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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37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. :
:
JAMES GEORGE DOURIS, : No. 998 EDA 2016
:
Appellant :
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence, February 29, 2016,
in the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County
Criminal Division at No. CP-09-CR-0007834-2014
BEFORE: FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E., STABILE AND MOULTON, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.: FILED APRIL 19, 2017
James George Douris appeals from the February 29, 2016 judgment of
sentence entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County, following
his conviction in a jury trial of one count of perjury, three counts of forgery,
one count of tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, and one count
of false swearing in an official proceeding.1 The trial court imposed an
aggregate sentence of 30 days to 23 months of imprisonment, followed by
3 years of probation. We affirm.
The trial court summarized the evidence, as follows:
[Appellant] appeared before Magisterial District
Judge Jan Vislosky in Fallsington, Bucks County, PA
on November 17, 2011. [Appellant] had filed a civil
complaint against Becker Tree Service (“Becker”),
1
18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 4902(a), 4101(a)(3), 4910(2), and 4903(a)(1),
respectively.
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which had performed work at his home in Upper
Makefield Township, Bucks County. [Appellant]
claimed that the work performed by Becker was
unsatisfactory, [sic] and required repair. [Appellant]
sought damages for repayment of his original costs,
as well as for the cost of repairing Becker’s work, in
the total amount of Five Thousand Dollars
($5,000.00).
....
On the first day of trial, Magisterial District
Judge Vislosky recounted [appellant’s]
sworn[Footnote 3] testimony in her district court on
November 17, 2011, when he asserted that he had
paid Becker Two Thousand Dollars ($2,000.00) which
he was seeking to have refunded, given Becker’s
allegedly inadequate tree work on his property.
[Appellant] also claimed at trial that the $2,000.00
was owed to him under the Pennsylvania Unfair
Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law.
[Footnote 3] The oath to tell the truth
taken by [Appellant] was administered
by legal authority, Judge Vislosky, in the
judicial proceeding which took place in
her court.
Judge Vislosky also recalled that [appellant]
testified that he sought an additional Three
Thousand Dollars ($3,000.00), which constituted
repayment to him of what he alleged he had already
paid others to repair damages allegedly caused by
Becker, along with additional damages. [Appellant’s]
testimony in the subject Common Pleas Court trial,
as to why he sought the additional $3,000.00 in
damages, was essentially consistent with
Judge Vislosky’s testimony as to the claims he had
made in her court.
In support of his testimony in her court,
[appellant] provided Judge Vislosky with an invoice
reflecting the $2,000.00 paid to Becker. He also
provided invoices that he represented to be
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estimates and/or payments for repair of damages
allegedly caused by Becker as a result of services it
performed at [appellant’s] property. [Appellant]
submitted photographs of the damage to his
property that he alleged had been caused by Becker.
Judge Vislosky testified that at the hearing
before her, [appellant] testified that a representative
from Becker came to his home and offered to repair
any damages or to arrange for another company to
perform any repairs. When a representative from
Maple’s Tree Service thereafter came to [appellant’s]
home to complete the repairs, [appellant] would not
allow him to do so. [Appellant] testified that his son-
in-law, Joe Connolly, “came over--right away.”
The invoices [appellant] presented to Judge
Vislosky for the repair work were from “Joe Connolly
in Philadelphia.” Exhibit C-2 was a proposal for work
in the amount of Two Thousand Five Hundred Dollars
($2,500.00) for raking wood chips, filling in topsoil
and seeding and fertilizing the grass following
Becker’s allegedly substandard work at the property.
That invoice reflected a deposit to be paid of One
Thousand Two Hundred Fifty Dollars ($1,250.00) if
the proposal were accepted. The Connolly invoice
did not include an address or telephone number.
Judge Vislosky testified that [appellant]
provided her with another invoice from “Joe Connolly
of Philadelphia” for grinding six (6) tree stumps.
Again, no business address or telephone number was
reflected on the proposal. The proposal stated a cost
of One Thousand Two Hundred Fifty Dollars
($1,250.00), with a deposit of Six Hundred Twenty-
Five Dollars ($625.00) due should the proposal be
accepted.
Exhibit C-4 was a proposal from “Joe Connolly
of Philadelphia” to [appellant] for repairing and
resealing [appellant’s] driveway. The Exhibit
included three (3) pages. On the first page the
proposal reflected a total cost of $1,250.00. Page
two (2) reflected a Six Hundred Twenty-Five Dollar
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($625.00) deposit having been paid, and page three
(3) reflected a payment of the remaining $625.00.
The proposal did not include any contact information
for Joe Connolly of Philadelphia. Additionally, the
documents included in Exhibits C-2, C-3, and C-4
were all devoid of any reference to dates, including
dates of proposals, work performed or completed, or
payments billed or received.
Judge Vislosky testified that [appellant]
provided sworn testimony on November 17, 2011
that Joe Connolly had come to [appellant’s] home,
assessed the damage done by Becker, and provided
proposals for repair of the damage. [Appellant]
testified he paid some of the money to Connolly but
that he needed to prevail at the hearing before
Judge Vislosky to garner the funds to pay Connolly
what he still owed him.[Footnote 4]
[Footnote 4] We note that after hearing
all of the testimony and reviewing the
exhibits, Judge Vislosky ruled in favor of
Becker and against [appellant].
Joseph Connolly, [appellant’s] son-in-law,
testified at the October, 2015 trial in Common Pleas
Court that he has lived in Philadelphia for five (5)
years and that he has been employed by Pepsi for
approximately seven (7) years. Mr. Connolly
testified that he does not work anywhere other than
Pepsi and that he is not presently, nor has he been
in the past, the owner of his own company.
Mr. Connolly testified that over the seven (7) or
eight (8) years he has known [appellant], he has
performed various work at [appellant’s] home. The
work performed by Mr. Connolly, either alone or with
the assistance of his cousin Robert Supley, included
flooring, painting, yard work, soil and tree removal,
and driveway paving or sealcoating. Mr. Connolly
testified that he could not recall if he removed a tree
from [appellant’s] property in 2009. He testified,
however, that the work at [appellant’s] property had
been performed prior to 2011; that is, prior to the
date when Mr. Supley passed away.
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Mr. Connolly testified that he was paid for the
work he performed at [appellant’s] home, but
claimed that he did not know how much he was paid
because his wife, [appellant’s] daughter, “dealt with
it . . . [.] My wife deals with her father. Like, I don’t
speak with my father-in-law that often. My wife
dealt with it.” Mr. Connolly testified that his
relationship with his father-in-law consisted of seeing
him perhaps three (3) or four (4) times per year, for
family holidays. They did not otherwise socialize.
[Appellant] testified at the October, 2015
Common Pleas Court trial. He insisted that his
son-in-law, Mr. Connolly, with the occasional
assistance of Mr. Supley, “absolutely” performed the
repair work at issue following Becker’s allegedly
substandard work at [appellant’s] property.
[Appellant] testified that he paid his daughter
for Mr. Connolly’s work[], but that he did not have a
receipt for payment made to Mr. Connolly. When
asked how he received the invoice depicted in
Exhibit C-2, [appellant] testified he had nothing to
do with preparing or altering the invoice. “I didn’t
make it. I didn’t put a pen to it. I didn’t do anything
to it.” “. . . [O]bviously I asked Joe, my son-in-law,
to prepare a receipt for me so I can present this to
the court. . . . He didn’t do it right away.”
[Appellant] stated that he also asked his son-in-law
to produce the document presented as Exhibit C-3.
[Appellant] testified that Mr. Connolly did not
produce it right away, stating that “it was like pulling
teeth.” [Appellant] claimed that his son-in-law
“absolutely” performed the work described in the
invoice introduced as Exhibit C-4, [sic] and insisted
that he did not prepare that receipt himself.
When Mr. Connolly was questioned about the
Exhibits C-2, C-3, and C-4, he testified that he
became aware of the documents labeled
“Joseph Connolly of Philadelphia,” which [appellant]
had presented at his hearing before Magisterial
District Judge Vislosky, when members of the Bucks
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County District Attorney’s office visited him at his job
and showed him the proposals. When asked
whether he had created those proposals, he replied,
“Not that I am aware of,” and when pressed for
further clarification as to whether he did or did not
prepare the proposals, Mr. Connolly again stated
“Not that I am aware of.” He admitted that “as far
as I’m aware of,” the first time he saw the
documents was when somebody from law
enforcement showed them to him. Mr. Connolly
testified that he did not know who prepared the
invoices represented in Exhibits C-2, C-3, and C-4.
[Appellant] testified at trial that an invoice
admitted into evidence as Exhibit C-6 that read
“Joe Connelly Jr. Construction,” was an invoice that
he believed Mr. Connolly had previously presented to
him for work performed at [appellant’s] home.
Despite his testimony that Mr. Connolly is not a
“junior,” [appellant] insisted that he received the
invoice from Mr. Connolly. [Appellant] also noted
that the invoice introduced as Exhibit C-6, which
spelled Connolly “C-O-N-N-E-L-L-Y”, as opposed to
“Connolly” as it was spelled in Exhibits C-2, C-3, and
C-4, was “spelled wrong . . . misspelled absolutely.”
Under the circumstances, it was reasonable for the
jury to conclude that it was less than likely that
Mr. Connolly would mistakenly refer to himself as
“Jr.,” and less than likely that Mr. Connolly would
misspell his own name on written documents
[appellant] claimed Mr. Connolly had produced.
Trial court opinion, 8/11/16 at 2, 4-10 (citations to notes of testimony
omitted).
The record further reflects that appellant did not file post-sentence
motions. On March 24, 2016, appellant filed a notice of appeal to this court.
Appellant thereafter complied with the trial court’s order directing appellant
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to file a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to
Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b). The trial court then filed its Rule 1925(a) opinion.
Appellant raises the following issues for our review:
A. Was the evidence sufficient to support the
convictions?
B. Did the trial judge err in permitting a police
detective to testify to the hearsay statement
made by the key witness in the case when that
witness was never confronted with the
statement during testimony?
Appellant’s brief at 4.
With respect to appellant’s sufficiency challenge, a reading of
appellant’s brief reveals that he does nothing more than set forth certain
portions of Joseph Connolly’s trial testimony, as well as certain portions of
his own testimony and the testimony of Messrs. Connolly and Supley from
the underlying magistrate’s hearing, in an effort to convince this court that
someone other than appellant prepared the falsified proposals. In so doing,
appellant’s argument on his first issue challenges the weight of the evidence,
not its sufficiency. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Gibbs, 981 A.2d 274,
281-282 (Pa.Super. 2008) (an argument that the fact-finder should have
credited one witness’ testimony over that of another witness goes to the
weight of the evidence, not the sufficiency of the evidence);
Commonwealth v. Wilson, 825 A.2d 710, 713-714 (Pa.Super. 2003) (a
review of the sufficiency of the evidence does not include a credibility
assessment; such a claim goes to the weight of the evidence);
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Commonwealth v. Gaskins, 692 A.2d 224, 227 (Pa.Super. 1997) (the
fact-finder makes credibility determinations, and challenges to those
determinations go to the weight of the evidence, not the sufficiency of the
evidence).
In order to raise a weight claim on appeal, Pennsylvania Rule of
Criminal Procedure 607 requires appellant to raise the claim with the trial
judge in a motion for a new trial “(1) orally, on the record, at any time
before sentencing; (2) by written motion at any time before sentencing; or
(3) in a post-sentence motion.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 607(A). “The purpose of this
rule is to make it clear that a challenge to the weight of the evidence must
be raised with the trial judge or it will be waived.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 607,
comment.
Our review of the certified record reveals that appellant failed to file
any post-sentence motions. Additionally, although the certified record
contains a portion of the trial transcript, it only includes the transcription of
the proceedings that occurred prior to the close of testimony. Furthermore,
the sentencing transcript is not contained within the certified record.
Therefore, we are unable to determine whether appellant raised a challenge
to the weight of the evidence on the record following the jury’s verdict or on
the record before sentencing. We remind appellant that it is appellant’s duty
to “ensure that the certified record is complete for purposes of review.”
Commonwealth v. Dehart, 730 A.2d 991, 993 n.1 (Pa.Super. 1999),
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appeal denied, 745 A.2d 1218 (Pa. 1999). An appellant’s failure to provide
the reviewing court with a complete certified record results in waiver of the
claim. See Commonwealth v. Johns, 812 A.2d 1260, 1261 (Pa.Super.
2002); see also, Commonwealth v. Lassen, 659 A.2d 999, 1008
(Pa.Super. 1995) (holding that where a claim depends upon materials not
provided in the certified record, that claim is waived). Accordingly, because
the certified record contains no evidence that appellant preserved his weight
challenges, appellant waives those challenges on appeal.
Appellant finally complains that the trial court erred in permitting
Detective Patricia Haines to testify that during the course of her
investigation, Joseph Connolly stated to her that he did not prepare the work
proposals2 that gave rise to appellant’s prosecution, that he was unfamiliar
with the proposals, that he did not know who prepared the proposals, and
that he did not perform the majority of work set forth in the proposals.
(Appellant’s brief 13-14.) Appellant contends that this portion of the
detective’s testimony constituted impermissible hearsay because
Mr. Connolly was not confronted with the statements that he allegedly made
to Detective Haines. Appellant further claims that this portion of
Detective Haines’s testimony prejudiced appellant because it contradicted
Mr. Connolly’s trial testimony, and as a result, the jury convicted appellant.
2
We note that appellant refers to the documents in his brief as “invoices,”
but the record reflects that the each of three documents is titled, “proposal.”
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[T]he admissibility of evidence rests within the sound
discretion of the trial court, and such a decision will
be reversed only upon a showing that the trial court
abused its discretion. An abuse of discretion is not
merely an error of judgment, but is rather the
overriding or misapplication of the law, or the
exercise of judgment that is manifestly
unreasonable, or the result of bias, prejudice, ill-will
or partiality, as shown by the evidence of record.
Hearsay is defined as [“]a statement, other than one
made by the declarant while testifying at trial or
hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the
matter asserted.[”] Hearsay testimony is per se
inadmissible in this Commonwealth, except as
provided in the Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence, by
other rules prescribed by the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court, or by statute.
Commonwealth v. Gray, 867 A.2d 560, 569-570 (Pa.Super. 2005)
(internal citations, original quotation marks, and original brackets removed).
See also Pa.R.E. 803(c) (defining “hearsay” as “a statement that (1) the
declarant does not make while testifying at the current trial or hearing; and
(2) a party offers in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted in the
statement.”).
Here, the record reflects that Mr. Connolly testified as a reluctant
prosecution witness. When asked on direct examination when he first saw
the proposals, he responded that, “it was the first time you guys came to
visit me at my job and showed them to me.” (Notes of testimony, 10/20/15
at 40.) When asked on direct if he had created the documents, Mr. Connolly
replied, “Not that I’m aware of.” (Id.) On cross-examination, appellant
asked Mr. Connolly if he knew who prepared the proposals that the
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prosecutor showed him on direct. Mr. Connolly replied, “No.” (Id. at 50.)
The record demonstrates that this portion of Mr. Connolly’s testimony was
substantially similar to Detective Haines’s testimony. Specifically, when the
prosecution asked Detective Haines on direct what Mr. Connolly said about
the proposals,3 the detective responded, “He stated that he did not prepare
them, that he was unfamiliar with them, and that he does not know or he
did not know who prepared them.” (Id. at 55.)
With respect to the work that Mr. Connolly performed for appellant,
Mr. Connolly testified as follows:
Q His housework. Just -- I mean labor, I guess.
That’s it.
A In the house or outside the house?
Q In, outside, around, yes.
Q What kinds of stuff have you done specifically?
A Labor I mean. Flooring, paint, yard work. I
did -- depends. A lot -- I’m not really sure of
everything I’ve done, but it was a lot of work I
did.
Q Have you ever done any tree removal?
A Removed a tree from his yard, yes.
....
3
We note that the record reflects that appellant’s counsel objected
immediately after the prosecutor asked Detective Haines what Mr. Connolly
said about the proposals on the grounds that the witness “wasn’t
contradicted or confronted with any inconsistencies to warrant this
testimony.” (Notes of testimony, 10/20/15 at 55.)
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Q Have you ever done any paving work for him?
A Paving or sealcoating or what? I don’t
understand.
....
Q What exactly did you do?
A The driveway.
....
A Put like sealcoating, like I put stuff in the
cracks, like on the surface of the driveway.
Id. at 37-39.
When the prosecutor asked Detective Haines what Mr. Connolly said
about the work that was claimed to have been done as set forth on the
proposals,4 Detective Haines responded, “He stated that he had done some
work for [appellant], but that the majority of the things that were listed on
the paperwork he did not do.” (Id. at 56.) The following colloquy then took
place:
Q What did he specifically say about the
document that contained the claim about
stump grinding?
A He stated that he did not grind any stumps.
He stated he did drag some trees and he did
do some cleanup work from the refuse of
trees, but he did not grind any stumps.
4
We note that the record reflects that appellant’s counsel placed an
objection on the record immediately after the prosecutor asked
Detective Haines what Mr. Connolly said about the work that appellant
claimed that Mr. Connolly had done, but counsel did not state the grounds
for his objection. (Notes of testimony, 10/21/15 at 56.)
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Q What about landscaping?
A That was when he was explaining that he did
drag some trees around and did some raking
and that he put -- dug some holes for a fence.
And he did some painting.
Id. at 56.
The record demonstrates that this portion of Detective Haines’s
testimony was also substantially similar to Mr. Connolly’s testimony.
Appellant, however, complains that this constituted inadmissible hearsay
because, “for the first time, the jury heard Detective Haines [sic] claim that
Mr. Connolly said he had done some work for [appellant], but that the
majority of the things that were listed on the paperwork he did not do.”
(Appellant’s brief at 15.) Detective Haines’s statement that Mr. Connolly
said “that the majority of the things that were listed on the paperwork he did
not do,” however, was not offered to prove the truth of the services that
Mr. Connolly rendered to appellant, but was offered to demonstrate that
Mr. Connolly did not prepare the invoices. Therefore, the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in admitting the statement because it did not constitute
hearsay under Pa.R.E. 803(c).
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Stabile, J. joins this Memorandum.
Moulton, J. concurs in the result.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 4/19/2017
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