Com. v. Quinn, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 3, 2018
Docket1057 EDA 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Quinn, A. (Com. v. Quinn, A.) 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. Quinn, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-S19023-18

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ANTHONY B. QUINN : : Appellant : No. 1057 EDA 2017

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence December 8, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-46-SA-0000098-2016, CP-46-SA-0000159-2016

BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., NICHOLS, J., and PLATT, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY NICHOLS, J.: FILED MAY 03, 2018

Appellant Anthony B. Quinn appeals pro se from the judgment of

sentence entered based upon his conviction for two counts of harassment1

following his summary appeal. Appellant argues that (1) the convictions are

void because the trial judge failed to read his sentence on the record and

inform him of his appellate rights, (2) the citations issued in connection with

this matter were defective, and (3) the prosecution failed to prove that he had

“no legitimate purpose” to his actions. We affirm.

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1 18 Pa.C.S. § 2709(a)(3). J-S19023-18

Appellant’s conviction arose out of a dispute with his neighbor

(Complainant). The trial court summarized the relevant facts of this matter

as follows:

[T]he neighbors’ properties abutted on the right-hand corner at the end of a dead-end street. The [Complainant’s] property was the last house on the right at the dead end. Continuing past it, one would proceed straight into [Appellant’s] driveway, which then curved off to the right to his house, recessed somewhat diagonally to the right and rear, with a high wood fence close to the [Complainant’s] house separating the properties almost to the street. . . . The [Complainant] would park a car in front of her property, at the end of the street, pointing into [Appellant’s] property to the right of the entrance to his driveway, with her house to the car’s right. This was roughly the spot both parties would place trash for collection.

The [Complainant] testified that at first in 2007 when she moved in [Appellant] would put his trash cans on the other side of the driveway closer to the house directly across the street from hers but a few years later he started putting them every trash night up against her car or that of someone else at her home who might be parked there, belligerently rebuffing her requests that he stop, and she had complained to police many times. She said she had had dings and damage to her cars from the cans. The Commonwealth introduced into evidence several photographs, some of which [Complainant] testified depicted [Appellant’s] trash cans against her or a visitor’s car and a couple of which showed the left front corner of her car surrounded by her and [Appellant’s] trash cans, all of which she testified Appellant had placed against the car.

Besides the [Complainant], two officers of the Springfield Township Police Department testified for the Commonwealth. One testified to an incident the night of August 7, 2013, when he responded to the [Complainant’s] report of a disturbance at her house, where she told him [Appellant] had taken her trash cans and a bag of trash from where she normally put them in front of her car parked on the street (she had no driveway) and moved them onto her property between her house and the car where, the officer said, the trash personnel might not be able to access or even see them for collection. The officer was aware of a prior call

-2- J-S19023-18

to police by the [Complainant] two months earlier in which the same dispute over the placement of trash had been at issue and the police and refuse authorities had advised the parties that she was to put her trash to the right of the driveway and [Appellant] was to put his to the left. The officer found no legitimate reason for [Appellant] to have moved [Complainant’s] trash onto her private property on the far side of her vehicle from the place in the public street where she had properly placed it for pickup, after the prior dispute had been resolved with official directions to place her trash there, so the officer issued [Appellant] a citation for harassment under 18 Pa.C.S. § 2709(a)(3).

The second officer testified he responded to another complaint by the [Complainant] on the morning of November 13, 2014, about two of [Appellant’s] trash cans placed up against the driver’s side of her car. The officer photographed the cans against the car, and the Court admitted the photo into evidence without objection. The officer summarized as follows the conversation he then had with [Appellant] after contacting him:

I asked him if they were his trash cans. And he said yes. And I asked him if he placed them against the vehicle. And he said he did not, he put them on the other side of the driveway before he went to bed. And then when I asked him, well, how did they arrive on the . . . [C]omplainant’s car, he stated it was magic.

At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s case, [Appellant] moved to dismiss the August 2013 charge brought by the first officer[,] on grounds his testimony was inconsistent with the [C]omplainant’s on whether he was called to the scene about trash cans being moved or trash cans being put against the car. The Court denied this motion, and [Appellant] proceeded to testify.

[Appellant] testified to his version of the incidents in question, and introduced four of his own photographs of the scene. He expressed the view that [Complainant] should not place her trash next to his property near the driveway, as previous neighbors had not, and that she did so and parked car at the edge of his property to harass him. He said he moved her trash cans to make room for his at that spot. He maintained as he had in cross-examining the officer who had responded to the August 2013 incident that he could not place his trash on the other side of his driveway because that was someone else’s property and to do so would violate township ordinances although he did not produce or cite to

-3- J-S19023-18

the Court any specific ordinance upon which he premised this argument. . . . [Appellant] also claimed that [Complainant], not he, had moved the trash cans up against her own car the night before the November 2014 complaint[.]

Trial Ct. Op., 5/8/17, at 1-4 (citations omitted).

Based upon the foregoing facts adduced at the trial de novo, the trial

court took the matter under advisement.2 One week later, the court entered

an order finding Appellant guilty of two counts of harassment and sentencing

him to a fine of $300 for each count plus costs. According to the docket entry,

the sentence was mailed to Appellant the same day it was entered.3 However,

the order did not apprise Appellant of his appellate rights. Appellant filed a

post-trial motion on January 20, 2017. The trial court denied the motion on

February 17, 2017, in an order indicating that pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P.

720(D), post-trial motions are not properly made following a summary appeal.

Appellant filed a notice of appeal to this Court on March 17, 2017.

Thereafter, Appellant filed a timely court-ordered statement of errors

2Taking the matter under advisement was in derogation of the Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure, which specify that in a summary appeal, “[t]he verdict and sentence, if any, shall be announced in open court immediately upon the conclusion of the trial.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 462(F). 3 Appellant asserts that he was not informed of his sentence immediately and indicates in his notice of appeal that it was postmarked January 17, 2017. See Notice of Appeal, 3/17/17.

-4- J-S19023-18

complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Quinn, A., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-quinn-a-pasuperct-2018.