Court Opinion

ID: 4511921
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-03-02 17:10:14.635224+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:38:41.617320
License: Public Domain

J-S65041-19

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                                :
                v.                              :
                                                :
                                                :
    RICHARD E. LAWRENCE                         :
                                                :
                       Appellant                :   No. 670 MDA 2019

              Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered April 24, 2019
     In the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County Criminal Division at
                       No(s): CP-36-CR-0003170-2012

BEFORE:      PANELLA, P.J., KUNSELMAN, J., and COLINS, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY COLINS, J.:                      FILED: MARCH 2, 2020

        Appellant, Richard E. Lawrence, appeals from the order of the Court of

Common Pleas of Lancaster County (trial court) that denied his first petition

filed under the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”).1 After careful review, we

affirm.

        This case arises out of sexual activity between Appellant and E.S., a boy

who was 16 at the time the conduct began in 2009.            Trial Court Opinion,

3/18/19 at 1. Appellant was over 53 years old when the first sexual contact

occurred. N.T. Trial, 1/31/14, at 194.

____________________________________________

*   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
1   42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541–9546.
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       Appellant, who was not related to E.S., worked as a driver for E.S.’s

uncle and lived in a house owned by E.S.’s brother about a quarter mile from

E.S.’s house.   N.T. Trial, 1/30/14, at 94-95.   E.S. would go to Appellant’s

house to play ping pong and watch movies and television. Id. at 96, 111.

E.S. had no access to television or movies in his home and had very little

knowledge about sex. Id. at 95-96, 106. Initially, their conversations were

unrelated to sex, but E.S. began asking questions about sex in the movies

they were watching.    Id. at 96-97. One evening, after E.S. began asking

questions about sex, E.S. had an erection while they were watching a movie

and Appellant taught E.S. how to masturbate. Id. at 97, 111-12. E.S. asked

Appellant if they were doing something that was wrong and Appellant told him

that it was all right and that nobody could do anything about it. Id. at 112,

127.

       Appellant later taught E.S. about other sex acts and Appellant and E.S.

performed oral sex on each other. N.T. Trial, 1/30/14, at 97-98. Appellant

also had anal sex with E.S. Id. at 98-99. E.S. thought that it didn’t feel right

and was sort of scary when he saw Appellant’s penis the first time. Id. at 99-

100. Appellant and E.S. engaged in sexual activity approximately once a week

for over two years. Id. at 100, 112-13, 119. All of their sexual encounters

occurred when E.S. came to Appellant’s house or outdoors at night. Id. at

112-14. Appellant told E.S. not to tell anyone about their sexual activity. Id.

at 123.   E.S. tried to end the relationship after he turned 18, but did not

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because Appellant kept contacting him and he was afraid that Appellant would

come to his house and harm his family if he stopped going over to Appellant’s

house. Id. at 116-18, 127-29.

        Appellant was charged in 2012 of two counts of corruption of a minor,

indecent exposure, and unlawful contact with a minor,2 and was convicted of

those offenses by a jury on January 31, 2014. The two separate corruption

of a minor convictions were for two different periods of sexual contact, May

2009 to December 6, 2010 and December 7, 2010 to February 2011,3 due to

an amendment of the statute that increased the grading of the offense if an

additional element was proven.             On January 22, 2015, Appellant was

sentenced to an aggregate term of imprisonment of 101/2 to 21 years,

consisting of consecutive sentences of 31/2 to 7 years for the December 7,

2010 to February 2011 corruption of a minor, 21/2 to 5 years for the May 2009

to December 6, 2010 corruption of a minor, 1 to 2 years for indecent exposure,

and 31/2 to 7 years for unlawful contact with a minor.

        Appellant timely filed a post-sentence motion challenging this sentence

as excessive, which was denied by the trial court, and timely appealed. On

August 22, 2016, this Court affirmed the judgment of sentence in an

unpublished memorandum. Commonwealth v. Lawrence, 156 A.3d 344

____________________________________________

2   18 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301(a)(1)(i) and (ii), 3127(a), and 6318(a), respectively.
3The February 2011 end of this period was based on the date that E.S. turned
18.

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(Pa. Super. 2016). Appellant’s timely petition for allowance of appeal was

denied    by    the    Pennsylvania      Supreme   Court   on   April   11,   2017.

Commonwealth v. Lawrence, 168 A.3d 1250 (Pa. 2017).

       On March 22, 2018, Appellant filed the instant timely first PCRA petition.

Counsel was appointed and, following the trial court’s grant of leave to do so,

filed an amended PCRA petition that raised the ineffective assistance of

counsel claims that Appellant argues in this appeal. On March 18, 2019, the

trial court issued a notice pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 907 of its intent to dismiss

the PCRA petition without a hearing and an opinion setting forth the reasons

for dismissal. On April 24, 2019, the trial court entered its order dismissing

the Appellant’s amended PCRA petition. This timely appeal followed.4

       Appellant presents the following issues for our review:

       A. Whether trial counsel was ineffective when he failed to litigate
       that as applied to this defendant, the provisions of 18 Pa.C.S.A.
       §6301, 18 Pa.C.S.A. §3127(a) and 18 Pa.C.S.A. §6318 were void
       for vagueness?

       B. Whether trial counsel was ineffective when he failed to litigate
       that the defendant was denied his rights to privacy by being
       unconstitutionally subjected to a prosecution for voluntary deviate
       sexual intercourse?

Appellant’s Brief at 4 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).

       We review the denial of a PCRA petition to determine whether the record

supports the court’s findings and whether its decision is free of legal error.

____________________________________________

4The trial court did not issue a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) order and adopted its March
18, 2019 opinion as its opinion in support of its April 24, 2019 dismissal order.

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Commonwealth v. Mason, 130 A.3d 601, 617 (Pa. 2015); Commonwealth

v. Smith, 181 A.3d 1168, 1174 (Pa. Super. 2018). Here, the trial court held

no hearing and made no factual findings. Rather, the issues in this appeal

involve constitutional challenges that are questions of law subject to our

plenary and de novo review. Commonwealth v. Pi Delta Psi, Inc., 211
A.3d 875, 886 (Pa. Super. 2019); Commonwealth v. Berry, 167 A.3d 100,

104 (Pa. Super. 2017).

      To be entitled to relief under the PCRA on a claim of ineffective

assistance of counsel, the convicted defendant must prove: (1) that the

underlying legal claim is of arguable merit; (2) that counsel’s action or inaction

had no reasonable basis designed to effectuate his client’s interests; and (3)

that he suffered prejudice as a result of counsel’s action or inaction. Mason,
130 A.3d at 618; Smith, 181 A.3d at 1174-75; Commonwealth v. Michaud,

70 A.3d 862, 867 (Pa. Super. 2013). The defendant must satisfy all three

prongs of this test to obtain relief under the PCRA. Mason, 130 A.3d at 618;

Smith, 181 A.3d at 1175; Michaud, 70 A.3d at 867. Appellant is correct that

only the first of these requirements need be addressed in this appeal. If his

constitutional arguments were in fact meritorious, they would result in

dismissal of the charges against him.       Trial counsel’s failure to raise the

arguments would therefore not be a reasonable strategic decision and would

necessarily have caused prejudice to Appellant. We conclude, however, that

Appellant’s constitutional arguments are without merit.

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      A statute may be found unconstitutionally vague if it does not provide

reasonable    standards   by   which   a   person   may   gauge   his   conduct.

Commonwealth v. Ludwig, 874 A.2d 623, 628 (Pa. 2005); Berry, 167 A.3d

at 108; Commonwealth v. Morgan, 913 A.2d 906, 911 (Pa. Super. 2006).

A statute is so vague that persons of reasonable intelligence have to guess

what conduct it prohibits violates due process.      Berry, 167 A.3d at 108;

Morgan, 913 A.2d at 911. Where, as here, First Amendment rights are not

implicated, the vagueness challenge must be analyzed as applied to the

defendant’s conduct and the issue is whether that statute gave sufficient

notice that the defendant’s conduct was prohibited. Berry, 167 A.3d at 108;

Commonwealth v. Orie, 88 A.3d 983, 1024 (Pa. Super. 2014). None of the

three statutes at issue here is unconstitutionally vague as applied to the

conduct for which Appellant was convicted.

      The Crimes Code defines the offense of corruption of minors in relevant

part as follows:

      (1) (i) Except as provided in subparagraph (ii), whoever, being
      of the age of 18 years and upwards, by any act corrupts or
      tends to corrupt the morals of any minor less than 18 years
      of age, or who aids, abets, entices or encourages any such minor
      in the commission of any crime, or who knowingly assists or
      encourages such minor in violating his or her parole or any order
      of court, commits a misdemeanor of the first degree.

      (ii) Whoever, being of the age of 18 years and upwards, by
      any course of conduct in violation of Chapter 31 (relating to sexual
      offenses) corrupts or tends to corrupt the morals of any
      minor less than 18 years of age, or who aids, abets, entices or
      encourages any such minor in the commission of an offense under
      Chapter 31 commits a felony of the third degree.

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18 Pa.C.S. § 6301(a)(1) (emphasis added).5                The standard for whether

conduct “corrupts or tends to corrupt the morals of [a] minor” is whether the

conduct would offend the common sense of the community and the sense of

decency, propriety and morality that most people entertain. Commonwealth

v. Slocum, 86 A.3d 272, 277, 281 (Pa. Super. 2014); Commonwealth v.

Decker, 698 A.2d 99, 101 (Pa. Super. 1997). This Court has held that this

standard gives sufficient notice to the ordinary person of what conduct is

prohibited and is not unconstitutionally vague. Commonwealth v. Randall,

133 A.2d 276, 279-81 (Pa. Super. 1957); see also Slocum, 86 A.3d at 278,

281    n.14    (reaffirming     that    corruption   of   minors   statute   is   not

unconstitutionally vague).

       Contrary to Appellant’s contention, the decisions upholding the

constitutionality of the corruption of minors statute do not require that the

defendant’s conduct be a criminal act. In Randall, the conduct constituting

corruption of minors did not consist solely of violating the liquor laws, but also

included soliciting sex from minors as old as 17. 133 A.2d at 279. In Slocum,

the conduct consisted of the 59-year-old’s enticing a 15-year-old to maintain

____________________________________________

5 Section (a)(1)(i) was in effect during all of Appellant’s conduct and was the
basis for Appellant’s corruption of a minor conviction for the period May 2009
to December 6, 2010. Section (a)(1)(ii) was added effective December 6,
2010 and was the basis for Appellant’s corruption of a minor conviction for the
period December 7, 2010 to February 2011.

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secretive contact with him that he knew was prohibited by the boy’s mother

and urging the boy to lie to his mother about the contact. 86 A.3d at 280-81.

      As applied to Appellant’s conduct here, the corruption of minors statute

is not unconstitutionally vague.      The conduct for which Appellant was

convicted was conduct that an ordinary person would understand that the

statute prohibited. Appellant was not merely an adult who had a consensual

sexual relationship with a minor over the age of consent. Rather, he initiated

the sexual relationship and actively enticed the 16-year-old to engage in sex

with him and he was over 53 years old, more than twice the minor’s age, when

he led the minor into this relationship. Initiation of a sexual relationship with

a minor by an adult more than twice the minor’s age constitutes conduct that

an ordinary person would understand to be offensive to community standards

of decency, propriety and morality, even if the minor is over the age of

consent.   Decker, 698 A.2d at 101-02 (37-year-old man having sexual

intercourse with a girl over 20 years younger who passively consented is

conduct that offends “the common sense of the community and the sense of

decency, propriety and the morality which most people entertain” and

constitutes corruption of a minor, even though girl was above the age of

consent). Indeed, the record shows that Appellant was aware that his conduct

was illegal. Appellant not only told E.S. that he should keep the relationship

a secret, but also urged E.S. to promise that he would not testify against

Appellant. N.T. Trial, 1/30/14, at 126-27.

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      The other two statutes at issue set forth even more clearly what conduct

is prohibited. The Crimes Code defines the offense of unlawful contact with a

minor in relevant part as follows:

      A person commits an offense if he is intentionally in contact with
      a minor, or a law enforcement officer acting in the performance of
      his duties who has assumed the identity of a minor, for the
      purpose of engaging in an activity prohibited under any of the
      following and either the person initiating the contact or the person
      being contacted is within this Commonwealth:

      (1) Any of the offenses enumerated in Chapter 31 (relating to
      sexual offenses). . . .

18 Pa.C.S. § 6318(a). This statute further defines “minor’ as “[a]n individual

under 18 years of age.”      18 Pa.C.S. § 6318(c).       A person of ordinary

intelligence can plainly understand that this statute makes it a crime to

intentionally have contact with a person under 18 for purposes of committing

an offense enumerated in Chapter 31. Accordingly, the unlawful contact with

a minor statute provides reasonable standards by which a person may gauge

his conduct and is not unconstitutionally vague. Morgan, 913 A.2d at 911-

12. Only if the Chapter 31 offense at issue is itself void for vagueness can an

unlawful contact with a minor charge be unconstitutionally vague. The statute

on which Appellant’s conviction for unlawful contact with a minor was

predicated was the indecent exposure statute, 18 Pa.C.S. § 3127, which is an

offense enumerated in Chapter 31 of the Crimes Code.

      The indecent exposure statute is neither vague nor unclear.       Section

3127 of the Crimes Code provides:

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      A person commits indecent exposure if that person exposes his or
      her genitals in any public place or in any place where there are
      present other persons under circumstances in which he or she
      knows or should know that this conduct is likely to offend, affront
      or alarm.

18 Pa.C.S. § 3127.     This language unambiguously prohibits exposure of

genitals both in a public place and anywhere that the actor knows or should

know that he is exposing himself to a person who is likely to be offended or

alarmed. The standard of knowledge or reason to know that the exposure will

be likely to offend or alarm is a standard by which a person may gauge his

conduct. The indecent exposure statute and the unlawful contact with a minor

statute as applied to Appellant’s conduct are therefore constitutional.

      Appellant does not point to anything in the language of the indecent

exposure statute or unlawful contact with a minor statute that is unclear or

fails to give persons of ordinary intelligence notice of what conduct is

prohibited. Rather, he argues that exposing genitals in consensual sex acts

cannot constitute exposure that he could reasonably know would cause

offense   or alarm.     That, however, is a challenge        to   whether   the

Commonwealth proved the offense of indecent exposure, not a basis for

challenging the statute as unconstitutionally vague.      Moreover, Appellant

raised this argument that exposing genitals in consensual sex acts cannot

constitute indecent exposure in his direct appeal and this Court ruled on and

rejected it.   Commonwealth v. Lawrence, 889 MDA 2015, unpublished

memorandum at 3-4 (Pa. Super., filed August 22, 2016). Because Appellant

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has previously litigated that issue, it cannot constitute a basis for relief under

the PCRA.    42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9543(a)(3), 9544(a)(a)(2); Commonwealth v.

Spotz, 47 A.3d 63, 101 (Pa. 2012); Commonwealth v. Miller, 212 A.3d
1114, 1130-31 (Pa. Super. 2019).

      Appellant’s argument that he was unconstitutionally prosecuted for and

convicted of voluntary deviate sexual intercourse likewise fails. The fact that

Appellant’s sexual activity was consensual deviate sexual intercourse does not

convert the offenses of which he was convicted into prohibitions of voluntary

deviate sexual intercourse. Neither indecent exposure nor unlawful contact

with minors predicated on indecent exposure involves proof of any sexual

relationship or act of sexual intercourse or deviate sexual intercourse. While

Appellant’s corruption of a minor convictions were based on his sexual acts

with E.S., they were based on the age of the parties and Appellant’s initiation

of the sexual relationship with a minor, not on the type of sexual intercourse

or the gender of the participants. The offense of corruption of a minor applies

equally to heterosexual non-deviate sexual intercourse between a far older

adult and a minor over the age of consent. Decker, 698 A.2d at 101-02; see

also Commonwealth v. Sipps, __ A.3d __, __, 2019 Pa. Super. 370, *1, *5-

*7, *10 (filed December 31, 2019) (man who had sexual relationship with 16-

year-old girl prostitute convicted of corruption of minor). Nothing in the trial

court’s instructions to the jury suggested that Appellant could be convicted

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based on the same-sex nature of the acts or the type of sex acts that occurred.

See N.T., 1/31/14, at 241-64.

      Because the issues that trial counsel failed to raise lack merit, Appellant

did not prove any ineffective assistance of counsel. We therefore affirm the

trial court’s denial of Appellant’s PCRA petition.

      Order affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 03/02/2020

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