J.L. Hawkins v. Adult Probation & Collections Unit, Com. of PA DOC

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 2025
Docket404 M.D. 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of J.L. Hawkins v. Adult Probation & Collections Unit, Com. of PA DOC (J.L. Hawkins v. Adult Probation & Collections Unit, Com. of PA DOC) 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
J.L. Hawkins v. Adult Probation & Collections Unit, Com. of PA DOC, (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Joyce Lynn Hawkins, : Petitioner : : v. : : Adult Probation & Collections Unit, : Commonwealth of Pennsylvania : Department of Corrections, : No. 404 M.D. 2023 Respondents : Submitted: November 6, 2024

BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge HONORABLE MATTHEW S. WOLF, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION1 BY JUDGE FIZZANO CANNON FILED: May 15, 2025

Petitioner, Joyce Lynn Hawkins (Hawkins), seeks relief from this Court in our original jurisdiction, asserting that the portion of her 2015 criminal sentence ordering restitution was illegal. Currently before the Court for disposition are preliminary objections filed by Respondent, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

1 Because the vote of the commissioned judges was evenly divided, this opinion is filed “as circulated” pursuant to Section 256(b) of the Court’s Internal Operating Procedures, 210 Pa. Code §69.256(b). McLinko v. Commonwealth, 270 A.3d 1278, 1280 n.1 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2022). Department of Corrections (DOC),2 demurring to the petition for review (Petition)3 on the basis that the Petition constitutes an improper collateral attack on Hawkins’s conviction because such challenges are exclusively governed by proceedings in the sentencing court under the Post Conviction Relief Act (PCRA).4 For the reasons discussed below, this Court will sustain the DOC’s demurrer and transfer the Petition to the sentencing court. I. Background In October 2014, Hawkins pleaded guilty to theft after misappropriating funds from her employer. Pet. at 3. Her February 2015 sentence included an order to pay restitution of $1,038,183.00. Id. Hawkins asserts that her appeal rights ended in 2015 and that she has been paying restitution pursuant to her sentence. Id. On October 21, 2019, the Pennsylvania Superior Court issued its decision in Commonwealth v. Hunt, 220 A.3d 582 (Pa. Super. 2019).5 In Hunt, the Superior Court concluded that a sentence of restitution under Section 1106(a) of the Crimes Code, 18 Pa.C.S. § 1106(a), could not be imposed in favor of a business entity because the applicable statutory provision defining victims entitled to restitution under a criminal sentence did not include business entities. Hunt, 220

2 The other Respondent in the case, Chester County’s Adult Probation & Collections Unit (County Probation), was dismissed from the action previously, as explained below. 3 Hawkins originally filed a civil complaint in the Chester County Court of Common Pleas (Common Pleas Court), which that court transferred to this Court, as explained below. Pursuant to this Court’s order dated October 16, 2023, the transferred complaint is treated as a petition for review in this Court’s original jurisdiction.

4 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9546. 5 This Court is not bound by decisions of the Superior Court, but we may cite them as persuasive authority where they address analogous issues. See Hill v. Governor of Commonwealth, 309 A.3d 238, 245 n.12 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2024).

2 A.3d at 591. The Superior Court acknowledged that a 2018 statutory amendment had expanded the definition of a “victim” to include a business entity. See Section 1106(c)(1)(ii)(G) of the Crimes Code, 18 Pa.C.S. § 1106(c)(1)(ii)(G) (listing a “business entity” on the prioritization of victims to receive restitution); see also Section 1106(h) of the Crimes Code, 18 Pa.C.S. § 1106(h) (defining a “[v]ictim” as including “any business entity”). However, because the previous version of the statute was in effect at all times pertinent to the defendant/appellant’s arrest and conviction and there was no indication that the amendment was intended to apply retroactively, the previous version of the statute, which did not include business entities in its definition of victims, applied. Hunt, 220 A.3d at 587. Hawkins filed her civil complaint with the Common Pleas Court on July 16, 2022, naming County Probation and the DOC as defendants. See Pet. at 1 (time stamp). Relying on Hunt, Hawkins asserted that the restitution segment of her criminal sentence was illegal because her employer was a business entity and, therefore, not a “victim” that Hawkins could be ordered to reimburse as part of her sentence.6 Pet. at 3-4. Hawkins sought declaratory and injunctive relief to invalidate her restitution sentence and to prevent further enforcement of the restitution sentence; she also sought an award of attorneys’ fees and costs. Id. at 9. The DOC filed preliminary objections in the Common Pleas Court that included both a jurisdictional challenge and a demurrer.7 See Hawkins v. Adult Prob.

6 Section 1106(g) of the Crimes Code provides that an order of mandatory restitution as part of a criminal sentence does not prevent a person or entity against which a crime has been committed from seeking recovery of a resulting loss from the perpetrator directly in civil court. 18 Pa.C.S. § 1106(g).

7 County Probation also filed preliminary objections in the Common Pleas Court. County Probation’s preliminary objections are not contained in the record before this Court, but the DOC’s

3 & Enforcement Unit (C.P. Chester Cnty., No. 2022-04223-IR) (Hawkins I), Defendant DOC’s Preliminary Objections (filed July 26, 2022) (DOC Common Pleas POs). In its jurisdictional challenge, the DOC asserted that this Court has exclusive original jurisdiction over claims related to deductions of restitution costs. Id. at 2. In its two-pronged demurrer, the DOC asserted, as an alternative to transferring the action pursuant to the jurisdictional challenge, that the Common Pleas Court could decline to transfer the case to this Court and could instead dismiss the action on the basis that this Court would not be able to grant relief in any event. First, the DOC averred that the case against it was moot because Hawkins is no longer in DOC custody and is not subject to deductions by the DOC from her inmate account. Id. at 2-3. Second, the DOC posited that Hawkins’s claim constituted a collateral attack on the legality of her criminal sentence that could be asserted only under the PCRA, not in a separate civil action. Id. at 3-4. By order dated May 26, 2023, the Common Pleas Court sustained the DOC’s preliminary objection challenging jurisdiction and agreed that Hawkins’s request for declaratory and injunctive relief relating to deductions from her inmate account lay exclusively in this Court’s jurisdiction. Hawkins I (citing Commonwealth v. Danysh, 833 A.2d 151 (Pa. Super. 2003)). The Common Pleas Court therefore transferred the action to this Court. Hawkins I. On October 16, 2023, this Court issued an order stating that it would treat Hawkins’s civil complaint in the Common Pleas Court as a petition for review addressed to this Court’s original jurisdiction. The order also set a briefing schedule

brief before this Court states that the Common Pleas Court sustained County Probation’s preliminary objection and dismissed County Probation from the action. DOC Br. at 4-5. Neither Hawkins nor the DOC suggests that any claim against County Probation remains.

4 relating to the DOC’s remaining preliminary objection, the demurrer. The briefs having been filed, this matter is ready for disposition. II. Issues In its preliminary objections before this Court, the DOC renews the arguments it asserted in its demurrer before the Common Pleas Court. The DOC asserts that Hawkins’s claim is really a collateral attack on the legality of her criminal sentence that could be asserted only under the PCRA, not in a separate civil action.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Danysh
833 A.2d 151 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2003)
Stackhouse v. Commonwealth
832 A.2d 1004 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2003)
Balshy v. Rank
490 A.2d 415 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1985)
Moss v. SCI - Mahanoy Superintendent Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole
194 A.3d 1130 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Hill v. Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
679 A.2d 773 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1996)
Com. v. Hunt, B.
2019 Pa. Super. 296 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019)

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