] is the subject of an official
    investigation of a violation of law.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 4914(a).
    In Kitchen, this Court examined section 4914(a). Kitchen was pulled
    over by a police officer for a traffic violation. 181 A.3d at 338. When the
    officer approached her car, he asked for her license, registration, and
    insurance. Id. When she could not produce the documents, Kitchen provided
    false identification. Id. at 339. She was charged with and convicted of, inter
    alia, the offense of false identification to a law enforcement officer. Id. at
    338. On appeal, Kitchen argued that her conviction could not stand because
    she had not been informed she was the subject of an official investigation.
    Id. at 341. An en banc panel of this Court agreed. In interpreting the statute,
    this Court noted that
    [t]he use of the term “informed” in this context strongly suggests
    that the legislature intended a statutory element akin to a formal
    notice requirement, rather than imposing an additional mens rea
    element focused on the accused’s inferential knowledge about the
    presence of an investigation at the time he or she presents false
    credentials.
    -5-
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    Id. at 342-43. Further, in Kitchen this Court examined In re D.S., explaining
    that
    while investigating an armed robbery, plainclothes officers
    approached D.S. and two other individuals in a park, as D.S.
    matched the robbery victim’s description of his assailant. The
    police ordered D.S. and his cohorts to put their hands in the air,
    and then demanded their names, ages, and addresses. D.S.
    responded with a fake name. The officers did not identify
    themselves as police, nor did they specifically and/or verbally
    inform D.S. that he was under investigation. Nevertheless, D.S.
    was charged with, and ultimately adjudicated delinquent of, a
    [false identification to a law enforcement officer] offense.
    Kitchen, 181 A.3d at 344. In D.S., our Supreme Court made clear that
    [u]nder the plain language of the statute, three conditions must
    be satisfied before an individual will be found to have violated [18
    Pa.C.S. § 4914] by providing false information about his identity.
    First, if the law enforcement officer is not in uniform, the officer
    must identify himself as a law enforcement officer. Second, the
    individual must be informed by the law enforcement officer that
    he is the subject of an official investigation of a violation of law.
    Third, the individual must have furnished law enforcement
    authorities with false information after being informed by the law
    enforcement officer that he was the subject of an official
    investigation of a violation of law.
    39 A.3d at 974. Because the officers did not identify themselves as police or
    specifically inform D.S. that he was under investigation, our Supreme Court
    found the evidence was insufficient to support D.S.’s adjudication of
    delinquency. Id. at 975.
    In D.S., our Supreme Court rejected “the Commonwealth’s suggestion
    that an individual may be ‘informed’ of an officer’s identity and/or purpose by
    surrounding circumstances.” Id. at 974. The D.S. Court expounded that
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    [i]n stating that an individual violates Section 4914 when he
    provides false information to law enforcement authorities “after
    being informed by a law enforcement officer” that he is the subject
    of an official investigation, the General Assembly made clear its
    intent that such information must be provided to the individual by
    the law enforcement officer. While the word “informed” might in
    other contexts carry the broader meaning the Commonwealth
    suggests, here it is linked to the law enforcement officer,
    indicating that the information conveyed must come from the law
    enforcement officer.
    In short, there is no language in the statute to suggest that
    the General Assembly intended that an individual’s knowledge
    could be derived from the surrounding circumstances.
    Id. at 975.
    Thus, this Court held in Kitchen that to sustain a conviction for false
    identification to a law enforcement officer, the Commonwealth must prove
    that the law enforcement officer informed the individual that he or she was
    the subject of an official investigation, and that must occur prior to the
    individual’s giving false identification. 181 A.3d at 345.
    Further, in Barnes, a police officer, while conducting a traffic stop for
    windshield obstructions, encountered Barnes, who was a passenger in the
    vehicle. 
    14 A.3d at 128
    . After Barnes twice gave false identification to the
    officer, the officer informed Barnes he was under investigation for providing
    false identification to law enforcement. 
    Id. at 129-131
    . Barnes then gave
    false identification for a third time. 
    Id. at 129
    . In concluding that the second
    element of the false identification statute cannot be satisfied by informing the
    accused he is being investigated for providing false identification to an officer,
    this Court stated that
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    [l]iterally read, the [false identification] statute in question does
    not make it illegal to provide to a law enforcement authority false
    information as to one’s identity unless and until one is first
    apprised that he is the subject of an official investigation of a
    violation of law. If one provides false information as to his identity
    prior to that point, he has not violated the statute.
    
    Id. at 131
    ; see also Kitchen, 181 A.3d at 343 (“‘[T]he official investigation
    element of 18 Pa.C.S. § 4914(a) cannot be satisfied solely by an investigation
    of the individual’s providing false information as to his [or her] identity.’”)
    (quoting Barnes, 
    14 A.3d at 131
    ).
    Instantly, Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to
    establish the second element of the statute, i.e., that an officer must inform
    the individual that he or she is the subject of an official investigation of a
    violation of the law.4 Appellant contends that he was not required to provide
    identification to Officer Makowski because there was no underlying official
    investigation of a violation of the law at the time the officer asked Appellant
    to provide his name, and even if there were such an investigation, Appellant
    was not the subject of it. Id. at 13-29.
    The trial court offered the following in support of its determination that
    Appellant violated the false identification statute.
    The evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction because
    Officer Makowski was identified as a police officer. He approached
    the scene in a marked patrol vehicle, and he was in uniform.
    4 Appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to satisfy the
    other two elements of the statute. Appellant does not contest that Officer
    Makowski identified himself as a police officer, see N.T., 1/16/2019, at 9, 12,
    or that Appellant provided false identifying information, see id. at 16, 99.
    -8-
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    When Officer Makowski arrived at the scene[,] he had only the
    information provided to him by dispatch, and was investigating to
    determine all of the facts and persons involved. He first spoke to
    Dade and found out that he was the boyfriend, and that his
    girlfriend [Chandler] walked away from the scene. [Appellant]
    told the officer that Dade’s girlfriend took his phone and walked
    away with it. According to Officer Makowski, he was investigating
    this incident as a domestic disturbance to which he believed
    [Appellant] to be a witness.        He was also investigating to
    determine whether the taking of the phone was a theft. During
    the course of this investigation, [Appellant] provided false
    identification even though he was advised he was the subject of
    the investigation and that if he continued to provide inaccurate
    information[,] he would be criminally charged. Accordingly, the
    evidence was sufficient to sustain [Appellant’s] conviction.
    Trial Court Opinion, 4/3/2019, at 6-7.
    We first address whether there is sufficient record evidence that Officer
    Makowski informed Appellant that he was the subject of an official
    investigation of a violation of law prior to asking for his identification, as
    mandated by section 4914(a) and our case law.          When asked about what
    happened after Appellant gave false identification the first time, Officer
    Makowski testified on direct examination as follows.
    Q.   After you received a no response from NCIC or no records
    found in the radio room, what did you do with that?
    A.    I advised [Appellant] that he was under official
    investigation, and if he continued to provide false information[,]
    he would be charged criminally.
    Q.   At that point what part of the investigation would you say
    [Appellant] was a part of?
    A.    The investigation, he was a party involved in the domestic
    incident. He had a cell phone reportedly taken from his hand. He
    was a witness to the verbal altercation.
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    Q.    Just to be clear, at that point you didn’t suspect him of
    actually violating any law himself?
    A.    No.
    Q.     But you considered him a witness to a potential disturbance
    or violation of the law?
    A.    Correct.
    N.T., 1/16/2019, at 18-19.
    Further, when questioned about his investigation, Officer Makowski
    testified on direct examination as follows.
    Q.    With regard to the original [domestic] incident that you had
    responded to, can you explain what happened with that? Before
    you’re leaving, what happened with that original incident?
    A.    After speaking with the Chief of Police[,] it [was] determined
    that the altercation [between Dade and Chandler] was just verbal
    and there was no crime of action that had been committed.
    Q.    How long would you say that portion of your investigation
    took to determine that no charges would be filed against the other
    two people[, Dade and Chandler]?
    A.    Approximately 15, 20 minutes maybe.
    Q.    During that approximate 15 to 20 minutes[,] did any portion
    of that also include the issue with identifying [Appellant]? Was
    there overlap there?
    A.    Throughout the course of the entire investigation, if you’re
    asking, I spent roughly about an hour on scene with the entire
    investigation. The first 15 or 20 minutes of the investigation
    focusing on the domestic incident and the remaining time was
    spent trying to identify [Appellant].
    Id. at 22-23.
    On cross-examination, Officer Makowski testified as follows.
    - 10 -
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    Q.   You said [on direct examination] that it took about 15, 20
    minutes to decide that there was actually no domestic crime
    committed, right?
    A.    Correct.
    Q.   And yet you were still trying to figure out who [Appellant]
    was?
    A.    [Appellant] was still part of my investigation.
    Q.   And yet you decided there was no domestic disturbance that
    had occurred?
    A.    Correct, but that did not end my investigation.
    Q.    So after your investigation about the domestic disturbance
    was over, the only thing left was to find out if [Appellant] was
    giving you truthful information?
    A.    Correct.
    Id. at 36-37.
    After defense had rested, the trial court also questioned Officer
    Makowski, who testified as follows.
    Q.    In the third paragraph down [of the affidavit of probable
    cause], it reads as follows: “[Appellant] verbally gave me his
    name as Calvin Clark, with a birthdate of 4/20/1960 and a Social
    Security number of XXX-XX-6820. A records check came back
    negative. [Officer Makowski] verbally advised [Appellant] that he
    was the subject of an official investigation, and if he provided
    [Officer Makowski] with any inaccurate information, he would be
    charged criminally.”
    So my question to you is, what was the official investigation
    that he was the subject of at that time in your mind?
    A.    At that time in my mind he was the subject of the
    investigation for the domestic.
    - 11 -
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    Id.   at   100,   quoting   Affidavit   of   Probable   Cause,   7/31/2018,   at   1
    (unpaginated).
    Officer Makowski’s testimony establishes that the officer informed
    Appellant that he was the subject of an official investigation of a violation of
    law after the officer asked for his identification, in violation of Kitchen,
    supra. Officer Makowski did not testify, nor is there any record evidence,
    that the officer informed Appellant that he was the subject of an official
    investigation of a violation of the law for a domestic incident, or any other
    violation of the law, prior to his asking Appellant for identification the first
    time. Rather, the record shows that, at the time Officer Makowski informed
    Appellant he was the subject of an official investigation, the officer had already
    asked Appellant for identification, Appellant had answered, and the officer had
    performed a records check; it was only at this point that Officer Makowski told
    Appellant he was the subject of an official investigation and if he continued
    to provide false identification, Appellant could be criminally charged. Id. at
    18-19, 23, 36-37, 100.       The Commonwealth concedes this point as well.
    Commonwealth’s Brief at 10 (“The first time Officer Makowski asked for
    identification, [Appellant] provided false information and claimed he had no
    identification on him.      After attempting, unsuccessfully, to verify this
    information, Officer Makowski informed [Appellant] that he was the subject of
    an official investigation.”) (emphasis added).
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    Accordingly, we conclude that the record shows that, when viewing all
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, as the verdict
    winner, the evidence was “so weak and inconclusive that as a matter of law
    no probability of fact [could have been] drawn from the combined
    circumstances” by the trial court, as fact-finder, to establish that Officer
    Makowski    informed    Appellant,   prior    to   Appellant’s   providing   false
    identification, that he was being investigated for a violation of law.       See
    Wanner, supra; see also Kitchen, supra; In re D.S., supra; Barnes,
    
    supra;
     Commonwealth v. Eisenhart, 
    2019 WL 4233854
     at *4 (Pa. Super.
    2019)5 (unpublished non-precedential memorandum) (reversing conviction
    for false identification to law enforcement officer due to insufficient evidence
    to establish second element, i.e., officer must inform individual that he or she
    is the subject of an official investigation of a violation of the law, where
    evidence showed (1) officer observed Eisenhart drive over white fog line, ran
    vehicle’s registration, determined it was suspended, conducted a traffic stop,
    and asked for license and registration, (2) Eisenhart provided a false name,
    (3) officer noticed Eisenhart looked nervous and informed him it was a crime
    to provide false identification, and (4) officer ran a records check and
    determined Eisenhart provided a false name).
    5See Pa.R.A.P. 126(b) (unpublished non-precedential memorandum decisions
    of the Superior Court filed after May 1 2019, may be cited for their persuasive
    value).
    - 13 -
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    Even if Officer Makowski had informed Appellant that he was being
    investigated for a violation of law before asking him for identification, the
    Commonwealth contends nonetheless that Appellant was the subject of an
    official investigation before he provided the false identification the first time.
    The Commonwealth argues that Officer Makowski was investigating the
    domestic incident, as well as a possible theft of Appellant’s cell phone, at the
    time he informed Appellant that he was the subject of an official investigation
    of a violation of law. Commonwealth’s Brief at 10-19. Appellant argues there
    was no underlying official investigation of a violation of the law at the time the
    officer asked Appellant to provide his name. Appellant’s Brief at 13-24.
    As discussed supra, the Commonwealth’s argument is belied by Officer
    Makowski’s own testimony. N.T., 1/16/2019, at 18-19, 22-23, 36-37, 100.
    Thus, even if the officer had informed Appellant he was the subject of an
    official investigation of a violation of law prior to asking for his identification,
    the record evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth
    as verdict winner, establishes that Official Makowski had concluded any
    investigation of either the domestic incident or purported theft at the time he
    asked Appellant for identification.
    However, even assuming arguendo that Officer Makowski was still
    investigating the domestic incident or supposed theft when he asked Appellant
    for identification, as the Commonwealth contends, Officer Makowski’s
    testimony confirms that he did not suspect Appellant was in violation of the
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    law until he discovered Appellant provided a false name, birthdate, and social
    security number. N.T., 1/16/2019, at 19. Rather, when Officer Makowski first
    asked for identification, he viewed Appellant as a witness to the domestic
    incident and the victim of a possible theft of Appellant’s phone. Id. Once
    Officer Makowski’s records check results came back negative, Officer
    Makowski spent the remainder of his time at the scene trying to identify
    Appellant. Id. at 22-23, 36-37.
    In rejecting a similar argument in Barnes, this Court noted that “the
    Commonwealth ostensibly argues that [s]ection 4194 is implicated as long as
    the police are investigating a matter and then provide the proper notice to the
    person being questioned. However, to apply [s]ection 4194 in such a fashion
    would greatly expand the scope of the offense in question, as well as ignore
    the explicit language of the statute.”   
    14 A.3d at 131
    .    We stated that “if
    [Barnes] was not yet under official investigation for a violation of law when
    asked for his name and [date of birth], the provision of false information was
    not a violation of law.” 
    Id. at 132
    . This Court expounded that
    under Fourth Amendment law, unless the stop was accompanied
    by reasonable suspicion that [Barnes] was in violation of the law
    or that criminal activity was afoot, the interaction between
    [Barnes] and [the o]fficer [] was a “mere encounter” and imposed
    no duty upon [Barnes] to even interact with [the o]fficer [].6
    While we do not condone the providing of false identification
    information to police officers, applying [s]ection 4914 in the
    fashion proffered by the Commonwealth would, in effect, impose
    a criminal liability on anyone for failing to provide truthful
    information as to his/her identity anytime a police officer asked,
    regardless of the basis for the request or the level of suspicion
    accompanying the request. Not only would such an obligation
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    seemingly contradict the explicit language of the statute, it would
    seemingly     contravene     accepted      Fourth     Amendment
    jurisprudence.
    __________
    6 A mere encounter need not be supported by any level of
    suspicion, and does not require a person to stop or respond.…
    Barnes, 
    14 A.3d at 132
     (citation omitted).
    Here, Officer Makowski’s testimony confirms that his initial questioning
    of Appellant was a mere encounter because it was not accompanied by
    reasonable suspicion that Appellant was in violation of the law.6 Accordingly,
    as in Barnes, we do not condone Appellant’s providing false identification to
    Officer Makowski, but under the circumstances of this case, Appellant was
    under no duty to answer truthfully.
    Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the Commonwealth produced
    insufficient evidence to sustain Appellant’s false identification to a law
    enforcement officer conviction. As such, we reverse his judgment of sentence.
    Judgment of sentence reversed.
    6 Officer Makowski testified that when he asked for Appellant’s identification,
    he “didn’t suspect Appellant of actually violating the law himself.” N.T.,
    1/16/2019, at 19. Under Barnes, we reject the Commonwealth’s contention
    that Appellant, as a witness and victim, was a “subject” of an official
    investigation within the meaning of 18 Pa.C.S. § 4914(a).                  See
    Commonwealth’s Brief at 20-26; Barnes, 
    14 A.3d at 131-32
    .
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    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 11/19/19
    - 17 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 355 EDA 2019

Filed Date: 11/19/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/19/2019