Com. v. Fluellen, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 6, 2016
Docket2819 EDA 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Fluellen, J. (Com. v. Fluellen, J.) 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. Fluellen, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

J-S40025-16

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

JAMES S. FLUELLEN

Appellant No. 2819 EDA 2015

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence August 20, 2015 In the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-23-CR-0006373-2014

BEFORE: BOWES, J., MUNDY, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY MUNDY, J.: FILED JUNE 06, 2016

Appellant, James S. Fluellen, appeals from the August 20, 2015

aggregate judgment of sentence of 12 to 24 years’ incarceration, plus 5

years’ probation, imposed after a jury convicted him of robbery, possessing

an instrument of a crime (PIC), and terroristic threats.1 After careful review,

we vacate and remand for re-sentencing.

The trial court detailed the relevant facts of record as follows.

On Thursday, September 18, 2014, Brittany Draughon, the assistant manager of the Dollar Tree store in Sharon Hill, and Diane Peters, a cashier, were working the closing shift. At about 8:30 p.m., Ms. Draughon was prepared to close the store for the evening. She collected trash near the register and took it to a crowded stock room that was located at ____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 3701, 907, and 2706, respectively. J-S40025-16

the rear of the store. Ms. Draughon was occupied with her task among the boxes and shopping carts in the storeroom. When she looked up from her work she saw [Appellant] slowly emerge from an adjacent bathroom with a gun in his hand. His head was hooded and a black bandana covered his face. Ms. Draughon froze. [Appellant] asked her whether there was a man in the store. She told him there was not and he asked whether there was anyone else in the store and also asked, “where’s the money?” Ms. Draughon told him that it was in a safe in the front of the store and [Appellant] walked her through the store to the front where the safe was located. As Ms. Draughon walked to the front of the store with [Appellant] close behind her, she passed her co-worker Ms. Peters and she whispered to her in an effort to get her attention.

When they reached the safe, [Appellant] put the gun to Ms. Draughon’s back and said, “open the safe or I’ll blow your head off.” At this point Ms. Peters approached and Ms. Draughon testified that, “she looked at me, because nobody is supposed to be at the safe unless it’s just a manager. She walked up. I pretty much gave her the look like, you know, something’s going on, like the look, right?” [Appellant] looked at Ms. Peters and said, “hey, how you doing.” Ms. Draughon looked directly at [Appellant] when he engaged in the conversation with Ms. Peters and “tried to ID his face.” He was standing less than an arm’s distance away from her and at this point his hood was still up but his face was no longer covered. Ms. Draughon testified that she looked at [Appellant’s] “full face” purposefully so that she would be able to identify him.

After [Appellant] took the money, in accord with Dollar Tree procedure, Ms. Draughon locked the door and called “911.” Meanwhile, unbeknownst to Ms. Draughon, Ms. Peters had also called 911 and reported a robbery. Police officers arrived before Ms. Draughon completed her 911 call and she gave them a description of the robber.

-2- J-S40025-16

About two weeks later, Detective Richard Herron of the Sharon Hill Police Department went to the Dollar Tree store with a photo array. In less than a minute, Ms. Draughon picked a photo of [Appellant] from the array and identified him as the robber.

Diane Peters, a Dollar Tree cashier, testified that she was working at the Sharon Hill Dollar Tree store when it was robbed. After 8:00 p.m. she saw a man enter the store. He was wearing a hoodie with the hood up over his head and he was carrying a bag. Ms. Peters thought this was strange because the weather was warm. Because he was carrying a bag, she suspected him of shoplifting. She followed him throughout the store, ending up by the safe where he stood with Ms. Draughon. Ms. Peters testified that she knew “something was wrong” because store protocol is that no one, except an employee or manager is allowed near the safe. Ms. Peters testified that she and Ms. Draughon looked at each other and that “the look in [Ms. Draughon’s] eyes was like fear.” After the man said “hi” to her, Ms. Peters walked down the aisle, pulled out her cell phone and called 911.

On cross-examination, trial counsel reviewed Ms. Peter’s direct testimony. Drawing his cross- examination to an end, trial counsel asked Ms. Peters whether she was ever asked to make an identification. She replied, “No.” Next, he asked: “And I think at one point you might even have told either the detective or the DA you don’t think you could identify anybody?” Ms. Peters replied: I probably did because it was a quick glance.”

On re-direct, the prosecutor noted that Ms. Peters appeared to have been cut short in her reply:

Q: Was there any explanation you wanted to make in response to that question by [Appellant’s counsel]?

-3- J-S40025-16

A: I said if I ever – I did see his face. And if I [saw] it again, and that is him sitting over there. I mean, at the time I wasn’t like – I looked at his face and stuff, but I just wasn’t asked to identify him because like I caught the end of it. [Ms. Draughon] had more contact than I did. But that is him.

Trial counsel did not object to this testimony. Instead, on re-cross, he continued and elicited further testimony which ended with the witness’s statement that she was “100 percent positive” that [Appellant] was the man who robbed the Dollar Tree[.]

Only after this exchange did trial counsel move for a mistrial. In support, he argued that he had withdrawn a pre-trial motion for Ms. Peters to appear for a line-up when the Commonwealth represented that Ms. Peters would not be called to identify [Appellant] at trial. Trial counsel claimed further, that Ms. Peters identified [Appellant] “at the Commonwealth’s prompting.” The prosecutor responded that she did not ask for identification but asked the witness to clarify her response to trial counsel’s question. She stated further that she did not know that Ms. Peters was going to identify [Appellant], that it “seemed [Ms. Peters] seemed she wanted to say something additional before he finished his questions.” The motion for a mistrial was denied.

[In addition,] Detective Herron testified that he responded to the reported armed robbery at the Dollar Tree on September [1]8, 2014. He arrived sometime after 8:00 p.m. Upon his arrival, Detective Herron met both Ms. Draughon and Ms. Peters and he took a written statement from Ms. Draughon, including a description of the robber. The store was not outfitted with security video cameras

-4- J-S40025-16

and no fingerprints were found on the safe. Ms. Draughon’s description of the robber was transmitted to local police departments and through a press release the description appeared in the Delaware County Daily Times. On September 30, 2014 [Detective Herron] received a tip that [Appellant] was possibly the man he was searching for. Detective Herron secured a picture of [Appellant] via a computer search and used that photo to prepare a photo array. [Ms. Draughon identified Appellant as the robber from the photo array.]

Trial Court Opinion, 10/29/15, at 2-6, 10 (internal citations and footnote

omitted).

After the two-day trial, the jury rendered its guilty verdict on June 3,

2015. The trial court originally sentenced Appellant on July 16, 2015.

Appellant filed a motion for reconsideration of sentence on July 22, 2015,

and asserted that his sentence was “excessive” and “exceeded the statutory

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Fluellen, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-fluellen-j-pasuperct-2016.