Com. v. Tubbs, E.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 7, 2022
Docket89 WDA 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Tubbs, E. (Com. v. Tubbs, E.) 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. Tubbs, E., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A06030-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : EARL TUBBS : : Appellant : No. 89 WDA 2021

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered December 2, 2020 In the Court of Common Pleas of Potter County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-53-CR-0000225-2019

BEFORE: MURRAY, J., SULLIVAN, J., and COLINS, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED: JULY 7, 2022

Earl Tubbs (“Tubbs”) appeals from the judgment of sentence imposed

after a jury convicted him of strangulation, recklessly endangering another

person (“REAP”), false imprisonment, and two counts of simple assault.1 After

careful review, we vacate the judgment of sentence and remand for a new

trial.

The factual and procedural history of this appeal is as follows. In July

2019, Tubbs and D.P.,2 who had been in a relationship for about two months,

went to Tubbs’s camper. Tubbs began drinking beer as they prepared dinner ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. 1See 18 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2718(a)(2), 2705, 2903(a), 2701(a)(1), (3). The trial court separately found Tubbs guilty of a summary offense of harassment. See 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2709(a)(1). 2 We elect not to provide D.P.’s full name in light of the assertions of a sexual crime. J-A06030-22

and continued to drink that evening. An altercation started between them.

Tubbs pushed D.P. onto the bed in the camper, pinned her down, and tried to

kiss her without her consent. He pressed his face against her nose so hard

she could not breathe. D.P. managed to tell Tubbs she could not breathe, and

he eventually got off her and went outside.

D.P. went outside and tried to call 911, but her phone did not have

service. She asked Tubbs for his phone, telling him that she wanted to call

her son, and Tubbs gave her his phone. She went to her car, but had to ask

for Tubbs’s help to find the screen to make a call. Without warning, Tubbs

pushed D.P. back into the car and pinned her down across the front seats. He

grabbed her neck and strangled her while demanding his phone. He then

stopped and got out of the car, taking D.P.’s key chain, which had an attached

cannister of pepper spray. When D.P. asked for her keys, Tubbs pepper-

sprayed her. He then returned her keys, and she managed to drive home.

Tubbs later sent D.P. a text apologizing for drinking and “acting like an idiot.”

See Commonwealth’s Trial Exhibit 7.

Two days later, D.P. reported the incident to the Pennsylvania State

Police. The investigating troopers took photographs of the numerous bruises

on D.P.’s arms, leg, and neck. Tubbs admitted to the troopers that he caused

D.P.’s bruises. The troopers filed a criminal complaint charging Tubbs with

indecent assault, two counts of strangulation, one count for blocking the nose

and mouth for the altercation inside Tubbs’s camper, and the second count

-2- J-A06030-22

for pressure to throat or neck for the altercation around D.P.’s car, REAP, false

imprisonment, unlawful restraint, and two counts of simple assault.

At Tubbs’s jury trial, D.P. testified about the altercations that occurred

inside Tubbs’s camper and around her car. N.T., 8/17/20, at 28-37. Tubbs

testified that he spent the afternoon with D.P., they had gone to his camper,

and he drank seven or eight beers throughout the day. Id. at 137-38. He

had lost interest in having a sexual relationship with D.P. and was messaging

another woman when D.P. suddenly grabbed his phone and ran to her car

yelling about that woman.3 Id. at 128, 130-31. When he demanded his

phone back, D.P., who was sitting in her car, put his phone underneath her

right leg, and he moved her leg to retrieve it. Id. at 131. Tubbs asserted

that the only bruise he would have caused was to D.P.’s leg when he retrieved

his phone. He denied touching her otherwise on the day of the incident.4 Id.

at 134. Tubbs admitted that he later sent D.P. a text apologizing for drinking

and acting like an idiot but asserted that his text concerned “breaking her

heart.” Id.

____________________________________________

3 D.P. testified that she saw Tubbs was messaging another woman on his phone but the message did not bother her and was not part of the altercation in and by her car. 4When asked why the investigating troopers stated that he admitted that he caused all of D.P.’s bruises, Tubbs answered, “[P]olice lie.” N.T., 8/17/20, at 156.

-3- J-A06030-22

During cross-examination, the Commonwealth elicited Tubbs’s assertion

that D.P. was the aggressor in the incident, and Tubbs volunteered that D.P.

was aware of his criminal record:

Q. And you stated that I believe that she asked to use your cell, she took your cell phone. So describe how she took that from you?

A. She just grabbed it out of my hand.

Q. So she was the aggressor in all this?

A. Yes. . . . She knew my criminal record, knew my criminal record [sic]. She learned everything about me. I met her, in a matter of three weeks I learned about her, she learned about me. I asked her if she knew my criminal record, she knew I had gotten in fight [sic]. She knew all this. I swear to God she’s making it up.

Q. I’m sorry you had a criminal record for what?

A. I got in argument with someone at work place [sic], I grabbed him by the neck. [D.P.] went with me to help pay fines down [sic] magistrates over it. I explained to her what was going on, she knew about that.

Q. So you had a history of some violent conduct, is that right?
A. Pardon me?
Q. You have history of violent conduct?
A. Yeah.

N.T., 8/17/20, at 139-40. Tubbs’s counsel objected. At sidebar, the

Commonwealth argued that because Tubbs had testified that D.P. was the

aggressor in the altercation, he thereby placed his own character for

aggression and violence at issue permitting the introduction, under Pa.R.E.

404(a) (“Rule 404(a)”), of evidence of his prior convictions for arson, simple

-4- J-A06030-22

assault and harassment.5 Id. at 141-44. The Commonwealth also argued

that Tubbs “opened the door” to the admission of his prior convictions because

he testified that D.P. knew about his criminal record and because he had a

more extensive criminal record than he suggested during his cross-

examination. Id. at 141-44, 147-48.

The trial court ruled that Tubbs had opened the door to his prior

convictions under Rule 404(a). Id. at 142-43. With the trial court’s

permission, the Commonwealth then cross-examined Tubbs about his 2001

arson conviction, which the Commonwealth asserted involved Tubbs’s

“burning [of an] ex-girlfriend’s car due to a recent breakup,” and his 2002

simple assault and harassment convictions, which the Commonwealth

described at trial as involving another former girlfriend. Id. at 149-53.

The trial court gave the following cautionary instruction during the

Commonwealth’s cross-examination:

[T]hese matters are brought before you for a limited purpose in this case. It is [Tubbs’s] contention that [D.P.] was the aggressor and these are brought for you to under the rules of evidence as essentially rebuttal of that statement and also to demonstrate a trait. . .. You may not consider it for any other purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Tubbs, E., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-tubbs-e-pasuperct-2022.