Com. v. Martin, F.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 28, 2018
Docket1345 WDA 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Martin, F. (Com. v. Martin, F.) 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. Martin, F., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-S34010-18

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : FRANKLIN RAY MARTIN, JR. : : Appellant : No. 1345 WDA 2017

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence January 27, 2017 In the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-65-CR-0001664-2015

BEFORE: BOWES, J., STABILE, J., and STRASSBURGER*, J.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 28, 2018

Franklin Ray Martin, Jr. appeals from the judgment of sentence of

twenty-five to fifty years imprisonment imposed following his jury trial

convictions for, inter alia, rape. We vacate the judgment of sentence and

remand for further proceedings pertaining to whether Appellant was deprived

of the right to confront his accuser.

The victim in this case, M.K., was thirteen years old when the sexual

abuse by Appellant began. M.K.’s mother, Amanda Martin, testified that she

started dating Appellant in 2011 or 2012, and he moved into her residence

sometime in 2012. The two married on July 27, 2013. M.K. informed the jury

that the abuse started shortly after Appellant moved in. One day, Appellant

asked for a backrub while Ms. Martin was at work. Afterwards, Appellant

asked her to touch his penis. When she refused, Appellant grabbed her hand

and put it on his penis. She ran to her bedroom and locked the door. About

____________________________________ * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-S34010-18

a month later, Appellant again asked her to touch his penis. When M.K. again

refused, Appellant forced her to kneel and perform oral sex on him. Similar

incidents with Appellant continued over the next two years, escalating to

forcible vaginal penetration. Appellant threatened to kill her or her family if

she told. The abuse continued unabated until approximately March of 2015,

when she told Appellant that he had to stop as she had a boyfriend.

Around this same time, M.K. attempted to run away from home on at

least two occasions. On March 12, 2015, Ms. Martin called the police to report

M.K.’s absence. Sergeant Paul Manke of the New Kensington Police

Department responded to the residence. Ms. Martin told him that M.K. had

tried to run away about two weeks before, and suggested that she was headed

to her boyfriend’s house. Sergeant Manke located M.K. and transported her

back home.

Ms. Martin testified that she asked M.K. what was going on, and M.K.

showed her a series of text messages, sent by Appellant, indicating sexual

contact. Ms. Martin told M.K. to leave, as Appellant would be home from work

later that evening. Once Appellant arrived, Ms. Martin confronted him and

asked, “have you been messing around with [M.K.]?” N.T., 8/1-3/16, at 171.

Appellant reacted angrily, prompting Ms. Martin to take his cell phone. Ms.

Martin called Sergeant Manke back, and he referred the matter to detectives

for further investigation.

M.K. provided her cell phone to Detective Thomas Klawinski, and it was

searched for text messages. The Commonwealth introduced a set of text

-2- J-S34010-18

messages, dated March 12, 2015, between M.K. and a number listed as

“dad.”1 Detective Klawinski read the contents of those messages to the jury:

M.K.: What did you whisper in my ear last night?

Dad: What? Don’t call. I hate talking on the phone plus everyone is sleeping.

Dad: I said you gotta make up your mind. I can’t keep doing this. One day we are good, the next we ain’t.

Dad: Um, hello?

M.K.: What is that supposed to mean?

Dad: The day before yesterday you were playing and all up on me, then yesterday you didn’t even want a hug before bed. I’m very confused.

M.K.: Well, I said I’m done. I have a BF. I don’t wanna do it anymore.

Dad: So then, don’t tease me. No more touching, tickling, holding hands, poking, groping, nothing!

M.K.: I never did and you do the same. Shit.

Dad: You were pushing your ass on me in the kitchen, pokin’ my ass and grabbin’ for my cawk. Don’t do that no more.

M.K.: No I wasn’t. Don’t come onto me either.

Dad: Fine. We are done. I’m finished with it, too. It was fun but I don’t need you no more.

M.K.: You never needed me to begin with.

Dad: If it makes you feel better then keep telling yourself that. You were the only thing keeping me home for a long time. You were the reason I smiled in the mornings and slept good at night. ____________________________________________

1 Presumably, these were the messages that M.K. showed to her mother.

-3- J-S34010-18

You were my sunshine and now you make me feel dirty and sick. I hope you heard me say I love you this morning. You won’t hear it [sic] again.

Id. at 192-94.

Detective Klawinski did not execute any search warrants on Appellant’s

phone. On cross-examination, the detective admitted that the designation

“dad” meant only that M.K.’s phone gave the corresponding phone number

that label. The Detective conceded that the authorities did not link that phone

number to Appellant.

Q. So I could have – I could take a cell phone and I can put Ken Noga and when I get a text message in from that particular number that I saved with it, it will show Ken Noga, correct?

A. That’s correct.

Q. Is there anything about that information that tells you who owns that number or whose number that is?

A. There is a phone number. There is a phone number attached to dad.

Q. So did you get that phone number?

A. No, I did not. It was – the investigator would have probably talked to the girl who said, yeah, that’s dad’s number or that’s the number I know my dad uses as the phone so I did not.

....

Q. Now, in the course of your investigation, and you extract this data from the phone even though it says dad, there’s a cell phone number associated with it, correct?

Q. You never checked who that cell phone number was listed with, correct?

-4- J-S34010-18

A. That’s correct, I did not.

Id. at 196-98.

The remaining direct evidence against Appellant was Ms. Martin’s

testimony that the two were “a little touchy-feely, sitting very close on the

couch at different times,” which led her to remark that “they acted more like

they were married than him and I did.” Id. at 166-67. Additionally, the

Commonwealth presented the testimony of two jailhouse informants, who

indicated that Appellant made incriminating comments while incarcerated.

Appellant was convicted and sentenced as indicated. Appellant filed a

timely post-sentence motion on February 1, 2017, and the trial court issued a

joint order/opinion disposing of the motion. Appellant timely appealed and

complied with the court’s order to prepare a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement.2

Appellant raises the following points of error.

____________________________________________

2 The trial court did not rule on the motions within 120 days as required by Pa.R.Crim.P. 720(B)(3)(a). Pursuant Rule, the judge may grant one thirty- day extension for good cause shown. “If the judge fails to decide the motion within the 30-day extension period, the motion shall be deemed denied by operation of law.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 720(B)(3)(b). The court purported to grant newly-appointed counsel multiple extensions to file amended motions.

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Com. v. Martin, F., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-martin-f-pasuperct-2018.