Court Opinion

ID: 4527705
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-04-22 13:12:27.774797+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:16:48.705457
License: Public Domain

[J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.]
                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                 MIDDLE DISTRICT

 COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                   :   No. 48 MAP 2019
                                                 :
                      Appellee                   :   Appeal from the Order of the
                                                 :   Superior Court at No. 383 MDA
                                                 :   2018 dated December 7, 2018
               v.                                :   Affirming the Judgment of Sentence
                                                 :   of the Adams County Court of
                                                 :   Common Pleas, Criminal Division,
 VICTOR LEE COPENHAVER,                          :   at No. CP-01-CR-0001070-2015
                                                 :   dated September 18, 2017.
                      Appellant                  :
                                                 :   ARGUED: November 21, 2019

                     CONCURRING AND DISSENTING OPINION

JUSTICE WECHT                                                  DECIDED: April 22, 2020
      I join the Majority’s straightforward and important holding “that driving a vehicle

with an expired registration does not entail a breach of the peace.” Maj. Op. at 8. I write

separately to address three topics.

      First, whereas the Majority remands this case to the Superior Court, I would

instead resolve the matter here. The Majority directs the Superior Court to determine

“whether the parties’ factual stipulation should be read as indicating that the officer’s

understanding that the registration sticker was associated with a different vehicle arose

in the pre-stop timeframe . . . .” Id. Based upon the record before us, I would rule that

the stipulation does not create such an understanding.

      Second, even assuming that a court should interpret the parties’ stipulation in the

manner that the Commonwealth proposes, driving with a registration sticker belonging to
another vehicle would not amount to a breach of the peace under the Majority’s own

definition.

       Finally, I believe that our decision in Commonwealth v. Leet, 641 A.2d 299, 303

(Pa. 1994) (holding that “a sheriff (and his deputies) may make arrests for motor vehicle

violations which amount to breaches of the peace committed in their presence,” even in

the absence of any authorizing statute), should be overruled, given its flawed logic and

this Court’s continued struggle to outline the contours of sheriffs’ common law arrest

powers.

       Below, I take up each point in turn.

                                               I

       The Commonwealth maintains that it was before stopping Copenhaver that Deputy

Sheriff Timothy Beall discovered that the registration sticker on Copenhaver’s vehicle

actually belonged to another vehicle. The Majority states that this is “consistent with the

Commonwealth’s position throughout this litigation.”          Maj. Op. at 8.       While the

Commonwealth may have advanced this view consistently, at least at the appellate level,1

it is a position inconsistent with the actual record facts of the case.

1      Notably, Deputy Beall, the arresting officer, testified at trial that he pulled over
Copenhaver only because the registration sticker had expired, and that he learned that
the registration belonged to another vehicle only after stopping Copenhaver. See Notes
of Testimony (“N.T.”), 7/12/2017, at 14 (“During the traffic stop, we did receive information
back from our dispatcher that not only was the tag expired as the sticker displayed, the
tag which was on the truck did not even go to the truck, nor was it a truck tag, if I remember
correctly.”); id. at 20 (responding, “That is correct” to a question asking, “Your report notes
that you then pulled [Copenhaver] over for that expired registration sticker; is that
correct?”); id. at 24 (stating that “that’s the reason we kept following him is we were waiting
on the dispatcher to confirm that the tag was in fact expired”). The Assistant District
Attorney also argued to the trial court that Deputy Beall pulled over Copenhaver only for
an expired registration. See id. at 52 (“[Deputy Beall] testified that . . . he did not observe
any Vehicle Code violations other than the expired registration”).

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       In the affidavit of probable cause, attached to the initial criminal complaint, Deputy

Beall, the arresting officer and only witness at Copenhaver’s trial, attested that he and

Deputy Sheriff Angel Garcia “were in uniform, operating an unmarked patrol vehicle,”

when they noticed “a gray Dodge Truck traveling westbound in front of them.” Affidavit

of Probable Cause, 9/3/2015, at 1 (“Beall Affidavit”). Deputy Beall stated that “[f]urther

examination revealed the tag had an expired [registration] sticker.” Id. After the truck

made another turn, the “Deputies stopped the vehicle for the violation.” Id.

       The next paragraph of the affidavit establishes that it was only after Deputy Beall

“approached the driver,” after Deputy Beall “advised [Copenhaver] why he was stopped

and asked [him] to produce his license,” after Copenhaver told Deputy Beall that he had

a suspended license, after Deputy Beall “could smell an odor of marijuana . . ., as well as

a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage,” after Deputy Beall noted Copenhaver’s

“bloodshot eyes and slurred speech,” and after Copenhaver told Deputy Beall that “he

had an outstanding arrest warrant,” that Deputy Beall did proceed to “check[] Mr.

Copenhaver’s information via the dispatcher” and then learned that “the registration

displayed on the truck came back to a 2001 Pontiac,” not the Dodge truck that

Copenhaver was driving. Id.

       Copenhaver filed a motion to suppress the evidence resulting from the search of

his vehicle, arguing that he had not committed a breach of the peace and that Deputy

Beall thus could not have made the stop under a sheriff’s common law authority.

Copenhaver asserted only that Deputies Beall and Garcia “noticed that [Copenhaver’s]

vehicle registration tag had expired,” citing the Incident Report which contained language

identical to that in the Beall Affidavit.    Copenhaver’s Motion to Suppress at ¶ 2.

Copenhaver went on to write that “[a]s a result of the expired tag, the sheriffs effectuated

a traffic stop.” Id.

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       But then a funny thing happened on the way to the (judicial) forum.              The

suppression court issued an order reporting that the parties agreed to a set of stipulated

facts, including the following:

       The vehicle stop occurred as a result of the deputy sheriff observing the
       tailgate to the pickup truck operated by [Copenhaver] being in a down
       position. This caught his attention. He further observed that the registration
       on the pickup truck was expired, and additionally, the registration number
       was identified as belonging to a vehicle other than the one on which it was
       attached.
Order of Stipulated Facts, 1/12/2016, at ¶ 2 (emphasis added).

       Our standard of review for an order denying suppression is well-settled:

       When we review the ruling of a suppression court we must determine
       whether the factual findings are supported by the record. When it is a
       defendant who has appealed, we must consider only the evidence of the
       prosecution and so much of the evidence for the defense as, fairly read in
       the context of the record as a whole, remains uncontradicted. Assuming
       that there is support in the record, we are bound by the facts as are found
       and we may reverse the suppression court only if the legal conclusions
       drawn from those facts are in error.
Commonwealth v. Hicks, 208 A.3d 916, 925 (Pa. 2019) (citation omitted). Additionally,

for the purpose of reviewing the suppression court’s determination, we restrict

ourselves—correctly so—to the record at the time of that ruling. Commonwealth v. Frein,

206 A.3d 1049, 1064 (Pa. 2019) (citing In re L.J., 79 A.3d 1073, 1085 (Pa. 2013)).

       Less established, however, is how a reviewing court must assess a situation in

which the parties dispute the meaning of a stipulated fact.         The very definition of

“stipulation” opposes the notion of a dispute. See Stipulation, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY

(11th ed. 2019) (“A voluntary agreement between opposing parties concerning some

relevant point; esp., an agreement relating to a proceeding, made by attorneys

representing adverse parties to the proceeding.”). However, as the Majority notes, the

parties disagree here as to whether the set of stipulated facts meant only that Deputy

Beall, before stopping Copenhaver’s vehicle, had observed that the registration sticker

                            [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 4
was expired, or, rather, that Deputy Beall additionally observed at that juncture that the

registration belonged to a different vehicle. See Maj. Op. at 2–3.

       When the parties dispute the meaning of a “stipulated” fact, it is prudent to read

that fact in the light most favorable to the party who prevailed in the suppression court,

“[a]ssuming that there is support in the record” at the time of the suppression hearing for

such an interpretation. Hicks, 208 A.3d at 925. Even under such a standard, nothing in

the record suggests that Deputy Beall knew—before he stopped Copenhaver—that the

registration belonged to another vehicle. The language in Deputy Beall’s affidavit, which

comprises the totality of the factual record before the court at the time of the suppression

motion (aside from the disputed stipulation), is clear. After stopping Copenhaver’s vehicle

and speaking with Copenhaver,

       Deputy Beall checked Mr. Copenhaver’s information via the dispatcher and
       it was learned that Mr. Copenhaver’s driver’s license had expired (9-30-
       1993) and the warrant was active. Additionally, the registration displayed
       on the truck came back to a 2001 Pontiac and was verified as expired.
Beall Affidavit at 1.2 Thus, there is no “support in the record,” Hicks 208 A.3d at 925, as

of the time the suppression motion was filed, to allow for the Commonwealth’s position.3

2      Read in isolation, the language of the Order of Stipulated Facts could support
either perspective. It is possible to read the phrase “[h]e further observed” in the second
sentence as modifying both “that the registration on the pickup truck was expired” and
“additionally, the registration was identified as belonging to a vehicle other than the one
on which was attached.” Conversely, it is possible to read “[h]e further observed” as only
modifying the first phrase—the reference to the expired registration. Indeed, the final
phrase is written in the passive voice; “the registration number was identified” as
belonging to the 2001 Pontiac. Deputy Beall did not necessarily himself identify that the
registration belonged to another vehicle. Consistent with the Beall Affidavit, the
stipulation should be read as meaning that another party, the dispatcher, identified the
registration mismatch. And, as Deputy Beall noted in the affidavit, he did not hear from
the dispatcher until after he learned Copenhaver’s identity, which did not occur until after
Deputy Beall stopped the vehicle.
3      I do not dispute that it is possible for a law enforcement officer to know that a
registration sticker belongs to another vehicle before stopping a driver. While

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The stipulation cannot be read to indicate that Deputy Beall knew about the registration

mismatch before he stopped Copenhaver’s vehicle. Thus, there is no need to remand

that particular issue to the Superior Court.

       Additionally, the manner in which the Commonwealth ran with those stipulated

facts, and the trial court’s response, deserve comment.                In its brief opposing

Copenhaver’s motion to suppress, the Commonwealth stated repeatedly that Deputy

Beall observed that the registration belonged to another vehicle. See Commonwealth’s

Memorandum of Law in Support of Sheriff Deputy Authority to Conduct Traffic Stop

(“Commonwealth’s Suppression Brief”), 1/26/2016, at 1–2 (“Deputy Beall conducted a

vehicle stop after observing . . . that the registration displayed on the truck was expired

and actually belonged on a different vehicle.”); id. at 2 (“Deputy Beall had the authority to

conduct a traffic stop of [Copenhaver’s] vehicle after observing [Copenhaver] . . . with a

displayed registration that belonged on a vehicle other than the one [Copenhaver] was

operating.”); id. at 4 (“Here, we have a traffic stop occurring after Deputy Beall noticed

that Copenhaver was operating a pick-up truck . . . that had an expired registration sticker.

Further, Deputy Beall determined that the registration that was displayed on

Copenhaver’s truck belong to a different vehicle altogether.              Based upon those

observations, Deputy Beall conducted a traffic stop of Copenhaver’s vehicle.”); id. at 5

(“Deputy’s Beall’s traffic stop . . . followed . . . the display of a registration that belonged

Copenhaver was on bail, pending appeal of this case, he again was stopped for allegedly
driving under the influence. On September 21, 2018, Gettysburg Borough Police
Department Officer Shannon Hilliard noticed a Jeep parked behind a stop sign. Before
stopping the vehicle, Officer Hilliard “ran the registration to find that it was registered to a
2010 Cougar trailer, not a Jeep.” Affidavit of Probable Cause, 12/22/2018, at 1. Only
after running this registration did Officer Hilliard attest that she attempted to pull over
Copenhaver. Id.; see also Commonwealth’s Motion to Revoke Bail at ¶ 5 (noting that
Officer Hilliard “was attempting to pull [Copenhaver] over for an improper registration
number”). Unlike Officer Hilliard, Deputy Beall never stated that he ran the registration
number through a database before attempting to stop Copenhaver’s vehicle.

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on another vehicle.”). At no point did the Commonwealth cite to the factual record, or

even to the stipulated facts, for support of any of these statements.

       Most stridently, the Commonwealth posited that the registration belonging to

another vehicle endangered public safety:

       In addition to posing a safety risk to the public by not being properly
       registered, the display of a registration upon a vehicle to which it does not
       belong constitutes a breach of the peace because it can hide the true
       identity of the vehicle and its operator, specifically whether the vehicle is
       stolen and whether the driver is a fugitive from justice. Displaying a
       registration upon the wrong vehicle can also serve to conceal other
       countless acts of criminal activity constituting a breach[] of the peace, such
       as drug trafficking, human trafficking, illegal transport or possession of
       firearms, etc. Actions to conceal such behavior, i.e.[,] displaying an
       improper registration upon a vehicle, disturb public order and amount to
       breaches of the peace.
Id. at 5–6.   The Commonwealth cited nothing from the record that indicated that

Copenhaver used a vehicle registration to commit or attempt theft, drug trafficking, human

trafficking, or illegal transport or possession of firearms. And the Commonwealth cited

no legal authorities, professional publications, or other sources to support its claim that,

in general, operating a vehicle with a registration belonging to another vehicle is

calculated to facilitate the commission of or increase the likelihood of any such crimes.

       The trial court denied the motion to suppress in a one-paragraph order, citing our

decisions in Leet and Commonwealth v. Marconi, 64 A.3d 1036 (Pa. 2013). However, in

its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, the trial court elected to adopt the position that the

Commonwealth took in its Suppression Brief. After opining that the stipulated facts meant

that “Sheriff Deputy Beall initiated a traffic stop because he observed that the registration

on [Copenhaver’s] vehicle was not only expired but also belonged to a different vehicle,”

Trial Court Opinion Pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a), 11/20/2017, at 5 (“Trial Ct. Rule

1925(a) Op.”), the court wrote that “[a]rguably, the vehicle could have been stolen, which

is certainly a breach of the peace. Therefore, Sheriff Deputy Beall had the authority to

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conduct a vehicle stop for a violation of the Motor Vehicle Code,” id. at 5–6.   Like the

Commonwealth, the trial court cited no facts in the record nor any support from any legal

or professional authority in general to support the conclusory assumption that a

mismatched registration meant that the vehicle “could have been stolen.” Any number of

things could have been true, and great many things are always possible. But adjudication

requires proof. It cannot rely upon bootstrapping.

      While critiques of our adversarial system abound, “‘the worst and most unjust

system is assuredly . . . an adversary system which weighs the scales, contrary to its

fundamental premises, in favor of the prosecution.’” Commonwealth v. Coley, 351 A.2d
617, 628 n.20 (Pa. 1976) (Roberts, J., dissenting) (quoting ALEXANDER BICKEL, THE

MORALITY OF CONSENT 82 (1975)). Our trial courts, especially when acting as factfinders,

have the right, even the duty, to weigh the parties’ arguments. However, a trial court

should not adopt wholesale a party’s assertion when that assertion is not supported by

any legal or factual authority. When a “claim[] has [not] been developed beyond . . .

unsupported assertions,” a court “will not develop the claims for” that party.

Commonwealth v. Cotto, 753 A.2d 217, 224 n.6 (Pa. 2000). This truism is applicable to

unsupported arguments advanced by defendants and prosecutors alike.                  See

Commonwealth v. Sherwood, 982 A.2d 483, 507 n.34 (Pa. 2009); Commonwealth v. Fant,

465 A.2d 1245, 1247 (Pa. 1983) (Flaherty, J., dissenting).

      It was error here for the trial court to adopt via opinion the Commonwealth’s bald

assertion that Copenhaver’s “vehicle could have been stolen” based upon mismatched

registration, Trial Ct. Rule 1925(a) Op. at 5, an assertion that the court then in turn

deployed to support its breach of the peace rationale. There is no accusation that the

trial court arrived at its conclusion out of ill will towards Copenhaver. Nonetheless, by

adopting the Commonwealth’s unsupported argument, in a written opinion meant to aid

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the Superior Court upon appeal, the trial court implicitly “weigh[ed] the scales . . . in favor

of the prosecution.” Coley, 351 A.2d at 628 n.20 (Roberts, J., dissenting) (citation and

quotation marks omitted). This transgressed a core tenet at the heart of our adversarial

system: the principle that our trial courts act as neutral arbiters, impartially evaluating the

parties’ arguments for credibility and persuasiveness in order to arrive at a just outcome.

As the Supreme Court of the United States stated recently in the context of administrative

law, “[i]f judicial review is to be more than an empty ritual, it must demand something

better” than “an explanation for . . . [an] action that is incongruent with what the record

reveals.” Dep’t of Commerce v. New York, __ U.S.__, 139 S. Ct. 2551, 2575–76 (2019).

In this instance, the trial court failed to “demand something better” than the

Commonwealth’s bald assertions involving a litany of crimes that Copenhaver was never

accused of committing.

                                              II

       But let us assume for a moment that the stipulated facts could be interpreted as

meaning that Deputy Beall somehow knew that the registration belonged to another

vehicle before he stopped Copenhaver.4 Even in such a scenario, the Majority’s own

definition of “breach of the peace” precludes a finding that a mismatched registration

would amount to a breach of the peace.

       Citing trial court opinions from our own Commonwealth, precedent from our sister

states, and a law review article, the Majority determines that “a breach of the peace arises

from an act or circumstance that causes harm to persons or property, or has a reasonable

4     In its brief to this Court, the Commonwealth, again, without any legal, factual, or
record citation, asserted that “[a]s a result” of learning that the registration belonged to
another vehicle, “Deputy Beall had information leading to a reasonable conclusion that
the vehicle might be stolen at a time prior to the traffic stop.” Commonwealth’s Brief at
15.

                            [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 9
potential to cause such harm, or otherwise to provoke violence, danger, or disruption to

public order.” Maj. Op. at 7–8.5 The Majority rightly concludes that, for crimes against

persons, the accused conduct must be “a violent or dangerous action” or must “lead to

public disorder.” Id. at 8.

       It is difficult to imagine how a registration sticker belonging to another vehicle

constitutes a “violent or dangerous action” or “lead[s] to public disorder.” Just as driving

with a registration sticker showing that the vehicle’s registration has expired “does not

tend to incite violence, disorder, public or private insecurity, or the like,” id., neither does

driving with a registration sticker that does not match the vehicle upon which it sits. The

average resident driving on our Commonwealth’s roads or strolling on our

Commonwealth’s sidewalks would not believe that a mismatched registration sticker on

a nearby vehicle (assuming that the average resident might somehow notice such

defect6) is a violent action being committed against other members of the public. It is

5       To extent that the Majority includes harm to property, I believe that it is
unnecessary to reach that issue here. While it is conceivable that certain property-related
crimes could constitute breaches of the peace, it is also easy to imagine de minimis
property violations which would not amount to breaches of the peace. Sweeping in all
property crimes could raise constitutional questions about notice and vagueness. Cf.
Commonwealth v. Duda, 923 A.2d 1138, 1147 (Pa. 2007) (“The due process void-for-
vagueness doctrine requires that a penal statute define the criminal offense with sufficient
definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited and in a
manner that does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”) (quotation
marks omitted); Wright v. Georgia, 373 U.S. 284, 293 (1963) (concluding that the
conviction of six defendants, who protested racial discrimination by playing basketball in
a segregated public park, violated due process because “it [could] not be maintained that
petitioners had adequate notice that their conduct was prohibited by the breach of the
peace statute”).
6      The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation does not even issue registration
stickers anymore. See 75 Pa.C.S. § 1332(d) (“Validating registration stickers shall not be
issued or required to be displayed.”); Pennsylvania Department of Transportation,
Effective 12/31/16, PennDOT will no longer issue Vehicle Registration stickers,

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inconceivable that the act of driving with the wrong sticker, in and of itself, disrupts the

public order.7 If it does, we have opened the door to law enforcement interventions in all

manner of circumstances in which no one would claim to discern a breach of the peace.

                                               III

       Since our Nation’s founding, this Commonwealth’s Constitutions have recognized

the office of county sheriff. See PA. CONST. of 1776, Frame of Government, §§ 19, 31;

PA. CONST. of 1790, art. II, § 8, art. VI §§ 1, 3; PA. CONST. of 1838, art. VI, §§ 1, 4; PA.

CONST. of 1874, art. III, § 7, art. XIV, §§ 1, 4, amend. of Nov. 6, 1945; PA. CONST. art. IX,

§ 4. Curiously, however, while our Constitution mentions the existence of the county

sheriff, its text does not assign or specify any duties of that office. See PA. CONST. art. IX,

§ 4 (“County officers shall consist of . . . sheriffs . . . .”). Twenty-six years ago, this Court

confronted the question of whether a sheriff could, even in the absence of statutory

authority, arrest an individual who has committed a breach of the peace. See Leet, 641
A.2d at 300. Though the majority opinion failed to note the aforementioned constitutional

provision, the Court, after reviewing the history of the sheriff at common law, simply

declared that “[u]nless the sheriff’s common law power to make warrantless arrests for

breaches of the peace committed in his presence has been abrogated, it is clear that a

sheriff (and his deputies) may make arrests for motor vehicle violations which amount to

breaches of the peace committed in their presence,” as long as the sheriff (or her

Title/Registration,                 https://www.dmv.pa.gov/VEHICLE-SERVICES/Title-
Registration/Pages/Registration-Stickers.aspx (last visited Feb. 24, 2020).
7      As noted above, while the trial court imagined that a mismatched sticker led to an
inference of theft, unless the individual accused of breaching of the peace is actually
committing that theft in a violent way that harms (or threatens to harm) another person,
such speculation is improper in determining that the registration belonging to another
vehicle is a breach of the peace.

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deputies) “complete[d] the same type of training that is required of police officers

throughout the Commonwealth.” Id. at 303. And that was that.

      Leet was flawed at the time it was decided, and the past twenty-six years have

underscored these flaws, revealing that Leet’s framework is untenable. It is time to

overrule that precedent, and it is time for our General Assembly to define the duties of

our Commonwealth’s sheriffs.

                                            A

      As an initial matter, the Majority concludes that overruling Leet “is beyond the

scope of the question presently before this Court.” Maj. Op. at 6 n.4. The question on

which we granted allocatur was limited to determining whether “an expired vehicle

registration tag constitutes a ‘breach of the peace.’” Commonwealth v. Copenhaver, 215
A.3d 970 (Pa. 2019) (per curiam).       However, in his Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement,

Copenhaver claimed that “Deputy Beall lacked any authority to detain [Copenhaver] for

an expired registration tag in the absence of express legislative authority,” without

referencing whether the expired registration amounted to a breach of the peace.

Copenhaver’s Concise Statement, 11/16/2017, at ¶ 1. Citing then-Chief Justice Nix’s

dissent in Leet, Copenhaver also seemed to argue in his Superior Court brief, see

Copenhaver’s Brief, 383 MDA 2018, at 12–14, his allocatur petition, see Petition for

Allowance of Appeal, 13 MAL 2019, at 9–12, and his Supreme Court brief, see

Copenhaver’s Brief, 48 MAP 2019, at 10–13, that sheriffs should not have the authority

to arrest for any Motor Vehicle Code violations.

      It is true that “‘we are limited to the issues as framed in the petition for allowance

of appeal.’” Maj. Op. at 6 n.4 (quoting Commonwealth v. Metz, 633 A.2d 125, 127 n.3

(Pa. 1993)). However, as we have previously stated:

      [W]e cannot look the other way simply because to abrogate prior precedent
      in the process of resolving this case is more than Petitioners have asked us

                          [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 12
      to do. We would encourage the perpetuation of poorly reasoned precedent
      were we to permit ourselves to revisit the soundness of our case law only
      when expressly invited to do so based upon a given party’s tactical decision
      of whether to attack adverse case law frontally (always a gamble against
      long odds) or to attempt more finely to distinguish the adverse decisions.
      The scope of our review is not so circumscribed.
William Penn Sch. Dist. v. Pa. Dep’t of Educ., 170 A.3d 414, 446 n.49 (Pa. 2017). In this

instance, both the allocatur petition and Copenhaver’s brief argued that Leet should be

overturned, as the Majority acknowledges. See Maj. Op. at 6 n.4 (“[Copenhaver] also

argues that deputy sheriffs should not be authorized to effectuate traffic stops based on

supposed common law powers.”). We can and should reach the issue of whether Leet

should be overturned notwithstanding Copenhaver’s “tactical decision” not to include Leet

in the language of the allocatur question.

                                             B

      The Framers of our Commonwealth’s and our Nation’s Constitutions had a

conception of law somewhat different from our own. For them, the common law simply

existed, waiting to be revealed by the “brooding omnipresence in the sky.” S. Pac. Co. v.

Jensen, 244 U.S. 205, 222 (1917) (Holmes, J., dissenting). But our Framers’ beliefs about

“the source of natural justice”8 made way over time for the view that “‘law in the sense in

which courts speak of it today does not exist without some definite authority behind it,’”

Erie R.R. CO. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 79 (1938) (quoting Black & White Taxicab &

Transfer Co. v. Brown & Yellow Taxicab & Transfer Co., 276 U.S. 518, 533 (1928)

(Holmes, J., dissenting)). Today’s conception of common law “is rooted in a positivist

mindset utterly foreign to the American common-law tradition of the late 18th century.”

Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain 542 U.S. 692, 745 (2004) (Scalia, J., concurring in part and

concurring in the judgment).

8     See Anthony J. Sebok, Misunderstanding Positivism, 93 MICH. L. REV. 2054, 2062
(1995).

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       The brooding-omnipresence-versus-positivist-authority debate played out most

prominently on the civil side of our common law jurisprudence, especially in the area of

general common law and federal diversity jurisdiction. See Erie, 304 U.S. 64. However,

when our Commonwealth adopted English common law in 1777, see Commonwealth v.

Ladd, 166 A.2d 501, 502–03 (Pa. 1960), we not only adopted the common law of torts

and contracts and property, but the common law of crime as well, see, e.g., Respublica

v. Newell, 3 Yeates 407, 414–16 (Pa. 1802) (applying the common law of perjury in a

criminal case). Into the twentieth century, we continued to adjudicate criminal common

law. See Commonwealth v. Mochan, 110 A.2d 788, 790 (Pa. 1955) (“In a number of

States[,] and especially in the common law State of Pennsylvania[,] the common law of

England, as to crimes, is in force except in so far [sic] as it has been abrogated by

statute.”).   However, in 1972, in line with the modern positivist trend, our General

Assembly codified the criminal laws of this Commonwealth. In doing so, the General

Assembly decreed: “Common law crimes abolished.--No conduct constitutes a crime

unless it is a crime under [Title 18 of Pennsylvania’s Consolidated Statutes] or another

statute of this Commonwealth.” Act of 1972, Pub. L. 1482, No. 334, § 107(b) (effective

June 6, 1973) (codified as 18 Pa.C.S. § 107(b)). Thus, the Commonwealth can no longer

bring common law charges against defendants. Rather, Pennsylvania prosecutors must

look to the “definite authority,” Erie, 304 U.S. at 79 (citation and quotation marks omitted),

of a statute duly enacted by our General Assembly.

                                              C

       In enacting the criminal code, the General Assembly elected not to codify the

common law crime of “breach of the peace.” See Commonwealth’s Brief at 13 (“As

[Copenhaver] aptly highlights, the Common Law crime of Breach of the Peace is no longer

viable following the adoption of the Crimes Code.”). Additionally, neither the criminal code

                           [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 14
nor the Motor Vehicle Code (“MVC”) empowers sheriffs to enforce their provisions. This

is not because the General Assembly is incapable of identifying in legislation which of our

law enforcement personnel can enforce our statutes. Police officers have the authority

to make warrantless arrests for violations of the criminal code, see 42 Pa.C.S. § 8902,

and municipal police officers are specifically empowered to enforce that same code, see

42 Pa.C.S §§ 8952–8953.         State police officers and “[o]ther police officers” are

empowered to make arrests for violations of the MVC. 75 Pa.C.S. § 6304.

       Nor is the General Assembly incapable of defining the sheriff’s duties. On the

contrary. By my count, the word “sheriff” appears in over 400 statutory provisions. Most

importantly, “sheriffs . . . shall perform all those duties authorized or imposed on them by

statute.” 13 P.S. § 40; see also 42 Pa.C.S. § 2921 (“The sheriff, either personally or by

deputy, shall serve process and execute orders directed to him pursuant to law.”). In line

with this generic grant of authority, the General Assembly has empowered our

Commonwealth’s sheriffs to perform all sorts of specific tasks. A sheriff can make an

arrest for the violation of a protection from abuse order committed in the sheriff’s

presence. 23 Pa.C.S. § 6113(a). A sheriff can apprehend an individual who has been

charged with an offense under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, pursuant to a court-

martial’s warrant. 51 Pa.C.S. § 5201(e). A sheriff can investigate disputes about the

custody of animals, 3 Pa.C.S. § 2315, search for gunpowder in homes within the City of

Philadelphia, 53 P.S. § 16567, serve process on islands between Pennsylvania and New

Jersey, 71 P.S. § 1815, remove stocks of illegal fireworks, 72 P.S. § 9415, and issue

licenses for dealers of precious metals, 73 P.S. § 1932. Even within the confines of the

MVC, a sheriff can direct that a vehicle be impounded for nonpayment of fines, 75 Pa.C.S.

§ 6309, and conduct public sales for impounded vehicles, 75 Pa.C.S. § 6310(b). Also

within the MVC, drivers are ordered to obey a sheriff who is directing traffic, 75 Pa.C.S.

                           [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 15
§ 3102, and a sheriff’s vehicle is permitted to have flashing lights, 75 Pa.C.S. § 4571.

And yet, with all of these specific provisions giving various duties to sheriffs, including

within the MVC itself, never did the General Assembly decree that sheriffs should have

the general authority to enforce the laws of our Commonwealth, criminal or motor vehicle

in nature.9

       As a matter of law, this lack of statutory authorization should have been the end of

this debate. Then-Chief Justice Nix, the sole dissenter in Leet, thought it was. Citing

what is now codified as 13 P.S. § 40 (“[S]heriffs . . . shall perform all those duties

authorized or imposed on them by statute.”), then-Chief Justice Nix wrote, simply, that

“[t]he General Assembly has not conferred upon the office of sheriff or his deputies the

authorization to make warrantless arrests for violations of the law. In contrast, such

authority has been granted to other law enforcement officials[, and t]here is no such

authority [for the sheriff] for any arrest under the specific chapter governing the rules of

9         In contrast to Pennsylvania, where sheriffs rely for their general arrest power only
upon common law authority developed and pronounced by this Court, other states
specifically empower their sheriffs through statute to make arrests, including for breaches
of the peace. See, e.g., ARIZ. REV. STAT. ANN. § 11-441(A)(2) (“The sheriff shall . . .
[a]rrest and take before the nearest magistrate for examination all persons who attempt
to commit or have committed a public offense.”); CAL. GOV’T CODE § 26601 (“The sheriff
shall arrest and take before the nearest magistrate for examination all persons who
attempt to commit or who have committed a public offense.”); FLA. STAT. § 30.15(1)(g)
(“Sheriffs . . . shall . . . [a]pprehend, without warrant, any person disturbing the peace
. . . .”); IND. CODE § 36-2-13-5 (“The sheriff shall (1) arrest without process persons who
commit an offense within the sheriff’s view, take them before a court of the county having
jurisdiction, and detain them in custody until the cause of the arrest has been investigated;
(2) suppress breaches of the peace, calling the power of the county to the sheriff’s aid if
necessary . . . .”); MONT. CODE ANN. 7-32-2121 (“The sheriff shall . . . arrest and take
before the nearest magistrate for examination all persons who attempt to commit or have
committed a public offense . . . .”); OHIO REV. CODE ANN. § 311.07(A) (“Each sheriff shall
preserve the public peace and cause all persons guilty of any breach of the peace, within
the sheriff’s knowledge or view, to enter into recognizance with sureties to keep the peace
and to appear at the succeeding term of the court of common pleas, and the sheriff shall
commit such persons to jail in case they refuse to do so.”). I can imagine nothing disabling
our own General Assembly from passing similar laws if it chooses to do so.

                           [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 16
the road,” i.e., the MVC. Leet, 641 A.2d at 304 (Nix, C.J., dissenting). Thus, “because

the legislature ha[d] not expressly granted to sheriffs” the power to make arrests for MVC

violations that amounted to breaches of the peace, then-Chief Justice Nix was

“constrained to conclude that such a decision is not within the province of this Court’s

authority” and that “the common law powers of the sheriff ha[d] been abrogated by

statute.” Id. at 305 (Nix, C.J., dissenting). Notwithstanding its unquestionable power to

do so, the General Assembly has chosen not to alter our statutory framework with regard

to sheriffs since Chief Justice Nix dissented in 1994. The dissent was convincing then,

and it is convincing now. It should be the law.

                                             D

       While Leet was incorrect when it was decided, the experience of this Court since

then in attempting to apply that precedent has shown even more clearly that we should

overrule the decision.10 In 2007, Justice Baer, writing for the Court, declared that “[f]or

the fifth time in the past fifteen years, this Court is called upon to clarify the breadth of

county sheriffs’ authority to investigate, cite, and arrest those who break the law.”

Commonwealth v. Dobbins, 934 A.2d 1170, 1171 (Pa. 2007) (footnote omitted). Since

2007, we have twice again been called upon to clarify our county sheriffs’ authority. See

Maj. Op. at 1; Marconi, 64 A.3d 1036.

       With one exception, see Commonwealth v. Hock, 728 A.2d 943 (Pa. 1999)

(recognizing that “fighting words” can be prohibited, notwithstanding the First

Amendment, if those words constitute a breach of the peace), the only time this Court

10      This is not the first criticism of Leet since it was decided. See Marconi, 64 A.3d at
1041 (calling Leet “not a fully-reasoned” decision); id. at 1041 n.5 (writing that Leet
“offer[s] little account for the derivation of [the difference between English sheriffs and
American sheriffs] or developmental and historical nuances associated with the evolving
role of peace officers”); but see id. at 1042 n.7 (“We have acknowledged that Leet could
have been a better developed opinion . . .; however, there is a salutary aspect in that
some of the deficiencies are offsetting in relation to others.”).

                           [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 17
ever even gives content to the term “breach of the peace” is when we adjudicate our

sheriffs’ (or constables’) authority. See Marconi, 64 A.3d 1036; Dobbins, 934 A.2d 1170;

Kopko v. Miller, 892 A.2d 766 (Pa. 2006); Lockridge, 810 A.2d 1191; Commonwealth v.

Roose, 710 A.2d 1129 (Pa. 1998); Leet, 641 A.2d 299. The Majority’s own definition of

breach of the peace is compelled to rely upon a trial court decision from 1930, a law

review article citing early American history, and decisions from sister states, the most

recent of which is from 1991. See Maj. Op. at 6–7.

       The Majority strives mightily to create a more precise meaning of breach of the

peace, possibly in the forlorn hope that our lower courts will be able to adjudicate future

cases without our recurrent intervention. Past experience of this Court suggests that this

exercise will prove fruitless. The six cases preceding Copenhaver’s appeal have failed

to provide authoritative guidance. See Marconi, 64 A.3d at 1041 n.5 (“Leet’s loose

incorporation of undefined peacekeeping powers as the rational litmus for determining

sheriffs’ current authority under the Vehicle Code has yielded substantial uncertainties in

the jurisprudence.”); cf. Atwater v. City of Lago Vista, 532 U.S. 318, 327 n.2 (2001)

(avoiding having to define breach of the peace, but writing that “[t]he term apparently

meant very different things in different common-law contexts” and “[e]ven when used to

describe common-law arrest authority, the term's precise import is not altogether clear”).

That we continually have felt bound to grant allocatur on this issue over the past quarter

century is a testament to the impossibility of defining the term with precision. The General

Assembly clearly is better-suited to such a task.

       Our continued failure to squarely define breach of the peace does no favor to either

sheriffs or average residents of (and visitors to) Pennsylvania. When a sheriff is traveling

in an official vehicle and witnesses an individual disobeying some provision of the MVC,

that sheriff will have to decide, on a moment’s notice, whether the observed action is a

                           [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 18
breach of the peace. While we rely upon our law enforcement officers to know the law

and their duties in enforcing the law, requiring a sheriff to interpret when a particular action

is a breach of a peace (and to know simultaneously whether the sheriff has the necessary

training, as judicially-decreed in Leet) seems beyond the pale, considering that even the

judges and justices of this Commonwealth cannot come to an agreement.

       Perhaps even more troubling is the lack of notice given to those Pennsylvanians

who may violate the MVC. The average resident, who likely has less legal training than

a law enforcement officer, will have no idea whether driving over an “unprotected hose of

a fire department,” 75 Pa.C.S. § 3708, parking forty-nine feet from a railroad crossing, 75

Pa.C.S. § 3353(a)(3)(i), or crossing a highway in a golf cart at a forty-five degree angle,

75 Pa.C.S. § 77A01(b)(1), constitutes a breach of the peace, for which a sheriff passing

by could make an arrest. Even if such an action does not constitute a breach of the

peace, the sheriff, as an arresting officer who “has probable cause to believe that [the]

individual has committed even a very minor criminal offense in his presence,” can arrest

that individual without violating the Fourth Amendment. Atwater, 532 U.S. at 354. And

while the arrestee, under the Majority’s approach, may hope later to have the fruits of that

arrest suppressed and the charges thrown out, the arrestee will nonetheless “join the 65

million Americans with an arrest record and experience the ‘civil death’ of discrimination

by employers, landlords, and whoever else conducts a background check.” Utah v.

Strieff, __ U.S. __, 136 S. Ct. 2056, 2070 (2016) (Sotomayor, J., dissenting).

       A sheriff using these common law powers of arrest granted by this Court has

enormous discretion. Because law enforcement resources are not unlimited, discretion

is a necessary element in our criminal justice system. But as the law stands, sheriffs have

discretion not only in determining who may be arrested and for what crimes they may be

arrested, but also in determining (at least until court review following a suppression

                            [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 19
motion) whether sheriffs themselves have the authority to make the arrest in the first

place.

         To make matters even worse, the Leet Court granted this authority after reviewing

the history of the sheriff’s power at common law, tracing that history back to England

before the Norman Conquest of 1066. See Leet, 641 A.2d at 301–03. Reading Leet, one

could be forgiven for thinking that the distinctly “powerful” role of the sheriff in law

enforcement in medieval England, id. at 301, is the reason that Pennsylvania sheriffs

today have the ability to make arrests for MVC violations that constitute breaches of the

peace.11 Nonetheless, in Kopko, this Court insisted that “the power of Sheriffs to arrest

for crimes committed in their presence is no different from that of a private citizen.” Kopko,
892 A.2d at 774. To be sure, older precedent has recognized that private citizens retain

a common law arrest power. See Commonwealth v. Chermansky 242 A.2d 237 (Pa.

1968); see also Commonwealth v. Corley, 462 A.2d 1374, 1379 (Pa. Super. 1983) (“[W]e

hold that a citizen’s arrest can be made for a breach of the peace that is personally

observed by the arrestor.”); aff’d on other grounds, 491 A.2d 829, 834 (Pa. 1985) (“[W]e

need not address the propriety of the Superior Court’s holding that a citizen may arrest

for a misdemeanor breach of the peace committed in his presence.”). In an appropriate

case, this quaint doctrine may be ripe for reexamination. Cf. Carol S. Steiker, Second

Thoughts About First Principles, 107 HARV. L. REV. 820, 830–33 (1994) (noting that

because professional police forces did not exist at the Founding, “ordinary citizens”

served in law enforcement roles). For present purposes, suffice it is to say that there is

11     See also Leet, 641 A.2d at 303 (“Indeed, such powers are so widely known and
so universally recognized that it is hardly necessary to cite authority for the proposition.
To make the point, how few children would question that the infamous Sheriff of
Nottingham had at least the authority to arrest Robin Hood.”).

                            [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 20
in practice a fundamental difference between a citizen’s arrest and a sheriff’s arrest, even

if the two seizures rely theoretically upon the same legal source.

       Let us imagine that an average driver failed to yield to an emergency vehicle

leaving a garage. 75 Pa.C.S. § 3346. Another individual notices this action, pulls up next

to the driver, and tells the driver that he or she is under arrest. Under Leet and Kopko, if

failing to yield to an emergency vehicle exiting a garage were to constitute a breach of

the peace, this individual (though a private citizen) legally could arrest the driver. The

driver would likely laugh (or fight) at this notion, and would no doubt refuse to submit to

such an “arrest.”

       Pursuant to Leet and its troubled progeny, when a sheriff makes an arrest for a

MVC violation constituting a breach of the peace, the reaction from the driver should, in

theory, be the same. But this is almost farcical. Where the sheriff is making the arrest,

does anyone really believe that a rational driver would refuse to submit? Any answer but

“no” is a legal fiction. “[N]o reasonable person[] would feel free to leave under such

circumstances.” Commonwealth v. Cost, __ A.3d __, 2020 WL 354975, at *15 (Pa. 2020)

(Wecht, J., concurring).12 A sheriff has a state-issued vehicle, a badge, a uniform, and a

firearm. In other words, the sheriff is imbued with all the power of the state, a power that

law-abiding citizens are bound to respect. And yet our law stubbornly pretends, per

Kopko, that the sheriff is making an arrest legally indistinct from one that could be made

by any private citizen. This is of course a sheer absurdity. Such dissonance only further

epitomizes the underlying weakness of Leet and its progeny.

12      Cf. Commonwealth v. Price, 672 A.2d 280, 284 (Pa. 1996) (rejecting that a citizen’s
arrest had occurred when an FBI agent attempted to arrest an individual for driving under
the influence because it was “convincingly clear that” the agent “displayed conduct which
can fairly be attributable to the state”) (quotation marks omitted).

                           [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 21
                                              E

       Leet was incorrect when it was decided, and it should be overruled. Since Leet,

this Court’s inability to give guidance to our lower courts, to our sheriffs, and to our

residents has only further eroded the efficacy of that decision. This Court’s fitful, episodic

case-by-case common law approach to defining breach of the peace—an approach the

General Assembly already had rejected when it abolished common law crimes—can

never prove equal to the task of providing the necessary guidance. That is why we elect

lawmakers.

       I do not express an opinion on the ultimate question of whether it would be

beneficial to have our Commonwealth’s sheriffs enforce our criminal or motor vehicle

laws. That is a policy question beyond my role as a jurist. To supply the answer to this

question, we should look to that branch of government whose duty it is to define crimes,

and whose processes allow for comprehensive regimes regarding enforcement of our

laws: the General Assembly. The General Assembly could pass a statute empowering

sheriffs to enforce specific provisions of the MVC or the criminal code, or the entirety of

those codes. The General Assembly could define the exact training sheriffs must possess

in order to enforce our criminal or motor vehicle laws. 13 We should stop beseeching the

13      In Leet, we noted that police officers “are required by statute to undergo formal
training prior to enforcing the law.” Leet, 641 A.2d at 303 (citing 42 Pa.C.S. § 8951 et
seq.). “We deem[ed] this requirement to apply equally to sheriffs who enforce motor
vehicle laws.” Id.; see also Marconi, 64 A.3d at 1046 (McCaffery, J., dissenting) (“[W]e
also emphasized in Leet the need for appropriate training for sheriffs who are engaged in
such law enforcement activities.”). We have struggled to determine what constitutes
appropriate training. See Pa., Dep’t of Transp., Bureau of Driver Licensing v. Kline, 741
A.2d 1281, 1285–86 (Pa. 1999) (finding “that training other than Act 120 certification may
be sufficient for purposes of Vehicle Code enforcement under our holding in Leet,” but
not declaring what exact training is required). The General Assembly has shown itself
capable of creating comprehensive training requirements for sheriffs and their deputies.
See Sheriff and Deputy Sheriff Education and Training Act, 71 P.S. §§ 2101–09. The
legislature also could create necessary requirements if sheriffs were statutorily
empowered to enforce the MVC.

                           [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 22
“brooding omnipresence,” Jensen, 244 U.S. at 222 (Holmes, J., dissenting), as we labor

serially to define our sheriffs’ role. We should rely instead upon that tried and true method

for crafting the laws of our Commonwealth: bicameralism and presentment. Such a

process not only conforms to the mandates of our Constitution but also would ensure

legitimacy, precision, and finality in defining the important role that sheriffs are to play in

our justice system.

       Because I would resolve the dispute about the stipulated facts in this Court, I

dissent from the Majority’s decision to remand the case to the Superior Court. And while

I agree that an expired registration tag does not amount to a breach of the peace, I would

find that sheriffs do not possess the authority to stop drivers who violate the Motor Vehicle

Code, absent a directive from the General Assembly.

                            [J-109-2019] [MO: Saylor, C.J.] - 23