Com. v. Spoerry, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 12, 2021
Docket2206 EDA 2020
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Spoerry, J. (Com. v. Spoerry, 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. Spoerry, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

J-A17024-21

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellee : : v. : : JESSE SPOERRY : : Appellant : No. 2206 EDA 2020

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered October 22, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-45-CR-0001802-2018

BEFORE: McLAUGHLIN, J., KING, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY KING, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 12, 2021

Appellant, Jesse Spoerry, appeals nunc pro tunc from the judgment of

sentence entered in the Monroe County Court of Common Pleas, following his

jury trial convictions for two counts of aggravated assault, one count of

burglary, two counts of simple assault, and one count of possession of an

instrument of crime.1 For the following reasons, we vacate and remand for

resentencing without imposition of any mandatory minimum sentence,

remand with instructions regarding the trial court’s analysis concerning the

proffered third-party guilt evidence, and affirm in all other respects.

The trial court opinion set forth the relevant facts of this case as follows:

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

1 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2702(a)(1), 3502(a)(1)(i), 2701(a)(1), and 907(a), respectively. J-A17024-21

On July 24, 2018, Mary Johnson (“Johnson”) and Korryn Suprys (“Suprys”) were sleeping on a pullout bed in Johnson’s home when an intruder attacked them both with an object like a baseball bat or pipe. They went to bed around 9:30 or 10. Next Johnson remembers, the attacker struck her in the legs while screaming “you fucking bitches, how could you do this to me, you fucking bitches?” Suprys awoke to Johnson screaming for help and was hit around her right eye, knocking her unconscious. Her eye swelled shut. Meanwhile, Johnson jumped away, tripping on the bed, and she “flew” out the front door, hoping a neighbor would hear her scream. The attacker followed her outside and continued to beat her on the head, arms, and back. Suprys walked to the bathroom where she saw blood covering her face and the side of her head “crumpled together.” Johnson followed a trail of blood to meet Suprys in the bathroom, saying “look what Jesse [(Appellant)] did to my ear.” Johnson then helped her off the toilet and took her to lie down.

Responding to the scene after Johnson called 911, Detective Earl Ackerman of the Pocono Township Police Department found her standing in the entranceway with “a lot of” blood on her head and body. Suprys was seated on the edge of the couch they used as a bed. Blood covered the couch. He found a blood trail leading to the bathroom and a significant amount of blood in the bathroom itself. Detective Ackerman observed cast-off on the walls and ceiling around the bed, consistent with a bloodied object being swung.

The victims both spent three days in the hospital. Johnson received treatment for a concussion with loss of consciousness, lacerations to the scalp, a broken collarbone, and fractures in her arm, wrist, thumb, and hand. Suprys experienced facial and skull fractures and had an epidural hematoma and concussion. At the time of trial, she continued to experience recurrent headaches and pain in her ear and shoulder.

They both identified [Appellant] as the assailant by his face, voice, body structure, and shoes. Johnson testified that she saw him standing by the bed holding a bat in the glow of a “bug light” on the front porch that lit him “like a glow worm.” Suprys also remembered Johnson say “Jesse, what the fuck

-2- J-A17024-21

are you doing?” The message dispatching Detective Ackerman to the scene reported Johnson’s ex-boyfriend as the possible assailant, indicating the 911 caller had identified him. Suprys could also recognize [Appellant’s] voice while he screamed at them, as she knew him as Johnson’s ex-boyfriend, [and] Johnson identified [Appellant] by the shoes she bought for him at a [buy]-one- get-one sale at The Crossings outlet stores. Suprys could only see the assailant from the waist down but believed she could recognize the build of his lower body. Another witness, Johnson’s neighbor Meghan Serfass, saw [Appellant]’s car driving toward the crime scene between 10:30 and 10:45 while she stood outside smoking a cigarette. She identified a photo of the car as the one belonging to [Appellant] at trial. She could recognize the car as a Honda Civic with black detailing on the side and a fire extinguisher in the passenger-side window.

* * *

Pocono Township Detective James Wagner reconstructed [Appellant]’s movements on the day of the crime, using geographical information of the cell towers accessed by [Appellant]’s phone and the internal GPS location data recorded by the phone itself. [The court] qualified Detective Wagner as an expert in cell data analysis and mapping, and he testified as follows. Between 9:40 and 10:05 P.M., [Appellant] left his home and then moved in a southerly direction toward the crime scene. He arrived in that vicinity at or after 10:32 P.M. By 11:12 P.M., he ha[d] begun to travel away east, toward New Jersey. Johnson called 911 at 11:02. Detective Wagner testified to a reasonable degree of expert certainty that [Appellant]’s phone was in the area of the crime at the time the assault occurred.

(Trial Court Opinion, filed January 20, 2020, at 2-6) (internal record citations

omitted).

On July 18, 2019, a jury convicted Appellant of the above-mentioned

crimes, but found Appellant not guilty of two counts of attempted criminal

-3- J-A17024-21

homicide and two counts of terroristic threats. On August 2, 2019, the

Commonwealth filed notice of its intent to seek mandatory sentencing

pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9714 (sentences for second and subsequent

offenses of crimes of violence), and Appellant filed his motion to preclude

imposition of a mandatory minimum sentence on that same day. On October

22, 2019, the court denied Appellant’s motion, and it sentenced Appellant to

an aggregate of 20 to 40 years’ incarceration. Appellant filed an untimely

appeal, which this Court quashed on June 15, 2020. See Commonwealth v.

Spoerry, No. 3418 EDA 2019 (Pa.Super. filed June 15, 2020).

Nevertheless, the court granted Appellant’s subsequent request for

reinstatement of his direct appeal rights nunc pro tunc on November 13, 2020.

Appellant timely filed his notice of appeal nunc pro tunc on November 16,

2020. The next day, the court ordered Appellant to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)

statement of errors complained of on appeal; Appellant timely complied.

Appellant raises seven issues for our review:

1. Whether the [c]ourt erred when it ruled that Appellant could not cross-examine Koryn Suprys, one of the alleged victims, based upon her medical records and statements from those records?

2. Whether the [c]ourt erred when it ruled that Appellant could not cross-examine…a member of one of the victims’ families, on whether she and her mother had received threats from another family and were in a dispute with them?

3. Whether the [c]ourt erred when it ruled that Appellant could not cross-examine Mary Johnson, one of the alleged victims, about various incidents of threats, sexual assault

-4- J-A17024-21

against her daughter, and other suspicious behavior which she had reported to police?

4. Whether the [c]ourt erred when it admitted text messages as properly authenticated, despite the holding in [Commonwealth v. Mangel, 181 A.3d 1154 (Pa.Super. 2018)], where the text messages were merely somewhere in Appellant’s cellular phone?

5.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Spoerry, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-spoerry-j-pasuperct-2021.