Commonwealth v. Colavita

993 A.2d 874, 606 Pa. 1, 2010 Pa. LEXIS 939
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 2010
Docket20 EAP 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by317 cases

This text of 993 A.2d 874 (Commonwealth v. Colavita) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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. Colavita, 993 A.2d 874, 606 Pa. 1, 2010 Pa. LEXIS 939 (Pa. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice CASTILLE. *

The Commonwealth appeals from the published opinion and order of the Superior Court, which reversed the order of the PCRA 1 court, vacated appellee’s judgment of sentence for third-degree murder, and remanded the case for a new trial. The Superior Court held that appellee’s trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the prosecutor’s commentary concerning appellee having consulted with an attorney prearrest, finding in the process that the prosecutor’s commentary violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and that the trial record, on its own, proved that counsel had no reasonable basis for failing to object. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the order of the Superior Court and remand to that court for proceedings consistent with this Opinion.

The facts adduced at trial demonstrated that in the early morning hours of Friday, December 10, 1999, Nicole Feehan was shot to death in her apartment on South Eighth Street in Philadelphia. At the time of her death, Ms. Feehan and appellee had been dating for a short period of time, according to her roommate, Dan Raz.

Mr. Raz testified that Ms. Feehan had been out late the night before the day in question, which was not unusual. He was in bed in his room, which was below Ms. Feehan’s room, *7 when he heard Ms. Feehan return at about 6:00 or 7:00 a.m. and go upstairs to her bedroom. Mr. Raz testified that after some time passed, “I heard a very loud noise which sounding [sic] like something very heavy hitting the floor. After I heard that noise, I heard a male’s voice saying [‘]oh, shit, Nicole, Nicole, I’m sorry.[’] In a kind of nervous laughter.” Mr. Raz believed this to be appellee’s voice and thought at first that something must have fallen over and broken upstairs in Ms. Feehan’s room and that appellee was apologizing for having knocked it over. At around 8:00 a.m., Mr. Raz arose and went to his medical school classes. He did not return until about 8:00 p.m. that night, at which time he encountered Selina Osborne, Ms. Feehan’s visiting friend from Australia, who was trying to find Ms. Feehan. When Mr. Raz entered the apartment and proceeded upstairs to Ms. Feehan’s room, her door was open and he saw that she was prone on her bed. Mr. Raz “instantly knew something was wrong,” felt her arm, which was “cold and stiff,” and called 911. Ms. Feehan was later pronounced dead from a single gunshot wound to the mouth.

Ms. Osborne testified that she, Ms. Feehan, appellee, and several other friends including Rui DaSilva and Paula Fagulha went to several clubs in the Old City area of Philadelphia on the night before the shooting occurred. They had alcoholic drinks and used recreational drugs until the clubs closed, then went to Mr. DaSilva’s apartment nearby to have more alcohol. Ms. Osborne decided to stay the night at Mr. DaSilva’s after Ms. Feehan told her that she and appellee were going back to Ms. Feehan’s apartment together and that Ms. Osborne would have to sleep on the couch if she came back with them. The next afternoon, when Ms. Osborne went to meet Ms. Feehan to go shopping, Ms. Feehan did not answer the door or her phone. Trying to track down Ms. Feehan, Ms. Osborne obtained appellee’s cell phone number from Mr. DaSilva, but appellee did not answer her call. Ms. Osborne spent the rest of the day waiting for Ms. Feehan until Mr. Raz returned to the apartment that evening when they discovered Ms. Feehan’s body.

*8 Mr. DaSilva testified that he had been friends with appellee for two years at the time, during which they spoke almost every day and went out together almost every night. He noted that appellee carried a handgun with him every day. About two weeks prior to Ms. Feehan’s death, Mr. DaSilva testified that the same individuals were together one night or early morning when appellee pulled out his concealed gun and showed it to them and that Ms. Feehan was “kind of startled.” In Mr. DaSilva’s opinion, it was an “uncomfortable situation” and no one was laughing. Mr. DaSilva corroborated that on the night of the shooting, he, appellee, Ms. Feehan, Ms. Osborne, and some others had consumed alcohol and used illegal drugs at some clubs, then went back to his apartment until the early hours of the morning. The next day, Mr. DaSilva tried to contact appellee numerous times on behalf of Ms. Osborne, but he never saw or heard from appellee again until the day of trial. He learned of Ms. Feehan’s death later that night when he stopped at the bar where she had worked. Mr. DaSilva testified that he had been present once or twice when Ms. Feehan and appellee had argued with one another.

Paula Fagulha testified that she had known Ms. Feehan for several months; saw her almost every day; and that she was in the group that went out the night preceding the discovery of Ms. Feehan’s body, but that she had left earlier in the evening when she learned that her daughter was sick. Ms. Fagulha had been present approximately two weeks earlier when appellee revealed his handgun at Mr. DaSilva’s apartment, which Ms. Fagulha believed “surprised” Ms. Feehan. Ms. Fagulha related that Ms. Feehan and appellee seemed to argue quite often, which she learned from speaking with each of them independently.

The Philadelphia Police Department’s crime scene investigator Avon Wilson processed the scene and testified that he observed no evidence of a struggle and that the manner of death was by an intraoral gunshot that exited through the back of Ms. Feehan’s head. He did not believe that the gunshot wound was self-inflicted because of the way blood *9 presented on Ms. Feehan’s right hand. 2 The Commonwealth’s weapons expert concluded that the sole projectile recovered from the scene was consistent with the size of a bullet for a .45 caliber semi-automatic handgun. Edwin Lieberman, an assistant medical examiner who participated in Ms. Feehan’s autopsy, testified that the blood on Ms. Feehan’s right hand was inconsistent with her having held the gun in her own mouth. 3 Dr. Lieberman also testified that Ms. Feehan’s toxicology results indicated the presence of alcohol, cocaine, and Ecstasy, a controlled substance, in her bodily systems at the time of death.

The defense’s forensics expert on blood staining and spattering, Herbert L. MacDonell, disagreed with Dr. Lieberman’s opinion that the blood on Ms. Feehan’s right hand indicated that the fatal gunshot wound was not self-inflicted. Professor MacDonell opined that the only way Ms. Feehan could have gotten the blood on her right hand was for her to have been holding the gun when it fired, although he could not say whether the gunshot was self-inflicted, accidental or suicide. Id. at 195-96.

Appellee’s mother, Marianne Colavita, also testified for the defense, stating that appellee called her at about 9:30 a.m. on Friday, December 10,1999 and told her that he would be away for the weekend.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
993 A.2d 874, 606 Pa. 1, 2010 Pa. LEXIS 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-colavita-pa-2010.