Com. v. Rogers, E. ( 2020 )


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  • J-S42041-20
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    ERIC ROGERS                                :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 1806 EDA 2019
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered May 29, 2019
    in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0509222-1991
    BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., OLSON, J., and MUSMANNO, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY MUSMANNO, J.:                           FILED DECEMBER 8, 2020
    Eric Rogers (“Rogers”) appeals from the judgment of sentence entered
    following his resentencing for his guilty plea to one count each of possession
    with intent to deliver a controlled substance (“PWID”) and criminal
    conspiracy.1 We affirm.
    The trial court summarized the history underlying the instant appeal as
    follows:
    On October 28, 1991, [Rogers] pled guilty… to one count of
    [PWID,] one count of criminal conspiracy, and one count of a
    violation of the Pennsylvania Corrupt Organizations Act [(“PCOA”),
    see 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 911]. On December 3, 1991, [the trial court]
    sentenced [Rogers] to 1-2 years [of] incarceration for the PWID
    charge, 5-10 years [of] incarceration for the criminal conspiracy
    charge, and 10-20 years [of] incarceration for the [PCOA] charge,
    ____________________________________________
    1   See 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 780-113(a)(30), 903.
    J-S42041-20
    each to be conserved concurrently. [Rogers] did not pursue a
    direct appeal after this initial sentencing.
    Trial Court Opinion, 11/21/19, at 1-2.
    Rogers subsequently filed two Petitions for relief pursuant to the Post
    Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”),2 both of which were denied. The trial court
    summarized what next transpired as follows:
    Rogers filed a third[,] pro se[,] PCRA Petition on May 13,
    2016. After the filing of this third PCRA Petition, Rogers filed a
    Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus in the United States District
    Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. On April 13, 2017,
    the Honorable Mitchell Goldberg [(“Judge Goldberg”),] of the
    United States District Court for the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania [(“the Federal Court”),] granted [Rogers’s] Habeas
    Corpus Petition, ordering that the Commonwealth vacate
    [Rogers’s] conviction for the [PCOA] charge and provide [Rogers]
    with a new sentencing hearing for the PWID and criminal
    conspiracy charges stemming from [Rogers’s] October 1991 guilty
    plea. Judge Goldberg granted [Rogers’s] Habeas Corpus Petition
    in finding that the [PCOA] charge was unconstitutionally applied
    to [Rogers,] as [Rogers] was engaged in a criminal enterprise,
    rather than a legitimate business, since criminal enterprises were
    not captured by the [PCOA] statute at the time [Rogers]
    committed the act. On May 17, 2017, Judge Goldberg issued a
    subsequent Order that extended the time the Commonwealth was
    to sentence [Rogers] [to] within 120 days from May 17, 2017.
    … On August 9, 2017, 84 [d]ays from the [Federal Court’s]
    Order extending the time for sentencing, [the trial court] vacated
    [Rogers’s PCOA] charge and sentenced [Rogers] on both the PWID
    and criminal conspiracy charges pursuant to the Order of Judge
    Goldberg. On the PWID charge, [Rogers] was sentenced by [the
    trial court] to 1-2 years [of] incarceration, and on the criminal
    conspiracy charge, [Rogers] was sentenced to 5-10 years [of]
    incarceration, both to run concurrently.
    ____________________________________________
    2   See 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-9546.
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    J-S42041-20
    Id. at 3-4.
    On direct appeal following resentencing, this Court vacated Rogers’s
    judgment of sentence and remanded for a more thorough sentencing hearing,
    at the request of the trial court. See Commonwealth v. Rogers, 2880 EDA
    2017 (Pa. Super. filed July 19, 2018) (order).
    Following the resentencing hearing, on October 9, 2018, the trial court
    sentenced Rogers to a prison term of 1-2 years for his conviction of PWID,
    and a concurrent prison term of 1-2 years for his conviction of conspiracy.
    This sentence was to run concurrent with any other sentence that Rogers was
    then serving. On direct appeal, this Court again granted a request by the trial
    court to      vacate   the   sentence     and    remand   for   resentencing.    See
    Commonwealth v. Rogers, 3139 EDA 2018 (Pa. Super. filed February 12,
    2018) (order).3
    On May 29, 2019, the trial court sentenced Rogers once again. For his
    conviction of PWID, the trial court sentenced Rogers to a prison term of 1-2
    years. For his conviction of conspiracy, the trial court imposed a concurrent
    prison term of 1-2years. The trial court ordered that the sentences be served
    concurrent with any sentence that Rogers was then serving.                Thereafter,
    ____________________________________________
    3 In its Opinion, the trial court requested a remand “for a more thorough
    resentencing hearing, as to the crimes to be resentenced and the basis of the
    resentencing.” Trial Court Opinion, 12/17/18, at 1.
    -3-
    J-S42041-20
    Rogers filed the instant timely appeal, followed by a court-ordered Pa.R.A.P.
    1925(b) Concise Statement of matters complained of on appeal.
    Rogers now presents the following claim for our review: “Whether the
    [sentencing] court erred in not reviewing the merits of [Rogers’s] no factual
    basis argument for his guilty plea?” Brief for Appellant at 8.
    Rogers claims that the trial court erred in resentencing him, “as there
    was no factual basis for his guilty plea.” Id. at 15. Rogers asserts that other
    courts have “gone outside the federal court’s remand for resentencing orders
    and reviewed claims of actual innocence.” Id. Rogers directs our attention
    to the comments to Pa.R.Crim.P. 319(a)(2), which set forth questions that a
    judge should ask in determining whether a guilty plea is knowing and
    voluntary. Brief for Appellant at 15. According to Rogers, when the Federal
    Court vacated his conviction of PCOA, there was no sufficient factual basis
    underlying his remaining convictions. Id.
    Rogers further argues that the Commonwealth misled the trial court at
    the original plea hearing. Id. According to Rogers, “[t]he Commonwealth
    contended that [Rogers] was in possession of drugs[,] and that he conspired
    to do so[,] when there was no substantive evidence to support such a
    contention.” Id. at 16. Rogers points out that at the original plea hearing,
    the evidence established that he possessed no drugs, and that there was never
    a record of “any money in the first place.” Id. at 17. Rogers states that he
    -4-
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    was taken to jail for traffic tickets[,] which does not support the PWID charge
    rendered.” Id.
    Regarding his charge of criminal conspiracy, Rogers claims that once the
    PCOA charge was vacated, “there was no one [that Rogers] could have
    conspired with.” Id. at 16. Rogers argues that the vacated PCOA charge was
    “inherently intertwined” with his conviction of conspiracy and PWID.          Id.
    Without the PCOA charge, Rogers asserts, there was no co-conspirator in the
    immediate case. Id.
    Rogers challenges his guilty plea as without factual support. However,
    this appeal is from resentencing following a remand from the Federal Court.
    In addressing Rogers’s claim, we are guided by this Court’s reasoning in
    Commonwealth v. McKeever, 
    947 A.2d 782
     (Pa. 2008). In McKeever, as
    in this case, the federal court remanded to the trial court, which vacated the
    defendant’s   corrupt organization sentences, but       did   not   disturb   the
    defendant’s remaining sentences.      
    Id. at 784
    .     This Court affirmed the
    defendant’s new judgment of sentence, after which our Supreme Court denied
    allowance of appeal. 
    Id.
    Within one year the defendant filed a PCRA petition challenging his guilty
    plea as to his remaining convictions. 
    Id.
     The PCRA court found the petition
    was timely filed within one year of the date the defendant’s resentence was
    affirmed, but, nevertheless, denied relief on the merits. 
    Id. at 784-85
    . On
    appeal, this Court determined the petition was untimely filed.      
    Id. at 786
    .
    -5-
    J-S42041-20
    This Court stated that the federal court’s “grant of federal habeas corpus relief
    as to [the defendant’s] corrupt organizations convictions [did] not ‘reset the
    clock’ for the finality of [the defendant’s] judgment of sentence[,] so as to
    make the PCRA petition [the defendant’s] ‘first’ for timeliness purposes.” 
    Id. at 785
    . This Court, relying on Commonwealth v. Dehart, 
    730 A.2d 991
    ,
    994 n.2 (Pa. Super. 1999), explained that a successful PCRA petition does not
    result in a new final judgment date “where the relief granted … neither
    restored a petitioner’s direct appeal rights nor disturbed his conviction, but
    rather affected his sentence only.” McKeever, 947 A.2d at 785.
    Although [the defendant] successfully challenged his corrupt
    organizations convictions and sentences successfully in federal
    court, the remainder of his convictions, each having a distinct
    sentence, were not disturbed by the [the federal court’s] grant
    of habeas corpus relief[,] or by the trial court when it vacated the
    corrupt organizations sentences in its resentencing order.
    Further, while it is correct that [the defendant] had an absolute
    constitutional right to appeal his judgment of sentence entered
    after the [the federal court’s] grant of habeas corpus relief, in
    that direct appeal, he was permitted to raise issues
    pertaining only to the re-sentencing procedure itself; his
    underlying claims of trial error regarding his non-vacated
    convictions could not be addressed on direct appeal from re-
    sentencing.     Therefore, for purposes of the PCRA, those
    convictions and their sentences became final on October 2, 1995.
    Our conclusion is wholly supported by the principle that, where a
    defendant is convicted of multiple charges and sentenced on those
    charges separately, his appellate challenge to one of the
    sentences, to the exclusion of the others, does not affect the
    operation of the other sentences.
    Id. at 785-86 (footnotes and citations omitted).
    -6-
    J-S42041-20
    Our review discloses that the Federal Court neither restored Rogers’s
    direct appeal rights, nor disturbed his remaining convictions. Consequently,
    in this appeal, Rogers is permitted to raise issues pertaining only to the re-
    sentencing procedure itself. See id. at 785. Because Rogers’s claim fails to
    do so, we affirm the trial court’s judgment of sentence.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 12/08/2020
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1806 EDA 2019

Filed Date: 12/8/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/8/2020