Commonwealth v. Restauri
This text of 664 A.2d 593 (Commonwealth v. Restauri) 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.
Opinion
Appellant James Dennis Restauri claims in this pro se direct appeal that the trial court erred in denying his petition to find the State College Bureau of Police Services in contempt of a court order to expunge all “records of [his] arrest or prosecution” for summary offenses. We affirm.
Before addressing appellant’s claim, it is necessary to review the complicated procedural history that preceded this appeal.
According to the expungement petition, appellant James Restauri was arrested by the State College police on a variety of summary charges between 1979 and 1985. At some point thereafter, appellant applied to and was hired by the Delaware State Police, after failing to disclose any record of his prior arrests in Pennsylvania. Appellant consequently was charged with a violation of the Delaware State Police Rules and Regulations when the Delaware authorities were supplied with his arrest records by the authorities in State College in July, 1991.
On September 23, 1991, appellant presented the Centre County Court of Common Pleas with a petition to expunge his records, claiming that the charges accruing from the prosecutions in Pennsylvania were “paid in full” and that there was no “justification [ ] for the Commonwealth to maintain” his records. The trial court granted appellant’s [595]*595petition the same day, without a hearing and without objection from the Commonwealth.
On August 12, 1993, appellant filed a motion in Centre County requesting that the trial court compel the Delaware State Police to comply with the court’s September, 1991, order of expunction. The trial court held a hearing on the motion on January 10, 1994, and subsequently denied appellant’s motion. In an unpublished memorandum, a panel of this Court recently affirmed the trial court’s action on the grounds that the records had been sent to Delaware by the State College police authorities prior to the entry of the expunction order, and further, that the Delaware Police held appellant’s records as an employer, not as a criminal justice agency. Commonwealth v. Restauri, No. 218 Harrisburg 1994 (filed 7/11/95).
In the meantime, on June 22, 1994, appellant also filed a petition to hold the State College police in contempt, alleging that they had not completely destroyed his records as mandated by the trial court’s 1991 expunction order.1 The trial court held a hearing on this petition also, on August 26, 1994. This petition was denied in an order and opinion dated September 21, 1994. Timely notice of appeal was filed with this Court on October 18, 1994. It is this appeal that is presently before us for decision.
Appellant contends that somewhere there may still exist a sealed, paper record of his arrests, asserting that nothing short of physical destruction satisfies the plain language of the court’s expunction order, and nothing short of physical proof that this was done will save the State College police from a contempt citation.2 The trial court, essentially conceding that some record of appellant’s arrest and prosecution may still exist somewhere, although sealed and inaccessible, similarly focuses its efforts on asserting that “destruction” of the records was not what it meant to say when ordering “expunction” of appellant’s records. The Commonwealth, choosing not to contradict appellant’s assertions that his records may still exist somewhere, argues instead that destruction is not legally required in expungement orders, citing to the Criminal History Record Information Act, 18 Pa.C.S. § 9101 et seq.
Interesting though all of the above arguments may be, and understandable in light of the language contained in the expunction order,4 they are beside the point. We need not [596]*596reach the question, of whether appellant is entitled to “destruction” rather than (or in addition to) “removal” of his records from the files and computers at State College. At the hearing held in this case on August 26, 1994, the officer in charge of records and data processing, Corporal Stuller, testified that the records “were removed within a day to two days” after he received the court’s expungement order. In addition, the chief of the State College police department, Thomas King, testified that “[t]here are no records in our computer system or in our incident files regarding Mr. Restauri. [] There are no records in any files existing[,] formal or informal in any office of the State College Police Department, mine includ[ed].” Thus, the trial court determined that there were no grounds upon which to find the State College Police in contempt.
A close reading of appellant’s argument confirms our conclusion that appellant is really petitioning the trial court to find that the police in State College were in contempt at some undefined time prior to the August 26, 1994, hearing. For this contention appellant relies upon Corporal Stuller’s testimony at the earlier hearing on appellant’s motion to compel the Delaware authorities to comply with the expunction order, held on January 10, 1994, or seven months before the hearing on appellant’s contempt petition was held. In this regard, appellant completely misunderstands the purpose of a petition for civil contempt, which is to “coerce the contemnor into compliance” with a court order, or face sanctions. Rulli v. Dunn, 337 Pa.Super. 613, 487 A.2d 430 (1985). However, the question before the trial eourt was whether, on August 26, 199k, any records existed, anywhere.
The certified record from the hearing on appellant’s contempt petition confirms the fact that a search of the computerized records system at State College disclosed no reference to appellant or his arrests.5 Whether such records were still in existence at some time prior to the contempt hearing in August, 1994, is wholly irrelevant for purposes of a contempt proceeding. Civil contempt proceedings are not intended to provide sanctions in hindsight. Appellant may find testimony from the chief of the State College Police Department6 that no records exist anywhere inadequate. We find it as compelling as did the trial court: there was no evidence that, as of August 26, 1994, any of appellant’s records still existed, anywhere.
Appellate review of a trial court’s actions relies heavily upon the sound discre[597]*597tion of the trial judge. Goodman v. Goodman, 383 Pa.Super. 374, 556 A.2d 1379 (1989). Reversal occurs only in the event that a clear abuse of the trial court’s discretion is evident. Mueller v. Anderson, 415 Pa.Super. 458, 609 A.2d 842 (1992). It was not an abuse of the trial court’s discretion to find that testimony that appellant’s arrest records no longer exist constitutes compliance with the trial court’s expunetion order of September 21,1991. As there is no remedial action left for the State College Police to take, there is no basis for finding them in contempt. Rulli, supra (civil contempt defined as a refusal to do an act ordered).
In summary, it is clear that appellant was convicted of the offenses for which he requested expungement.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
664 A.2d 593, 444 Pa. Super. 593, 1995 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-restauri-pasuperct-1995.