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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
IN RE: PRIVATE CRIMINAL COMPLAINT IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
OF ERIC G. MARTTILA PENNSYLVANIA
APPEAL OF: ERIC G. MARTTILA
No. 3526 EDA 2015
Appeal from the Order October 19, 2015
In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County
Criminal Division at No(s): CP-09-MD-0001522-2015
BEFORE: PANELLA, J., LAZARUS, J., and FITZGERALD, J.*
MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED JANUARY 05, 2017
Eric G. Marttila, Esquire, appeals from the order, entered in the Court
of Common Pleas of Bucks County, which denied his petition for review of
the Bucks County District Attorney’s decision to disapprove his private
criminal complaint. Upon review, we affirm.
The trial court summarized the relevant facts of this matter as follows:
[Attorney Marttila] represented Paul Bradberry in two criminal
actions wherein Bradberry was charged with [r]esisting [a]rrest,
[d]isorderly [c]onduct, [p]ublic [d]runkenness, and [c]riminal
[m]ischief in relation to a March 17, 2013 incident. After a
bench trial before this [c]ourt, Bradberry was found not guilty of
each charge on November 12, 2013. In acquitting Bradberry,
this [c]ourt accepted Bradberry’s testimony and further found
Officer Keith [Dietz] of the Doylestown Borough Police
Department, who was the affiant and Bradberry’s arresting
officer, to be less than forthright in his testimony before the
____________________________________________
*
Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
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[c]ourt. Specifically, we noted in delivering the verdict of the
[c]ourt:
[I]t’s a difficult case, not because it’s difficult for me to
decide what the true facts are and what really happened,
it’s difficult for me because I have to accept the fact that
these things happened here in Bucks County in Doylestown
Borough. . . . [I]t’s shocking. For me to suggest [] that
Officer [Dietz] was mistaken would be a [] miscarriage of
my oath of office.
...
[I]n attempting to reconcile the evidence and the
testimony of all [of the] witnesses, I have come to the
inescapable conclusion that Officer [Dietz] was anything
but candid with this [c]ourt in his testimony, in his reports
and in the evidence that he presented. That evidence is
contrary to the evidence of the other officers and by all
means contrary to the testimony of the defendant or the
defendant’s witnesses. And for what it’s worth, [] I accept
the testimony of Mr. Bradberry in its entirety in my
determination of whether the Commonwealth has met its
burden of proof in this matter.
N.T. [Trial, 11/13/13, at] 260-62.
As a direct result of the evidence presented and reports prepared
in Bradberry’s case, [Attorney Marttila] filed a private criminal
complaint in District Court on January 30, 2015[,] charging
Officer [Dietz] with multiple counts of [p]erjury, [f]alse
[s]wearing, [u]nsworn [f]alsification to [a]uthorities, and [f]alse
[r]eports to [l]aw [e]nforcement [a]uthorities that arose from
seven (7) alleged criminal acts. In support of the above
charges, [Attorney Marttila] specifically referenced Officer
[Dietz’s] testimony at trial, during the two (2) separate
preliminary hearing[s], and during a deposition in a civil matter
arising from the Bradberry case, along with Officer [Dietz’s]
prepared reports, including his Affidavit of Probable Cause and
Supplemental Narrative Report. In a letter dated May 29, 2015,
the District Attorney of Bucks County, David W. Heckler,
disapproved of the charges in [Attorney Marttila’s] Complaint,
citing a lack of prosecutorial merit and insufficient evidence.
On June 16, 2015, [Attorney Marttila] filed with this [c]ourt a
“Petition for Review of Decision by the District Attorney of Bucks
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County to Disapprove Private Criminal Complaint Pursuant to
Pa.R.C.P. 506(b)(2).” A hearing was held on [Attorney
Marttila’s] Petition on September 3, 2015, during which
argument was presented by both [Attorney Marttila] and Mr.
Heckler and additional evidence, unavailable during trial, was
added to the record. On the basis of the argument presented
and a detailed review of the record, this [c]ourt denied [Attorney
Marttila’s] Petition on October 19, 2015. [Attorney Marttila] filed
at timely Notice of Appeal to the Superior Court on November
18, 2015[,] from this [c]ourt’s [d]enial of his Petition.
Trial Court Opinion, 2/9/16, at 1-3 (footnotes omitted).
On appeal, Marttila raises the following issues for our review:
1. Did the trial court err in failing to correctly identify the nature
of the District Attorney’s reasons for acting or failing to act?
2. Did the trial court err in failing to apply a de novo standard of
review?
3. Did the trial court err in failing to determine that the district
attorney’s decision to disapprove the private criminal
complaint in this case represented a deviation from moral
rectitude and sound thinking, and, therefore, constituted an
act of bad faith?
Brief of Appellant, at 2.
Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal Procedure 506 provides for the
submission of private criminal complaints to an attorney for the
Commonwealth, “who shall approve or disapprove it without unreasonable
delay.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 506(A). The rule further provides that “if the
Commonwealth’s attorney disapproves the complaint, the attorney shall
state the reasons on the complaint form and return it to the affiant.
Thereafter, the affiant may petition the court of common pleas for review of
the decision.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 506(B)(2).
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In cases involving the disapproval of a private criminal complaint, the
review conducted by the trial court and our standard of review are
dependent upon the reason for disapproval. “[W]hen the district attorney
disapproves a private criminal complaint solely on the basis of legal
conclusions, the trial court undertakes de novo review of the matter.
Thereafter, the appellate court will review the trial court’s decision for an
error of law.” In re Wilson, 879 A.2d 199, 214 (Pa. Super. 2005) (en
banc) (emphasis in original). However,
when the district attorney disapproves a private criminal
complaint [wholly on] policy considerations, or on a hybrid of
legal and policy considerations, the trial court’s standard of
review of the district attorney’s decision is abuse of discretion.
This deferential standard recognizes the limitations on judicial
power to interfere with the district attorney’s discretion in these
kinds of decisions.
The private criminal complainant has the burden to prove the
district attorney abused his discretion, and that burden is a
heavy one. In the Rule 506 petition for review, the private
criminal complainant must demonstrate the district attorney’s
decision amounted to bad faith, fraud or unconstitutionality. The
complainant must do more than merely assert the district
attorney’s decision is flawed in these regards. The complainant
must show the facts of the case lead only to the conclusion that
the district attorney’s decision was patently discriminatory,
arbitrary or pretextual, and therefore not in the public interest.
In the absence of such evidence, the trial court cannot presume
to supervise the district attorney’s exercise of prosecutorial
discretion, and should leave the district attorney’s decision
undisturbed.
Thereafter, the appellate court will review the trial court’s
decision for an abuse of discretion, in keeping with settled
principles of appellate review of discretionary matter. An abuse
of discretion is not merely an error of judgment, but if in
reaching a conclusion the law is overridden or misapplied or the
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judgment exercised is manifestly unreasonable, or the result of
partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill will, as shown by the evidence or
the record, discretion is abused.
Id. at 215 (citations and quotation marks omitted).
Instantly, when the Commonwealth disapproved the complaint, it
noted that it was doing so because it had determined that insufficient
evidence existed in the case and because the matter lacked prosecutorial
merit. As we noted in Commonwealth v. Metzker, 658 A.2d 800 (Pa.
Super. 1995),
once the complaint establishes a prima facie case, the
prosecutor cannot rest the disapproval on a legal assessment of
the complaint. . . . The Commonwealth may exercise discretion
. . . on the basis of policy. A determination that the case lacks
“prosecutorial merit” is such a policy determination. Courts will
not disturb that decision unless there is a gross abuse of
discretion.
Id. at 801. The Commonwealth investigated the allegations against Officer
Dietz, determined that the case against him could not be successfully
prosecuted, and used its discretion to disapprove the complaint.
Accordingly, the trial court correctly applied an abuse of discretion standard
in reviewing the disapproval of the complaint. Wilson, supra. Therefore,
Attorney Marttila’s first two issues raised are without merit.
In his final issue raised, Attorney Marttila asserts that the decision to
disapprove the complaint was an act of bad faith because it represented a
“deviation from moral rectitude and sound thinking.” Commonwealth v.
Brown, 708 A.2d 81, 86 (Pa. 1998); see Brief of Appellant, at 27-28.
Attorney Marttila argues the disapproval of the complaint was an act of bad
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faith on several grounds. For the following reasons, we disagree as to each
ground upon which Attorney Marttila relies.
The first instance of alleged falsification Attorney Marttila raises
involves sworn statements Officer Dietz made in the affidavit of probable
cause and in the police criminal complaint in the Bradberry case. Officer
Dietz indicated that Bradberry tore his police badge off his uniform and
intentionally damaged it. Attorney Marttila asserts that this was false,
because at Bradberry’s second preliminary hearing, Officer Dietz testified
that he did not know how the badge was removed or how it was damaged.
At trial, Officer Dietz testified that he did not see exactly how his badge was
destroyed, only affirming that he wore it prior to struggling with Bradberry
during his arrest and that afterward it was recovered from the scene in a
bent and damaged condition. However, Officer Dietz added to this
explanation, saying that “[i]t’s my belief that he damaged the badge
somehow. And it says [in the affidavit], to the best of my knowledge,
information and belief.” N.T. Trial, 11/12/13, at 147. Accordingly, the trial
court did not abuse its discretion in reviewing the policy decision of the
District Attorney. Metzker, supra.
Attorney Marttila also asserts that Officer Dietz falsified a supplemental
narrative report by stating in it that during closing argument at a preliminary
hearing, Attorney Marttila had “made clear to [Magisterial District] Judge
[Mark D.] Douple that they were friends and had worked with each other for
a long period of time[.] . . . [Attorney Marttila] continued to remind the
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Judge about their past working relationship.” Supplemental Narrative
Report, Officer Keith Dietz, 4/20/13. However, at trial, Officer Dietz testified
that he wrote down only what he heard Attorney Marttila say and that he did
not believe any collusion to be taking place between Attorney Marttila and
Judge Douple. N.T. Trial, 11/12/13, at 151, 160. Additionally, no
stenographer was present at the hearing, so no transcript exists and the
exact statements made during the hearing cannot be precisely proven.
Accordingly, we discern no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court
in denying the petition. Metzker, supra.
Next, Attorney Marttila claims that Officer Dietz lied under oath when
he testified to using his Taser on Bradberry and being “face-to-face, chest-
to-chest” when doing so. See N.T. Preliminary Hearing, 8/27/13, at 68;
N.T. Trial, 11/12/13, at 124. Attorney Marttila raises this argument
because of other testimony that Bradberry was facing away from Officer
Dietz during their interaction and because Bradberry suffered Taser burn
marks on his back. We note that the “face-to-face” and “chest-to-chest”
language was that of Attorney Marttila during cross-examination, to which
Officer Dietz replied affirmatively, rather than being Officer Dietz’s
characterization of the situation. Moreover, certain photographic evidence
came to light only after the conclusion of the Bradberry matter. As the trial
court noted, “[the four] photographs illustrate striation marks stretching
from Bradberry’s left chest, across his left side, and onto Bradberry’s back.
This evidence provides reasonable doubt that Officer [Dietz made]
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intentional misstatements in his description of his encounter with
Bradberry[.]” Trial Court Opinion, 2/9/16, at 9. Therefore, the trial court
did not abuse its discretion in denying the petition. Metzker, supra.
Finally, Attorney Marttila argues that Officer Dietz lied in a deposition
in a related federal civil rights lawsuit, when he indicated that he had never
testified prior to that date to deploying his Taser into Bradberry’s back
because Attorney Marttila had interrupted him every time he testified and
had prevented him from doing so. Officer Dietz stated in the deposition that
when he deployed his Taser, it was on Bradberry’s left torso, which included
his front and back sides, but that “when [Attorney Marttila] got the answer
[he was] happy with, [he] cut [Officer Dietz] off and moved on.” Deposition
of Keith Dietz, 8/20/14, at 130. The very nature of this testimony indicates
that proving the charge would be difficult and it was not an abuse of
discretion for the trial court to deny the petition. Metzker, supra.
For the foregoing reasons, we do not agree that disapproval of the
complaint was a “deviation from moral rectitude and sound thinking,”
Brown, supra, and we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
denying Attorney Marttila’s petition for review of the disapproval of the
private criminal complaint. Wilson, supra.
Order affirmed.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 1/5/2017
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