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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellee :
:
v. :
:
JUDITH A. HOCKENBERRY, :
: No. 1121 MDA 2013
Appellant :
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence May 7, 2013
In the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland County
Criminal Division No(s).: CP-21-CR-0001038-2010
BEFORE: BOWES, OLSON, and FITZGERALD,* JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY FITZGERALD, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 21, 2014
Appellant, Judith A. Hockenberry, appeals from the judgment of
sentence entered in the Cumberland County Court of Common Pleas
following the revocation of her intermediate punishment1 (“IP”) sentence for
*
Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
1
Our Supreme Court has explained:
42 Pa.C.S. § 9763(c) authorizes a sentencing court to
impose intermediate punishment as part of a sentence for
DUI. Pursuant to that intermediate punishment, the court
may attach any of a number of conditions upon the
defendant as it deems necessary. These conditions include
. . . participation in drug or alcohol screening and
treatment programs . . . . 42 Pa.C.S. § 9763(b)(1)-(17)[.]
Commonwealth v. Kyle, 874 A.2d 12, 13 n.2 (Pa. 2005).
The Legislature’s intent [behind the Pennsylvania County
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driving under the influence/high rate of alcohol2 (hereinafter “DUI”).
Appellant claims the trial court misapplied the law in not awarding her credit
for time spent in inpatient treatment as part of her IP sentence. We vacate
the sentence and remand for the court to award credit.
The trial court summarized the procedural history of this case as
follows. See Trial Ct. Op. 8/7/13, at 1-4. On July 27, 2010, Appellant
pleaded guilty to DUI—third or subsequent offense and driving while
operating privilege is suspended or revoked.3 After evaluating Appellant, a
Cumberland-Perry Drug and Alcohol Commission case manager
recommended long-term inpatient treatment. Id. at 1. On October 5,
2013, the trial court imposed a sentence of five years in the IP program.
The following day, October 6th, Appellant “was sent to Bowling Green” at
Brandywine, an inpatient drug and alcohol rehabilitation center. Id.
However, she was discharged on November 2nd because she was pregnant
Intermediate Punishment Act, 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9801-9813,]
was: “to give judges another sentencing option which
would lie between probation and incarceration with respect
to sentencing severity; to provide a more appropriate form
of punishment/treatment for certain types of non-violent
offenders; to make the offender more accountable to the
community; and to help reduce the county jail
overcrowding problem while maintaining public safety.”
Commonwealth v. Williams, 868 A.2d 529, 534 (Pa. Super. 2005)
(citations omitted).
2
75 Pa.C.S. § 3802(b).
3
75 Pa.C.S. § 1543(a).
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and using substances. Appellant was then sent to Gaudenzia Vantage House
until April 1, 2011.
On November 29, 2011, the probation department filed a petition to
revoke Appellant’s IP sentence, alleging Appellant (1) admitted using cocaine
and drinking alcohol, (2) tested positive for cocaine twice, and (3) was
“issued a citation for Public Drunkenness after being found to be under the
influence of alcohol at the Wal-Mart.” Id. at 2. The court subsequently
granted a continuance on the hearing on the petition to determine whether
Appellant “would be allowed to participate in the Cumberland County
Treatment Court Program.” Id. However, Appellant “did not enter the
Treatment Court Program.” Id.
Nevertheless, the probation department later withdrew its revocation
petition “in an effort to afford [Appellant] another opportunity to lead a
sober life.” Id. Appellant, however, was required to: (1) undergo
monitoring on a SCRAM bracelet for a minimum period of six months, (2)
“complete the intensive outpatient program and the outpatient program
[sic]” at Roxbury Treatment Center, (3) complete daily logs to account for
her whereabouts, (4) comply with curfew requirements, (5) report to the
probation office every Monday and Wednesday until she obtained gainful
employment, and (6) obtain a General Educational Diploma. Id. “Initially,
[Appellant] complied with these conditions. However, on October 14, 2012,
[she] tested positive for using opiates and cannabinoids.” Id. at 3.
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The probation department thus filed a second petition for revocation of
intermediate punishment on October 31, 2012. The court held a hearing on
November 20th. Appellant
admitted that she had violated the conditions of her
program and she was revoked from the Intermediate
Punishment Program. . . . However, in a final effort to
give [Appellant] a chance for a sober life, her Probation
Officer requested that she be considered for the State
Intermediate Punishment Program.
Id. Subsequently, however, the Department of Corrections advised the
court that Appellant was not eligible for the state IP program “because she
was wanted for a Violation of Probation in Tennessee based upon an arrest
for Aggravated Assault on a Police Officer and Possession of Paraphernalia.” 4
Id.
On May 7, 2013, the trial court, after obtaining an updated
presentence investigation report, imposed the underlying sentence for DUI:
a standard-range sentence of sixteen to forty-eight months’ imprisonment
with a Recidivism Risk Reduction Incentive sentence of twelve months. 5 The
court gave “credit for 260 days previously served in the county and state
prisons.” Id. at 4. Appellant filed a post-sentence motion, requesting an
4
Tennessee authorities later indicated that it would not seek extradition of
Appellant. Trial Ct. Op. at 3.
5
Appellant was also ordered to pay costs of prosecution, a $1,500 fine, and
$500 restitution. For driving while operating privilege is suspended or
revoked, the court imposed costs of prosecution and a $200 fine.
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additional credit of 177 days spent in inpatient treatment as a part of her IP
sentence. The court denied the motion, and this timely appeal followed. 6
For her sole issue on appeal, Appellant claims the trial court erred by
not granting her credit for time served in inpatient drug and alcohol
treatment, totaling 177 days. Appellant’s Brief at 12. She alleges she was
entitled to credit because the treatment was a mandatory, court-ordered
condition of her original intermediate punishment sentence. Id. Appellant
claims her inpatient treatment constituted “time spent in custody” pursuant
to 42 Pa.C.S. § 9760(2) because it was not voluntary, she could not opt out
of treatment, and the inpatient facilities prevented her from leaving the
premises. Id. We hold that Appellant is entitled to relief.
We first note:
“[A] challenge to the trial court’s failure to award credit
for time spent in custody prior to sentencing involves the
legality of sentence[.]” It is now well-settled and
essential that the [trial] court maintain the ability to
incarcerate persons for whom intermediate
punishment is no longer a viable means of
rehabilitation. Upon revocation, the sentencing
alternatives available to the court shall be the same
as the alternatives available at the time of initial
sentencing. . . .
Commonwealth v. Fowler, 930 A.2d 586, 595 (Pa. Super. 2007) (citations
omitted).
6
Appellant complied with the court’s order to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)
statement of errors complained of on appeal.
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Section 9760 of the Sentencing Code governs credit for time served
and provides, in pertinent part:
Credit against the maximum term and any minimum term
shall be given to the defendant for all time spent in
custody as a result of the criminal charge for which a
prison sentence is imposed or as a result of the conduct on
which such a charge is based. Credit shall include credit
for time spent in custody prior to trial, during trial, pending
sentence, and pending the resolution of an appeal.
42 Pa.C.S. § 9760(1) (emphasis added); see also 42 Pa.C.S. § 9773(b)
(providing that upon revocation of county intermediate punishment
sentence, court shall consider time served in county intermediate
punishment program).
This Court has stated: “The principle underlying Section 9760 is that a
defendant should be given credit for time spent in custody prior to
sentencing for a particular offense.” Fowler, 930 A.2d at 595 (citation
omitted). While Section 9760, or any other provision of the Sentencing
Code, does not define the phrase “time spent in custody,” “[c]ourts have
interpreted the word ‘custody,’ as used in Section 9760, to mean time spent
in an institutional setting such as, at a minimum, an inpatient alcohol
treatment facility.” Id. at 596 (citations omitted).
With respect to IP, this Court has stated:
“Intermediate punishment is an alternative to total
confinement.” Our Supreme Court has concluded that the
Legislature intended imprisonment and intermediate
punishment to be mutually exclusive and to be treated
differently, noting:
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the Legislature provides that nothing in this chapter
shall be construed as creating an enforceable right in
any person to participate in an intermediate
punishment program in lieu of incarceration. 42
Pa.C.S.[A.] § 9812. Thus, the Legislature now
clearly distinguishes between incarceration, i.e.,
imprisonment, and intermediate punishment.
Generally, it is within the trial court’s discretion whether to
credit time spent in an institutionalized rehabilitation and
treatment program as time served “in custody.” . . .
Id. at 596 (some citations omitted).
Our review of Pennsylvania authority has not revealed a case with the
facts and question presented in this case—whether inpatient drug treatment
that is part of a county IP sentence, is “custody” for credit purposes.
However, we consider the following decisions.
In the 1991 Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision of Commonwealth
v. Conahan, 589 A.2d 1107 (Pa. 1991), the defendant was arrested for
DUI, “voluntarily commenced inpatient treatment for DUI, which lasted for
ninety-five days,” and then subsequently pleaded guilty to DUI. Id. at
1108. The trial court imposed a mandatory sentence7 of imprisonment and
gave credit for the ninety-five days of treatment. Id.
Our Supreme Court first held that the term “custody” in section 9760
“includes time spent in institutionalized rehabilitation and treatment
programs.” Id. at 1109. The Court then held that, in the case before it, the
7
The defendant was convicted under the predecessor DUI statute, 75
Pa.C.S. § 3731. Conahan, 589 A.2d at 1108.
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trial court properly awarded the credit, noting:
[The defendant] voluntarily and at his own expense
entered a custodial hospital environment for well in excess
of the applicable mandatory minimum sentence; [he] was
restrained of his liberties during the entire time of his
confinement in that if he had violated this custody by
"walking away" he would not have received credit; and
that he has taken responsibility for his alcoholism and
maintained his sobriety through application of principles
acquired during his rehabilitation and subsequent
dedication to the ideology of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Id. However, the Court clarified that a DUI defendant was not entitled to
such credit as of right, and instead, the award of credit was at the trial
court’s discretion. Id. at 1110.
Later that same year, the Superior Court decided Commonwealth v.
Cozzone, 593 A.2d 860 (Pa. Super. 1991). In that case, the defendant was
convicted of DUI. Id. at 861. While awaiting sentencing, he was arrested
and charged with DUI again. Id. As a condition for bail for the second DUI
charge, the defendant “entered an inpatient alcohol treatment center, where
he remained for thirty-two . . . days.” Id. He subsequently pleaded guilty
to the second DUI charge. The court imposed sentence in both cases at the
same hearing. Id. For the first DUI, it sentenced him to forty-eight hours
to twenty-three months. Id. For the second DUI, it sentenced him to a
consecutive term of thirty days to twenty-three months. Id.
On appeal, the defendant claimed the court failed to give him credit
toward the second DUI conviction for time spent in treatment. Id. This
Court noted that he “was permitted by the District Justice to admit himself
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to an alcohol treatment facility in lieu of being committed to the county
prison,” and the “admission to a treatment facility was made a condition of .
. . bail.” Id. at 866. This Court reasoned the treatment was not voluntary
and held:
[I]n contrast to Conahan, [the defendant] did not
voluntarily admit himself to an alcohol treatment facility.
Instead, he entered the rehabilitation facility as a condition
of bail in order to avoid pre-trial imprisonment. We
conclude, therefore, that the time which [the defendant]
spent as a patient in the alcohol treatment facility was
“time spent in custody” within the contemplation of 42
Pa.C.S. § 9760(1). As such, he is entitled to credit
therefor against the sentence of imprisonment imposed for
his second offense.
Cozzone, 593 A.2d at 867-68.
In the 2007 Superior Court decision of Fowler,8 the defendant
completed twenty-five months of inpatient drug treatment as a part of the
county Drug Treatment Court Program. Fowler, 930 A.2d at 588. The trial
court denied his request for credit for this time. Id. at 590. On appeal to
this Court, the defendant argued, inter alia, that he was entitled to the credit
because the court ordered his participation in the drug treatment. Id. at
595. This Court disagreed, adopting the trial court’s reasoning:
Importantly, it was [the defendant] who requested the
opportunity to participate in the Erie County Drug Court.
[The defendant’s] motivation, in part, was to avoid
incarceration. . . .
8
Fowler was an appeal from an order denying a Post Conviction Relief Act,
42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546, petition. Fowler, 930 A.2d at 588.
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Equally as important was the fact [that the defendant’s]
participation in the Drug Court Program was voluntary.
This [p]rogram is not a mandated program. Instead, it was
[the defendant] who requested to participate. [The
defendant] could opt out of the program at any time.
Id. at 597. This Court also found,
[The defendant] had misused and abused the many
opportunities for rehabilitation without incarceration that
the court had provided to him. The [trial] court declined to
reward [the defendant’s] actions with credit for time
served. The court’s decision was entirely within its
purview.
Id. at 598.
Finally, in Commonwealth v. Toland, 995 A.2d 1242 (Pa. Super.
2010), the defendant was charged with DUI. Id. at 1243. “The magisterial
district judge provided in the . . . bail information . . . that [the defendant]
‘shall enter and complete [a] comprehensive in-patient alcohol/drug
treatment program.’” Id. at 1247. Before entering treatment, the
defendant was arrested for public drunkenness and hospitalized for a
“dangerously high blood alcohol level.” Id. The defendant then “referred
himself for . . . inpatient treatment” in Oregon and transferred to a program
in Arizona for additional inpatient treatment. Id. at 1248. The total time
spent in these two programs was 354 days. Id.
Thereafter, the trial court imposed a mandatory minimum sentence of
imprisonment. Id. at 1243. This Court specifically noted that the court
could not impose “any form of IP, such as placement in a residential
inpatient drug or alcohol treatment program, because [the defendant] was
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subject to a mandatory sentence of imprisonment[.]” Id. at 1252 n.11. The
defendant requested credit for the 354 days spent in inpatient rehabilitation.
Id. at 1243, 1247. The trial court denied it, determining, “Despite the
language in the bail information,” the defendant “voluntarily checked himself
into treatment.” Id. at 1251.
On appeal, this Court affirmed. Id. We first reviewed Conahan and
Cozzone and opined:
[I]t seems that whether a defendant is entitled to credit
for time spent in an inpatient drug or alcohol rehabilitation
facility turns on the question of voluntariness. If a
defendant is ordered into inpatient treatment by the court,
e.g., as an express condition of pre-trial bail, then he is
entitled to credit for that time against his sentence.
Cozzone. By contrast, if a defendant chooses to
voluntarily commit himself to inpatient rehabilitation, then
whether to approve credit for such commitment is a matter
within the sound discretion of the court. Conahan. See
also Commonwealth v. Mincone, . . . 592 A.2d 1375
(Pa.Super. 1991) (en banc) (trial court may exercise its
discretion in determining whether to grant defendant credit
towards his mandatory minimum sentence of
imprisonment for time voluntarily spent at Gateway
Rehabilitation Center, an institutionalized rehabilitation
facility) (discussing Conahan, supra).
Toland, 995 A.2d at 1250-51.
The Toland Court agreed that the defendant had “voluntarily
committed himself to residential rehabilitative treatment.” Id. at 1251. We
noted the defendant: (1) did not enter treatment until “one full month after
his release on bail, and after he had been re-arrested for public drunkenness
and hospitalized,” (2) conceded “that he did not enter inpatient treatment to
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avoid . . . jail for DUI, but did it ‘voluntarily’ to ‘save [his] life,’” (3) claimed
he began treatment as a condition of bail only after the trial court denied
him credit, and (4) “continued his preliminary hearing [eight] times in order
to remain in treatment, only to ultimately waive his preliminary hearing 15
months later, when, perhaps not coincidentally, he had spent nearly one full
year in residential inpatient treatment,” where the defendant “faced a
mandatory minimum sentence of one year of imprisonment.” Id.
The Toland Court next considered whether the trial court abused its
discretion in denying credit. Id. The trial court had found the treatment
facilities “were not custodial and did not rise to the level of ‘imprisonment,’”
where the defendant “was not restrained and was free to leave treatment at
any time.” Id. Furthermore, the defendant “was permitted to do his own
grocery shopping[,] volunteer in the community,” and “had a part-time job
at Office Max.” Id. at 1252. This Court held that the defendant failed to
demonstrate an abuse of discretion. Id.
Applying the dictates of Toland to the case sub judice, we review
whether Appellant’s participation in inpatient drug treatment was voluntary.
See id. at 1250-51. In arguing that it was not voluntary, Appellant
emphasizes that inpatient drug treatment was a condition of her IP
sentence, she could not opt out of treatment at any time, and she could not
leave the treatment center, as police would have apprehended her.
Appellant’s Brief at 17. In its opinion, the trial court did not discuss the
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voluntariness of Appellant’s drug treatment. Instead, its reasons for denying
credit are: (1) Appellant was clearly told that if she failed to comply with the
conditions of her IP sentence, she could be imprisoned up to 60 months; (2)
she was “given every chance” but repeatedly failed at her treatment; (3) she
was afforded 177 days of inpatient treatment, whereas “most other
participants in the Intermediate Punishment Program” receive 90 days; (4)
“the public spent well over $30,000.00 for [Appellant’s] rehabilitative
treatment” and she is not required to pay any of those costs; and (5) her
“inpatient treatment ultimately proved to be a failure [and] did nothing to
change her drug use habits,” and awarding credit “would reward failure.”
Trial Ct. Op. at 8-9.
While it is clear the trial court carefully reviewed the history of
Appellant’s case, we hold the court erred in not considering whether she
voluntarily entered inpatient treatment. See Toland, 995 A.2d at 1250-51.
After review of the foregoing decisional authority and the certified record,
including the original sentencing order of October 5, 2010, and the trial court
opinion, we hold that Appellant’s participation in treatment was not
voluntary akin to that in Fowler and Toland. Although Appellant’s sentence
was not imposed through Drug Court, like the sentence in Fowler, she “was
sent to Bowling Green” the day after she was sentenced, unlike the
defendant in Towland, who did not enter treatment until one month after
release on bail and after another arrest for public drunkenness and
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hospitalization. See Towland, 995 A.2d at 1247, 1251; Fowler, 930 A.2d
at 588. Appellant then “remained [at Bowling Green] until November 2,
2010, when she showed up at the Cumberland County Probation Office
having been discharged from Bowling Green.” Trial Ct. Op. at 1.
Appellant avers on appeal that she is entitled to 177 days of credit,
which we calculate is the length of time between October 6, 2010, when she
started at Bowling Green, and April 1, 2011, when she left Gaudenzia
Vantage House. In light of our foregoing discussion, we agree that she is
entitled to this amount of credit. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of
sentence and remand for the trial court to award 177 days of credit.
Judgment of sentence vacated. Case remanded for proceedings
consistent with this memorandum. Jurisdiction relinquished.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 11/21/2014
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