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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
v. :
:
DAWN SMALLEY, : No. 1571 EDA 2015
:
Appellant :
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence, May 18, 2015,
in the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County
Criminal Division at Nos. CP-46-CR-0000958-2015,
CP-46-CR-0005775-2014
BEFORE: FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E., OTT AND MUSMANNO, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.: FILED APRIL 18, 2016
Dawn Smalley appeals from the May 18, 2015 judgment of sentence
following her conviction of retail theft. We affirm.
On May 18, 2015, appellant entered into a plea agreement with the
Commonwealth in response to a charge of retail theft. As part of the plea
agreement, appellant agreed to serve a term of incarceration at the
Montgomery County Correctional Facility for not less than six months, nor
more than twenty-three months followed by a three-year term of probation,
community service requirements, and payment of fines, court costs, and
restitution. The terms of the plea agreement were jointly recommended to
the trial court. (Notes of testimony, 5/18/15 at 9.) The plea agreement
contained the following clause:
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Are you aware that the Judge does not have to
sentence you to the term of probation or jail
sentence upon which your attorney and Assistant
District Attorney have agreed?
Plea agreement at 4. Appellant affirmatively indicated that she understood
that particular clause of the plea agreement. Additionally, appellant initialed
at the bottom of the page on which the clause was found in the plea
agreement and signed the plea agreement. The trial court, after stating on
the record that the terms of the plea agreement were unsatisfactory,
sentenced appellant to a term of eleven and one-half to twenty-three
months’ imprisonment.1
Appellant does not challenge any aspect of the sentence she received,
rather, she challenges the legality of the sentence, indicating that her case
should be remanded to the trial court for resentencing consistent with the
terms of her plea agreement.
Having determined, after careful review, that the Honorable Wendy
Demchick-Alloy, in her Rule 1925(a) opinion of June 30, 2015, ably and
comprehensively disposes of appellant’s issue on appeal, with appropriate
1
When plea agreements are accompanied by a recommended sentence, the
trial court is not bound to that recommendation and is free to not abide by
the terms of the recommended sentence. Commonwealth v. Berry, 877
A.2d 479, 484-485 (Pa.Super. 2005) (en banc), appeal denied, 917 A.2d
944 (Pa. 2007). If the sentence imposed by the trial court is unacceptable
to the defendant, it is the defendant’s responsibility to file a motion with the
trial court to withdraw the guilty plea. Id.
-2-
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reference to the record and without legal error, we will affirm on the basis of
that opinion.
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Musmanno, J. joins the Memorandum.
Ott, J. concurs in the result.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 4/18/2016
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Circulated 03/18/2016 02:21 PM
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IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
CRJMINAL DIVISION
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA Nos. CP-46-CR-0000958-20 I 5
CP-46-CR-0005775-2014
v.
DAWN SMALLEY
OPINION
DEMCHICK-ALLOY, J. JUNE 30, 2015
Appellant Dawn Smalley, defendant in the above-captioned matters, appeals from the
judgments of sentence filed on May 18, 2015. By order dated May 29, 2015, the undersigned
judge directed appellant to file a statement of errors complained of on appeal. On June 17, 2015,
appellant filed a "Preliminary Concise Statement of Matters Complained of Pursuant to
Pa.R.AP. 1925" (hereinafter, "the Statement"). The Statement raises a single issue, quoted here
verbatim:
Whether the trial court erred in allowing Appellant to be colloquied and thereafter
accepting Appellant's guilty pica and admissions to [her] probation violations
based on the terms and conditions as announced in open court by the prosecutor
and defense, but, subsequent thereto sentencing appellant to a sentence that did
not conform to the global negotiated pica agreement as announced before
appellant tendered [her] guilty pica and concomitant admission to probation
violations.
Facts and Procedural History
On May 18, 2015 appellant appeared with counsel before the undersigned and, together
with an assistant district attorney for the Commonwealth, presented a negotiated guilty plea in
regard to a new charge of retail theft graded as a felony of the third degree. N. T. 5-18-20 J 5, p. 2.
The proposed sentence included a term of incarceration of six to twenty-three months, to be
served at the Montgomery County Correctional Facility, with three years' probation, thirty-six
hours' community service, and a fine of $300.00 and costs, with restitution to be determined
within thirty days after sentencing. Id.
Appellant's lawyer conducted an oral guilty plea colloquy and produced, as Exhibit 0-1,
a written guilty plea colloquy. Id. at 3-8. The written colloquy was accepted into evidence and
made a part of the record. The assistant district attorney engaged appellant in a supplemental
oral plea colloquy. Id. at 8-10. After the oral and written colloquies were presented to the court,
the undersigned judge engaged appellant in a dialogue in order to observe her demeanor,
appraise her apparent willingness to reform herself, and further assess her rehabilitative needs.
That dialogue, when considered in the context of appellant's criminal history record, established
that: she had been convicted numerous times in Montgomery County, Bucks County and
Philadelphia County, id. at 1 1-12, 20-21; her offenses included identity theft, id at 13; she had
been addicted to narcotics for the past fourteen years, id at 22, before and after she became the
mother of twins, id. at 16, 22-23; and she stole to support her addiction, id. at 15. She began
taking narcotics when a doctor prescribed them to treat the pain from lupus, id at 14, but she
spent fourteen years indulging her addiction by stealing without seeking any steps to treat it. Id.
at 14-15. Appellant's testimony that she did not tell any of her prior sentencing judges or
probation officers that she was addicted to narcotics until January of this year (at which time she
told her probation officer in Bucks County) was incredible. Id. at 15, 23; see also id. at 16
(''Why wouldn't you totally and utterly be desperate for rehab, and do everything you could on
your own, if the PO is not responding to get help, as opposed to stealing?").
The evidence adduced at the guilty plea hearing indicated that the negotiated sentence
would not be sufficient to enable appelJant to undergo an effective program of drug treatment
while she was off the streets, and the undersigned judge repeatedly stated her intention not to
2
follow the sentencing recommendation because it would not have been consistent with
appellant's rehabilitative needs or the protection of the public. Id. at 13 (considering
incarceration at SCI Muncy and referring to drug treatment program available there); id. at 13-14
(stating, "I'm thinking out loud so you can hear me in the way I'm thinking here."); id. at 18, 19
(considering treatment programs available at SCI Muncy in view of appellant's rehabilitative
needs and public safety); id. at 20, 23-24 (concluding that negotiated term of incarceration too
short even asswning upcoming sentencing in Bucks County would address appellant's need for
treatment). Prior to imposing sentence, the undersigned judge gave appellant opportunities to
speak before being sentenced, at which times she could have asked to withdraw her guilty plea,
or to have time to speak with her lawyer about whether to proceed with the guilty plea hearing.
Id. at 15-16, 23. At no time before or after sentencing did defense counsel ask for a recess to
speak with appellant about whether to withdraw her plea. Alter the hearing concluded, appellant
did not file a written post-sentence motion to withdraw the plea or ask for reconsideration of the
sentence. Appellant simply filed the instant appeal.
Discussion
Appellant does not claim on appeal that the colloquies were deficient in any way, nor
does she claim that her guilty plea was less than knowing, intelligent and voluntary. She does
not claim that the sentences imposed in the above-captioned matters were illegal for any reason.
Likewise, appellant does not expressly state that the undersigned judge abused her discretion,
and she does not identify any theory by which the sentences could be determined to be the
product of an abuse of discretion. Appellant merely claims that the undersigned judge erred by
accepting her guilty pleas but rejecting the negotiated sentences, notwithstanding the controlling
rule of criminal procedure, which expressly gives judges the power to "refuse to accept a plea of
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guilty .... " Pa.R.Crim.P. 590(/\)(1 ).1
The Sentencing Code, 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9701-9799.41, obligates judges to impose a sentence
"that is consistent with the protection of the public, the gravity of the offense as it relates to the
impact on the life of the victim and on the community, and the rehabilitative needs of the
defendant." 42 Pa.C.S. § 9721 (b). The statute does not give judges a discretionary power to
disregard those considerations when imposing a sentence. See Commonwealth v. Walls, 926
A2d 957, 964 (Pa. 2007) (explaining that sentence may be vacated as "unreasonable" if "the
sentence was imposed without express or implicit consideration by the sentencing court of the
general standards applicable to sentencing found in Section 9721, i.e., the protection of the
public; the gravity of the offense in relation to the impact on the victim and the community; and
the rehabilitative needs of the defendant."). Based on appellant's fourteen-year career of theft
without any serious effort to seek help for the drug addiction that drove it, the terms of the
negotiated sentences would not have been consistent with appellant's rehabilitative needs or the
protection of the public. The facts of record in the above-captioned matters show that the
undersigned judge considered the requisite statutory criteria when rejecting the negotiated
sentences and fashioning the sentences that were imposed. The sentences imposed in the above-
captioned matter were, therefore, a lawful exercise of discretion.
I The record shows that the undersigned judge told appellant that she decided not to accept the terms of
the negotiated disposition prior to imposing sentence, thus giving her an opportunity to orally move to
withdraw her pica before sentencing. The undersigned judge was, however, under no legal obligation to
do so. Prior to its amendment in 1995, Pa.R.Crim.P. 391 obligated a judge "to pcnnit the defendant to
withdraw his pica" if the judge decided not to accept the tcnns negotiated by the parties. Pa.R.Crim.P.
319(b)(3). Case law interpreting sub-paragraph (b)(3) imposed an additional obligation: "if the court
decides not to accept the recommended disposition of the pica agreement it must make its decision known
to the defendant and his counsel before sentencing so that the defendant has an opportunity to petition to
withdraw the plea." Commonwealth v. Fazenbaker, 375 A2d 175, 176 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1977) (italics
added). Sub-paragraph (bX3) was deleted by amendment of December 22, J 99 5, effective July I, 1996,
and Ruic 319 was renumbered as Pa.R.Crim.P. 590 by order of March I, 2000, effective April 1, 200 l.
Pa.R.Crim.P. 590, cmt.
4
CONCLUSION
Upon consideration of the foregoing discussion, the undersigned respectfully submits that
the judgment of sentence should be affirmed.
BY THE COURT,
Copy of above sent on ~ ;;.,_ ~:
Raymond D. Roberts, A~ellate Division, by inter-office mail
Robert M. Falin, Deputy District Attorney, D.A. 's Office, by inter-office mail
s