Court Opinion

ID: 7806047
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-02 16:09:41.908365+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:30:09.114920
License: Public Domain

J-S10043-22

                                   2022 PA Super 151

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                       Appellant               :
                                               :
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
    MATTHEW ELIAS DON BULLIAN                  :   No. 754 MDA 2021

                   Appeal from the Order Entered June 7, 2021
      In the Court of Common Pleas of Lebanon County Criminal Division at
                        No(s): CP-38-CR-0002062-2019

BEFORE:      MURRAY, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and COLINS, J.*

OPINION BY COLINS, J.:                             FILED: SEPTEMBER 2, 2022

        The Commonwealth appeals from an order entered by the Court of

Common Pleas of Lebanon County (trial court) dismissing a simple assault

charge against the defendant, Matthew Elias Don Bullian (Appellee). For the

reasons set forth below, we reverse.

        On November 20, 2019, the Commonwealth charged Appellee with

simple assault, a second-degree misdemeanor, and the summary offense of

harassment1 for punching his live-in girlfriend multiple times in the head,

throwing her to the floor, and slamming her head into a wall.         Criminal

Complaint. On August 5, 2020, Appellee voluntarily entered an Accelerated

Rehabilitative Disposition (ARD) program with respect to the simple assault

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*   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
1   18 Pa.C.S. § 2701(a)(1) and 18 Pa.C.S. § 2709(a)(1), respectively.
J-S10043-22

charge. Trial Court Opinion at 3; Trial Court Order, 8/5/20; N.T., 8/5/20, at

2-6. At the hearing placing Appellee into the ARD program, the trial court

explained the conditions of the ARD program to Appellee, including the

requirement that he obey all laws and maintain good behavior for a 12-month

supervision period, and explained that if he completed the program

successfully, the simple assault charge would be dismissed. N.T., 8/5/20, at

4-6. At this hearing, Appellee was also advised and acknowledged that he

understood that if he did not successfully complete the ARD program, he could

be prosecuted on that charge. Id. at 2-3, 5-6. At the August 5, 2020 ARD

hearing, Appellee also pled guilty to the harassment charge and the trial court

sentenced Appellee to pay a fine of $100 and costs of prosecution on that

conviction. Trial Court Opinion at 4; Docket Entries at 3; Trial Court Order,

8/5/20; N.T., 8/5/20, at 5.

      On September 9, 2020, Appellee was charged with simple assault and

trespassing arising from an incident in another county. N.T., 12/9/20, at 2-

3. On December 9, 2020, following a hearing, Appellee was removed from

the ARD program and he was directed to appear for trial on the 2019 simple

assault charge. Id. at 3-4; Trial Court Order, 12/9/20. On March 10, 2021,

Appellee entered a negotiated guilty plea to the 2019 simple assault charge

with sentencing deferred until May 12, 2021. N.T., 3/10/21, at 2-9. At the

sentencing hearing, however, Appellee orally moved to dismiss that simple

assault charge on the ground it was barred by compulsory joinder due to

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Appellant’s previous guilty plea to the harassment charge that was based on

the same conduct. N.T., 5/12/21, at 2. The Commonwealth opposed this

motion on the ground, inter alia, that Appellee’s compulsory joinder rights

were waived by his entry into ARD. Id. at 3. Following argument, the trial

court granted Appellee’s motion to dismiss the simple assault charge. Id. at

15; Trial Court Order, 5/14/21.

      The Commonwealth filed a motion for reconsideration of the dismissal

on May 21, 2021, in which it argued that the simple assault charge could not

be dismissed because Appellee had waived his compulsory joinder rights by

entering ARD, and the trial court, on May 24, 2021, issued an order vacating

the dismissal order and scheduling a hearing on the Commonwealth’s motion

for reconsideration for June 2, 2021. Commonwealth Motion to Reconsider

Order at 6-8 ¶¶12(e)-(g), 14(b)-(c); Trial Court Order, 5/24/21. At the June

2, 2021 hearing, the Commonwealth again argued that the simple assault

charge could not be dismissed because Appellee had waived his compulsory

joinder rights. N.T., 6/2/21, at 6. At the close of that hearing, the trial court

issued an order, entered on June 7, 2021, denying the Commonwealth’s

motion for reconsideration and again dismissing the simple assault charge

against Appellee. Id. at 17; Trial Court Order, 6/7/21. The Commonwealth,

on June 8, 2021, timely appealed this dismissal order.

      The trial court held that dismissal of the 2019 simple assault charge

against Appellee was required by the compulsory joinder provision of Section

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110(1)(iii) of the Crimes Code, 18 Pa.C.S. § 110(1)(iii), because both the

simple assault and harassment charges were based on the same conduct and

Appellee had previously pled guilty to and been sentenced on the harassment

charge. Trial Court Opinion at 6-10. Section 110 provides in relevant part:

     Although a prosecution is for a violation of a different
     provision of the statutes than a former prosecution or is
     based on different facts, it is barred by such former
     prosecution under the following circumstances:

     (1) The former prosecution resulted in an acquittal or in a
     conviction as defined in section 109 of this title (relating to
     when prosecution barred by former prosecution for the
     same offense) and the subsequent prosecution is for:

     (i) any offense of which the defendant could have been convicted
     on the first prosecution;

     (ii) any offense based on the same conduct or arising from the
     same criminal episode, if such offense was known to the
     appropriate prosecuting officer at the time of the commencement
     of the first trial and occurred within the same judicial district as
     the former prosecution unless the court ordered a separate trial
     of the charge of such offense; or

     (iii) the same conduct, unless:

     (A) the offense of which the defendant was formerly
     convicted or acquitted and the offense for which he is
     subsequently prosecuted each requires proof of a fact not
     required by the other and the law defining each of such
     offenses is intended to prevent a substantially different
     harm or evil; or

     (B) the second offense was not consummated when the former
     trial began.

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18 Pa.C.S. § 110(1) (in effect August 27, 2002 to July 10, 2022) (emphasis

added).2    Whether dismissal of a charge is required by Section 110 is a

question of law subject to our plenary, de novo review. Commonwealth v.

Dawson, 87 A.3d 825, 826-27 (Pa. Super. 2014); Commonwealth v.

Simmer, 814 A.2d 696, 698 (Pa. Super. 2002).

       The Commonwealth argues that the dismissal of the simple assault

charge was error because Appellee waived his right to seek dismissal of the

that charge on Section 110 compulsory joinder grounds by entering the ARD

program. We agree.

       Claims that a prosecution is barred by Section 110’s compulsory joinder

requirements are waivable. Dawson, 87 A.3d at 827; Simmer, 814 A.2d at

699; Commonwealth v. Szebin, 785 A.2d 103, 105 (Pa. Super. 2001).

While waiver of Section 110 rights requires some affirmative act by the

defendant to separate the prosecution of the charges and mere silence or

inaction by the defendant is insufficient to constitute such a waiver,

Commonwealth v. Failor, 770 A.2d 310, 314-15 (Pa. 2001), voluntary entry

into an ARD program on one of multiple charges is an affirmative act by the

defendant     that   separates     the    charges   for   the   defendant’s   benefit.

Commonwealth v. Pries, 861 A.2d 951, 956-57 (Pa. Super. 2004);

____________________________________________

2The amendment of Section 110 that went into effect on July 11, 2022 made
changes only to Subsection 110(1)(ii). The provision of Section 110 at issue
here, Subsection 110(1)(iii), remains unchanged.

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Simmer, 814 A.2d at 699-700.                   Accordingly, where the defendant

acknowledges, when he enters ADR for an offense, that he is subject to later

prosecution for that offense if he does not successfully complete the ADR

program, his voluntary entry into ARD waives his right to assert that Section

110 bars his later prosecution for that offense. Pries, 861 A.2d at 956-57;

Simmer, 814 A.2d at 699-700; Szebin, 785 A.2d at 105.

        Here, the record is clear that Appellee acknowledged when he entered

the ADR program that he would be subject to prosecution on the simple

assault charge if he failed to successfully complete the ADR program. N.T.,

8/5/20, at 2-3.       Appellee’s entry into ADR on the simple assault charge

therefore waived his right to seek dismissal of that charge based on the

compulsory joinder requirements of Section 110 of the Crimes Code. Pries,

861 A.2d at 956-57; Simmer, 814 A.2d at 699-700; Szebin, 785 A.2d at

105.3

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3 The trial court based its dismissal solely on Section 110, not on constitutional
double jeopardy grounds. Trial Court Opinion at 5-6. Our conclusion that the
dismissal of the simple assault charge is barred by waiver would, however, be
the same if the dismissal were based on the Double Jeopardy Clause of the
United States or Pennsylvania Constitution.           Objections that a second
prosecution violates the defendant’s double jeopardy right to have all charges
against him tried in one proceeding are, like Section 110 claims, waivable.
Commonwealth v. Banks, 253 A.3d 768, 777-83 (Pa. Super. 2021);
Dawson, 87 A.3d at 828-29. This Court has also held that entry into ARD
constitutes a waiver of such double jeopardy claims. Szebin, 785 A.2d at
105.

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         The trial court acknowledged that this Court held in Simmer and Szebin

that a defendant’s entry into ARD constituted a waiver of his Section 110

compulsory joinder rights, but held that these decisions were distinguishable

because they involved offenses based on different conduct and were decided

under a different provision of Section 110, Subsection 110(1)(ii) (concerning

prosecution for offenses arising from the same criminal episode), rather than

Subsection 110(1)(iii) (concerning prosecution for the same conduct). Trial

Court Opinion at 8-9.4 In addition, the trial court opined that the precedential

value of these cases was reduced by our Supreme Court’s more recent

decision in Commonwealth v. Johnson, 247 A.3d 981 (Pa. 2021).               Trial

Court Opinion at 9. Neither of these bases for rejecting waiver, however, is

valid.

         While this Court’s decisions in Pries, Simmer, and Szebin involved

Subsection 110(1)(ii), the waiver rulings in those decisions were not based on

the language of that subsection or the fact that the charges involved different

conduct.     Rather, this Court held that the act of voluntarily entering ARD

constituted a waiver of the defendants’ rights to assert any violation of Section

110 as a ground for dismissal of the charge that was the subject of the ARD.

Pries, 861 A.2d at 956-57 (holding that the defendant “waived any

objection to compulsory joinder by taking an affirmative action to separate

____________________________________________

4   Appellee did not file a brief in this appeal.

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the prosecutions pending against him by availing himself of the potential

opportunity afforded by participation in the ARD program”) (emphasis added);

Simmer, 814 A.2d at 699 (“a defendant’s voluntary entry into an ARD

program, with respect to a charge of DUI, constitutes a waiver of the

defendant’s right to later assert section 110 as a bar to prosecution of

the DUI offense, upon the defendant’s removal from the ARD program”)

(emphasis added); Szebin, 785 A.2d at 105 (defendant “agreed to waive his

rights under Section 110 by acknowledging that failure to abide by the

terms of the program would result in the institution of proceedings on the

original charge”) (emphasis added). This Court’s holdings that entry into ARD

constitutes a waiver of the defendant’s Section 110 compulsory joinder rights

are therefore equally applicable cases where joinder is compulsory under

Subsection 110(1)(iii).5

       Nothing in Johnson overruled or impaired this Court’s holdings that

entry into ARD waives the defendant’s right to seek to dismissal on Section

110 grounds. In Johnson, the Supreme Court addressed whether Section

112(1) of the Crimes Code provided an exception to Section 110 where the

____________________________________________

5 Indeed, although the Court cited only to Subsection 110(1)(ii) in Simmer,
it appears that one of guilty pleas that was raised as grounds for compulsory
joinder dismissal in one of the two appeals that were the subject of that
opinion was for the same conduct as the charge that the defendant sought to
dismiss and that Subsection 110(1)(iii) could therefore apply to that appeal.
814 A.2d at 697-98 (prior guilty pleas of defendant Simmer, who sought
dismissal of driving under the influence charge after removal from ARD,
included guilty plea to a charge of operating with alcohol in system).

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court that previously adjudicated a summary offense charge did not have

jurisdiction over the later prosecuted charge. 247 A.3d at 982-87. The Court’s

limited discussion of waiver in Johnson merely reaffirmed that Section 110

rights can be waived, but that such waiver, as previously held in Failor,

requires some affirmative act by the defendant to separate the prosecutions.

247 A.3d at 987 n.8 (holding that “an exception to compulsory joinder applies

when the defendant takes affirmative action to separate the prosecutions

pending against him, resulting in a waiver,” but that the act of pleading guilty

to a summary offense by itself does not constitute such affirmative action).

Our decisions in Simmer and Pries holding that entry into ARD constitutes a

waiver of defendant’s Section 110 compulsory joinder rights applied Failor

and the requirement of an affirmative act by the defendant to separate the

charges and are therefore fully consistent with Johnson. Pries, 861 A.2d at

956-57; Simmer, 814 A.2d at 699-700.

      Because Appellee’s voluntary entry into ARD constituted a waiver of his

right to compulsory joinder under Section 110 of the Crimes Code, the trial

court erred in granting his motion to dismiss the simple assault charge. We

therefore reverse the trial court’s order and remand this case for sentencing

on Appellee’s guilty plea.

      Order reversed. Case remanded for further proceedings. Jurisdiction

relinquished.

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Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 09/02/2022

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