Court Opinion

ID: 4188839
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-07-24 19:16:29.138162+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:40:18.349271
License: Public Domain

J-S34031-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

S. C. C.,                                        IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                       PENNSYLVANIA
                            Appellee

                       v.

J. L. C.,

                            Appellant                No. 2348 EDA 2016

                      Appeal from the Order June 27, 2016
              in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
                        Family Court at No.: 1606V7386

BEFORE: BOWES, J., SOLANO, J., and PLATT, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY PLATT, J.:                               FILED JULY 24, 2017

        Appellant, J. L. C., appeals from the order granting a Final Order of

Protection From Abuse (PFAO) in favor of his former paramour (and mother

of his now four year old son), S. C. C., Appellee.1 Appellant maintains that

his conceded statements about killing Appellee, or having someone kill her

for him, were only jokes. We affirm.

____________________________________________

*
    Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
1
  Although the record and the briefs identify the parties by their full names,
we will follow the practice of the trial court and identify the parties in both
the caption and in this memorandum by their initials to preserve their
privacy. See E.W. v. T.S., 916 A.2d 1197, 1199 n.1(Pa. Super. 2007); In
the Interest of R.C., 628 A.2d 893, 894 (Pa. Super. 1993). We have
amended the caption accordingly.
J-S34031-17

        Appellant   and   Appellee   were   in    a   romantic   relationship    for

approximately four years, until Mother’s Day, May 8, 2016.          They are the

parents of a now four year-old son. Therefore, the parties were “intimate

partners . . . who share biological parenthood” within the definition in the

protection from abuse statute. 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 6102.

        About a month after the break-up, on June 4, 2016, the three went on

a day trip to the Elmwood Park Zoo in Norristown, followed by lunch at the

King of Prussia Mall.     In the mall parking lot, Appellee became concerned

when she noticed a man who made her feel uneasy, and took evasive action

to avoid him. Appellant saw her from the mall entrance.

        When Appellant asked her what she had been doing, she explained

that the man could have been a threat to her, who might have wanted to

drug her, or Tase her. (See N.T. Hearing, 6/27/16, at 10). Appellee told

Appellant that she knew he wanted her “out of the picture.”          (Id. at 11).

Appellant replied that if he wanted to get rid of her he had fifty ways to do

it, including making a fall on a mall escalator look like an accident.          (See

id.).   He proceeded to recite a list of other possible murders, including

choking and poisoning.

        Appellant, who is employed as a parole agent, had also mentioned

using his employer-issued Taser on her.          But he concluded that if he was

going to kill her he would get somebody else to do it for him. (See id. at

12). Appellee filed for a protection from abuse order on June 23, 2016.

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       After a hearing2 on June 27, 2016, the court issued a final protective

order, for one year.3 The court denied a motion for reconsideration (which

included the weight claims presented here on appeal), without a hearing, on

July 15, 2016. This timely appeal followed, on July 25, 2016.4

       Appellant presents four questions for our review:

             1. Whether the [c]ourt erred in finding Appellee’s
       testimony credible that she was in reasonable fear of immediate
       serious bodily injury from Appellant?

             2. Whether the [t]rial [c]ourt erred in failing to find
       Appellant’s testimony more credible than Appellee’s?

              3. Whether the [t]rial [c]ourt erred in failing to give proper
       weight to the fact that Appellee spent significant time with
       Appellant after the date of the incident contained in the
       [p]rotection from [a]buse petition and prior to the filing of the
       petition, which was filed twenty days after the alleged incident?

             4. Whether the [t]rial [c]ourt erred in failing to give proper
       weight to the fact that the [o]rder prohibits Appellant from
       possessing a firearm, which is a necessary requirement of his job
       as a parole officer[?]

____________________________________________

2
  Appellant was represented by counsel at the hearing. Appellee appeared
pro se.
3
 Therefore, the PFAO was set to expire on June 27, 2017. We review this
appeal, even though the one year effective period has presumably expired,
because this case falls into the well-recognized exception to the mootness
doctrine of a case which has important public policy considerations and yet
may escape review. See Snyder v. Snyder, 629 A.2d 977, 980 n.1 (Pa.
Super. 1993).
4
  Appellant also filed a statement of errors complained of on appeal. The
trial court filed an opinion, on November 15, 2016. See Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

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(Appellant’s Brief, at 3).

      Our standard of review is well-settled.

      “In the context of a PFA order, we review the trial court’s legal

conclusions for an error of law or abuse of discretion.”      Hood-O'Hara v.

Wills, 873 A.2d 757, 759 (Pa. Super. 2005) (citation omitted).

             In reviewing the validity of a PFA order, we must
      determine whether the evidence, in the light most favorable to
      petitioner and granting her the benefit of all reasonable
      inferences, was sufficient to sustain the trial court’s
      determination that abuse was shown by a preponderance of the
      evidence.    Moreover, we must defer to the lower court’s
      determinations of the credibility of witnesses at the hearing.

R.G. v. T.D., 672 A.2d 341, 342 (Pa. Super. 1996) (citations omitted).

      In this appeal, all four of Appellant’s questions raise weight claims, two

explicitly, and two questioning credibility assessments.

             Our standard of review of a weight of the evidence claim is
      for an abuse of discretion. Appellate review is limited to whether
      the trial judge’s discretion was properly exercised, and relief will
      only be granted where the facts and inferences of record disclose
      a palpable abuse of discretion. Indeed, it is oft-stated that the
      trial court’s denial of a motion for a new trial based on a weight
      of the evidence claim is the least assailable of its rulings. . . . A
      defendant must put the issue before the trial court in the first
      instance because it is not the function of the appellate court to
      substitute its judgment based on a cold record for that of the
      trial court. The weight to be accorded conflicting evidence is
      exclusively for the fact finder, whose findings will not be
      disturbed on appeal if they are supported by the record.

Commonwealth v. Ratushny, 17 A.3d 1269, 1272 (Pa. Super. 2011)

(citations and quotation marks omitted).        “When reviewing a challenge to

the weight of the evidence, the verdict may be reversed only if it is so

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contrary   to   the   evidence       as   to    shock   one’s   sense   of   justice.”

Commonwealth v. Davidson, 860 A.2d 575, 582 (Pa. Super. 2004),

affirmed, 938 A.2d 198 (Pa. 2007) (citations omitted). “When ‘the figure of

Justice totters on her pedestal,’ . . ., then [the verdict] is truly shocking to

the judicial conscience.” Id. at 581 (citations omitted).

      Here, under both our sufficiency standard of review for a PFAO and our

review of Appellant’s specific weight claims, we conclude the trial court

properly determined that Appellee, by her testimony, established abuse by a

preponderance of the evidence. The record supports the trial court’s finding

that Appellant’s death threats put Appellee in reasonable fear of imminent

serious bodily injury.    (See Trial Court Opinion, 11/15/16, at 8-10); see

also 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 6102(a)(2). Reviewing the evidence in the light most

favorable to Appellee as the petitioner, we discern no basis on which to

disturb the finding of the trial court. See R.G. v. T.D., supra at 342.

      Appellant conceded the substance of the statements, but claimed he

was only joking. (See N.T. Hearing, 6/27/16, at 45-48). Notably, the trial

court found that Appellee was credible, and Appellant was not. (See Trial

Ct. Op., at 9). Specifically, the trial court found that Appellant’s assertion

that he was only joking was “preposterous.”              (Id.).   We defer to the

credibility determinations of the trial court which find support in the record.

Appellant’s first two claims fail.

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      In his third claim, Appellant argues that the trial court failed to give

proper weight to Appellee’s interaction with him from the date of the

statements until she filed the petition. It was the exclusive province of the

trial court sitting as fact finder to weigh conflicting evidence.            See

Ratushny, supra at 1272.             We decline Appellant’s invitation to an

impermissible re-weighing of the evidence. Appellant’s third claim does not

merit relief.

      Finally, in his fourth claim, Appellant challenges the weight the trial

court gave to the fact that the PFAO prohibits him from possessing a

firearm, which he maintains is a requirement for his job as a parole officer.

(See Appellant’s Brief, at 11).        Even though Appellant maintains that

possession of a firearm is a job requirement, it appears elsewhere in the

record that he was assigned to desk duty after the issuance of the

temporary PFAO, albeit with reduced hours. (See N.T. Hearing, at 47).

      More fundamentally, Appellant fails to develop an argument in support

of this claim, which he raises in a single paragraph of three sentences with

absolutely no citation to any pertinent authority. Accordingly, Appellant has

waived his final argument. See Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a), (b).

      Moreover,   it   would   not   merit   relief.   Here,   again,   Appellant

misapprehends the purpose of appellate review.         It is not the role of this

Court to re-weigh the evidence presented to the trial court.

                                       -6-
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      In any event, hardship which might result as a collateral consequence

of firearms restrictions imposed on the grant of the PFAO is beyond the

scope of our appellate review.    We examine the order and the record to

determine if the trial court properly found that Appellee established abuse by

a preponderance of the evidence. See Hood-O'Hara, supra at 759; R.G.,

supra at 342. We do not review the PFAO to determine if its enforcement

would be inconvenient to Appellant.

      Order affirmed.

      Judge Bowes joins the Memorandum.

      Judge Solano concurs in the result.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 7/24/2017

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