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2019 PA Super 176
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
:
RICHARD HOLSTON : No. 223 EDA 2016
Appeal from the Order December 21, 2015
In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County Criminal Division at
No(s): CP-09-CR-0005331-2015
BEFORE: GANTMAN, P.J., BENDER, P.J.E., PANELLA, J., SHOGAN, J.,
LAZARUS, J., STABILE, J., DUBOW, J., NICHOLS, J., and
McLAUGHLIN, J.
CONCURRING AND DISSENTING OPINION BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED MAY
31, 2019
I agree with the Majority that the Commonwealth has waived its claim
that the trial court erred in granting Richard Holston’s motion for habeas
corpus as to the conspiracy and insurance fraud1 charges because it failed to
ensure this Court had a complete certified record. However, I would find the
Commonwealth presented a prima facie case that Richard Holston committed
perjury and obstruction of justice2 and therefore that the trial court erred in
granting the motion for habeas corpus as to those charges.
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1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 903 and 4117(a)(2), respectively.
2 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 4902(a) and 5101, respectively.
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I. Factual History
The charges at issue in this case stem from a criminal investigation that
started following an October 2013 fire at a mansion owned by the Risoldi
family. This was the third fire at the mansion since June 2009. The
investigation concerned an alleged insurance fraud scheme involving
homeowners’ insurance claims following the multiple fires. The claims
submitted by the Risoldi family following each fire included claims for damaged
window treatments, which the Risoldi family allegedly purchased from
Summerdale Mills. The Risoldi family’s insurer, AIG, declined to reimburse for
the window treatments following the 2013 fire without proof of the
replacement cost following the second fire. The Risoldi family initially claimed
proof of the replacement cost had been lost in the fire.
Holston is the owner of Philadelphia Draperies, LLC, doing business as
Summerdale Mills. According to Holston, his brother-in-law, Abraham
Reichbach, gave him the Summerdale Mills business in January 2014. Prior to
January 2014, Holston had a fabrication shop that rented space from
Summerdale Mills and did fabric work for Summerdale Mills, including
fabricating window treatments.
In August 2014, the Commonwealth issued a subpoena to “Summerdale
Mills and Design Center[,] Rick Holston[,]” requiring the production of all
records of business conducted between members of the Risoldi family and
Summerdale Mills, including canceled checks, invoices, and estimates for the
replacement of fabrics due to fires at the Risoldi mansion.
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Holston testified before a grand jury in September 2014 and produced
68 documents in response to the subpoena. N.T., 9/16/14, at 11. The
documents consisted of diagrams related to window treatment fabrications.
Id. at 12. However, he did not produce any canceled checks, invoices,
estimates, or similar documents. Id. When asked where he found the
documents he produced, he stated, “I looked through any of the boxes that
had files that I could find to try to comply with the subpoena.” Id. He stated
he did not have any canceled checks, invoices, or estimates because
Summerdale Mills’ computer had allegedly died. He said:
[The] computer hard drive, which . . . had everything
financial, which had all the orders, invoices, everything, that
hard drive died at the end of April, beginning of May of this
past year. And then we called in several companies to try to
restore it. And they were unable to do that. And then we
sent it out to a company to see if they could restore it. They
recently responded that it was not able to be recovered. And
that was all the data that had been passed on to me from
2006 on.
Id. at 12-13.
When asked whether the company had kept hard copies of the sales
orders, Holston stated, “No. Not that I’ve seen,” claiming the company had
been “paperless.” Id. at 31. Holston testified that the company was
“handwriting everything now” because the company “[did not] have a
computer system.” Id. at 30. Holston stated that he continued to receive
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orders from the website, because he checked his email on his laptop.3 Id. at
41.
Holston further stated that the records of his fabrication business, which
did work for Summerdale Mills prior to January 2014, would not reference
“Risoldi.” Id. at 25. He claimed the customer of the business was Summerdale
Mills, and Summerdale Mills did not reference specific customers when
requesting work from fabrication companies. Id. at 25-26.
Holston testified he did not have access to the bank accounts for
Summerdale Mills prior to January 2014, because his brother-in-law allegedly
still controlled the bank accounts for the business prior to January 2014, and
Holston opened new accounts. Id. at 15, 18. He said that he had asked his
brother-in-law for documents, but his brother-in-law did not provide any. Id.
19-20.
On October 9, 2014, agents from the Office of Attorney General
executed a search warrant at Summerdale Mills. N.T., 8/19/15, at 16. The
agents found more than 450 documents throughout the Summerdale Mills
offices related to Summerdale Mills’ work for the Risoldi family, including
documents from Holston’s office. The documents found by the agents
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3 Holston’s testimony is unclear as to whether it was one computer and one
hard drive that was broken or whether it was a “computer system” that was
broken. Although he said he now uses a laptop to access emails, and the
company is still “doing everything by hand,” he testified the employee who
prepares the company’s tax returns still had a functioning computer. N.T.,
9/16/14, at 56.
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included, among other things, invoices and work orders dated before April
2014. Id. at 19-53.4 The agents also found invoices from Philadelphia
Draperies to Summerdale Mills from 2010 and 2011, which had the Risoldi
name on it. Id. at 28, 52.5
II. Legal Analysis
As noted by the majority, to establish a prima facie case, the
Commonwealth must “produce[] evidence of each of the material elements of
the crime charged and establish[] sufficient probable cause to warrant the
belief that the accused committed the offense.” Commonwealth v. Huggins,
836 A.2d 862, 866 (Pa. 2003) (quoting Commonwealth v. McBride, 595
A.2d 589, 591 (Pa. 1991)). “The evidence need only be such that, if presented
at trial and accepted as true, the judge would be warranted in permitting the
case to go to the jury.” Id. (citing Commonwealth v. Marti, 779 A.2d 1177,
1180 (Pa.Super. 2001)). Further, “[i]nferences reasonably drawn from the
evidence of record which would support a verdict of guilty are to be given
effect, and the evidence must be read in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth.” Id. (quoting Marti, 779 A.2d at 1180).
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4 The documents were not made a part of the certified record. However,
agents did testify at the preliminary hearing about the search and the
documents they found.
5 The agents also observed operational computers, including an operational
computer in Holston’s office, and an operational central server system. Id. at
84-85. There does not appear to be any testimony as to any documents
retrieved from the computers or as to whether the computers and servers
were operational prior to Holston’s Grand Jury testimony.
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A. Perjury
To establish perjury, the Commonwealth must establish that the
defendant “in any official proceeding [made] a false statement under oath or
equivalent affirmation . . . when the statement is material and he does not
believe it to be true.” 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 4902(a). The statute defines “materiality”
as follows:
Falsification is material, regardless of the admissibility of the
statement under rules of evidence, if it could have affected
the course or outcome of the proceeding. It is no defense
that the declarant mistakenly believed the falsification to be
immaterial. Whether a falsification is material in a given
factual situation is a question of law.
Id. at § 4902(b). The statute further provides that “[i]n any prosecution under
this section, except under subsection (e) of this section, falsity of a statement
may not be established by the uncorroborated testimony of a single witness.”
Id. at § 4902(f).
Here, the Commonwealth claims Holston presented false testimony
before the grand jury and the evidence gathered following the execution of a
search warrant establishes that the testimony was false.
The trial court found, and the Majority agrees, that the Commonwealth
failed to establish a prima facie case of perjury. Prior to his grand jury
testimony, Holston appeared for an interview with the Commonwealth on
September 2, 2014. In finding the Commonwealth failed to present a prima
facie case, the trial court reasoned that “the [Commonwealth] failed to
establish any variance between Holston’s comments on September 2 and his
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Grand Jury testimony as there was no evidence presented as to what he said
on September 2.” Trial Court Op., filed Dec. 21, 2015, at 10-11. The trial court
next stated Holston “was not in legal possession of Summerdale [Mills’] pre-
2014 records and had no duty to produce them.” Id. at 11. The court found
that “[t]he fact that the item is in an area that defendant has access to does
not establish his control over it, let alone his intent to possess it.” Id. at 12.
The court stated “[t]here was no evidence, direct or circumstantial, of
Holston’s intent to possess or control the pre-2014 documents of Summerdale
Mills. As the pre-2014 Summerdale Mills’ records were not Holston’s, he had
no duty to produce them and was improperly held on the perjury count.” Id.
The Majority quotes the trial court’s analysis and states it “correctly
determined the Commonwealth failed to present a prima facie case that
[Holston] committed perjury while testifying before the grand jury.” Majority
at 16. It concludes that the “Commonwealth failed to set forth sufficient
evidence beyond mere suspicion that [Holston] had any knowledge of the
existence of the documents that were discovered during the execution of the
search warrant.” Id. It further concluded that “[t]here is no indication in the
record that [Holston] knew that his statements regarding his inability to
present additional documentation pursuant to subpoena were false.” Id. at
17.
Respectfully, I believe that in reaching this conclusion the Majority is
making credibility determinations and weighing the evidence, which should
not be done when addressing a motion for habeas corpus. See
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Commonwealth v. Ouch, 199 A.3d 918, 923 (Pa.Super. 2018) (quoting
Marti, 779 A.2d at 1180). I would conclude that the trial court erred in
granting the motion for habeas corpus and finding the Commonwealth failed
to establish a prima facie case to support the perjury charge.
First, the Commonwealth does not argue that the September 2 interview
forms the basis for the perjury charge. Therefore, the trial court’s conclusion
that the Commonwealth failed to establish a variance between statements
from the September 2 interview and the Grand Jury testimony is irrelevant.
Second, I do not agree that Holston had no legal obligation to produce
documents in the possession of Summerdale Mills, a company that he owned
at the time of the issuance of the subpoena. The subpoena was sent to
“Summerdale Mills and Design Center[,] Rick Holston[,]” and required the
production of all records of business conducted relating to certain individuals.
A company cannot avoid its obligations under a subpoena by transferring
ownership to a new individual, who could then claim he had no legal right to
the records of the company he now allegedly owns. A subpoena’s command
is personal, and if Holston had the documents, he had a duty to produce them.
It is irrelevant that the requested documents allegedly came into being before
Holston owned the company.
Further, contrary to the trial court’s finding, Holston’s legal obligation as
to the documents does not impact whether he, in fact, committed perjury.
Rather, when testifying before the Grand Jury, he was asked about his
compliance with the subpoena, and he responded, “I looked through any of
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the boxes that had files that I could find to try to comply with the subpoena.”
Id. at 12. In those boxes he claimed he found only 68 documents, and found
no canceled checks, invoices, or work orders. Holston did not say that he
lacked access to any part of the building when searching for and through
boxes. A month later, when the Commonwealth executed a search warrant, it
also looked through boxes, and found more than 450 documents related to
the Risoldi family, including invoices, work orders, and estimates.
Holston further stated that he did not produce any canceled checks,
invoices, or estimates because Summerdale Mills’
computer hard drive, which . . . had everything financial,
which had all the orders, invoices, everything, that hard
drive died at the end of April, beginning of May of this past
year. And then we called in several companies to try to
restore it. And they were unable to do that. And then we
sent it out to a company to see if they could restore it. They
recently responded that it was not able to be recovered. And
that was all the data that had been passed on to me from
2006 on.
Id. at 12-13. When asked whether the company had kept hard copies of the
sales order, Holston stated, “No. Not that I’ve seen,” claiming the company
had been “paperless.” Id. at 31. Again, when the agents executed the search
warrant, they found hard copies of invoices and work orders that predated the
claimed loss of the computer hard drive.
Holston further stated that the records from the fabrication business he
owned before January 2014, which did work for Summerdale Mills, would not
reference the Risoldi name, as the customer of the fabrication business was
Summerdale Mills, and Summerdale Mills did not reference specific customers
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when it requested work from fabrication companies. In contrast, however,
when executing the search warrant, the agents located invoices from
Philadelphia Draperies to Summerdale Mills which referenced “Risoldi.”
Holston never claimed he did not produce documents because he had
no legal right to the documents or that he had limited access to areas of the
office. Rather, he claimed he searched the boxes, the computer was not
working, Summerdale Mills did not keep hardcopies of invoices, and
Summerdale Mills did not inform its subcontractors of the clients for whom the
subcontractor was doing work.6 The agents’ discovery of documents in areas
to which Holston had access raises a strong inference that Holston’s testimony
before the grand jury was not truthful.
The statements would be material, as the Grand Jury was investigating
insurance fraud on the part of the Risoldi family, who alleged they had no
documentation to support the claimed replacement cost of the drapes.
Further, contrary to the Majority, I believe the Commonwealth’s
evidence was more than mere suspicion or conjecture. Rather, the evidence
would support a finding that Holston committed perjury, that is, that he made
a false statement under oath, the statement was material, and he knew the
statement was false. See 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 4902(a). Accordingly, viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, I would find that
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6 Holston also claimed he asked his brother-in-law for documents, and his
brother-in-law did not provide any, and claimed he could not access the bank
account information for the company prior to January 2014.
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the Commonwealth presented sufficient evidence to establish a prima facie
case of perjury.
B. Obstruction
The Majority finds the Commonwealth waived its claim that it presented
a prima face case of obstruction of justice because it failed to ensure the
certified record included the documents that Holston produced in response to
the subpoena and failed to include such documents in the reproduced record.
I disagree. Holston described the documents in his Grand Jury testimony and
agreed at that time that they do not contain invoices or estimates. I would
therefore find that we can adequately review this claim.
Obstruction of justice is defined as follows:
A person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if
he intentionally obstructs, impairs or perverts the
administration of law or other governmental function by
force, violence, physical interference or obstacle, breach of
official duty, or any other unlawful act, except that this
section does not apply to flight by a person charged with
crime, refusal to submit to arrest, failure to perform a legal
duty other than an official duty, or any other means of
avoiding compliance with law without affirmative
interference with governmental functions.
18 Pa.C.S.A. § 5101. To establish a person obstructed justice, the
Commonwealth must establish that “(1) the defendant had the intent to
obstruct the administration of law; and (2) the defendant used force or
violence, breached an official duty or committed an unlawful act.”
Commonwealth v. Goodman, 676 A.2d 234, 235 (Pa. 1996).
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Comparing Holston’s Grand Jury testimony with the documents and
items found during the execution of the search warrant, I believe the
Commonwealth established a prima face case of obstruction of justice.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the
evidence supports a finding that Holston intended to prevent the government
from gaining access to documents relevant to the criminal investigation, and,
in doing so committed an unlawful act, that is, perjury. See Commonwealth
v. Feese, 79 A.3d 1101, 1123-24 (Pa.Super. 2013) (finding sufficient
evidence of obstruction of justice where defendant and co-conspirator
withheld documents that should have been turned over to the Office of
Attorney General pursuant to subpoenas and altered documents prior to
producing them).
C. Conspiracy and Insurance Fraud
The Majority claims that the Commonwealth waived the claims that it
presented sufficient evidence to support prima facie cases of conspiracy and
insurance fraud because the certified record does not contain the documents
from the binder, which form the basis of the conspiracy and insurance fraud
claims. I also note that although the reproduced record contains some
testimony from a preliminary hearing describing the documents, the transcript
from the relevant preliminary hearing is not part of the certified record, and
the reproduced record includes only a portion of the transcript. I therefore
agree with the Majority that the Commonwealth has waived its claim that it
presented prima facie cases of conspiracy and insurance fraud.
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In conclusion, I agree with the Majority that the Commonwealth waived
its claim that it presented sufficient evidence of prima facie cases of conspiracy
and insurance fraud. However, I disagree with the Majority as to the perjury
and obstruction of justice charges. I would find the Commonwealth presented
sufficient evidence to support a prima facie case that Holston committed
perjury and obstruction of justice and that the trial court erred in granting
Holston’s motion for habeas corpus as to those charges.
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