Commonwealth v. Samuel

961 A.2d 57, 599 Pa. 166, 2008 Pa. LEXIS 2262
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 17, 2008
Docket30 EAP 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 961 A.2d 57 (Commonwealth v. Samuel) 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. Samuel, 961 A.2d 57, 599 Pa. 166, 2008 Pa. LEXIS 2262 (Pa. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice TODD.

In this direct appeal, we are asked to determine whether the sentencing court erred in making the factual determination that Appellant Eric Samuel’s burglary conviction was a “crime of violence,” triggering the mandatory “two-strikes” sentencing provision of 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9714(g). For the following reasons, we find no error in the sentencing court’s application of the two-strikes provision in this case, and affirm.

On November 13, 2003, by his own admission, Appellant burglarized the apartment of his neighbor, Jamaal Garnett, on Spring Garden Street in Philadelphia. The uncontradicted trial testimony revealed that at about 1:30 p.m, Garnett was in the living room of his second floor apartment when he heard a loud crashing noise. He went to investigate and came upon Appellant raising his second floor bathroom window in an apparent attempt to break into the apartment. Garnett recognized Appellant from the neighborhood and called 911 from his cell phone as he ran out of the apartment, forgetting his keys. When the police arrived a short time later, Garnett was unable to let them into the building, and ran back up the fire escape. Upon entering his apartment, he observed Appellant inside with Garnett’s VCR in his hands. Appellant escaped out a second-story window carrying a duffel bag.

Appellant was apprehended nearby, and a search of his duffel bag yielded a VCR. Garnett identified his VCR and Appellant at the scene of the arrest. Following Appellant’s arrest, Detective William Farrell administered Miranda warnings and took Appellant’s statement, wherein he admitted to climbing into Garnett’s apartment through the bathroom win *169 dow and removing Garnett’s VCR and $10 in cash. Appellant also admitted to having committed two other burglaries at the homes of Ruth Mack and Paul White in August and November 2003, respectively.

Based on Appellant’s confession to the three burglaries, Appellant was charged with three counts of burglary as felonies of the first degree 1 and three counts of theft by unlawful taking. 2 He was tried by a jury on October 28, 2004 before the Honorable Shelley Robins New. At trial, the Commonwealth presented abundant evidence against Appellant, including not only the eyewitness testimony of Garnett and the arresting officers, but also Appellant’s confession, wherein he acknowledged that a person was present at the time he committed the Garnett burglary:

Q. How did you get into the apartment?
A. Second floor bathroom window. I climbed up the rear using gates on the windows. The bathroom window was closed but unlocked. I opened the window, climbed inside. After getting inside, the bathroom door was closed. I walked out of the bathroom into like the bedroom. I picked up $10 and some change. Then I turned around and I looked and unplugged and took the VCR. That’s when the guy came back. I ran towards the window, climbed down, and was arrested by police.

N.T. Trial, 10/28/04, at 123. In addition, in a strategic move in which Appellant conceded having burglarized Garnett’s home in order to make his challenge at trial of the other two burglaries seem more plausible to the jury, Appellant’s counsel openly acknowledged during closing arguments that Gar-nett witnessed Appellant enter the apartment through the bathroom window. He further acknowledged that Garnett saw Appellant in Garnett’s apartment holding Garnett’s VCR when Garnett briefly returned. Appellant’s counsel told the jury:

*170 They have the eyewitnesses. Mr. Garnett himself saw [Appellant] in the apartment [and] coming into the apartment. • They have the officers outside who saw him leaving with Mr. Garnett’s items in his hand. There’s no reasonable doubt in that case. That’s the kind of case where they have met their burden of proof.

Id. at 163.

In the charge to the jury, the trial court defined burglary according to its statutory definition under Section 3502(a) of the Crimes Code. 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 3502(a). Apparently anticipating the Commonwealth would seek application of the two-strikes provision in 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9714—which, as we discuss more fully below, provides a mandatory minimum sentence when a defendant commits a second “crime of violence” including, inter alia, “burglary of a structure adapted for overnight accommodation in which at the time of the offense any person is present,” id. § 9714(g)—the trial judge indicated in her PaiR.A.P.1925(a) opinion that she offered the Commonwealth the opportunity to request a separate finding by the jury that Garnett was present at the time of the November 13, 2003 burglary, but the Commonwealth declined. Trial Court Opinion, 3/29/06, at 4. 3 Following Appellant’s conviction of all charges by the jury, the Commonwealth gave notice of its intention to seek application of the two-strikes provision at sentencing.

At Appellant’s sentencing on February 9, 2005, the Commonwealth indeed sought application of the mandatory second-strike provision in 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9714, introducing into ■ evidence documentation that Appellant previously was convicted of aggravated assault, a first-degree felony, in an unrelated case. The Commonwealth then contended Appellant’s conviction for the Garnett burglary constituted a second strike under Section 9714 because the evidence at trial revealed that Garnett was at home, in a building adapted for overnight accommodations, when Appellant perpetrated the burglary, and thus this constituted a “crime of violence” under that *171 section. Appellant countered that because the bill of information charging him with the Garnett burglary did not specify that a person was present, and because the jury was not specifically asked to make such a factual determination, the burglary conviction could not qualify as a “crime of violence” and thus should not count as a second strike.

The sentencing court, nevertheless, made the factual finding Garnett was present in his home when Appellant entered and thus that the burglary was a crime of violence under Section 9714. Applying Section 9714(a)(1) accordingly, the court sentenced Appellant to the mandatory minimum sentence of 10 to 20 years imprisonment for the Garnett burglary, plus two additional concurrent sentences for the other two burglary convictions of an aggregate term of two to four years. 4 N.T. Sentencing Hearing, 2/9/05, at 25-28. Appellant filed a post-sentence motion to modify the sentence imposed on the Gar-nett burglary, which the trial judge denied on March 14, 2005, and Appellant timely appealed to the Superior Court.

In her Rule 1925(a) opinion, Judge New concluded that in sentencing Appellant, she incorrectly applied the mandatory second-strike provision because the jury did not make the specific factual finding that Garnett was present at his home at the time of the burglary. Trial Court Opinion, 3/29/06, at 7. The trial court thus requested the Superior Court to remand the matter for resentencing. Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
961 A.2d 57, 599 Pa. 166, 2008 Pa. LEXIS 2262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-samuel-pa-2008.