Com. v. Rogers, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 18, 2024
Docket1104 MDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Rogers, J. (Com. v. Rogers, 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. Rogers, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-S20045-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : JOAN L. ROGERS : : Appellant : No. 1104 MDA 2023

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered June 27, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-31-SA-0000005-2022

BEFORE: OLSON, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY STEVENS, P.J.E.: FILED: JULY 18, 2024

Appellant, Joan L. Rogers, appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered at the conclusion of her summary trial by the Court of Common Pleas

of Huntingdon County, which imposed a $50.00 fine plus payment of costs

associated with the prosecution of the charge of a single count of Disorderly

Conduct—Unreasonable Noise, 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 5503(a)(2). We affirm.

The relevant facts and procedural history are as follows: On October

12, 2021, the Huntingdon County Commissioners had completed their weekly

9 a.m. public meeting held in the commissioners’ meeting room of the county

courthouse, and Commissioners Jeffrey Thomas and Jeffrey “Scott” Walls were

conducting a private meeting with a constituent by appointment, as they often

do after concluding a public meeting, when Ms. Rogers entered the room

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-S20045-24

asking to speak with Commissioner Mark Sather. N.T., 4/12/23, at 5.

According to the testimonies of Commissioners Thomas and Walls, they know

Ms. Rogers personally, and they informed her that Commissioner Sather was

not present. N.T. at 5. Ms. Rogers repeated five or six times, however, that

she needed to speak with Commissioner Sather, and each time the

commissioners responded that he was not present and asked Ms. Rogers to

leave the private meeting. N.T. at 5. Commissioner Walls testified that Ms.

Rogers “got louder as she came in, more aggressive, I guess.” N.T. at 20.

It was Commissioner Thomas’ testimony that Ms. Rogers, who was 67

years old at the time,1 knew from her experience with public meetings that

the public meeting had concluded and that one does not approach the

commissioners’ desk the way she did. N.T. at 17. Commissioner Thomas

testified, “So, what triggered the event was probably me. I finally raised my

voice because we were in a meeting and said, ‘Joan, you’re going to have to

leave,’ and at that time the deputy heard me, came in, [and] asked her to

leave.” N.T. at 5-6.

Thomas denied screaming or shouting at Ms. Rogers, maintained that

he had been respectful to Ms. Rogers during her repeated questions, and

explained that he raised his voice enough for the deputy to come in. N.T. at

1 Although the Brief of Appellant prepared by counsel indicates that Ms. Rogers

was 61 years old at the time in question, Ms. Rogers testified at the summary trial that she was 67, a statement corroborated by the “Defendant Information” section of the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon County’s Summary Appeal Docket, which lists Ms. Rogers’ birthdate as 05/16/1955.

-2- J-S20045-24

17. He testified that the deputy and Ms. Rogers eventually left the room,

“and then it got very loud with the comments[,]” particularly when he heard

Ms. Rogers tell the deputy in an “extremely loud” voice to “stand down, stand

down.” N.T. at 6, 9. Commissioner Thomas could not hear the deputy’s voice

in reply. N.T. at 9.

Deputy Sheriff Stanley Snyder, who has served 15 years with the

Huntingdon County Sheriff’s Department, testified that he was seated about

12 to 15 feet outside the Commissioners’ meeting room in the area where

deputies monitor metal detectors and check in members of the public entering

the courthouse. N.T. at 31, 36. He recalled that Ms. Rogers came through

the front door of the courthouse and cleared the metal detector, and he

permitted her to walk to the door of the Commissioners’ meeting room, look

through its window, and walk in. N.T. at 31, 41. The deputy testified that he

has worked at this post for many commissioner meetings, N.T. at 37, but at

the time in question he did not realize the public meeting was over and that a

private meeting had ensued because he had left the area momentarily to

conduct his routine security check of the courthouse. N.T. at 31, 41.2

The next thing Deputy Snyder heard was Commissioner Thomas raising

his voice. N.T. at 31. Upon entering the meeting room in response, the

deputy testified, he assessed the situation and addressed Ms. Rogers,

directing her, “he [Commissioner Thomas] told you to leave several times, ____________________________________________

2 A second deputy remained at the metal detectors during this time. N.T. at 42.

-3- J-S20045-24

now get out.” N.T. at 32. Ms. Rogers replied, “Who do you think you’re talking

to?”, to which he retorted, “Now you can leave the courthouse because you’re

very loud and belligerent.” N.T. at 32, 34, 42.

According to Deputy Snyder, Ms. Rogers raised her voice to a very loud

level in response and said, “Make me.” N.T. at 32. The deputy replied, “No,

you can leave the courthouse,” but Ms. Rogers repeated, “Make me.” Deputy

Snyder testified that he walked to his phone and placed a call to the Sheriff’s

office requesting they activate courthouse cameras to record the interaction

taking place. N.T. at 32. He testified that he repeated his command to leave

the courthouse several more times, but Ms. Rogers refused, kept saying

“make me, make me[,]” and was getting “very loud, obnoxious, very

belligerent.” N.T. at 32. It was at this point, according to the deputy, that

Ms. Rogers told him to “stand down.”

At this time, the deputy testified, he looked up and noticed people in the

courthouse had stopped to observe the scene, including those “by the

Prothonotary’s Office clear at the other end [of the courthouse].” N.T. at 33.

Eventually, the deputy related, Ms. Rogers “very slowly” left voluntarily at his

repeated directions. N.T. at 33. Deputy Snyder was the affiant of the

disorderly conduct charge he filed against Ms. Rogers.

Ms. Rogers testified that she went to the courthouse that morning to

attend the commissioners weekly public meeting for “no particular reason.”

N.T. at 47. She knew the commissioners “meet every Tuesday usually”, and

-4- J-S20045-24

she had “been to enough to know what’s going on because . . . I pay attention

and I’m a councilwoman.” N.T. at 55.

She described how she went through the visitor check-in, where Sheriff

Lippman asked where she was going. N.T. at 47. Ms. Rogers told the sheriff

she was going to the commissioners’ meeting and pointed to the door of the

meeting room. N.T. at 47. Deputy Snyder and Deputy Sheriff Lippman

allowed her to go to the meeting room, and Ms. Rogers walked to the door

and entered. N.T. at 48.

According to Ms. Rogers, she “had barely even got through the door”

when she heard Commissioner Thomas “disrespectfully loudly yelling, ‘We’re

in a meeting.’” N.T. at 49. Ms. Rogers believed the public meeting was in

progress when she opened the door, and she was “kind of stunned” by

Commissioner Thomas’ words and tone. She testified that she asked if the

meeting was over, and Commissioner Thomas again used a disrespectful tone

when he answered, “Yes.” N.T. at 49.

After that, Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Rogers, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-rogers-j-pasuperct-2024.