Court Opinion

ID: 9747273
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-27 15:08:06.213849+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:25:22.209351
License: Public Domain

ZAPPALA, Justice,
dissenting.
I join in Justice Cappy’s Dissenting Opinion but write separately to emphasize the inequities of the majority’s ruling. It has always been my view that the law is fair and impartial, favoring neither the prosecution nor the defendant. But, today, the majority fosters injustice by holding that an accused who is absent without cause on his date of trial, may be tried in absentia.
Citing court timeliness, scheduling, and judicial respect, the majority punishes the careless or willful defendant who fails to appear. Yet, this same majority fails to consider the instances where the prosecutor neglects to appear “without cause.” *107Surely, court timeliness, scheduling and judicial respect are also at stake in these circumstances. However, we do not consider waiving the prosecution’s right to try the defendant as an appropriate punishment.
In Commonwealth v. Carson, 510 Pa. 568, 510 A.2d 1233 (1986), we held that the lower court abused its discretion in sua sponte dismissing charges against the defendant when the prosecutor failed to timely appear for trial. As a basis for our holding we stated:
The failure of a party to appear at a scheduled time must involve more than a mere failure of time; the failure must involve a failure of justice or prejudice to a defendant to justify the discharge of a criminal action. When such interests are not involved, the offending party may be otherwise sanctioned without defeating the public interest.
510 Pa. at 572, 510 A.2d 1235.
I cannot accept the double standard that this court continues to adopt. If a defendant or his counsel fails to appear, sanctions are now imposed. He effectively loses the greatest of all rights, that being the rights which are afforded him by the Pennsylvania State Constitution. However, if a prosecutor fails to appear, we require a showing of prejudice. It has always been said that although we strive to achieve a perfect trial, the most that we can hopefully obtain is a fair trial. If the process is not fair, however, then the exercise has been futile. If prejudice is a material issue when the prosecutor fails to appear, then the same standard should be applied to a defendant.
CAPPY, J., joins this dissenting opinion.