C.R. Vance v. PennDOT, Bureau of Driver Licensing

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 24, 2017
DocketC.R. Vance v. PennDOT, Bureau of Driver Licensing - 1621 C.D. 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of C.R. Vance v. PennDOT, Bureau of Driver Licensing (C.R. Vance v. PennDOT, Bureau of Driver Licensing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.R. Vance v. PennDOT, Bureau of Driver Licensing, (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Connor Robert Vance : : v. : No. 1621 C.D. 2016 : Submitted: March 24, 2017 Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, : Department of Transportation, : Bureau of Driver Licensing, : : Appellant :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE COLINS FILED: May 24, 2017

The Department of Transportation, Bureau of Driver Licensing (Department) appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County (Trial Court) sustaining the appeal of Connor Robert Vance (Licensee) from a one-year suspension of his driver’s license imposed by the Department based on a conviction of driving with a suspended sentence. We agree with the Department that it met its burden of proof related to the one-year license suspension and Licensee did not present evidence to rebut the basis for the suspension. However, as the Department acknowledges in its brief, Licensee presented evidence at the hearing that identified a breakdown in the administrative process that may have prevented him from timely responding to the underlying citations. Therefore, in accordance with this Court’s opinion in Piasecki v. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Driver Licensing, 6 A.3d 1067 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010), we vacate the Trial Court’s order sustaining Licensee’s appeal of the one-year license suspension and remand this matter to the Trial Court with directions to hold Licensee’s appeal in abeyance while he may pursue a nunc pro tunc appeal1 of the underlying citations. On June 28, 2016, the Department sent a notice to Licensee informing him that his driving privilege was being suspended for one year based on an August 21, 2014 conviction for an August 9, 2014 violation of Section 1543(a) of the Vehicle Code, 75 Pa. C.S. § 1543(a), which provides that any person driving a motor vehicle with a suspended, revoked or cancelled license is guilty of a summary offense. (Notice of Suspension, Reproduced Record (R.R.) 5a.) The one-year suspension was authorized pursuant to subsection (c)(1) of Section 1543, which provides that:

(c) Suspension or revocation of operating privilege.-- Upon receiving a certified record of the conviction of any person under this section, the department shall suspend or revoke that person’s operating privilege as follows: (1) If the department’s records show that the person was under suspension, recall or cancellation on the date of violation, and had not been restored, the department shall suspend the person’s operating privilege for an additional one-year period.

75 Pa. C.S. § 1543(c)(1).

1 Nunc pro tunc, a Latin phrase meaning “now for then,” denotes an order “[h]aving retroactive legal effect through a court’s inherent power.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1174 (9th ed. 2009). “When an order is signed ‘nunc pro tunc’...it means that a thing is now done which should have been done [as of an earlier] date.” Id. (citing 35A C.J.S. Federal Civil Procedure § 370 (1960)).

2 Licensee filed a timely appeal of the notice of suspension, and on September 1, 2016 a hearing was held before the Trial Court. At the hearing, Licensee appeared pro se, and his mother assisted in presenting his argument without objection by the Department’s counsel. (Sept. 1, 2016 Hearing Transcript (H.T.) at 3, R.R. 9a.) The Department submitted into evidence a packet of certified documents that included a conviction report for Licensee’s violation of Section 1543(a), copies of two October 11, 2013 notices of suspension sent to Licensee informing him that his driving privilege was being suspended indefinitely effective November 1, 2013, and a copy of Licensee’s “Certified Driving History.” (Id. at 3-4, R.R. 9a-10a; Exhibit C-1, R.R. 29a, 32a-44a.) Licensee testified at the hearing that he was pulled over for speeding on August 9, 2014 and that he “had no clue” that his license was suspended when informed by the officer. (H.T. at 18-19, R.R. 24a-25a.) In addition, Licensee stated that he had contacted the Department on multiple occasions attempting to pay the fines for the tickets that resulted in his October 11, 2013 provisional suspensions, but that “everybody is throwing us in a million different directions” and he felt that his only recourse was to file an appeal from the June 28, 2016 suspension. (Id. at 5, 17-19, R.R. 11a, 23a-25a.) Licensee’s mother stated that Licensee never received notice of the magisterial district judge hearing for the alleged 2013 violations and that when she and her son attempted to resolve the suspension that resulted from the failure to pay those fines, they discovered that the Freeland district court in Luzerne County, which was listed on the notices of suspension and Department restoration letter, had closed. (Id. at 5-6, 14, R.R. 11a- 12a, 20a.) Licensee’s mother further explained that she and her son made numerous further unsuccessful attempts to contact the Department and the other

3 district courts in Luzerne County before finally discovering which district court received the closed court’s docket. (Id. at 6-7, 14-17, R.R. 12a-13a, 20a-23a.) Licensee’s mother stated that she then learned that she did not receive notice of the Freeland district court’s closure or the transfer to a new district court because the district court had an outdated address that did not reflect the updated address on file for Licensee with the Department. (Id. at 7, 11, R.R. 13a, 17a.) Following the hearing, the Trial Court entered an order sustaining Licensee’s appeal and rescinding Licensee’s suspension. The Department then timely appealed the Trial Court’s order.2 In its subsequent opinion issued pursuant to Rule of Appellate Procedure 1925(a), the Trial Court explained that it found credible both Licensee’s and his mother’s accounts of the “extraordinary and continuing efforts” undertaken to pay his fines and resolve his suspensions and “the resulting frustration of being referred back to the closed district court each and every time.” (Nov. 15, 2016 Opinion at 3-4.) Though the Trial Court found that a nunc pro tunc appeal of the underlying convictions would have been an appropriate avenue for Licensee to have taken and was warranted on the record, the Trial Court concluded that fundamental fairness and due process required that the appeal from the June 28, 2016 notice of suspension be sustained and that sending Licensee “back to square one with a nunc pro tunc appeal and continue the seemingly never-ending bureaucratic odyssey of obstruction was an untenable result.” (Id. at 4 (emphasis added).)

2 This Court’s review of a trial court order in an appeal from a license revocation is limited to determining whether the trial court’s findings are supported by competent evidence and whether the trial court committed an error of law or an abuse of discretion. Piasecki, 6 A.3d at 1070 n.7.

4 Before this Court, the Department argues that it met its burden of proof regarding the one-year license suspension imposed on Licensee by presenting certified documents that demonstrated that the Department’s records accurately reflected that Licensee’s license was suspended when he received a citation on August 9, 2014 for driving on a suspended license in violation of Section 1543(a) and that the Department received a record of Licensee’s August 21, 2014 conviction for that violation.

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Bluebook (online)
C.R. Vance v. PennDOT, Bureau of Driver Licensing, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cr-vance-v-penndot-bureau-of-driver-licensing-pacommwct-2017.