Commonwealth v. Viglione

842 A.2d 454, 2004 Pa. Super. 22, 2004 Pa. Super. LEXIS 55
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 29, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 842 A.2d 454 (Commonwealth v. Viglione) 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. Viglione, 842 A.2d 454, 2004 Pa. Super. 22, 2004 Pa. Super. LEXIS 55 (Pa. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION BY FORD ELLIOTT, J.:

¶ 1 We granted en banc review to determine whether the law of the case doctrine precludes our consideration of appellant’s double jeopardy claim. Having concluded that an exception to that doctrine allows our review, we nonetheless find no merit to the claim. We therefore affirm appellant’s judgment of sentence for driving with license suspended. In order to reach that result, however, we must address and surmount several procedural roadblocks along the way.

¶ 2 A summary of the facts and procedure follows. The complainant, Eric Dorsch, who operates a wrecker as part of his job as a provider of emergency road service, spotted appellant riding his motorcycle in the emergency lane of an interstate highway and traveling at a high rate of speed. Dorsch, who was patrolling the interstate at the time, therefore radioed ahead to Trooper Jolando Hinton, who was finishing his investigation of an accident farther up the interstate, to watch out for the motorcycle. As a result, Trooper Hinton stopped appellant. Dorsch arrived at the scene while Trooper Hinton was talking with appellant and stopped to obtain some information. Following this incident, appellant returned to the interstate on two different dates and threatened Dorsch. The first incident allegedly involved verbal threats while both individuals were operating their vehicles. The second incident, however, involved appellant’s allegedly stopping Dorsch and threatening to shoot him while pointing a gun at him. (Notes of testimony, 3/31/00 at 10-18.)

¶ 3 Appellant was subsequently arrested and charged with numerous counts, includ *457 ing disorderly conduct and driving with license suspended. 1 The case proceeded to a non-jury trial before the Honorable Lester G. Nauhaus (“The Court”). At the close of the Commonwealth’s case in chief, the following exchange, which is the core of appellant’s double jeopardy claim, occurred:

Patrick Thomassey Esq. (defense counsel): Just for the record I make a motion for judgment of acquittal on all counts, Your Honor.
[THE COURT]: Come forward, Mr. Spurgeon (Assistant District Attorney David Spurgeon, Esq. (‘Commonwealth counsel’)). All right. Driving while under suspension, the record is not enough. That motion is granted.
You have to force me — I will get you the case — but the Supreme Court has said that report without anything more is not enough to convict anybody of driving while under suspension. Has to be some, some indication that the defendant knew he was under suspension. There just hasn’t been any testimony so far as that’s concerned.
Recklessly endangering another person charge the statute—
[COMMONWEALTH COUNSEL]: Your Honor—
[THE COURT]: I am talking.
Yes, sir.
[COMMONWEALTH COUNSEL]: As in terms of the driving while suspended I believe the defendant made statements to Officer Hinton that he knew his license was suspended. I believe Officer Hinton testified as to that.
[THE COURT]: Okay. You are right. I withdraw that.

Id. at 35-36.

¶ 4 At the close of the evidence, the trial court found appellant guilty of summary disorderly conduct and driving while under suspension. Appellant waived a pre-sen-tence investigation and was immediately sentenced to pay a fine of $300 for summary disorderly conduct and $200 for driving while operating privileges were suspended. (Id. at 66.)

¶ 5 Appellant filed an immediate appeal on April 24, 2000, docketed at No. 785 WDA 2000. The trial court ordered appellant to file a Rule 1925(b) statement and appellant complied, raising issues of insufficiency of the evidence as to both convictions. Appellant also claimed the court erred when it failed to inform him of his right to allocution prior to sentencing and counsel was ineffective for failing to call the omission to the court’s attention. (Concise Statement of Matters to be Raised on Appeal, 8/1/00, R. at 14.) In his Rule 1925(a) opinion, Judge Nauhaus found sufficient evidence to support the disorderly conduct conviction but, upon review of the transcript, insufficient evidence to support the driving with a suspended license conviction. (Trial court opinion, 8/28/00 at 3-4, R. at 15.)

¶ 6 In his brief to this court, appellant raised an issue he did not raise in his Rule 1925(b) statement:

Were appellant’s U.S. Const. [A]mend. V & XIV and Pa. Const. [A]rt. I § 10 rights violated when the trial court reversed its earlier order granting him a judgment of acquittal (and, to the extent an appellate challenge to this action was procedurally defaulted, was appellant denied his U.S. Const. [A]mend. VI & XIV and Pa. Const. [A]rt. I § 9 rights to the effective assistance of trial and appellate counsel by those defaults)?

Commonwealth v. Michael Viglione, No. 785 WDA 2000, unpublished memorandum *458 at 3, 778 A.2d 1249 (Pa.Super. filed May-11, 2001), R. at 16 (“Viglione I”).

¶ 7 The Viglione I court found insufficient evidence to support the disorderly conduct conviction but sufficient evidence to support the driving while operating privileges were suspended conviction and therefore remanded for re-sentencing. Regarding appellant’s double jeopardy claim, the Viglione I panel, in a footnote, stated:

Appellant’s final complaint is that his constitutional rights were violated (a) when the trial court, after having granted a judgment of acquittal on the charge of summarg disorderly conduct in his favor, reconsidered and then reversed that judgment; and/or (b) when his trial and prior appellate counsel ineffectively failed to preserve this issue for appellate review. Appellant’s Brief at 26. In light of our reversal of Appellant’s judgment of sentence on his summary disorderly conduct conviction, we need not address this issue.

Viglione I at 10 n. 4 (emphasis added). Appellant filed a petition for reconsideration, which this court denied, and also filed a petition for allocatur, which our supreme court denied.

¶ 8 The case was remanded for re-sentencing on the only remaining conviction, driving with operating privileges suspended. Prior to the hearing on re-sentencing, Scott Rudolf, Esq., who is appellant’s present counsel and who filed the brief in support of appellant’s first appeal, in which he raised the double jeopardy claim, filed a motion pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 704(B), 42 Pa.C.S.A. for pre-sentence relief. Counsel acknowledges the impropriety of the written motion, but notes the Commonwealth consented to the court’s hearing the motion, and the court addressed the motion prior to sentencing. (Notes of testimony, 4/16/02 at 3-6.)

¶ 9 In the motion, counsel requested that the court vacate appellant’s conviction because it violated the double jeopardy clauses of both the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
842 A.2d 454, 2004 Pa. Super. 22, 2004 Pa. Super. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-viglione-pasuperct-2004.