Commonwealth v. Maloney

876 A.2d 1002, 2005 Pa. Super. 206, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1355
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 1, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 876 A.2d 1002 (Commonwealth v. Maloney) 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. Maloney, 876 A.2d 1002, 2005 Pa. Super. 206, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1355 (Pa. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION BY STEVENS, J.:

¶ 1 This is an appeal from the judgment of sentence entered by the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County after a jury found 18 year old Appellant guilty of just one of two counts of Selling or Furnishing Liquor to a Minor, 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 6310.1(a). On appeal, Appellant challenges the sufficiency of evidence that he knew the age of the victim, and that he actually sold or furnished liquor. Appellant also challenges the court’s denial of his motion in limine to exclude a police officer’s testimony as to the minor’s physical condition and level of intoxication. We affirm.

¶2 This case centers on 18 year-old, Penn State-University Park freshman Appellant’s involvement in the intoxication of fellow 18 year-old freshman Kimberly Brower. On July 14, 2003, at 2:50 a.m., Penn State police officers were dispatched to Hamilton Hall on a report of a female (Ms. Brower) vomiting in the women’s restroom. Escorted by a University Resident Assistant, the officers discovered Ms. Brower lying on the bathroom floor curled up around the toilet with vomit and blood [1004]*1004in .the toilet and on herself. According to the evidence, the officers detected a. pungent odor of. alcoholic beverage from Ms. Brower, and she was unconscious, unresponsive to intense waking measures, and exhibited weak vital signs. The officers transported Ms. Brower to the Centre Community Hospital.

¶ 3 Investigating officers subsequently learned from another Hamilton Hall freshman, Julieann Micklos, that both she and Ms. Brower had been drinking at a party hosted by Appellant in his Hamilton Hall dormitory room. Again escorted by a Residence Life officer, Penn State Police Officer Mark Allen knocked on Appellant’s dormitory room door and announced “Penn State University Police.” Appellant’s roommate opened the door and admitted the officers. Still in the room, Appellant confessed to the officer that about seven individuals including Ms. Brower and Ms. Micklos had been drinking in his room, that he had already learned Ms. Brower was taken to the hospital, and that neither Brower nor Micklos had brought any alcohol with them.

¶ 4 Appellant was charged with two counts of Selling/Furnishing Liquor to Minors. Appellant filed a pre-trial Motion in limine seeking exclusion of any testimony Officer Allen may supply regarding Ms. Brower’s physical state when first discovered on the restroom floor. Rejecting Appellant’s argument that such testimony was inflammatory and unfairly prejudicial, the court found, instead, that evidence of Ms. Brower’s significant intoxication in a dormitory common area, and Appellant’s discovery thereof, was probative to Appellant’s motive to remove alcohol from his room before a campus investigation arrived at his-; door. . Such removal, moreover, could reasonably be found to reflect Appellant’s, consciousness of guilt of having furnished alcohol to minors, the court concluded.

¶ 5 At trial, a jury heard testimony from Brower, Micklos, Appellant’s roommate Curtis Keiper, dorm neighbor down the hall Zach Weinberg, and Ms. Brower’s roommate Michelle Burgess — all of whom had been 18 year-old freshmen living in Hamilton Hall on the night in question. Officer Mark Allen was the last Commonwealth "witness to testify.'

¶ 6 Viewed in a light most favorable to the Commonwealth as verdict winner, the students were cautious and vague in their testimonies, seemingly reluctant to provide any damaging testimony against Appellant. For example, Ms. Brower testified that she helped herself to the alcohol in Appellant’s room after Appellant gave no answer to her questions concerning whose alcohol it was and if she could drink it. She later went so far - as to change her testimony, however, to say that the alcohol definitely was not Appellant’s:

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: There was no response [by Appellant] that it [was] his alcohol.
[MS. BROWER]: Oh, yes, there was no response. ' It wasn’t his.
Q: There was no response that he said-
A: No, it wasn’t his. No, it wasn’t his.

N.T. 3/26/04 at 36. Coincidentally enough, Ms. Micklos gave the same account of Appellant’s peculiar non-response when she had asked him if she could have a drink:

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: When you got to the room, you asked [Appellant] if you could drink the alcohol?
[MS. MICKLOS]: Yes.
Q: And he did not respond to you, correct?
[1005]*1005A: No.

N.T. at 52.

¶ 7 Ms. Brower also acknowledged knowing Appellant from her hometown, but would then check herself and limit the extent to which she knew Appellant:

[PROSECUTION]: Did you know [Appellant] prior to that time [the July 18th party in Appellant’s room]?
[MS. BROWER] He went to a surrounding high school in my hometown. I have met him through acquaintances, but — .
[DEFENSE COUNSEL] You indicated that you knew [Appellant] from living at Penn State?
[MS. BROWER] Yes. I also knew [Appellant] just because we were from the same hometown.
Q: You didn’t know him from your hometown?
A: No, I just heard of the name.

N.T. 3/26/04 at 37.

¶ 8 Nevertheless, the students collectively offered damaging testimony that: (1) Appellant attended the drinking party in his room for the entire night; (2), seven or so dormitory residents drank at the party; (3) all testifying students were 18 years old at the time of the party; (4) Appellant was a hometown friend of Micklos’s — Brower’s high school mate — during their high school years and had also met fellow hometown resident Brower through acquaintances prior to their time as Penn State students, N.T. 3/26/04 at 27-28, 30; (5) Ms. Brower asked Appellant directly if she could help herself to a drink, and received a silent, non-responsive look with no opposition when she poured herself four drinks right in front of Appellant; (6) Appellant personally returned Ms. Brower to her room sometime after 1:00 a.m., with both of them laughing, N.T. at 40; and (7) Appellant and his roommate transferred bags of alcohol bottles from their room to their neighbor’s dorm room in anticipation of a security investigation of their room.

¶ 9 Officer Allen also took the stand and gave a complete account of the evening, which included Appellant’s admission to having hosted the alcohol party in his dorm room for the entire evening, and that Ms. Brower and Ms. Micklos attended. N.T. at 85. Officer Allen also offered another telling remark regarding Appellant’s state of mind with respect to the age of his partygoers. Specifically, Officer Allen said, without objection or rebuttal, that Appellant refused to divulge the names of his partygoers because he did not want to get them in trouble with police. - N.T. at 82. •

¶ 10 At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief, the defense moved for acquittal based on the dissent in Commonwealth v. Lawson, 759 A.2d 1 (Pa.Super.2000) (McEwen, P.J., concurring and dissenting), which disagreed with the Majority holding that Section 6310.1 may apply to a case of a minor accused of furnishing another minor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
876 A.2d 1002, 2005 Pa. Super. 206, 2005 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-maloney-pasuperct-2005.