Com. v. Fredrick, J., Jr. ( 2020 )


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  • J-A03008-20
    
    2020 Pa. Super. 79
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    JACOB WILLIAM FREDRICK, JR.                :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 770 MDA 2019
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered April 5, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of York County Criminal Division at No(s):
    CP-67-CR-0001412-2018
    BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., STABILE, J., and DUBOW, J.
    OPINION BY LAZARUS, J.:                                 FILED MARCH 31, 2020
    Jacob William Fredrick, Jr., appeals from the judgment of sentence,
    entered in the Court of Common Pleas of York County, following his conviction
    for possession of firearms—person not to possess.1 Upon careful review, we
    affirm.
    On December 8, 2017, York Community Management (YCM) evicted
    Fredrick from his mobile home in Dover, Pennsylvania, for community rules
    violations.   N.T. Suppression Hearing, 6/25/18, at 8, 62.      The same day,
    Constables Moffit, Winslow, and Shannon2 changed the locks on Fredrick’s
    mobile home pursuant to YCM’s eviction procedure.
    Id. at 8-9,
    30. Victoria
    ____________________________________________
    1   18 Pa.C.S.A § 6105(a).
    2 We note that, with the exception of Constable Robert Winslow, who testified
    on behalf of the Commonwealth, only the constables’ surnames are provided
    in the record. See N.T. Suppression hearing, 6/25/18 at 9, 29.
    J-A03008-20
    Walters, Fredrick’s property manager at YCM, testified that the following day,
    she received messages from other residents in the mobile home community
    that they saw two vehicles and “the man who had lived there” on Fredrick’s
    property.
    Id. at 10-13.
    Walters called the police, who investigated the matter
    and determined that the home was secure.
    Id. at 12.
    On December 11, 2017, Walters received another message from YCM
    tenants that “other people were on [Fredrick’s] property.”
    Id. at 13.
      As
    Walters supervised another evicted tenant retrieve personal property from her
    home that day, she noticed Sergeant Michael Bosco, a veteran of the
    Newberry Township Police Department for 16 years, in front of Fredrick’s
    trailer.
    Id. at 14,
    33. Sergeant Bosco was on the premises in response to a
    911-call from Fredrick that same day.
    Id. at 33-34,
    58.
    Fredrick spoke with Sergeant Bosco regarding a suspected burglary of
    his mobile home.
    Id. at 33-34,
    58. Fredrick explained to Sergeant Bosco that
    he was evicted from his mobile home three days earlier.
    Id. at 34.
    Fredrick
    further explained that someone told him that his home had since been
    burglarized and that the back door was hanging open, and that Fredrick was
    unable to confirm whether either of these statements was true.3
    Id. at 34,
    59. Fredrick advised Sergeant Bosco that he had 30 to 35 firearms “along the
    lines of AKs, MAC-10s, ARs, and several pistols” underneath his mattress in
    ____________________________________________
    3Fredrick is a truck driver who was out of the area at the time he was advised
    of a possible burglary. N.T. Suppression Hearing, 6/25/18, at 50-53. Fredrick
    was also on notice that he would be arrested for trespass if he returned to the
    property from which he was evicted.
    Id. at 40,
    59.
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    the middle bedroom inside the mobile home.
    Id. at 34-36.
    Fredrick described
    where the weapons should have been located “several different times,”
    insisting that they would be nowhere else.
    Id. at 52.
    Both Sergeant Bosco
    and Fredrick testified that Fredrick was highly concerned about the weapons
    being used to harm innocent people, which compelled Fredrick to request a
    police investigation of the suspected burglary.
    Id. at 36,
    59-62.
    Sergeant Bosco explained to Walters that Fredrick had summoned him
    to the property to investigate whether a burglary occurred and verify whether
    any firearms were missing from the trailer.
    Id. at 14-15,
    35. After Walters
    explained the situation to her supervisor, she called Raymond Snyder, a YCM
    maintenance worker, to let Sergeant Bosco into the mobile home through the
    front door.
    Id. at 15.
    As they waited for Snyder to arrive, a neighbor informed
    Sergeant Bosco that she sees “people keep going up to [Fredrick’s home].”
    Id. at 44.
    Sergeant Bosco testified that, from the front of the mobile home,
    “it appear[ed] [that] at some point[,] someone had messed around with the
    front window,” and around the rear, the doorknob, which was falling off,
    looked as if someone “had [made] some attempts to force their way in.”
    Id. at 36-37.
      Based on all of the foregoing, Sergeant Bosco believed that
    someone could have been inside the mobile home.
    Id. at 37.
    Upon entering the mobile home, Sergeant Bosco conducted a protective
    sweep to ensure that no one else was inside.
    Id. at 37.
    Sergeant Bosco then
    entered the middle bedroom, where he immediately observed two rifle cases
    on top of a pile of clothing.
    Id. Inside the
    cases were a 12-gauge shotgun
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    and a Mossberg hunting rifle.
    Id. at 35-45.
    Sergeant Bosco checked under
    the mattress to see whether any of the 30-35 firearms that Fredrick described
    to him were missing.
    Id. at 38.
    The only weapons under the mattress were
    “a couple [of] BB guns.”
    Id.
    at 38.
    During a follow-up phone call, Sergeant
    Bosco explained this to Fredrick, who advised him that this should not have
    been the case.
    Id. at 38.
    Fredrick further advised Sergeant Bosco on this
    call that he was a person prohibited from possessing firearms, and that “[h]e
    was more concerned about the weapons getting on the streets[,] because of
    what types they were,” than he was concerned about “being in trouble for it.”
    Id. at 38.
    Another officer ran a criminal background check on Fredrick and
    confirmed that he is a person not to possess firearms.
    Id. at 38-39.
    The following day, Sergeant Bosco spoke with Fredrick via telephone to
    try to track down the missing guns.
    Id. at 39.
    Fredrick explained that none
    of the firearms was registered in his name.
    Id. at 39.
    Fredrick purchased the
    firearms on the streets of New York and New Jersey, and some of them had
    their serial numbers erased.
    Id. at 39.
      Police were unable to locate and
    recover any of the missing firearms.
    Id. On April
    3, 2018, Fredrick was charged with persons not to possess
    firearms in connection with the two weapons recovered from his mobile home.
    On June 25, 2018, the trial court held a suppression hearing and denied
    Fredrick’s motion to suppress the evidence of the firearms, wherein Fredrick
    argued that Sergeant Bosco effectuated an illegal, warrantless search of his
    mobile home without his consent. See
    id. at 79.
    Fredrick proceeded to a
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    bench trial on January 9, 2019, before the Honorable Maria Musti Cook, after
    which he was convicted of the crime charged. On April 5, 2019, the court
    sentenced Fredrick to a term of three to six years’ imprisonment.
    Fredrick timely filed a notice of appeal and a court-ordered Pa.R.A.P.
    1925(b) concise statement of errors complained of on appeal.        On appeal,
    Fredrick contests the trial court’s denial of his pre-trial motion to suppress.
    Specifically, Fredrick argues that Sergeant Bosco lacked legal authorization to
    enter and search his locked mobile home without a warrant and without his
    express permission, and that the suppression court thus erred in failing to
    suppress the firearms found therein.
    Our review of the suppression court’s ruling on a motion to suppress is
    governed by the following principles:
    When reviewing the propriety of a suppression order, an appellate
    court is required to determine whether the record supports the
    suppression court’s factual findings and whether the inferences
    and legal conclusions drawn by the suppression court from those
    findings are appropriate. Where the [Commonwealth] prevailed
    in the suppression court, we may consider only the evidence of
    the [Commonwealth] and so much of the evidence for the
    [defense] as remains uncontradicted when read in the context of
    the record as a whole. Where the record supports the factual
    findings of the suppression court, we are bound by those facts and
    may reverse only if the legal conclusions drawn therefrom are in
    error. However, where the appeal of the determination of the
    suppression court turns on allegations of legal error, the
    suppression court’s conclusions of law are not binding on an
    appellate court, whose duty it is to determine if the suppression
    court properly applied the law to the facts.
    Commonwealth v. Cartagena, 
    63 A.3d 294
    , 298 (Pa. Super. 2013) (en
    banc) (citation omitted).
    -5-
    J-A03008-20
    In the matter sub judice, the suppression court concluded that Fredrick
    impliedly consented to police entry into his mobile home by summoning police
    to investigate a suspected crime against him, telling Sergeant Bosco about
    the weapons inside voluntarily, and communicating the idea that public safety
    was in grave jeopardy. Trial Court Opinion, 8/22/19, at 7. We agree.
    Under both the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and
    Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, a search conducted
    without   a   warrant   is   deemed   to   be   unreasonable,   and   therefore,
    constitutionally impermissible, unless an established exception applies.
    Commonwealth v. Kemp, 
    961 A.2d 1247
    , 1260 (Pa. Super. 2008). “One
    such exception is consent, voluntarily given.”
    Id. Consent may
    be express
    or implied.   See Commonwealth v. Witman, 
    750 A.2d 327
    (Pa. Super.
    2000); Commonwealth v. Wilmer, 
    194 A.3d 564
    , 573-76 (Pa. 2018) (“the
    Superior Court in Witman . . . approved [police] entry [into defendant’s
    residence] based upon the initial implied consent of [the defendant,] and
    thereafter [approved reentry into his residence] based upon the express
    consent of his mother and father.”) (emphasis added).
    In Commonwealth v. Smith, 
    77 A.3d 562
    , 568-69 (Pa. 2013), our
    Supreme Court explained:
    [T]he legality and constitutionality of warrantless, but
    consented[-]to searches and seizures are examined objectively
    under a totality of the circumstances test to determine whether
    the consent was the product of an essentially free and
    unconstrained choice and not the result of coercion or duress.
    Under this maxim, no one fact, circumstance, or element of the
    examination of a person’s consent has talismanic significance.
    -6-
    J-A03008-20
    . . . [I]t is a court’s function to determine whether a criminal
    defendant voluntarily and knowingly gave his consent to be
    subjected to a search or seizure as contemplated by the Fourth
    Amendment and Article I, Section 8.
    Id. (citations and
    quotation marks omitted).
    With regard to consent, “voluntariness” is a question of fact to be
    determined from the totality of the circumstances.           Schneckloth v.
    Bustamonte, 
    412 U.S. 218
    (1973). Moreover, the standard for measuring
    the scope of an individual’s consent is one of “objective reasonableness.”
    Commonwealth v. Reid, 
    811 A.2d 530
    , 549 (Pa. 2002). Thus, we ascertain
    the scope of consent based on what “a reasonable person would have
    understood by the exchange between the officer and the person who gave the
    consent.”
    Id. In Witman,
    supra, this Court first addressed the issue of implied
    consent to search and held, after examining the law of our sister states,4 that
    “a sound exception to the warrant requirement must exist where a defendant
    has summoned police and set the tone for the initial investigation.”
    Id. at 335.
    There, the defendant called police to his home after claiming to have
    ____________________________________________
    4 See, e.g., Brown v. Texas, 
    856 S.W.2d 177
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (where
    owner of premises reports to police that third person committed crime, owner
    implicitly consents to search of premises reasonably related to routine
    investigation of offense and identity of perpetrator); State v. Fleishman, 
    754 P.2d 340
    (Ariz. Ct. App. 1988) (restaurant owner who was not criminal suspect
    implicitly consented to search of restaurant by reporting wife’s killing to
    police); State v. Fredette, 
    411 A.2d 65
    (Me. 1979) (defendant consented to
    search of home by calling police, reporting husband shot, and cooperating
    during police search); Kelly v. State, 
    249 N.W.2d 800
    (Wis. 1977) (defendant
    consented to search of premises by reporting to police deceased was shot
    while defendant was in another room).
    -7-
    J-A03008-20
    heard a struggle downstairs and finding his brother slain.
    Id. at 335.
    The
    Court noted that because the defendant presented himself to police as a
    victim, and the police did not suspect him as the perpetrator of any crime,
    “the record support[ed] a finding that police          [were] conducting an
    investigation pursuant to the [defendant’s] valid consent.”
    Id. at 331-37.
    Furthermore, we specifically held in Witman that “in summoning emergency
    personnel for help and by communicating the idea that a murderer was at
    large, [the defendant] implicitly consented to the police entry into the house.”
    Id. at 335.
    Here, Fredrick called the police to alert them to the possibility that a
    large cache of firearms had been stolen from his mobile home and turned
    loose on the streets. Fredrick informed Sergeant Bosco that he had no way
    of verifying whether his trailer had been burglarized or whether the firearms
    were secure. He repeatedly told Sergeant Bosco that the firearms should have
    been located under the mattress in the middle bedroom, and he repeatedly
    expressed fears that the weapons would be used to harm innocent people. At
    the time Fredrick initially contacted the police, he represented himself as a
    victim, and the police had no reason to suspect that he was involved in any
    criminal activity. Thus, we find that the police acted pursuant to his valid
    consent. See 
    Witman, supra
    at 331-37.
    Regarding the scope of Fredrick’s consent, we find that, undoubtedly, “a
    reasonable person would have understood” that Fredrick requested police
    assistance in safeguarding the firearms under his mattress, which necessarily
    -8-
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    entailed entry into his mobile home and, specifically, his bedroom. See 
    Reid, supra
    . Tellingly, when Sergeant Bosco called Fredrick to report that the guns
    were missing, Fredrick did not object to Sergeant Bosco’s presence inside the
    mobile home; instead, Fredrick continued to cooperate with Sergeant Bosco
    and, unprompted, revealed to Sergeant Bosco that he was a person not to
    possess firearms. There is nothing in the record to suggest that Fredrick’s
    implied consent for Sergeant Bosco to enter his home and verify whether his
    firearms were stolen was the result of anything other than Fredrick’s
    unfettered free will and his justifiable concern for the safety of others.
    Given the foregoing, we conclude that the warrantless search of
    Fredrick’s mobile home was constitutionally permissible.       
    Witman, supra
    .
    Specifically, Fredrick impliedly and voluntarily consented to Sergeant Bosco’s
    search of his mobile home by summoning police to investigate a suspected
    burglary against him, repeatedly telling Sergeant Bosco where his arsenal
    should have been located inside the home, and communicating the idea that
    without police intervention, dozens of extremely dangerous firearms might be
    put to nefarious use. See
    id. Accordingly, all
    evidence seized inside Fredrick’s mobile home was
    admissible at trial. The suppression court did not err in denying Fredrick’s
    pre-trial motion to suppress.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    -9-
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    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 03/31/2020
    - 10 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 770 MDA 2019

Filed Date: 3/31/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/31/2020