J-A07008-21
2021 PA Super 95
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
CHRISTOPHER BANKS :
:
Appellant : No. 651 MDA 2020
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered April 8, 2020
In the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County Criminal Division at
No(s): CP-40-CR-0002500-2018
BEFORE: BOWES, J., DUBOW, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
OPINION BY BOWES, J.: FILED MAY 13, 2021
Christopher Banks appeals from the judgment of sentence of an
aggregate term of six to twelve years of imprisonment imposed after he was
convicted of driving under the influence (“DUI”), fleeing or attempting to elude
a police officer, firearms not to be carried without a license, and three counts
of recklessly endangering another person (“REAP”), as well as several
summary offenses, following a bifurcated trial. We affirm.
The charges against Appellant stemmed from events in the early
morning of April 27, 2018. At 2:15 a.m., Appellant, in his vehicle with two
passengers, encountered the vehicle of Krystle and Jack Neary on the streets
of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Appellant tailgated the Nearys so closely that
Mrs. Neary, who was driving, was unable to see Appellant’s headlights in her
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* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
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rearview mirror. She took evasive action to try to lose Appellant, but he
continued to follow her, driving fast and aggressively. Appellant then began
firing a gun at the Nearys from his driver’s window, discharging five or six
shots in total. Appellant’s vehicle later spun out as the parties approached
railroad tracks, enabling Mrs. Neary to get a good look at Appellant and the
gun in his hand. Mrs. Neary then fled, with Appellant still chasing her. The
Nearys soon encountered two police vehicles, occupied by Sergeant Dale
Binker and Officer Thomas Lepore. Mrs. Neary, with Appellant again behind
her, stopped her vehicle in front of the officers and solicited the officers’ help,
yelling that someone was shooting at her.
Sergeant Binken believed that he saw a gun in Appellant’s hand and
directed him to drop it. Officer Lepore did not see a gun. Appellant responded
by backing up his car, nearly hitting one of the officers, and speeding away.
The officers pursued Appellant in what became a high-speed chase over
approximately sixty miles and three counties, ending when Appellant
eventually stopped four or five miles after driving over spike strips which had
been placed across the highway. The officers found Appellant with slurred
speech, dilated eyes, and smelling of alcohol.1 Appellant refused to take a
blood test. Appellant was arrested and his car impounded. A subsequent
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1 While the certified record indicates that there were two female passengers
in the car with Appellant the whole time, and apparently statements were
taken from them, the passengers did not testify at trial and remain
unidentified.
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search of the vehicle produced a bullet fragment, an empty shell casing, a
handgun magazine, and markings consistent with bullet damage to the
driver’s door, but no firearm.
Appellant was charged with a bevy of crimes including aggravated
assault, DUI, and REAP, as well as several firearm and Vehicle Code violations.
Since one of the firearms charges—possession of a firearm prohibited—
required proof of Appellant’s prior robbery conviction, Appellant requested,
and was granted, severance of that count to avoid prejudicing the jury. A trial
solely on the charge of person not to possess was held on January 15, 2020.2
In attempting to prove this charge, the Commonwealth opted to present only
the testimony of the two officers, the physical evidence seized from Appellant’s
vehicle, and the parties’ stipulation that Appellant had pled guilty to robbery,
which was an enumerated offense precluding his lawful possession of a
firearm. While the Commonwealth did not offer the Nearys as witnesses, both
officers testified that the Nearys had claimed that someone had shot at them.
However, the trial court refused to allow the hearsay to be used as substantive
evidence as an excited utterance, ruling that it could only be considered to
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2 The case was originally scheduled for trial in March 2019, but was delayed
nearly a year due to continuance requests, most of them by Appellant. Prior
to trial, Appellant sought discharge pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 600, but his
motion was denied. Although Appellant included that denial in his Pa.R.A.P.
1925(b) statement, he has elected to abandon it on appeal.
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explain the officers’ course of conduct. The jury returned a verdict of not
guilty.3
When the parties appeared for the trial of the remaining charges,
Appellant moved to dismiss the counts for carrying a firearm without a license,
carrying a loaded weapon, and REAP as to the Nearys. Appellant argued that,
since the first jury found him not guilty of possession by person prohibited,
allowing the other charges based upon Appellant’s possession of a firearm to
go forward could result in inconsistent verdicts. See N.T. Trial, 2/10-12/20,
at 3. The Commonwealth responded by noting that the simple not guilty
verdict in the first trial did not necessary mean that the jury found that
Appellant did not possess a firearm, and that the second jury will receive
evidence that the first jury did not, including the testimony of the Nearys. Id.
at 4-5. The court asked counsel if he had any legal authority to support
Appellant’s dismissal motion, but he did not. Id. at 9. The court denied
Appellant’s motion. Id.
The following day, before trial commenced, Appellant sought
reconsideration of his motion to dismiss the firearm-related charges.
Appellant presented a memorandum citing collateral estoppel, rather than
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3 During deliberations, the jury submitted the following question: “Which door
had a bullet hole; driver’s side or passenger?” N.T. Trial, 1/15/20, at 138.
The trial court informed the members of the jury that it could not answer, and
that they were required to rely upon their individual and collective
recollections. Id.
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inconsistent verdicts, as the basis for dismissal. After entertaining argument,
the trial court initially granted the motion as to the charge of carrying a firearm
without a license. However, after further argument, the court ruled that the
Commonwealth could proceed on that charge, but its evidence of Appellant’s
possession of the firearm was limited to the first part of the crime spree prior
to the Nearys encountering police. Id. at 46.
At the conclusion of the second trial, the jury found Appellant not guilty
of aggravated assault, but guilty of fleeing or attempting to elude a police
officer (high-speed chase), firearms not to be carried without a license, all
three counts of REAP, and DUI—general impairment (with refusal and accident
resulting in vehicle or property damage). Id. at 321-22. Appellant then pled
guilty or was convicted by the trial court of the remaining charges.
On April 8, 2020, Appellant was sentenced to an aggregate term of six
to twelve years of imprisonment. Appellant filed no post-sentence motion,
but filed a timely notice of appeal. The trial court ordered Appellant to file a
Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement of errors complained of on appeal, and Appellant
timely complied after being granted multiple extensions. The trial court
thereafter authored a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, and the appeal is ready for
disposition.
Appellant presents the following questions for our consideration:
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A. Whether the trial court erred in denying [Appellant]’s motion
to dismiss counts three, five, six, and eleven[4] of the
information on the grounds of double jeopardy and collateral
estoppel in that a previous jury had considered the issue of
whether [Appellant] possessed a firearm and made a factual
determination that he had not?
B. Whether the evidence was insufficient to convict [Appellant]
of [DUI] in that:
i. the jury found him not guilty of [DUI] while fleeing the
police; and
ii. the evidence of intoxication was only erratic driving
while traveling at 130 MPH for about 60 miles on the
Interstate, that Sergeant Binker smelled an odor of
alcohol on [Appellant] and his pupils were dilated, he
had slowed speech and he was sweating?
Appellant’s brief at 4 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
For ease of disposition, we first address Appellant’s second issue
challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain his DUI conviction. The
following principles govern our review of this claim.
The standard we apply in reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence
is whether viewing all the evidence admitted at trial in the light
most favorable to the verdict winner, there is sufficient evidence
to enable the fact-finder to find every element of the crime beyond
a reasonable doubt. In applying the above test, we may not weigh
the evidence and substitute our judgment for the fact-finder. In
addition, we note that the facts and circumstances established by
the Commonwealth need not preclude every possibility of
innocence. Any doubts regarding a defendant’s guilt may be
resolved by the fact-finder unless the evidence is so weak and
inconclusive that as a matter of law no probability of fact may be
drawn from the combined circumstances. The Commonwealth
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4Counts three, five, six, and eleven stated, respectively, charges of firearms
not to be carried without a license, REAP as to Mrs. Neary, REAP as to Mr.
Neary, and carrying a loaded weapon.
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may sustain its burden of proving every element of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt by means of wholly circumstantial
evidence. Moreover, in applying the above test, the entire record
must be evaluated and all evidence actually received must be
considered. Finally, the finder of fact while passing upon the
credibility of witnesses and the weight of the evidence produced,
is free to believe all, part or none of the evidence.
Commonwealth v. Reed, 216 A.3d 1114, 1119 (Pa.Super. 2019) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Appellant was convicted of DUI—general impairment. The pertinent
statutory provision specifies that “[a]n individual may not drive, operate or be
in actual physical control of the movement of a vehicle after imbibing a
sufficient amount of alcohol such that the individual is rendered incapable of
safely driving, operating or being in actual physical control of the movement
of the vehicle.” 75 Pa.C.S. § 3802(a)(1). To establish that a defendant was
incapable of driving safely, “it must be shown that alcohol has substantially
impaired the normal mental and physical faculties required to safely operate
the vehicle.” Commonwealth v. Palmer, 751 A.2d 223, 228 (Pa.Super.
2000). “Substantial impairment, in this context, means a diminution or
enfeeblement in the ability to exercise judgment, to deliberate[,] or to react
prudently to changing circumstances and conditions.” Id. Further, we have
held that “a police officer who has perceived a defendant’s appearance and
conduct is competent to express an opinion, in a prosecution for [DUI], as to
the defendant’s state of intoxication and ability to safely drive a vehicle.”
Commonwealth v. Butler, 856 A.2d 131, 137 (Pa.Super. 2004).
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Appellant first suggests that a factual finding of the jury in connection
with the fleeing or eluding charge renders the evidence insufficient to sustain
his DUI conviction. See Appellant’s brief at 31. By way of background, the
offense of fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer is generally graded as
a second-degree misdemeanor. See 18 Pa.C.S. § 3733(a.2)(1). However, it
constitutes a third-degree felony if, while fleeing, the driver, inter alia, is DUI
or engages in a high-speed chase that endangers law enforcement or a
member of the general public. See 18 Pa.C.S. § 3733(a.2)(2)(i), (iii).
Accordingly, on the verdict slip Appellant’s jury was asked, for the fleeing or
attempting to elude charge, to first indicate whether Appellant was guilty or
not guilty. It was then queried, if the finding was guilty, whether the
Commonwealth had proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Appellant, while
fleeing, (A) committed a violation of the DUI statute, and (B) endangered law
enforcement or others by engaging in a high speed chase. The jury checked
“no” for A and “yes” for B.
Appellant maintains that the “no” finding for this charge impacts the
sufficiency analysis of his DUI charge. See Appellant’s brief at 31-32.
However, the fact that the jury simultaneously convicted Appellant of DUI and
found that Appellant was not DUI in connection with the fleeing/eluding charge
is of no moment. “[I]t is well-settled that inconsistent verdicts are permissible
in this Commonwealth.” Commonwealth v. Burton, 234 A.3d 824, 829
(Pa.Super. 2020). As we have explained:
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[I]nconsistent verdicts, while often perplexing, are not considered
mistakes and do not constitute a basis for reversal. Consistency
in verdicts in criminal cases is not necessary. When an acquittal
on one count in an indictment is inconsistent with a conviction on
a second count, the court looks upon the acquittal as no more
than the jury’s assumption of a power which they had no right to
exercise, but to which they were disposed through lenity. Thus,
this Court will not disturb guilty verdicts on the basis of apparent
inconsistencies as long as there is evidence to support the verdict.
The rule that inconsistent verdicts do not constitute reversible
error applies even where the acquitted offense is a lesser included
offense of the charge for which a defendant is found guilty.
Commonwealth v. Barnes, 167 A.3d 110, 120 (Pa.Super. 2017) (en banc)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
To avoid this well-settled law, Appellant contends that he is not alleging
inconsistent verdicts, asserting as follows:
[Appellant] is not arguing inconsistent verdicts, but rather
that if the jury has found as a fact that the [Appellant] was not
driving under the influence of alcohol while fleeing the police, the
fact of the nature of his driving during the period of flight is not a
fact that can be used to establish the evidence was sufficient.
Further, the observations of the police officer of the [Appellant]
while out of the car of odor of alcohol, slow speech, dilated pupils
and sweating do not establish he was intoxicated to such a degree
that he was not capable of safe driving.
Appellant’s brief at 31-32.
We are not persuaded. Appellant asserts that the jury’s decision to
convict him of DUI, but not to check the DUI box on the verdict slip under the
fleeing count, necessarily indicates that it based his DUI conviction on
evidence of his actions prior to the high-speed chase. His argument is wholly
based upon the notion that the jury must have intended to render a logically
consistent verdict. We instead look on this result as “no more than the jury’s
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assumption of a power which they had no right to exercise, but to which they
were disposed through lenity.” Barnes, supra at 120. Thus, Appellant’s his
first sufficiency attack is unavailing.
Appellant frames his remaining sufficiency argument as follows:
[Appellant] submits odor of alcohol, slowed speech, dilated
eyes, and sweating do not establish that he was intoxicated to an
extent that rendered him incapable of safe driving. In fact, he led
Officer Lepore on a high-speed chase at 130 miles per hour from
Wilkes-Barre to Mount Pocono Township without striking any other
vehicles or driving of[f] the road. His car was only stopped when
a speed strip was laid down on the road causing him to have a flat
tired [sic]. [The jury’s decision not to add the enhancement of
DUI while fleeing an officer indicates they believed he was not
intoxicated to the point that rendered him incapable of safe
driving.
There must be a point at which the Court can, as a matter of
law, find that observations of the police officer are not sufficient.
Almost all cases finding sufficiency included failed field sobriety
tests or some kind of confusion in fumbling for a driver’s license.
Those facts do not exist in this case. Even the usual “slurred”
speech was described as “slowed.” The symptoms of slowed
speech, dilated eyes and sweating can certainly be attributed to
having driv[en] at a high rate of speed of 130 miles on the
interstate for sixty miles while attempting to flee the police.
[Appellant] contends that this case falls below what should
be the level of evidence required to prove DUI General Impairment
and depends upon the ubiquitous “odor of alcohol.[“]
Appellant’s brief at 35-36.
Thus, Appellant’s claim does not challenge that he was driving, or that
he was driving under the influence of alcohol, but only that he had been
incapable of safely driving. Appellant’s argument that he managed to
maintain a high speed chase for many miles without crashing demonstrated
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that he had in fact been driving safely is absurd. As the trial court’s summary
of Appellant’s driving makes plain, Appellant in his intoxicated state engaged
in highly unsafe driving:
A police officer who has perceived the way a defendant appears
and acts is competent to express an opinion as to the defendant’s
state of intoxication and ability to safely drive a vehicle. Sergeant
Binker, who is trained in the detection of impaired drivers and who
has frequent contact with intoxicated people in the line of duty,
testified that, based on his observations of [Appellant], he did not
think that he could drive safely. In addition, there was testimony
that [Appellant] followed the Nearys in a close and aggressive
manner and that he sped through residential areas at speeds of
over 100 miles per hour. [Appellant] drove in an erratic manner
all over the roadway at speeds in excess of 130 miles per hour for
over sixty miles. He tried to pass a semi-truck on the shoulder of
the road, almost hitting a large interstate sign. Even after running
over the spike strips that were laid down flattening his tires,
[Appellant] continued to drive for three or four miles.
Trial Court Opinion, 8/25/20, at 31 (citation omitted).
We agree. Based upon their common sense and the evidence viewed in
the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the members of the jury were
free to conclude that Appellant was operating his vehicle while under the
influence of alcohol, and that his outrageous driving maneuvers manifested
an alcohol-induced “diminution or enfeeblement in the ability to exercise
judgment, to deliberate[,] or to react prudently to changing circumstances
and conditions.” Palmer, supra at 228. Consequently, Appellant’s challenge
to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain his conviction for DUI—general
impairment fails. Accord Commonwealth v. Gruff, 822 A.2d 773, 782
(Pa.Super. 2003) (finding evidence sufficient to establish that the defendant
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exhibited a diminution of the ability to exercise judgment where he “drove at
a high rate of speed, gave inappropriate answers, and refused a blood test”).
Appellant’s claim lacks merit.
We now address Appellant’s double jeopardy issue sounding in collateral
estoppel, mindful of the following legal principles. “Application of the doctrine
of collateral estoppel is a question of law. Accordingly, our standard of review
is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary.” Commonwealth v.
Brockington-Winchester, 205 A.3d 1279, 1283 (Pa.Super. 2019) (cleaned
up).
The Double Jeopardy Clauses of both the U.S. and Pennsylvania
constitutions are “grounded on the concept that no person should be harassed
by successive prosecutions for a single wrongful act and that no one should
be punished more than once for the same offense.” Commonwealth v.
Johnson, 231 A.3d 807, 819 (Pa. 2020). One aspect of the Double Jeopardy
Clause is that it “requires a prosecutor to bring, in a single proceeding, all
known charges against a defendant arising from a single criminal episode.”
Commonwealth v. Perfetto, 207 A.3d 812, 814 (Pa. 2019) (cleaned up).
However, “an accused cannot demand, or, perhaps, acquiesce in, a separation
of charges then complain, when prosecution on the severed charge is
imminent, that the Commonwealth is precluded from trying him on that
charge because of the accused’s right to have all charges against him tried
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together.” Commonwealth v. Wallace, 602 A.2d 345, 347 (Pa.Super.
1992).
Collateral estoppel is another aspect of the rule against Double
Jeopardy. As this Court explained:
The doctrine of collateral estoppel is a part of the Fifth
Amendment’s guarantee against double jeopardy, which was
made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth
Amendment. The phrase “collateral estoppel,” also known as
“issue preclusion,” simply means that when an issue of law,
evidentiary fact, or ultimate fact has been determined by a valid
and final judgment, that issue cannot be litigated again between
the same parties in any future lawsuit. Collateral estoppel does
not automatically bar a subsequent prosecution, but rather, it bars
redetermination in a second prosecution of those issues
necessarily determined between the parties in a first proceeding
that has become a final judgment.
Brockington-Winchester, supra at 1283 (cleaned up).
Collateral estoppel “does not operate in the criminal context in the same
manner in which it operates in the civil context.” Commonwealth v. States,
938 A.2d 1016, 1020 (Pa. 2007). In determining whether collateral estoppel
applies in the criminal arena, we undertake the following inquiries:
1) an identification of the issues in the two actions for the purpose
of determining whether the issues are sufficiently similar and
sufficiently material in both actions to justify invoking the
doctrine;
2) an examination of the record of the prior case to decide whether
the issue was “litigated” in the first case; and
3) an examination of the record of the prior proceeding to
ascertain whether the issue was necessarily decided in the first
case.
Id. at 1021.
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Our High Court further elucidated: “If the [prior] verdict must have
been based on resolution of an issue in a manner favorable to the defendant
with respect to a remaining charge, the Commonwealth is precluded from
attempting to relitigate that issue in an effort to resolve it in a contrary way.”
Id. at 1021. “Conversely, where an acquittal cannot be definitively
interpreted as resolving an issue in favor of the defendant with respect to a
remaining charge, the Commonwealth is free to commence with trial as it
wishes.” Id. Stated differently: “To say that the second trial is tantamount
to a trial of the same offense as the first and thus forbidden by the Double
Jeopardy Clause, we must be able to say that it would have been irrational
for the jury in the first trial to acquit without finding in the defendant’s favor
on a fact essential to a conviction in the second.” Currier v. Virginia, 138
S.Ct. 2144, 2150 (2018) (emphasis in original).
For example, in Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436 (1970), six men
playing poker were robbed by four masked men. Ashe and three other men
were charged with, inter alia, six separate counts of armed robbery, one for
each victim. Ashe went to trial only on one of the counts regarding a victim
named Knight, at which the prosecution offered the testimony of Knight and
three more of the poker players. The testimony was consistent and
unchallenged as to all aspects of the crime but for Ashe’s identity as one of
the perpetrators. The jury found Ashe not guilty. When the trial concerning
the next victim commenced, Ashe moved to dismiss based upon the prior
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acquittal. The motion was denied, and the prosecution presented the same
witnesses, who this time offered stronger identification testimony concerning
Ashe as one of the robbers. This time the jury found Ashe guilty.
The High Court first concluded that an examination of the record
revealed no rational basis for the jury to have concluded that there was no
armed robbery or that the claimed victim had not been one of the poker
players. Hence, “[t]he single rationally conceivable issue in dispute before the
jury was whether the petitioner had been one of the robbers. And the jury by
its verdict found that he had not.” Id. at 445. The Court then proceeded to
hold that the second prosecution was barred, explaining as follows:
After the first jury had acquitted [Ashe] of robbing Knight,
Missouri could certainly not have brought him to trial again upon
that charge. Once a jury had determined upon conflicting
testimony that there was at least a reasonable doubt that [Ashe]
was one of the robbers, the State could not present the same or
different identification evidence in a second prosecution for the
robbery of Knight in the hope that a different jury might find that
evidence more convincing. The situation is constitutionally no
different here, even though the second trial related to another
victim of the same robbery. For the name of the victim, in the
circumstances of this case, had no bearing whatever upon the
issue of whether [Ashe] was one of the robbers.
In this case the State in its brief has frankly conceded that
following the petitioner’s acquittal, it treated the first trial as no
more than a dry run for the second prosecution: “No doubt the
prosecutor felt the state had a provable case on the first charge
and, when he lost, he did what every good attorney would do—he
refined his presentation in light of the turn of events at the first
trial.” But this is precisely what the constitutional guarantee
forbids.
Id. at 446–47.
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In Commonwealth v. States, 938 A.2d 1016, 1017 (Pa. 2007), States
was in a single vehicle collision which he survived, but two other occupants
did not. States was charged with DUI, accidents involving death or personal
injury while not properly licensed, homicide by vehicle, and homicide by
vehicle while DUI. States sought, and was granted, severance of the first
charge to avoid potential prejudice flowing from his lack of a valid driver’s
license. The case proceed to trial with the judge as the fact-finder as to the
severed charge, and with a jury deciding the other counts. When the jury
became deadlocked, the trial court both (1) found States not guilty of the
charge of accidents involving death because it was not convinced that States
had been the driver, and (2) declared a mistrial on the remaining charges.
States then sought dismissal of the mistrial counts on double jeopardy
grounds. States appealed the denial, and this Court reversed, holding that
“because the trial court explicitly found that the Commonwealth failed to prove
States was driving, collateral estoppel principles precluded the Commonwealth
from attempting to prove States was the driver in any subsequent
proceeding.” Id. at 1019. Our Supreme Court agreed, stating:
The Commonwealth, in order to proceed on retrial, would
have to present evidence on an issue that has already been
decided in States’ favor.
....
[Therefore,] we hold that the Commonwealth may not
retry States on the charges upon which the jury could not agree,
for to do so would permit relitigation of an issue already
determined, by final judgment, in States’ favor.
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Id. at 1027.
The U.S. Supreme Court more recently considered the collateral
estoppel aspects of double jeopardy in the context of separate trials following
severance in Currier, supra.5 In that case, Currier’s nephew claimed that
Currier had been his accomplice in stealing a safe containing guns and cash
from a residence. Currier was charged with burglary, larceny, and unlawful
possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.6 The prosecution agreed to
severance of the unlawful possession charge to avoid prejudice, and the court
held the burglary and larceny trial first. There, the prosecution offered the
testimony of the nephew and a neighbor of the burgled residence to identify
Currier. “Currier argued that the nephew lied and the neighbor was unreliable
and, in the end, the jury acquitted.” Id. at 2147.
Currier then sought dismissal of the severed firearm charge based upon
double jeopardy, or at least exclusion of evidence about the burglary and
larceny in the second trial. The trial court rejected Currier’s arguments, the
severed charge went to trial, and Currier was found guilty of unlawful
possession. The Virginia appellate courts affirmed, and the U.S. Supreme
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5 While Currier is a plurality decision, the aspects of this case discussed in
the body of our decision are those to which five members of the High Court
subscribed.
6 “The last charge followed in light of Mr. Currier’s previous convictions for (as
it happens) burglary and larceny.” Currier v. Virginia, 138 S.Ct. 2144, 2147
(2018).
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Court granted certiorari to resolve lower courts’ “conflicting results on the
double jeopardy arguments” raised by Currier. Id. at 2149.
Currier premised his arguments primarily on Ashe. The Court observed
that “Ashe’s suggestion that the relitigation of an issue can sometimes
amount to the impermissible relitigation of an offense represented a significant
innovation in our jurisprudence[,]” and that “it sits uneasily with this Court’s
double jeopardy precedent and the Constitution’s original meaning.” Id. at
2149-50. Nonetheless, “whatever else may be said about Ashe, we have
emphasized that its test is a demanding one. Ashe forbids a second trial only
if to secure a conviction the prosecution must prevail on an issue the jury
necessarily resolved in the defendant’s favor in the first trial.” Id. at 2150.
The Court went on to find a meaningful distinction between Ashe and
the case before it:
Bearing all that in mind, a critical difference immediately
emerges between our case and Ashe. Even assuming without
deciding that Mr. Currier’s second trial qualified as the retrial of
the same offense under Ashe, he consented to it. Nor does
anyone doubt that trying all three charges in one trial would have
prevented any possible Ashe complaint Mr. Currier might have
had.
How do these features affect the double jeopardy calculus?
A precedent points the way. In Jeffers v. United States, 432
U.S. 137 . . . (1977), the defendant sought separate trials on each
of the counts against him to reduce the possibility of prejudice.
The court granted his request. After the jury convicted the
defendant in the first trial of a lesser-included offense, he argued
that the prosecution could not later try him for a greater offense.
In any other circumstance the defendant likely would have had a
good argument. Historically, courts have treated greater and
lesser-included offenses as the same offense for double jeopardy
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purposes, so a conviction on one normally precludes a later trial
on the other. But, Jeffers concluded, it’s different when the
defendant consents to two trials where one could have done. If a
single trial on multiple charges would suffice to avoid a double
jeopardy complaint, there is no violation of the Double Jeopardy
Clause when the defendant elects to have the offenses tried
separately and persuades the trial court to honor his election.
What was true in Jeffers, we hold, can be no less true here.
If a defendant’s consent to two trials can overcome concerns lying
at the historic core of the Double Jeopardy Clause, so too we think
it must overcome a double jeopardy complaint under Ashe. Nor
does anything in Jeffers suggest that the outcome should be
different if the first trial yielded an acquittal rather than a
conviction when a defendant consents to severance. While we
acknowledge that Ashe’s protections apply only to trials following
acquittals, as a general rule, the Double Jeopardy Clause protects
against a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction
as well as against a second prosecution for the same offense after
acquittal. Because the Clause applies equally in both situations,
consent to a second trial should in general have equal effect in
both situations.
Id. at 2150–51 (cleaned up).
Currier argued that “he had no real choice but to seek two trials”
because otherwise, knowledge of his prior convictions would taint the jury.
Noting that there was no dispute that the charges could have been tried
together “with appropriate cautionary instructions,” the Court rejected the
notion that Currier was forced “to give up one constitutional right to secure
another.” Id. at 2151. The Court explained:
Instead, Mr. Currier faced a lawful choice between two courses of
action that each bore potential costs and rationally attractive
benefits. It might have been a hard choice. But litigants every
day face difficult decisions. Whether it’s the defendant who finds
himself in the shoes of Jeffers . . . and forced to choose between
allowing an imperfect trial to proceed or seeking a second that
promises its own risks. Or whether it’s the defendant who must
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decide between exercising his right to testify in his own defense
or keeping impeachment evidence of past bad acts from the jury.
This Court has held repeatedly that difficult strategic choices like
these are not the same as no choice, and the Constitution does
not forbid requiring a litigant to make them.
Id. at 2151–52 (cleaned up).
Hence, Currier’s election to have two trials resulted in waiver of his
Ashe-based double jeopardy claim, and the subsequent conviction was
affirmed.7
____________________________________________
7 In a portion of the opinion garnering the support of four justices, a plurality
of the Currier Court indicated that collateral estoppel in the criminal context
bars only retrial for the same offense, not retrial of the same fact or issue.
See Currier v. Virginia, 138 S.Ct. 2144, 2153–54 (2018) (“[E]ven under
[the Ashe test,] a court’s ultimate focus remains on the practical identity of
offenses, and the only available remedy is the traditional double jeopardy bar
against the retrial of the same offense—not a bar against the relitigation of
issues or evidence. Even at the outer reaches of our double jeopardy
jurisprudence, then, this Court has never sought to regulate the retrial of
issues or evidence in the name of the Double Jeopardy Clause.”). Justice
Kennedy, who joined the aspects of the decision discussed above, concurred
to distance himself from the plurality’s reexamination of the extent of the
Ashe protections, stating as follows:
[W]hen a defendant’s voluntary choices lead to a second
prosecution he cannot later use the Double Jeopardy Clause,
whether thought of as protecting against multiple trials or the
relitigation of issues, to forestall that second prosecution. The
extent of the Double Jeopardy Clause protections discussed and
defined in Ashe need not be reexamined here; for, whatever the
proper formulation and implementation of those rights are, they
can be lost when a defendant agrees to a second prosecution. Of
course, this conclusion is premised on the defendant’s having a
voluntary choice, and a different result might obtain if that
premise were absent.
Id. at 2157 (Kennedy, J. concurring).
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With these decisions in mind, we turn to the instant appeal. We first
observe that neither the parties nor the trial court appears to have considered
Currier, which clearly indicates that Appellant waived his Ashe-based double
jeopardy rights by voluntarily seeking to have two trials. At the very least,
Appellant has no valid claim under the federal constitution.
Our Supreme Court has held that the Pennsylvania Constitution offers
broader double jeopardy protection than its federal counterpart concerning
retrial following a mistrial based upon prosecutorial misconduct. See
Commonwealth v. Smith, 615 A.2d 321, 322 (Pa. 1992). However, the
Court has also held that the rights are coextensive with the federal in origin
and application concerning the collateral estoppel implications of the Clauses.
See States, supra at 1019 (applying Ashe test after indicating: “The double
jeopardy protections afforded by our state constitution are coextensive with
those federal in origin; essentially, both prohibit successive prosecutions and
multiple punishments for the same offense.”).
Neither this Court nor our Supreme Court has rendered a decision in
which Currier is cited. However, in Wallace, this Court held that voluntary
severance, while amounting to a waiver of having all claims decided in a single
proceeding, did not waive collateral estoppel claims. See Wallace, supra at
349. The Wallace decision does not appear to be based upon the
Pennsylvania Constitution, but rather applies the Ashe test and rejects the
Jeffers-based analysis adopted by the Currier court. Thus, to the extent
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that Wallace purported to espouse federal constitutional principles, it appears
to have been overruled by Currier.
Our Supreme Court addressed the Wallace decision in States, a case
in which the Court, as noted above, expressed the coextensiveness of the
double jeopardy protections at issue. The majority noted that Wallace was
not on point, since in States there was a simultaneous trial by bench and jury
of all charges, rather than successive trials. See States, supra at 1023 n.8.
Nonetheless, the Court went on to indicate its agreement with the principle
that States’s “request for severance, which operated as a specific waiver of
his right to have all charges brought against him in one proceeding, cannot be
converted into a general waiver of all constitutional double jeopardy rights.”
Id.
Justice Saylor filed a concurring opinion, indicating his joinder to all
aspects of the majority except the majority’s discussion of Wallace. Justice
Saylor appreciated the Commonwealth’s argument that States had waived his
collateral estoppel double jeopardy rights by seeking severance, but ultimately
was more persuaded by another state’s decision “which focuse[d] on the
substantial difference between the preclusive effect of a guilty plea or
conviction, at issue in the seminal line of United States Supreme Court
decisions, and that of an acquittal, such as is at issue here.” Id. at 1028
(Saylor, J. concurring) (footnote omitted). The line of cases to which he
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referred is that beginning with Jeffers, the one upon with the Currier
majority’s holding that voluntary severance results in waiver was based.
Justice Castille, joined by Justices Baer and Eakin,8 dissented. For the
very reasons offered and cases cited by the Currier majority, the dissent
would have found waiver:
As a matter of constitutional principle, neither double jeopardy nor
collateral estoppel precludes a full prosecution of a matter, based
upon an acquittal in a separate prosecution, where the defendant
is responsible for the severance of the charges that led to separate
prosecutions before separate factfinders. In such an instance,
there is no governmental overreaching. By contrast, in Ashe
. . . , the defendant was charged in separate criminal complaints
with robbing six poker players. After a jury acquitted him of
robbing one of the victims based on insufficient identification
evidence, the prosecutor sought to try him for the robbery of a
second poker player. Clearly, concerns of governmental
overreaching are implicated in that scenario. In this case, the
Commonwealth intended to try all charges against appellee in a
single trial, but appellee demanded and received a separation of
the proceedings. This is governmental accommodation, not
governmental oppression. The windfall the Majority accords
appellee furthers no constitutional value; it does, however,
operate to deprive the Commonwealth of its constitutional right to
a trial by jury. In this regard, the result here is perverse.
Id. at 1033 (cleaned up). See also id. at 1031-32 (citing Jeffers and its
progeny).
____________________________________________
8 In addition to joining Justice Castille’s dissent, Justice Eakin separately
dissented to argue a similar position as that advocated by the plurality in
Currier concerning the difference between collateral estoppel in the civil and
criminal contexts. See Commonwealth v. States, 938 A.2d 1016, 1034 (Pa.
2007) (Eakin, J. dissenting).
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Hence, given the coextensive nature of the two constitutions
acknowledged by the States Court, and Currier resolving the question upon
which Justice Saylor’s view hinged in the opposite way, it would appear that
it is now the law under both the U.S. and Pennsylvania constitutions that a
criminal defendant’s voluntary severance of charges results in a blanket
inability to successfully invoke double jeopardy to bar the subsequent trial if
he is acquitted in the first, regardless of the results of the Ashe test.9
Therefore, because Appellant requested to have his person not to possess
charge tried separately, his acquittal in that trial had no impact upon the
Commonwealth’s ability to pursue the subsequent charges in the second trial.
His double jeopardy claim must fail.
We alternatively hold that, under pre-Currier precedent, Appellant’s
Pennsylvania constitutional rights were not violated by the subsequent trial on
the remaining charges.10 The trial court addressed Appellant’s claim as
follows:
____________________________________________
9 We observe that this result is fully consistent with the rule discussed above
permitting the fact-finder to reach inconsistent verdicts. Had Appellant not
sought severance, and a single jury decided all issues, a not guilty verdict on
the possession by person prohibited count would not have precluded the same
jury from convicting him of the remaining charges related to gun possession.
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Barnes, 167 A.3d 110, 120 (Pa.Super. 2017)
(en banc).
10 We address this question in the event that our Supreme Court might grant
discretionary review to resolve the state constitutional issue. However, we
note that Appellant has not argued that the Double Jeopardy Clause of the
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The facts here are distinguishable, not only from those in
Wallace, but from the facts found in States and Ashe as well.
The charges in all three of those cases stemmed from a single
incident rather than two distinct, separate episodes as exist in the
instant matter. In Wallace, all of the offenses took place during
a single incident and all of the victims were in the same car. In
States, the charges resulted from one car accident. In addition,
the trial court acquitted the defendant of the charge against him
after explicitly stating that it was not convinced beyond a
reasonable doubt that he was the driver of the car. The first jury
as fact-finder in the instant matter did not state the basis for
[Appellant]’s acquittal. Indeed, the first jury did not hear the
Nearys testify to their encounter with [Appellant]. In Ashe, the
charges resulted from one robbery of several victims that occurred
at the same place and time. Further, the identification evidence
presented in Ashe at the first trial for the robbery of one of the
victims was weak. At the second trial in Ashe, the government
presented essentially the same witnesses, although two witnesses
who at the first trial had been unable to identify the defendant
testified at the second trial that “his features, size and
mannerisms matched those of one of their assailants.” Another
witness who in the first trial identified the defendant mainly by his
size, at the second trial was able to recognize the “unusual sound
of his voice.” In the instant case, the officers were the only
witnesses who testified in both trials. But for the strictures placed
upon them by this court -- i.e., our hearsay ruling in the first trial
forbidding consideration of statements made by the Nearys, and
our ruling in the second trial that Sergeant Binker not be allowed
to testify that he saw the gun -- their testimony in both the first
and second trials was consistent. Unlike in Ashe, there were no
witnesses in the second trial here that testified to additional
evidence regarding the same issue that markedly differed from
the testimony given in the first trial.
____________________________________________
Pennsylvania constitution provides greater protection than its federal
counterpart, and thus has waived the claim. See, e.g., Commonwealth v.
Bishop, 217 A.3d 833, 840 (Pa. 2019) (“In terms of efforts by criminal
defendants to raise claims for departure from federal constitutional
jurisprudence on independent state grounds, the Commonwealth is correct
that the precedent of this Court [mandates] that some analysis explaining the
grounds for departure is required.”).
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Collateral estoppel prevents re-litigation between parties of
an issue where that issue has been previously decided by a
competent legal forum. After a thorough review of the record
here, it is apparent that the issues are not sufficiently similar for
collateral estoppel to apply. Here, an issue not litigated in the first
trial was to be decided in the second trial. In the first trial, it was
established either that [Appellant] did not possess a gun during
the time of Sergeant Binker’s involvement or that there was not
sufficient evidence to prove that he did. However, there was no
testimony during the first trial as to what the Nearys saw prior to
Sergeant Binker’s involvement because this court sustained the
defense objection as to hearsay and only allowed limited
testimony in order to show the officer’s course of conduct. Again,
the first jury never heard the Nearys testify. As a result, there
was no determination regarding any event that took place during
the first episode when the Nearys encountered [Appellant] prior
to police involvement.
As we said prior to vacating our ruling granting the motion
to dismiss, “The question of whether or not the Nearys saw a gun
and whether or not [Appellant] allegedly shot at them, that was
not at issue. That was not litigated in the first trial.” Because the
verdict in the first trial did not address whether [Appellant]
possessed a gun in the first episode with the Nearys, the
Commonwealth was properly allowed to proceed with count three,
albeit without Sergeant Binker’s testimony regarding having seen
the gun.
For the same reasons, the Commonwealth was also properly
allowed to proceed on count eleven, carrying a loaded weapon.
That statute, 18 Pa.C.S.A. §6106.1(a), provides, in pertinent part,
that “no person shall carry a loaded pistol, revolver, shotgun or
rifle, other than a firearm as defined in section 6102 (relating to
definitions), in any vehicle.” The first jury did not consider the
issue as to whether [Appellant] carried a loaded weapon during
the first episode with the Nearys.
Counts five and six, one count each of REAP, allege that
[Appellant] recklessly engaged in conduct which placed or may
have placed another, namely, Krystle Neary and Jack Neary,
respectively, in danger of death or serious bodily injury. These
counts involve victims, evidence and testimony that was not
presented and was thus not considered in the first trial and proof
of additional elements that do not hinge on whether [Appellant]
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possessed a firearm as relayed by Sergeant Binker. Moreover,
neither count five nor count six is necessarily dependent on the
fact that [Appellant] was in possession of a firearm. Evidence
proving that [Appellant] drove under the influence of alcohol at
excessive speeds while aggressively following the victims (Nearys)
supports the convictions for REAP. See, Commonwealth v.
Sullivan, 864 A.2d 1246 (Pa. Super. 2004) (Defendant’s actions
while driving intoxicated when accompanied by other tangible
indicia of unsafe driving supported convictions for REAP).
Because under the Ashe test the acquittal in the first trial
also cannot be definitively interpreted as resolving an issue in
favor of [Appellant] with respect to the charges for REAP at the
second trial, [Appellant]’s motion with regard to counts five and
six was also properly denied.
Trial Court Opinion, 8/25/20, at 23-25 (some citations omitted).
We fully agree with the trial court’s assessment. Contrary to Appellant’s
assertion that the first jury “considered the issue of whether [Appellant]
possessed a gun and was shooting at the Nearys,” the first jury heard no
substantive evidence of, and thus could not render a factual determination
about, whether Appellant possessed a gun during his encounter with the
Nearys prior to their encountering the police. The only witnesses to testify at
the first trial were Sergeant Binker and Officer Lepore. They testified,
respectively, that they were approached by a car whose occupants exclaimed
that “they were being shot at” or “somebody is shooting at me.” N.T. Trial,
1/15/20, at 34, 76. Appellant objected to both statements, and the trial court
both times indicated that the evidence was not admitted for its truth, but to
explain the officers’ course of conduct. Id. at 25, 76-77.
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Regarding any weapon possession or use prior to the officers’
involvement, the first jury heard only that someone in the other car, not
necessarily Appellant, had been shooting at them, and thus the officers
intervened. The remaining evidence concerned only subsequent events
personally witnessed by the officers. Specifically, Sergeant Binker testified
that he then exited his vehicle and saw Appellant with a handgun in his hand.
Id. at 35. Officer Lepore testified that he heard Sergeant Binker say “drop
the weapon, show me your hands,” but he did not himself see Appellant
holding a firearm. Id. at 77-18. The jury heard no substantive evidence of
the earlier events of the evening, nor any evidence identifying Appellant as
the vehicle’s shooter. Hence, the jury’s not guilty verdict only necessarily
found that Appellant did not possess a firearm at the time of the police
encounter or thereafter, not that the Nearys were not fired upon by Appellant
before they happened upon the police.
In Ashe, States, and Wallace, all relied upon by Appellant, the incident
and timeframe at issue in the second trial completely overlapped with those
at issue in the first trial. Here, the evidence in the first trial concerned a mere
portion of the episode, and the Commonwealth sought to litigate the
remaining charges in the second trial by reference to completely separate
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portions of the overall incident.11 As a result, the issue decided in Appellant’s
favor in the first trial—that he did not possess a firearm during his encounter
with the police officers—would not have to be resolved in a contrary way for
the Commonwealth to prevail in the second trial. The issue resolved in the
first trial was omitted entirely from the case in the litigation of the remaining
charges. It would not be irrational for a jury to find that Appellant no longer
possessed a gun when the police saw him, but that he had possessed one
earlier when he pursued and fired at the Nearys. Accordingly, Appellant’s
collateral estoppel claim fails.
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 5/13/2021
____________________________________________
11 To the extent that Appellant contends that the occurrences of April 27,
2018 amounted to a single criminal episode, and the Commonwealth could
have expanded the litigation of the severed claim by offering the testimony of
the Nearys to bolster the evidence of possession, his argument implicates not
collateral estoppel, but the requirement that the Commonwealth litigate the
entirety of a single criminal episode in one proceeding. See Commonwealth
v. Perfetto, 207 A.3d 812, 814 (Pa. 2019). However, as noted above, even
under Wallace, Appellant waived that aspect of his double jeopardy rights by
seeking severance of the charges. See Commonwealth v. Wallace, 602
A.2d 345, 347 (Pa.Super. 1992).
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