Commonwealth v. Moore

584 A.2d 936, 526 Pa. 152, 1991 Pa. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 4, 1991
Docket33 and 34 Western District Appeal Dockets 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 584 A.2d 936 (Commonwealth v. Moore) 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. Moore, 584 A.2d 936, 526 Pa. 152, 1991 Pa. LEXIS 1 (Pa. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

ZAPPALA, Justice.

Brian C. Moore stands charged with rape, statutory rape, indecent assault, and corruption of minors, with respect to an incident that occurred in August of 1986. After the case was set for trial, the Allegheny County District Attorney filed in the Commonwealth Court a Petition for Access to Confidential Information, pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 8723. *155 The Petition asserted that the Commonwealth had reason to believe that Moore had received treatment for gonorrhea at the Allegheny County Health Department in August of 1986. As the victim had been diagnosed as having contracted gonorrhea, the Commonwealth asserted that evidence that Moore had had the disease about the time of the incident would be material and relevant to his prosecution. Commonwealth Court dismissed the Petition for lack of jurisdiction, holding that the Allegheny County Health Department is a local health agency, not a Commonwealth agency subject to that court’s jurisdiction under § 8723.

The District Attorney then filed a similar petition with the Court of Common Pleas, which was granted. The Health Department, however, refused to comply with the order by producing records. On the Commonwealth’s Petition for Rule and Adjudication of Civil Contempt, the court vacated its previous order, thereby denying the Petition for Access to Confidential Information. The court held that there is no explicit statutory authority under which a court of common pleas has power to grant access to information expressly made confidential by the Disease Prevention and Control Law, 35 P.S. § 521.15. The court certified the issue for interlocutory appeal, 42 Pa.C.S. § 702(b); Pa.R.A.P. 1311.

Superior Court reversed and remanded “for entry of an order directing the Health Department to produce those medical records of the defendant which are necessary for the administration of justice.” Commonwealth v. Moore, 378 Pa.Super. 379, 381, 548 A.2d 1250, 1251 (1988). The court considered disclosure of records relevant in the prosecution of an alleged sex offender as being within the exception to confidentiality provided in § 521.15, which states, “... authorities may not disclose reports of diseases ... except where necessary to carry out the purposes of this act.” (Emphasis added.) In further support of its decision, the court observed that courts of common pleas have broad discretionary powers to make such rules and orders of court as the interest of justice may require, citing 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 103, 323, and 912; that in the similar, though *156 concededly not identical, case of “child abuse proceedings in juvenile or family court ... any privilege of confidential communication between ... professional persons, including but not limited to physicians ... and their patients ..., shall not constitute grounds for excluding evidence ...” 11 P.S. § 2222(2); and that the legislature has provided statutory authority for the Commonwealth Court to order disclosure of confidential records in the possession of Commonwealth agencies, 42 Pa.C.S. § 8723. The latter consideration the court found especially telling, “finding no logic to a dichotomy between identical types of records held by a Commonwealth health agency and a local health agency,” 378 Pa.Super. at 391, n. 12, 548 A.2d at 1256, n. 12, such that a defendant who had sought treatment at a state run clinic might have his records disclosed by order of the Commonwealth Court, while the records of a defendant who had obtained identical treatment at a local health agency would not be subject to disclosure.

We granted the petitions for allowance of appeal filed by Moore and the Allegheny County Health Department, each of which presents several reasons why the order of the Superior Court should be reversed. Moore argues preliminarily that the Commonwealth should not have been entitled to appeal because common pleas court’s order did not substantially handicap the prosecution of the case by depriving the Commonwealth of the use of all its evidence. He also argues that Superior Court’s order violates his constitutional right of privacy. The Health Department argues that disclosure of records relevant to the prosecution of a criminal case does not further the purpose of the Disease Prevention and Control Act and thus does not fall within the only exception to the statutory requirement of confidentiality. It also argues that the compelling interests of privacy and protection of the public health override the Commonwealth’s interest in obtaining circumstantial evidence, of limited relevance, in a single criminal prosecution.

Moore’s argument that the Commonwealth’s appeal was improperly allowed under the rule of Commonwealth *157 v. Dugger, 506 Pa. 537, 486 A.2d 382 (1985), may be dismissed out of hand. Although Superior Court went to some length to analogize the common pleas court’s ruling here with an order suppressing evidence, and explained in detail why the order deprived the Commonwealth of the use of evidence such that the prosecution of the case was substantially handicapped making an appeal permissible under Dugger, it is apparent that Dugger is entirely inapplicable. The Commonwealth sought certification of the order as one involving a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion, immediate appeal of which might materially advance the ultimate termination of the matter. The case thus came before Superior Court pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1311. Although it is within that court’s discretion to grant or deny permission to appeal an order that has been certified, we think it error to suggest that that decision is controlled by the rule of Dugger. Notwithstanding Moore’s arguments that the evidence in question is not as important as the Commonwealth suggests, we cannot find that Superior Court abused its discretion in accepting the interlocutory appeal of this certified order.

On the merits of the issue presented, however, we are constrained to agree with Moore and the Health Department that Superior Court misconstrued the statute and overstated the authority of courts of common pleas in directing the disclosure of these records. Section 15 of the Disease Prevention and Control Law of 1955, 35 P.S. § 521.15, states:-

State and local health authorities may not disclose reports of diseases, any records maintained as a result of any action taken in consequence of such reports, or any other records maintained pursuant to this act or any regulations, to any person who is not a member of the department or of a local board or department of health, except where necessary to carry out the purposes of this act.

*158 After failing to find a clear statement as to the act’s purpose, Superior Court did not seek to discern that purpose from reading the act as a whole. Instead, the court focused on the purpose of the confidentiality provision of the act, gleaning from case law several broad propositions about the purpose of confidentiality in the physician/hospital-patient setting generally.

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Bluebook (online)
584 A.2d 936, 526 Pa. 152, 1991 Pa. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-moore-pa-1991.