Com. v. Morel, R.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 10, 2024
Docket1641 EDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Morel, R. (Com. v. Morel, R.) 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. Morel, R., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-A10005-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : ROBERTO MOREL : No. 1641 EDA 2023

Appeal from the Order Entered May 19, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0003126-2022

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., BECK, J., and COLINS, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY PANELLA, P.J.E.: FILED JUNE 10, 2024

The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania appeals from the Philadelphia

County Court of Common Pleas’ order granting Roberto Morel’s motion to

suppress evidence obtained pursuant to a search of his vehicle. After careful

review, we affirm on the basis of the trial court opinion.

In its opinion, the trial court summarized the relevant facts leading to

the court’s decision to grant the suppression motion as follows:

On February 22, 2022, at approximately 11:45 A.M., officers were alerted via radio call that a victim of a shooting was being treated at St. Christopher’s Hospital. The responding officers spoke with the victim Roberto Morel, wherein they discovered he had suffered multiple gunshot wounds. Additionally, the officers learned that [] Morel had driven himself to the hospital. Upon investigation of [Morel’s] vehicle, the officers noticed several bullet holes had penetrated the windshield and driver’s window of [] Morel’s vehicle. ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A10005-24

The vehicle was towed to a police lot. Subsequently, on the same day, officers applied for a search warrant of the vehicle. The application was reviewed and approved by a magistrate judge who granted the police a warrant to “search for any ballistic evidence or any other items of evidentiary value [emphasis added.]” During the search of [] Morel’s vehicle, officers recovered from inside the glove compartment a Taurus 9mm semi-automatic handgun with an “unreadable” model number but with serial number intact.

Trial Court Opinion, 7/25/23, at 1-2 (record citations omitted) (emphasis in

original). The Commonwealth charged Morel with several violations of the

Uniform Firearms Act1 based on the handgun found in Morel’s glove

compartment. Morel filed a pretrial motion seeking to suppress physical

evidence, i.e. the firearm recovered from the search.

On May 19, 2023, the trial court held a suppression hearing. Morel

presented the search warrant and the property receipt for the firearm into

evidence. No witnesses testified. Following the hearing, the trial court granted

the motion to suppress. This timely appeal followed.

On appeal, the Commonwealth argues the suppression court erred “by

suppressing a firearm, found by police in the glove box of [Morel]’s car during

the course of a warrant search, where the warrant was supported by probable

cause and was sufficiently specific.” Appellant’s Brief, at 4.

When this Court reviews a Commonwealth appeal from an order

granting suppression, as we are tasked to do here, we may only consider the

____________________________________________

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 6101-6127.

-2- J-A10005-24

evidence produced at the suppression hearing and then, only that evidence

which comes from the defendant’s witnesses, along with the Commonwealth’s

evidence which remains uncontradicted. See Commonwealth v. Barr, 266

A.3d 25, 29 (Pa. 2021). We must determine, in the first instance, whether the

suppression court’s factual findings are supported by the record and if they

are, we are bound to those findings. See id. We must always keep in mind

that the suppression court, as fact-finder, has the exclusive ability to pass on

the credibility of witnesses. See Commonwealth v. Fudge, 213 A.3d 321,

326 (Pa. Super. 2019). Therefore, “we will not disturb a suppression court’s

credibility determinations absent a clear and manifest error.” Id. at 326

(citation omitted). This is not relevant here, as no witnesses were presented

at the suppression hearing.

Unlike the deference we give to the suppression court’s factual and

credibility findings, we have de novo review over the suppression court’s legal

conclusions. See Commonwealth v. Brown, 996 A.2d 473, 476 (Pa. 2010).

Accordingly, we must determine whether the legal conclusions the suppression

court drew from its factual findings are correct. See Barr, 266 A.3d at 39.

The trial court explained that it granted Morel’s motion to suppress

because it found the search warrant was unconstitutional due to the overly

broad language and failure to specify with particularity the evidence subject

to search. See Trial Court Opinion, 7/25/23, at 3. Further, the court put its

reasons for suppression on the record as follows:

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You're telling me, don't look at this as a broad general search warrant, which the law is pretty clear, they’re supposed to specify what they’re looking for. If you look at that language, any ballistic evidence and any other items of evidentiary value, that’s pretty general.

You’re saying, Judge, look what they’re looking for. That’s not a broad phrase. It’s a shooting where a man was shot. What you’re looking for then is evidentiary value of a fact he was shot, not that he was shooting, that he was shot. That’s all you gave me here in this affidavit. I don’t have articulable facts that he was shooting back. I don’t see anything telling me he had residue on his hand indicating he had a firearm, he was wearing a bullet proof vest. Why are you making me to jump something that the four corners of the search warrant? Don't tell me that it would be reasonable for them to look in the glove box. If there’s no bullet holes going into the glove box, why would they look in there.

And, shame on a magistrate if they thought this was fine to use items of evidentiary value. Search warrants are going to start doing that? Not in Pennsylvania. You know not in Pennsylvania. Even in cars, we still have a right of privacy that the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is protecting. They don’t want boldfaced search warrants coming in using the phrase “other items of evidentiary value.”

I hate this, because I’m stuck now having to rule in favor, where I agree with you, this is most likely gang related, but my hands are tied. [The] law is clear. That’s not a search warrant that meets the four [corners] analysis.

I do find, first and foremost, that the phrase, even though you tried to make a valid argument, “any other items of evidentiary value” is extremely vague and overreaching. It is not specific enough for them, at that point, to do a valid search into the glove box. The magistrate had come out and said, which I don’t think he could because you don’t have probable cause, listed a gun in there. He couldn’t, because he saw in the probable cause, there was no evidence that there would be a firearm in there.

Second, even if I’m wrong on higher analysis on that, and they say, no, it’s not, I do also find that, in fact, they did not have reason to believe that there was evidence, based on this probable cause, would have been located in that glove box based on the

-4- J-A10005-24

four corners of this search warrant. Therefore, they did go beyond the scope of where they should have been looking, because there was no evidence to indicate bullets would be found inside that glove box, and they’re not in plain view then.

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Com. v. Morel, R., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-morel-r-pasuperct-2024.