Com. v. Farabaugh, M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 27, 2020
Docket681 WDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Farabaugh, M. (Com. v. Farabaugh, M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. v. Farabaugh, M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-A05032-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : MARIE ANN FARABAUGH : No. 681 WDA 2019

Appeal from the Order Entered April 11, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-65-CR-0005683-2015

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., BOWES, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY PELLEGRINI, J.: FILED MARCH 27, 2020

The Commonwealth appeals from the order of the Court of Common

Pleas of Westmoreland County (trial court) granting the post-trial motion for

a new trial of Marie Ann Farabaugh (Farabaugh). After our careful review, we

affirm.

We take the following factual background and procedural history from

the trial court’s April 11, 2019 opinion and our independent review of the

certified record. On February 1, 2016, the Commonwealth charged Farabaugh

with Endangering the Welfare of Children (EWOC), 18 Pa.C.S. § 4304(a)(1),

and Recklessly Endangering Another Person (REAP), 18 Pa.C.S. § 2705,

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A05032-20

related to incidents that occurred between January 1, 2012, and January 1,

2015.1 The trial court held a jury trial from August 6-8, 2018, at which

Farabaugh and Palmer were co-defendants. The trial court provided the

following thorough recitation of the significant facts adduced at trial:

1. Alyssa was born on May 20, 1998; at the time of trial, she was 20 years old. (N.T. Trial, at 97, 140). She testified that the first incident of abuse by [Palmer] occurred when she was roughly 12 years old and living at a home on Murtha Way in Latrobe, Pennsylvania with her mother, [Palmer], and her seven -year - younger sister, Autumn. (See id. at 99). Alyssa testified that approximately one week after the first incident of abuse she told her mother that “Bruce touched [her] inappropriately,” and her mother did not believe her and grounded her. (See id. at 101).

2. Alyssa testified that when she was approximately 14 years old (i.e., between May 2012 and May 2013), she moved to a home on Dancer Road, along with her mother, [Palmer], Autumn, and her approximately 11-year-younger, half-brother, Xander. (See id. at 102, 141, 273). Alyssa testified that while living at Dancer Road, “Bruce got very sexual with [her]. He used to touch [her] inappropriately. It got to the point where he would start touching [her] underneath [her] clothes. And it got to the point where he would rape [her] and have sex with [her].” (See id. at 104).

3. Alyssa testified that [Palmer] first raped her when she was 14 years old and living at Dancer Road, and thereafter that [Palmer] raped her “[a]bout once a week, maybe more,” when she was fourteen, fifteen and sixteen years old. (See id. at 100, 105, 115). Alyssa testified that [Palmer] abused her for approximately five (5) years when she was between the ages of 12 to 16 years

1 Specifically, her live-in boyfriend, Bruce Jonathan Palmer (Palmer), was charged and convicted of Rape by Forcible Compulsion, 18 Pa.C.S. § 3121(a)(1), and related charges, as the result of his alleged rape and sexual assault of Farabaugh’s daughter, Alyssa Farabaugh (Alyssa), during the same time period. The trial court also granted his motion for a new trial, and the Commonwealth has appealed that ruling at docket number 668 WDA 2019.

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old; and that he raped her on a weekly basis during the ages of 14 to 16 years old. (See id. at 115).

4. During the period of time in which Alyssa testified the abuse and rapes occurred, i.e., roughly 2010-2014, Alyssa’s father and mother were engaged in a legal dispute regarding the custody of both Alyssa and Autumn. (See id. at 116).

5. As late as October 14, 2014, in the course and context of her parents’ custody litigation, Alyssa expressed to her guardian ad litem and to the family court a continuing preference to live with her mother and [Palmer], rather than with her father. (See id. at 137-38, 222-25).

6. Alyssa told father’s wife, Jodie, in mid-February 2015, that [Palmer] raped her “multiple times over a few years.” (See id. at 111, 143, 197). Both Alyssa and Jodie testified that Alyssa got into a significant argument over the phone with her mother regarding Alyssa’s use of marijuana shortly before Alyssa told Jodie that [Palmer] raped her. (See id. at 198, 2005). Alyssa’s father called the police after Alyssa told him that [Palmer] raped her. (See id. at 111, 198). Alyssa’s father testified that, later that same day, he relinquished custody of his 10-year-old daughter, Autumn, to Mother and [Palmer], for Mother’s period of shared custody. (See id. at 230).

7. Alyssa testified that she told her grandmother about [Palmer’s] actions when she stayed at her house. (See id. at 106). Alyssa testified that her mother picked her up from her grandmother’s house and sometime thereafter made her call her grandmother on the phone and apologize for lying about what [Palmer] had done. (See id. at 106, 120).

8. Alyssa’s maternal grandmother, Margaret Camilli (“Grandmother”), however, testified in substantial contradiction to Alyssa’s testimony. Grandmother testified that Alyssa stayed over at her house one night in the summer of 2014, in approximately June 2014, and Alyssa got in [a] big phone argument and fight with her mother over a misplaced iPad in the family home. (See id. at 174-79). Grandmother testified that Alyssa was extremely upset over the iPad argument, over being accused of lying about its location, and that Alyssa said [Palmer] probably hid the iPad to get her in trouble and that “we had sex.” (See id. at 174-83). Grandmother testified that Alyssa said the

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next morning, “Grandma, I lied about that. That’s all she said,” and after that “everything was fine” and she took Alyssa home later that day. (See id. at 174-182).

9. Alyssa testified that while living at Dancer Road, she also told her then boyfriend, Stanley Ferry, about [Palmer’s] abuse. (See id. at 107, 123-24). Mr. Ferry, however, also testified in substantial contradiction to Alyssa’s testimony. Mr. Ferry testified that Alyssa told him that [Palmer] molested her when she was six years old, specifically, that Alyssa told him in 2014, when Alyssa was 16, that “[Palmer] went into her bedroom when she was six years old and molested her is what she said.” (See id. at 188- 193). Alyssa turned six years old in May 2004. [Palmer’s] uncontradicted testimony at trial, however, was that he and Mother’s romantic relationship began in 2007, when they worked together at Walmart, and that they moved in together in 2008. (See id. at 272, 274).

10. . . . [D]espite testifying to being raped by [Palmer] at least once weekly from the ages of 14 to 16 years old, and to an unspecified amount of inappropriate touching in the years prior since she was 12, Alyssa offered little in the way of specific testimony regarding these incidents. (See id. at 100, 104).

11. At sidebar with counsel during Alyssa’s cross-examination at trial, Alyssa was directed out of the witness stand and was seated at the prosecution table, approximately two to three feet away from the front of the jury box. (See id. at 125-27). During sidebar, Alyssa began crying visibly while seated in front of the jurors. (See id. at 129). When Attorney Sweeney alerted the Court to Alyssa crying, the Court immediately took a ten-minute recess and had the jury escorted from the courtroom. (See id. at 127, 129). Jurors numbered four and five, who were seated closest to Alyssa, put their heads down. (See id. at 130).

12.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Farabaugh, M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-farabaugh-m-pasuperct-2020.