Com. v. Styles, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 20, 2015
Docket876 EDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Styles, J. (Com. v. Styles, 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. Styles, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-S19008-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

JAMES E. STYLES

Appellant No. 876 EDA 2014

Appeal from the PCRA Order entered March 6, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at No: CP-51-CR-0014913-2009

BEFORE: STABILE, JENKINS, and MUSMANNO, JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED MAY 20, 2015

Appellant, James Styles, is serving a prison sentence for his conviction

of firearms offenses. He appeals from an order denying relief under the

PCRA.1 On appeal, he argues the PCRA court erred in denying a new trial

based on after-discovered evidence and ineffective assistance of counsel.

We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand.

At trial, the Commonwealth presented the testimony of Philadelphia Police Officer Javier Montanez. On October 2, 2009, at approximately 10:15 p.m., Officer Montanez was on patrol in the area of 29th and Flora Streets, in the [C]ity and [C]ounty of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. While driving southbound on 29th Street, he observed a crowd of approximately twenty-five (25) people on the corner of 29th and Flora Street[s], standing outside a bar called “Sarah’s Place.”

____________________________________________

1 Post Conviction Relief Act, 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-46. J-S19008-15

Officer Montanez saw Appellant standing “at the lower step of the bar,” pointing a silver handgun at a group of females about twenty (20) feet away. Officer Montanez witnessed Appellant fire the gun “toward the waistline and leg area of the females.” The officer testified that he heard the gunshot, and saw a “muzzle flash.”

After the gunshot, Officer Montanez immediately parked and exited his patrol car with his gun drawn. By this time, a crowd of people w[as] chaotically running toward him. Among this crowd was Appellant, who was “speed walking” in the officer’s direction as though “not acknowledging that [the [O]fficer] actually saw him discharge the firearm at the females.” Officer Montanez ordered Appellant to the ground, “placed [his] knee . . . on [Appellant’s] waistline,” reached into Appellant’s right waistband, and recovered the gun. The firearm was loaded with six live rounds in its magazine and one round in the chamber.[1] After placing Appellant under arrest, Officer Montanez recovered a spent shell casing outside the bar, at the same location from which Appellant fired the gun. Forensic evidence established that the gun had discharged this shell casing.[2]

[1] The parties stipulated that the certified record, from the Pennsylvania State Police, states that Appellant had no license to carry a firearm on October 2, 2009.

[2] The Commonwealth presented the testimony of Gamilia Marshal, who is a Firearms Examiner for the Philadelphia Police Department. Appellant stipulated that Ms. Marshal is qualified as an expert in “firearms identification,” and she testified “to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty” that the shell casing was discharged from the gun recovered from Appellant.

Officer Montanez further testified that the three females, at whom he saw Appellant shoot, ran up to him and screamed: “[h]e just shot at me. He just shot at me.” These females were Precious Leverette, Shakea Johnston, and Thomika Thomas.

Precious Leverette testified at trial.[3] She claim that she, her cousin (Thomika Thomas), and her friend (Shakea Johnston), together went to “Sarah’s Place” on October 2, 2009. At some point in the evening[,] a fight broke out and the bar’s owner, “Ms. Sarah,[] told everyone to leave . . . because there was too much complication in the bar.” While the three females made their way to the exit, Appellant began “pushing [Ms. Thomas],

-2- J-S19008-15

telling her [to] move, bitch, hurry up bitch.” Upon hearing this, Ms. Leverette confronted Appellant, who “started pushing” her and calling her a bitch. When Ms. Leverette exited the bar, and after being pushed by Appellant “about four times,” she “grabbed [Appellant] and threw him towards a black truck.”

[3] Ms. Leverette originally lied to police, telling them her name was Precious “Taylor.” She claimed she had given this false name because she lives in the neighborhood where the incident occurred, and feared the consequences of cooperating with the police. She feared, in particular, being labeled a “snitch.”

In response to being thrown against the truck, Appellant pulled a gun from his waistband, pointed it towards Ms. Leverette’s feet, and fired. Ms. Leverette testified that the bullet missed her because Ms. Johnston had grabbed her from behind and pulled her away. After the gunshot, Ms. Leverette and her companions ran, “going zigzag” around cars because Ms. Leverette believed Appellant would shoot again.

Ms. Leverette’s testimony differs in some respects from that of Officer Montanez. Officer Montanez testified that Appellant and Ms. Leverette testified they were “face to face.” Officer Montanez further testified that he recovered the gun from Appellant’s right waistband while Appellant was face-first on the ground, but Ms. Leverette testified that Appellant had placed the gun on the ground in compliance with the [O]fficer’s orders. In other words, Ms. Leverette claimed that Officer Montanez did not recover the gun from Appellant’s waistband.[4]

[4] Furthermore, on cross-examination, Ms. Leverette testified she did not see Officer Montanez arrive until after the shot was fired. She also testified that she originally tried to flee the scene, but was stopped by police.

The defense presented the testimony of Ernestine Savage and Tujunana Burgess, both of whom claimed to have been at Sarah’s Place at the time of the shooting. Ms. Savage testified that an argument broke out between Appellant and another female inside Sarah’s Place, which culminated outside the bar. Looking outside the bar’s front door, Ms. Savage saw “a lot of females surrounding [Appellant] . . . [.] They were on his back, like they were jumping him.” Ms. Savage heard a gunshot during the brawl, but she did not see Appellant with a gun.[5]

-3- J-S19008-15

[5] On cross-examination, Ms. Savage testified that she had known Appellant for approximately fifteen (15) years and that she is his “close friend.” However, prior to trial, Ms. Savage never informed the police or “anyone” else that she had seen Appellant, her “close friend,” being assaulted by a group of females just prior to his arrest.

Ms. Burgess, an “acquaintance” of Appellant who frequents Sarah’s Place, likewise testified that an argument broke out inside the bar, during which Appellant asked a female patron “to leave his cousin’s establishment because he didn’t want know trouble in there.” Although Ms. Burgess heard Appellant call the female a bitch, she never saw Appellant push or punch this individual. Rather, when Appellant stepped outside the bar, Ms. Burgess saw him talking to an unidentified male and “trying to apologize for calling the girls a bitch.”

According to Ms. Burgess, when Appellant offered his apology, “[a] girl came up from behind and hit [him] in his head.” “[T]hen another girl came, and it was like a free for all, it was a fight.” While Appellant was under attack, still another “young lady,” who “wasn’t in the bar,” pulled out a silver gun. Appellant “wrestled” this woman for the gun, and “the next thing [Ms. Burgess] knew . . . the gun went off.”[6]

[6] Ms. Burgess testified in part: “[Appellant] thought quick. We all could have been dead out there. One of us could have been killed. I’m glad he got the gun from her. I really am. Similar to Ms. Savage, Ms.

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Com. v. Styles, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-styles-j-pasuperct-2015.