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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37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. :
:
:
MICHAEL THOMAS SCHWARTZ :
:
Appellant : No. 3575 EDA 2017
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence October 5, 2017
In the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County Criminal Division at
No(s): CP-64-CR-0000336-2016
BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and KUNSELMAN, J.
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 22, 2019
Michael Thomas Schwartz appeals from the judgment of sentence of 149
to 540 months of imprisonment following his convictions for various sex
crimes. The trial court found Appellant to be a sexually violent predator
(“SVP”) at the sentencing hearing. Also before us is Appellant’s application to
proceed pro se. Upon review, we deny Appellant’s motion, vacate Appellant’s
SVP designation, and affirm his judgment of sentence in all other respects.
Appellant, along with his co-defendant wife, were accused of crimes in
connection with the sexual abuse of Appellant’s minor nephews. The
Commonwealth gave notice of its intent to offer at trial evidence of the
nephews’ out-of-court statements concerning the abuse (“Tender Years
testimony”) pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 5985.1(b). In pretrial motions,
Appellant sought to exclude the statements, as well as seeking a change of
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venue. The trial court denied the change of venue, and, following a hearing,
denied the motion to exclude the Tender Years testimony.
Appellant proceeded to a non-jury trial in front of the same judge who
ruled on the pretrial motions. At the close of the Commonwealth’s case, the
trial court dismissed some of the charges. After Appellant presented defense
witnesses, the trial court convicted Appellant of all remaining charges,
including, inter alia, involuntary deviant sexual intercourse, attempted rape of
a child, and indecent exposure. On October 5, 2017, the trial court found
Appellant to be an SVP, and sentenced him as indicated above.
Appellant filed no post-sentence motion, but filed a timely counseled
notice of appeal. This Court dismissed the appeal for failure to file a brief, but
reinstated it upon Appellant’s motion.1 Before Appellant’s brief was filed, he
submitted a pro se motion to have new counsel appointed. However, he
subsequently tendered another pro se document indicating that he wished for
counsel to file a brief, which counsel did, following the grant of three
extensions. After the Commonwealth filed its brief, Appellant submitted
another pro se letter taking issue with counsel’s brief. This Court forwarded
the letter to counsel pursuant to Commonwealth v. Jette, 23 A.3d 1032 (Pa.
2011). On December 14, 2018, Appellant filed a pro se motion wherein he
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1 The appeal of Appellant’s co-defendant wife, docketed at 3494 EDA 2017,
was also dismissed and reinstated, but dismissed again when no brief was
filed.
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asked both to proceed pro se and for appointment of new appellate counsel.
Also included was a request to refile his brief based upon allegations of
ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
The brief filed by counsel includes the following questions for this Court’s
consideration.
1. Whether the Appellant’s due process rights were violated
when the trial judge who heard the pretrial motions and Tender
Year’s [sic] hearing testimony presided over the criminal trial?
2. Whether the evidence presented at Appellant’s trial was
insufficient as a matter of law to sustain his conviction?
3. Was there judicial misconduct by the trial judge, judicial
misconduct by the district attorney’s office and/or conspiracy
between the district attorney’s office, the Office of Children and
Youth [“CYS”] and the Pennsylvania State Police?
4. Did the trial judge commit a manifest abuse of discretion
when he denied Appellant a change of venue?
5. Did the trial judge commit a manifest abuse of discretion
when he allowed the CYS caseworker to testify at trial to hearsay
statements of the victims, who testified at trial?
Appellant’s brief at 4 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
We begin by noting that the brief includes argument advocating the
merits of only the first question. Id. at 16-21. The remaining questions are
discussed in a separate portion of the brief under the heading “Anders brief,”
which concludes with counsel’s assessment that these issues lack merit. Id.
at 22-29. As this Court thoroughly discussed in Commonwealth v.
Morrison, 173 A.3d 286 (Pa.Super. 2017), such a hybrid advocate’s/no-merit
brief is improper.
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The Morrison Court noted that, while indigent defendants have the
constitutional right to counsel on direct appeal, all attorneys have the ethical
obligation to refrain from pursuing frivolous appeals. Id. at 291. “When
appointed counsel is asked to pursue an appeal that he or she, after
‘conscientious examination,’ deems to be ‘wholly frivolous,’ counsel must
seek to withdraw from representation on appeal by using the procedure
outlined by the United States Supreme Court and our Supreme Court.” Id.
(citing Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738, 744 (U.S. 1967);
Commonwealth v. Santiago, 978 A.2d 349, 361 (Pa. 2009)) (emphasis
added in Morrison). The Anders procedure is designed “to give an indigent
defendant access to counsel who uses his or her trained eye to make the same
diligent and thorough evaluation of the case as a retained lawyer before
concluding that an appeal is frivolous.” Id.
However, this procedure for withdrawal of counsel under Anders
“applies only to appeals that are wholly frivolous—that is, cases where
counsel has determined that there are no arguments that counsel may
advance because all issues lack basis in law and/or fact.” Id. (emphases in
original). If counsel identifies any non-frivolous issue, he or she must file an
advocate’s brief that, to the best of counsel’s ability, seeks to persuade this
Court to grant relief. Id. The indigent defendant has no right to require
counsel to pursue even non-frivolous arguments if counsel, in exercising
professional judgment, determines it is best to decline to do so. Id. at 292.
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“The process of winnowing out weaker arguments on appeal and focusing on
those more likely to prevail, far from being evidence of incompetence, is the
hallmark of effective appellate advocacy.” Id. (cleaned up).
The Morrison Court found persuasive the reasoning of the Third Circuit
Court of Appeals in United States v. Turner, 677 F.3d 570 (3d Cir. 2012),
when it too was faced with a brief that both advocated some claims and
explained why others were frivolous. Turner and his counsel requested that
Turner be granted leave to file a supplemental pro se brief in which to present
arguments on the issues counsel had deemed to be frivolous, but the court
declined, holding that hybrid representation is impermissible. Morrison,
supra at 292. The court concluded that counsel’s hybrid approach was
contrary to the Rules of Professional Conduct, which require a lawyer “to
reasonably consult with the client about the means by which the client’s
objectives are to be accomplished. When a client and counsel disagree, the
client may discharge the lawyer. Moreover, the rules permit the lawyer to
exercise professional discretion.” Id. at 293 (cleaned up). The Turner court
thus rejected the quasi-Anders procedure, and concluded that “when
disagreements arise between counsel and the client as to the issues to include
in an appellate brief, counsel should evaluate the issues and present only the
issues that counsel believes, consistent with his or her ethical duty, are
meritorious.” Id.
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Although it acknowledged that counsel’s efforts were well-intentioned,
the Morrison court held that the hybrid advocate’s/Anders brief was
improper. Since it is entirely acceptable for attorneys to elect to omit non-
frivolous issue in litigating an appeal, the Court saw no reason for counsel who
has identified a valid basis to seek relief to also present frivolous issues that
the client wishes to argue. Id. The Court noted that the availability of post-
conviction collateral relief supports this course, as “the appellant may assert
counsel’s ineffectiveness at a later time and, thus indirectly, assert the claims
he or she would have made on direct appeal.” Id. (internal quotation marks
and citation omitted).
Accordingly, the Morrison Court held as follows:
when counsel and an appellant disagree on which issues should
be raised and/or briefed on appeal, counsel must only raise and/or
brief the issues that counsel believes, consistent with counsel’s
ethical duty, to be nonfrivolous. If the disagreement arises prior
to counsel’s filing of briefs, the appellant is free to petition for the
withdrawal of counsel in order for the appellant to attempt to
proceed pro se or with privately-retained counsel. If the
disagreement arises after briefs have been filed by appointed
counsel, and the appellant remains convinced of the merit of his
or her proposed issues, the appellant may later challenge the
effectiveness of his or her appellate counsel in a timely-filed
collateral attack pursuant to the PCRA.
Id.
In conducting its analysis, the Court noted that Morrison did not attempt
to file a pro se brief in that case, but, “[i]f he had, we would not have been
permitted to consider it, as hybrid representation on direct appeal is not
permitted in Pennsylvania.” Id. at 292 n.5 (citing Commonwealth v. Ellis,
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626 A.2d 1137, 1141 (Pa. 1993)). The Court also observed that our Supreme
Court has made clear that “a criminal appellant who challenges the
effectiveness of his appellate counsel’s representation cannot terminate
counsel after the time of counsel’s filing of appellate briefs simply because he
wishes to file pro se appellate briefs.” Id. (citing Commonwealth v. Rogers,
645 A.2d 223, 224 (Pa. 1994)) (internal quotation marks omitted). “Instead,
the appellant must remain with counsel through the appeal, once counsel has
filed briefs, but may assert appellate counsel’s ineffectiveness at a later time.”
Id. (cleaned up).
Hence, it is clear that counsel’s quasi-Anders brief is improper, and that
Appellant is not entitled to proceed pro se at this stage of the appeal. As
detailed above, Appellant made no request to proceed pro se until after
counsel filed his brief. Moreover, the motion to proceed pro se also included
a request for the appointment of new counsel along with allegations of
ineffective assistance of present counsel. Applying the reasoning of Morrison
to the instant case, (1) we deny Appellant’s late motion to proceed pro se;2
and (2) we shall limit our review to the issue upon which counsel advocates
for relief, and leave any determination as to the merits of claims which counsel
declined to argue for Appellant to litigate on collateral review, subject to the
requirements of the PCRA.
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2See Commonwealth v. Jette, 23 A.3d 1032, 1044 (Pa. 2011) (“[O]nce the
brief has been filed, any right to insist upon self-representation has expired.”).
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Appellant asserts that his due process rights were violated when the trial
court served as the fact-finder at a non-jury trial after having presided over
motions where he was privy to the hearsay statements of the victims.
Appellant’s brief at 18-19. In support, Appellant cites our Supreme Court’s
decision in Commonwealth v. Paquette, 301 A.2d 837 (Pa. 1973). In that
case the Court, considering a claim that the judge who ruled upon the
defendant’s suppression motion should not have presided over the subsequent
non-jury trial, noted that “[t]he better practice in a multi-judge county would
be to have the trial conducted by someone other than the judge who presided
over the Suppression Proceedings particularly where there is a waiver of jury
accepted.” Id. at 841.
Appellant acknowledges that the issue of disqualification or recusal of
the judge was not preserved by a timely objection in the trial court and that
he entered a knowing and voluntary waiver of his right to a jury trial at the
time he waived it. Id. at 19-20. However, Appellant emphasizes that the
waiver pre-dated the Commonwealth’s Tender Years notice, and that no new
colloquy was conducted afterwards to ensure that Appellant “understood that
the same judge would be hearing trial testimony, after hearing damaging
testimony during the Tender Years Hearing.” Id. at 20-21. Appellant argues
that his waiver of the right to a jury trial was rendered unknowing by the
Commonwealth’s subsequent Tender Years notice and hearing, and that “best
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practice and his due process right would have been served if another judge
. . . presided over the trial or the Tender Years Hearing.” Id. at 21.
In its brief, the Commonwealth’s only countervailing argument is that
Appellant was colloquied regarding the fact that the same judge would hear
the pretrial motions and preside at trial, and Appellant thus waived any
potential conflict. Commonwealth’s brief at 5 (citing N.T. Omnibus Pretrial
Motions, 12/30/16, at 36-37).
We are not persuaded that Appellant is entitled to relief. Our Supreme
Court has explained that Paquette did not create “a mandatory requirement
even in a multi-judge district[.]”3 Commonwealth v. Goodman, 311 A.2d
652, 653 (Pa. 1973). Rather, the High Court has clarified that the rule
regarding the same judge hearing pretrial motions and presiding over the
subsequent trial is that “a judge should honor a request for recusation where
prejudicial information is received in a pre-trial proceeding that would be
otherwise inadmissible during the trial of the cause.” Id. at 654. “Whether a
trial judge should recuse himself thus depends upon the type of evidence that
the judge hears; if the evidence is inadmissible and is of a highly prejudicial
nature, the judge should recuse himself or declare a mistrial if it is too late for
recusal.” Commonwealth v. Lewis, 460 A.2d 1149, 1151 (Pa.Super. 1983).
This Court has more recently summarized the applicable law as follows:
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3 Wayne County is not a multi-judge district.
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The mere participation by the trial judge in an earlier stage of the
proceedings does not provide a per se basis for requiring recusal
of the trial judge.
The determination of whether a trial judge should recuse himself
depends upon the following: the type of evidence that the judge
hears; if the evidence is inadmissible and is of a highly prejudicial
nature, the judge should recuse himself or declare a mistrial if it
is too late for recusal. The judge should also recuse himself
whenever there is substantial doubt as to his ability to preside
impartially. The burden to show prejudice, however, is on the
party seeking recusal. If the evidence is admissible, or not of a
highly prejudicial nature, recusal is not required, and while it may
be the better practice to have a different judge preside over trial
than preside over pre-trial proceedings, such a practice is not
constitutionally required and has not been made the basis for
setting aside a verdict reached in an otherwise proper trial. This
principle appears to be based on the prevailing view that judicial
fact-finders are capable of disregarding prejudicial evidence.
Commonwealth v. Postie, 110 A.3d 1034, 1038 (Pa.Super. 2015) (cleaned
up).
Moreover, our Supreme Court has made clear that even if a judge should
have recused himself or herself under the above standards, an appellant is
not entitled to relief unless the issue was preserved at trial by raising it in the
trial court. See Goodman, supra at 654 (finding claim that trial court should
have granted defendant’s motion to disqualify was waived for appeal because
it was not included in post-sentence motion); Paquette, supra at 841
(holding defendant not entitled to relief where he did not request that the
judge recuse himself).
Application of this precedent to the facts of the instant case
demonstrates that Appellant’s claim must fail. First, Appellant did not
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preserve the issue for appeal. Upon questioning by the trial court, Appellant
expressly indicated at the hearing on pretrial motions that he would not ask
for recusal if the case remained in Wayne County. N.T. Omnibus Pretrial
Motions, 12/30/16, at 36-37. Appellant did not express any change of heart
by presenting a motion for recusal after the Tender Years hearing was held.
Nor did he file a post-sentence motion preserving the issue. Hence the claim
of error is waived. Goodman, supra at 654; Paquette, supra at 841.
Moreover, Appellant couches his claim in terms of a due process
violation; yet, as indicated above, this Court has expressly stated that having
a different judge try a case than the one who heard pretrial motions “is not
constitutionally required.” Postie, supra at 1038. Finally, the trial court,
after hearing the Tender Years testimony at the hearing on pretrial motions,
ruled that the evidence was admissible, and Appellant does not claim that that
ruling was erroneous.4 Recusal is not warranted if the pretrial evidence is
admissible at trial. Id. For any and all of these reasons, Appellant’s claim
warrants no relief from this Court.
However, our review of the record does reveal that Appellant is entitled
to some relief on a different issue. By order dated October 5, 2017, the trial
court found Appellant to be an SVP by clear and convincing evidence pursuant
to 42 Pa.C.S. § 9799.24(e)(3) of the Sexual Offender Registration and
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4 Counsel addressed the admissibility of the Tender Years testimony in the
“Anders Brief” portion of Appellant’s brief.
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Notification Act (“SORNA”). On October 31, 2017, this Court held “that section
9799.24(e)(3) of SORNA violates the federal and state constitutions because
it increases the criminal penalty to which a defendant is exposed without the
chosen fact-finder making the necessary factual findings beyond a reasonable
doubt.” Commonwealth v. Butler, 173 A.3d 1212, 1218 (Pa.Super. 2017),
appeal granted, 190 A.3d 581 (Pa. 2018). “Since Butler finds that this issue
pertains to the legality of the sentence, . . . we may reach [the issue] sua
sponte.” Commonwealth v. Tighe, 184 A.3d 560, 583 (Pa.Super. 2018),
appeal granted, 195 A.3d 850 (Pa. 2018).
As such, we vacate the order designating Appellant as an SVP. However,
we need not remand for the issuance of new notice of his registration
requirements; “[s]ince Appellant was convicted of a Tier III offense, he is still
required to register for life.” Commonwealth v. Tighe, 184 A.3d 560, 583
(Pa.Super. 2018), appeal granted, 195 A.3d 850 (Pa. 2018).
Application to Proceed Pro Se denied. SVP designation vacated.
Judgment of sentence affirmed in all other respects. Jurisdiction relinquished.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 2/22/19
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