Commonwealth v. Chazin

873 A.2d 732, 2005 Pa. Super. 143, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 907
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 22, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 873 A.2d 732 (Commonwealth v. Chazin) 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
Commonwealth v. Chazin, 873 A.2d 732, 2005 Pa. Super. 143, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 907 (Pa. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.:

¶ 1 The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, through the District Attorney of Philadelphia County, appeals the trial court’s order granting a new trial to Barry Chazin pursuant to provisions of the Post Conviction Relief Act, 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-46. The court concluded that Chazin’s lawyer provided ineffective assistance of counsel (IAC) in having failed to offer the defendant appropriate advice concerning the Commonwealth’s offer to recommend a sentence below the mandatory minimum in exchange for his guilty plea to a charge of Robbery. The Commonwealth counters that the court erred in finding IAC because the Commonwealth withdrew the offer prior to the plea hearing and the sentencing judge remarked that he would not have accepted the plea bargain on the terms specified. The Commonwealth argues accordingly that Chazin failed to establish that he suffered prejudice and therefore cannot establish IAC. We concur in the Commonwealth’s assessment and, consequently, reverse the trial court’s order.

¶ 2 On August 27, 2001, Chazin entered a negotiated guilty plea to one count each of Robbery, Possessing Instruments of Crime (PIC), and Criminal Conspiracy in connection with his gunpoint hold-up of a Philadelphia delicatessen. In exchange for his plea, the Commonwealth recommended a sentence of nine to eighteen years’ incarceration for Robbery coupled with a consecutive term of twelve years’ reporting probation for Criminal Conspiracy and a concurrent term of five years’ reporting probation for PIC. The Commonwealth then dismissed a host of other charges, including two counts of Aggravated Assault. The court accepted Chazin’s negotiated plea and later imposed the recommended sentence.

¶ 3 Chazin did not file a direct appeal but, on March 18, 2002, filed, pro se, his first post-conviction petition. Chazin alleged that his first appointed trial counsel, Mark Damian Hauser, Esquire, rendered IAC in having failed to advise him adequately on an earlier plea offer that the Commonwealth tendered that would have allowed him a term of incarceration of only four to eight years. In response to Cha-zin’s claims, the trial court, the Honorable D. Webster Keogh, appointed post-conviction counsel and convened an evidentiary hearing. At the hearing, Chazin and Attorney Hauser offered conflicting accounts of the terms of the disputed plea offer. Attorney Hauser testified, and the court accepted, that the Commonwealth first *734 limited the offer to the day of the pre-trial conference on March 27, 2001, but at counsel’s request, extended it to the date of the informal attorney conference. When the conference ultimately convened on June 11, 2001, the Commonwealth withdrew the offer and extended a new offer which, due to the strength of the Commonwealth’s case, Chazin was compelled to accept. The new offer, however, more than doubled the recommended term of Chazin’s incarceration, prompting Chazin to assert that had counsel effectively communicated with him prior to the June 11 withdrawal date, he would have accepted the Commonwealth’s offer.

¶ 4 Chazin and his former counsel each attribute responsibility for failed communication to the other, counsel contending that although he sent the offer to Chazin in a letter, Chazin never responded and later told him that he had chosen to take the case to trial with the aid of another lawyer. Chazin countered that he had called counsel’s office on numerous occasions to discuss the offer, intending to accept it, but had never received a return call. Following the hearing, Judge Keogh, relying on our decision in Commonwealth v. Copeland, 381 Pa.Super. 382, 554 A.2d 54, 60-61 (1988), concluded that counsel had failed to offer appropriate and timely professional advice concerning the plea and had thereby rendered IAC. Trial Court Opinion, 6/29/04, at 3. Accordingly, the court granted Chazin’s petition and ordered a new trial. The Commonwealth then filed this appeal, raising the following question for our review:

Given that the Commonwealth’s offer of a plea agreement is unenforceable prior to its acceptance by the trial court, would defendant’s post-conviction claim-that counsel was ineffective for inadequately advising him with respect to a plea offer-have been rejected for lack of prejudice, since the Commonwealth withdrew the offer before defendant could agree to it and the trial court would not have accepted the proposed agreement in any event?

Brief for Appellant at 2.

¶ 5 The Commonwealth’s claim impugns the trial court’s disposition of Chazin’s post-conviction petition. Our standard of review of a trial court’s disposition of a post conviction petition “is limited to examining whether the PCRA court’s determination is supported by the evidence of record and free of legal error.” Commonwealth v. Wilson, 824 A.2d 331, 333 (Pa.Super.2003). Nevertheless, we remain mindful that post-conviction claims may not be freely granted without a substantial demonstration by the petitioner to show not merely the abstract merit of his claim, but also its impact on the result in his cáse.

PCRA claims are not merely direct appeal claims that are made at a later stage of the proceedings, cloaked in a boilerplate assertion of counsel’s ineffectiveness. In essence, they are extraordinary assertions that the system broke down. To establish claims of constitutional error or ineffectiveness of counsel, the petitioner must plead and prove by a preponderance of evidence that the system failed (i.e., for an ineffectiveness or constitutional error claim, that in the circumstances of his case, including the facts established at trial, guilt or innocence could not have been adjudicated reliably), that his claim has not been previously litigated or waived, and where a claim was not raised at an earlier stage of the proceedings, that counsel could not have had a rational strategic or tactical reason for failing to litigate these claims earlier.

Commonwealth v. Rivers, 567 Pa. 239, 786 A.2d 923, 929 (2001).

*735 ¶ 6 Consequently, in assessing claims of IAC, the court’s evaluation of counsel’s performance must be “highly deferential,” its determination based not upon “the distorting effects of hindsight,” Commonwealth v. Basemore, 560 Pa. 258, 744 A.2d 717, 735 (2000), but upon a preponderance of the evidence in each of three categories. Thus, claims of IAC may provide grounds for relief only where the petitioner establishes that: 1) his underlying claim is of arguable merit, 2) counsel lacked any reasonable basis for the act or omission alleged, and 3) that the petitioner was prejudiced as a result, ie., “that there is a reasonable probability that, but for the act or omission challenged, the outcome of the proceeding would have been different.” Rivers, 786 A.2d at 927; see also Commonwealth v. Shaffer, 763 A.2d 411, 415 (Pa.Super.2000).

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Bluebook (online)
873 A.2d 732, 2005 Pa. Super. 143, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-chazin-pasuperct-2005.