Commonwealth v. Gayle

145 A.3d 188, 2016 Pa. Super. 174, 2016 Pa. Super. LEXIS 443, 2016 WL 4268495
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 10, 2016
Docket2848 EDA 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 A.3d 188 (Commonwealth v. Gayle) 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. Gayle, 145 A.3d 188, 2016 Pa. Super. 174, 2016 Pa. Super. LEXIS 443, 2016 WL 4268495 (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION BY STEVENS, P.J.E.:

Wayne Silvria Gayle ("Appellant") appeals from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County, in which the trial court denied his Petition for Return of Property, to wit, seven screenplays and one novel he claims to have authored while he was previously incarcerated. According to Appellant, police confiscated the papers from his residential safe during execution of a search warrant as part of a narcotics investigation of his home address. Upon careful review of the record, we affirm. 1

The trial court presided over the June 30, 2015, evidentiary hearing on Appellant's petition. The Commonwealth presented evidence that on May 2, 2014, the narcotics unit of the Easton Police Department culminated its investigation of Appellant's *190 suspected illicit drug trafficking at his mother's residence with the execution of a search warrant. As part of his duties as case officer in charge of the investigation, Officer Brian Burd collected evidence from the search and placed it in a plastic bin he carried throughout the home. N.T. 6/30/15 at 83, 85-86. Burd denied observing anything resembling manuscripts during his search of the home and the safe in question. N.T. at 88, 89. Inspector Salvatore Crisafulli, supervisor of the narcotics unit, observed Burd in this regard and noticed no paper items in the bin other than three pieces of mail. N.T. at 74-76, 81. In response to Appellant's petition, Crisafulli searched the evidence room at the Easton Police Department and found no manuscripts or other writings among the items seized during the search. N.T. at 78-79.

Appellant claimed that his bedroom safe stored seven screenplay manuscripts and one novel manuscript, each approximately 120 pages long, that he had authored in prison and mailed to his brother, Albert, for safekeeping. N.T. at 38, 40. 2 Albert testified at the hearing that he had placed the manuscripts in Appellant's safe at various times prior to Appellant's February of 2013 release from prison, pursuant to Appellant's instructions. N.T. at 8-10. He did not view the contents of the safe again until after the May 2, 2015 search, at which time he observed an empty safe. N.T. at 12, 13.

Appellant's other brother, Baltimore, lived at the address but denied ever looking into Appellant's bedroom safe. N.T. at 17. Baltimore was present on the morning of the search, and, according to his testimony, he asked officers where they were going with a plastic bin full of Appellant's papers. N.T. at 20, 22, 27. Appellant's mother, Louise Gayle, was the principal resident of the address and had lived there for over twenty years, but she was not home on the morning of the search. N.T. at 29. She arrived at the home to find several officers standing on her porch holding a plastic bin filled with a "pile of papers," she testified. N.T. at 30. Once inside, she observed that the safe in Appellant's bedroom had been forcibly opened, but she could not say what, if anything, had been removed because she had never before looked inside the safe. N.T. at 31, 35.

By order of August 12, 2015, the trial court denied Appellant's petition as moot given the lack of evidence that the Commonwealth possesses, or ever possessed, the manuscripts in question. On September 11, 2015, Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal. He raises one question for our review:

Even a minimum showing will satisfy a petitioner's initial burden of proof in a motion for return of property. [ ] Did the trial court err in dismissing this petition as moot where the Appellant presented evidence that (a) he stored manuscripts in a safe at 1139 Butler Street (b) the police emptied the safe while executing a search warrant and (c) the police departed with a bin containing numerous documents?

Appellant's brief at 5 (footnote omitted).

We initially recognize that an appellate court's review of a trial court's decision on petition for return of property is limited to examining whether findings of *191 fact made by the trial court are supported by competent evidence and whether the trial court abused its discretion or committed error of law. Commonwealth v. Wintel, Inc., 829 A.2d 753 (Pa.Cmwlth.2003).

Regarding the manuscripts, we agree with the Commonwealth that Appellant's claim is moot. See Commonwealth v. Matsinger, 68 A.3d 390 (Pa.Cmwlth.2013) (holding where the Commonwealth is not in possession of property in question, petition for return of property is moot). Here, questions pertaining to whether manuscripts were located in the bedroom safe and whether investigators confiscated the manuscripts were matters of credibility, which the trial court resolved in the Commonwealth's favor. Pivotal to the court's decision was the absence of the manuscripts from the search inventory list of items seized from the residence, Inspector Crisafulli's testimony that his thorough search of the Easton Police Department's property room pursuant to Appellant's petition yielded no manuscripts, and the admissions of Baltimore and Louise Gayle that they neither knew what Appellant stored in his safe prior to the search nor identified paperwork in Officer Burd's bin as the alleged manuscripts in question. We, therefore, conclude that competent evidence supports the lower court's decision, and in this respect we adopt the court's Order of August 12, 2015, which comprises the findings of fact and conclusions of law central to the court's determination.

Order is AFFIRMED.

ORDER OF COURT

AND NOW, this 12 day of August, 2015, after a hearing held on June 30, 2015, and briefs filed by the Commonwealth on June 20, 2015 and July 14, 2015, and by the Defendant on July 10, 2015, 1 the Defendant's Petition for Return of Property is DENIED as moot.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. On or about May 2, 2014, Officer Brian Burd of the Easton Police Department obtained a search warrant and conducted a search of 1139 Butler Street, Easton, Pennsylvania. See Commonwealth Exhibit 1.
2. The police were investigating Defendant for drug trafficking and had conducted controlled buys from Defendant, who was observed exiting the residence at 1139 Butler Street.
3. The residence at 1139 Butler Street is owned by Louise Gayle, Defendant's mother.
4. Defendant's brother, Albert Gayle, testified that while Defendant was previously incarcerated he would send writings home for Albert Gayle to place in a safe in a bedroom at 1139 Butler Street.
5.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 A.3d 188, 2016 Pa. Super. 174, 2016 Pa. Super. LEXIS 443, 2016 WL 4268495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-gayle-pasuperct-2016.