Commonwealth v. Mendozajr

71 A.3d 1023
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 23, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 71 A.3d 1023 (Commonwealth v. Mendozajr) 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. Mendozajr, 71 A.3d 1023 (Pa. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION BY

GANTMAN, J.:

Appellant, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, appeals from. the judgment of sentence entered in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleás following the open guilty plea of Appellee, Manuel Men-dozajr, to the offenses of firearms not to be carried without a license and carrying firearms on public streets or public prop[1025]*1025erty in Philadelphia.1 The Commonwealth asks us to determine whether the trial court erred in downgrading the Section 6106 offense of firearms not to be carried without a license from a third-degree felony to a first-degree misdemeanor. Under the circumstances of this ease, we hold the trial court improperly graded the Section 6106 offense as a first-degree misdemean- or because Appellee’s contemporaneous Section 6108 conviction independently precluded the court from downgrading the Section 6106 offense from a third-degree felony to a first-degree misdemeanor. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of sentence and remand for resentencing.

The certified record sets forth the factual basis of the plea in this case as follows:

[COMMONWEALTH]: Your honor, March 24th, 2011, at approximately 11:24 p.m. police in the 25th District were [in] the area of 7th and Erie Streets in Philadelphia and heard seven to eight gun shots in the area south. Other officers, Officer McKnight and White were also in the area.
Officers responded to the area at 8th and Venango and observed a complainant, Michael Bivens, with a gunshot wound to his right shin. Those officers gave out radio information that there was a found shooting.
Officers White and McKnight were in the area, received that information over police radio and observed a grey '98 Ford Crown Victoria traveling southbound coming from the direction where the shooting had occurred. They observed that the vehicle had bullet holes in the rear window and a bullet hole in the driver’s side fender. [Appellee] was the driver of that vehicle that was pulled over. In the course of the car stop officers observed in the area next to the driver’s seat, Officer White observed [Appellee] reaching in that area and that he was able to observe a firearm which was subsequently recovered. It was a silver/black Ruger .45 caliber handgun with an obliterated serial number. It was empty with a slide lock open. That was placed on property receipt 2968523 and later submitted to Firearm’s Identification Unit.
Officer McKnight recovered from the passenger side floor a black and silver nine millimeter firearm with a double/POED that was jammed. That was placed on a property receipt and also submitted to the Firearm’s Identification Unit.
The crime scene at 8th and Venango was processed by Philadelphia Police Detectives and multiple .45 caliber and nine millimeter caliber fire cartridge casings were recovered from that scene and submitted [to] the Firearm’s Identification Unit.
Your Honor, I have what I’ll mark as C-1 a ballistic’s report which indicates that the .45 caliber casings that were recovered at the scene of the shooting, were a match to the gun that was recovered in the car [Appellee] was driving!,] to the right of [Appellee]. [Appellee] subsequently gave — well, at the scene of the arrest, indicated to Police Officer White that it was in fact his firearm and subsequently [Appellee] gave two statements to the police. The first I’ll mark as C-2 which is a statement to Detective New-berg that was taken on 3/25/2011, at 3:20 a.m. which in sum indicates that [Appel-lee] knew his friend Michael Bivens' the complainant in the shooting had been shot, but [Appellee] basically denied any sort of involvement in having a firearm. And a subsequent statement that [was] given to Detective Bartle, which I’ll [1026]*1026mark as C-3, that was taken on [3/26/2011], at- approximately 2:00 a.m. [Appellee] indicates that he did in fact have a firearm and that he had his 45 gun on him and someone was shooting at his friend and [Appellee] shot and he discharged his firearm in that direction. So I would move those into evidence for ■the purposes of the plea and that’s a summary of evidence. ' [Appellee’s] pleading guilty to the possession of the 45. .
[COURT]: Okay. [Appellee] was not otherwise eligible?
[COMMONWEALTH]: I’m sorry.- I would mark as C^l the certificate’' of non-licensure which indicates [Appellee] did not have a valid license to carry a firearm or a sportsman’s firearm.-
[APPELLEE’S COUNSEL]: May I be heard?
[COURT]: Yes.
[APPELLEE’S COUNSEL]: I would like to make one correction to what the Commonwealth stated with regard to C-2 in the first statement. It’s wrong. My client didn’t deny anything with the firearm in the first statement. [Appel-lee] stated that he found it n'ext to his car and he picked it up and put it in his car after his friend, Mr. Bivens, had been shot and while they were trying to get him to the hospital.
[COMMONWEALTH]: That’s correct. If the [c]ourt would like, I have copies of the statements if you would like to read them. In the later statement is when he admits that it was in fact his firearm.

(N.T. Guilty Plea Hearing, 8/9/11, at 12-16). Following the recitation of the facts, Appellee pled guilty to the two firearms offenses: Section 6106 as a third-degree felony, and Section 6108 as a first-degree misdemeanor. The parties agreed to waive the Pre-Sentence Investigation (“PSI”) report and proceeded directly to sentencing. Appellee’s counsel requested a sentence of only probation because Ap-pellee had no- prior record and. maintained fulltime employment. Appellee apologized to the court and also emphasized his lack of prior record. The court questioned whether Appellee was “otherwise eligible for a firearms license” to downgrade Ap-pellee’s Section 6106 conviction from a third-degree felony to a first-degree misdemeanor. ■ The Commonwealth argued Appellee was not entitled to a downgrade due to Appellee’s companion Section 6108 conviction for carrying firearms on public streets or .public property in Philadelphia, citing Commonwealth v. Bavusa, 574 Pa. 620, 832 A.2d 1042 (2003). The court rejected that argument. After conceding Ap-pellee pled guilty to the Section 6106 offense as a third-degree felony, the court downgraded the Section 6106 conviction to a first-degree misdemeanor for purposes of sentencing and imposed three years’ reporting probation. '

On September 1, 2011, the Commonwealth timely filed a notice of appeal and a contemporaneous Rule 1925(b) statement.

The Commonwealth raises the following issue-for our review:

WHERE [APPELLEE] ENTERED AND THE COURT ACCEPTED AN OPEN GUILTY PLEA TO 18 PA. C.S.A. § 6106 AS A FELONY OF THE THIRD DEGREE, DID THE [TRIAL] COURT ERR IN RECLASSIFYING THE OFFENSE AS A MISDEMEANOR AT SENTENCING WHERE [AP-PELLEE] ALSO CONTEMPORANEOUSLY PLED GUILTY TO 18 PA. C.S.A. § 6108 GRADED AS A MISDEMEANOR OF THE FIRST DEGREE?

(Commonwealth’s Brief at 4).

The Commonwealth r argues Appellee’s contemporaneous guilty plea to a Section 6108 offense constituted an “other, criminal [1027]*1027violation” that disqualified Appellee for reduced grading of his Section 6106 conviction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 A.3d 1023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mendozajr-pasuperct-2013.