Com. v. Stewart, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 6, 2024
Docket139 MDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

J-A27004-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : JERRELL M. STEWART : : Appellant : No. 139 MDA 2023

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered October 19, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-22-CR-0004058-2008

BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., NICHOLS, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED: AUGUST 6, 2024

Jerrell M. Stewart appeals from the judgment of sentence, entered in

the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, following his conviction for

first-degree murder and the imposition of a sentence of life imprisonment

without the possibility of parole (LWOP). Because the trial court’s sentence

was not the product of careful consideration regarding Stewart’s youth and

his efforts to rehabilitate himself while incarcerated over the past thirteen

years, we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion. Therefore, we

vacate and remand for resentencing.

On April 20, 2009, a jury convicted Stewart of first-degree murder after

he fatally shot the victim two or three times with a .38 caliber handgun. At

the time of the offense, Stewart was almost seventeen and one-half years old.

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-A27004-23

Stewart was sentenced to a mandatory LWOP sentence and a concurrent

aggregate term of 13-48 months’ imprisonment on the remaining charges.1

On direct appeal, our Court set forth the facts of the case as follows:

This case arises out of Stewart’s admitted shooting of victim Charles (Mac) Davenport during an incident in which Davenport assaulted Stewart’s friend, Drakkari Brooks, and attempted to [force] him into a vehicle. Events preceding the shooting reflect a significant history of antagonism between the victim and Stewart and Brooks, in part over an automobile that Brooks had obtained as payment for drugs from a third party[] and had customized. On June 5, 2008, the day before the shooting, the victim purportedly stole the vehicle from Brooks, prompting [Brooks] to enlist assistance from Stewart to retrieve it. On the following day, Brooks and Stewart ventured to Davenport’s residence and, using Brooks’s extra keys, drove the vehicle and its contents away. Among the items in the car were Davenport’s cell phone and his gun.

In response to Brooks and Stewart’s unannounced reclamation of the car, the victim located Brooks at the home of Stewart’s sister, who was also Brooks’s paramour. Davenport was somewhat larger than Brooks2 and, after locating Brooks at the scene of the eventual shooting[,] “dragged, shook, yanked, choked[,] and generally manhandled Brooks,” and “continually yelled at Brooks to take him to get his ‘shit’ back.” Trial Court Opinion, 10/15/10, at 17. As Brooks, “scared to death,” pleaded for help from the assembling crowd, Davenport pushed him back against his SUV and berated him[,] saying, “is this your truck . . . get in this truck and take me to my stuff, take me to my shit[.]” Id. at 4. At that point, Stewart, armed with a .38 caliber handgun, moved behind ____________________________________________

1 Stewart was also charged and convicted of one count each of recklessly endangering another person (1-24 months’ imprisonment), 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2705, and firearms not to be carried without a license (12-24 months’ imprisonment). Id. at § 6106(a)(1). Those sentences were ordered to run consecutive to each other and concurrent to Stewart’s LWOP sentence.

2 The record reflects that Brooks was approximately 5’9” tall and weighed 150

pounds, while the victim was approximately 6’0” tall and 160 to 170 pounds.

-2- J-A27004-23

Davenport and, from a short distance[,] fired one or two shots, causing Davenport to spin around and fall to the ground. Although testimony varied on the number and sequence of the shots fired, multiple eyewitnesses reported that[,] as Davenport lay on the ground begging for his life, Stewart stood over him and fired two more shots, one of which lodged in Davenport’s torso, and the second of which ricocheted off the ground. Davenport died within minutes from massive internal bleeding; nevertheless, even as his body lay lifeless, Stewart and his sister kicked the fallen Davenport repeatedly, prompting eventual comment in the coroner’s report concerning the extent of physical trauma to the body. Following the shooting, Stewart and Brooks fled and were apprehended by police two days later at a local inn. Thereafter, Stewart wrote his paramour from prison urging her not to testify or provide statements to the police concerning her knowledge of his actions.

Following a formal arraignment, Stewart’s case proceeded to a [four-day] jury trial before the Honorable Jeannine Turgeon. In its case[-]in[-]chief, the Commonwealth produced multiple eyewitnesses, some of whom testified that the shots Stewart fired were [broken up] into two short cadences separated by a few moments, while others testified that they heard the shots in a single volley. In addition, the Commonwealth called Dr. Wayne K. Ross, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy on Davenport’s body.

D[octo]r Ross reported that the bullet shot into the victim’s upper[-]right side entered the victim’s right chest and actually moved from the back to the front, traveling into the chest and grazing a lung[,] which caused significant bleeding. . . . D[octo]r Ross stated that the second wound to the upper[-]left chest was fired from the victim’s back and entered the left side of the victim’s chest. D[octo]r Ross described it as moving from back to front, traveling through his left lung, heart[,] and liver. A third shot entered lower on the left side of the victim’s chest and abdominal area and travelled through the spleen and lung before severing Davenport’s spinal cord. D[octo]r Ross testified that the bullets in the two upper wounds travelled downward and that the bullet in the lower wound was travelling upwards, suggesting that the victim might have been lying on the ground. D[octo]r Ross did not know the order of the shots but said that any one alone would have been fatal.

-3- J-A27004-23

[Nevertheless, Dr.] Ross testified that the three entrance wounds would be consistent with a scenario where the victim was shot both from behind and while on the ground and that the pathway of the lower wound in particular suggested that the victim was on the ground. D[octo]r Ross also explained that the three wounds into the victim’s sides were compatible with someone moving around from side to side. Regarding the lower wound, he stated that it was consistent with a scenario where the person shot is on the ground and rolling around.

Trial Court Opinion, 10/15/10, at 9.

Stewart called two witnesses in his defense but did not testify on his own behalf. Stewart argued that he had acted in defense of Drakkari Brooks and that[,] consequently[,] his use of deadly force was justified. Nevertheless, the jury rejected Stewart’s argument and found him guilty as charged. Subsequently, [on April 20, 2009,] Judge Turgeon imposed a sentence of life in prison with concurrent sentences for the remaining offenses.

Commonwealth v. Stewart, 570 MDA 2010, *1-4 (Pa. Super. filed May 10,

2011) (unpublished memorandum decision) (citations to notes of testimony

omitted).

Stewart filed post-trial motions claiming the verdict was against the

weight of the evidence and that there was insufficient evidence to support a

first-degree murder conviction because he was justified in shooting the victim.

The trial court denied the motions.

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Com. v. Stewart, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-stewart-j-pasuperct-2024.