Court Opinion

ID: 9404685
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-23 20:09:07.260542+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:16.247497
License: Public Domain

[J-69-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.]
                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                WESTERN DISTRICT

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                 :   No. 10 WAP 2022
                                                  :
                      Appellee                    :   Appeal from the Order of the
                                                  :   Superior Court entered December
                                                  :   23, 2020 at No. 176 WDA 2020,
               v.                                 :   affirming the convictions and
                                                  :   vacating the Judgment of Sentence
                                                  :   of the Court of Common Pleas of
    RYAN MICHAEL DUNN,                            :   Allegheny County entered
                                                  :   September 11, 2019 at No. CP-02-
                      Appellant                   :   CR-0014780-2018, and remanding.
                                                  :
                                                  :   ARGUED: October 26, 2022

                         OPINION IN SUPPORT OF REVERSAL

JUSTICE WECHT                                                   DECIDED: June 23, 2023
        I join Justice Donohue’s Opinion in Support of Reversal (“OISR”).         I write to

supplement that well-reasoned analysis with a few additional thoughts.

        I agree with Justice Mundy’s Opinion in Support of Affirmance (“OISA”)1 that our

discovery rules apply with full force to expert witnesses who testify pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S.

§ 5920. I also agree that the Commonwealth’s last-minute disclosure of its intent to call

such an expert in this case violated the requirement of Rule 573(D) of the Pennsylvania

Rules of Criminal Procedure that the Commonwealth “promptly notify” the defendant of

the identity of any additional witness that it intends to call at trial.2 The language of the

1    Hereinafter, uses of “OISA” generally refer to the Opinion authored by Justice
Mundy. References to Chief Justice Todd’s OISA are so specified.
2     Pa.R.Crim.P. 573(D) (“If, prior to or during trial, either party discovers additional
evidence or material previously requested or ordered to be disclosed by it, which is
subject to discovery or inspection under this rule, or the identity of an additional witness
Commonwealth’s belated disclosure in this case indicates that it represented an attempt

to induce Ryan Michael Dunn into accepting a guilty plea rather than proceeding to trial.3

The Commonwealth sent this correspondence mere hours before jury selection. The trial

court should have appreciated that it was palpably unfair for the Commonwealth to

threaten Dunn with “trial by ambush” in this manner.4 The trial court’s refusal to provide

any remedy to Dunn was error.

       As for the nature of the remedy, the OISA faults Dunn for declining to explicitly

request a continuance, and it suggests that a continuance would have sufficed to cure

any prejudice that Dunn sustained.5 Justice Donohue rightly “questions” a rule that

or witnesses, such party shall promptly notify the opposing party or the court of the
additional evidence, material, or witness.”) (emphasis added).
       Although it concludes that the Commonwealth violated this prompt notification
requirement, the OISA notes that there is no fixed period specified in Rule 573 within
which such notifications must be provided, and it refers that matter to the Criminal
Procedural Rules Committee for consideration. OISA at 20. I agree that this is a worthy
task. The committee should explore whether Rule 573 would benefit from a more
concrete framework for the timeliness of the required disclosures, in order to alleviate any
ambiguity and to avoid potential litigation over the meaning of a “prompt” notification. A
specified number of days might be warranted. Alternatively, a requirement that trial courts
set individualized discovery deadlines tailored to the needs and schedule of each case
may be beneficial.
3        See Email from Assistant District Attorney to Trial Counsel, 6/3/2019, at 4:25 p.m.
(reproduced in Dunn’s Br. at 9) (“Please see the attached documents. I intent [sic] to call
Jamie Mesar as per 42 Pa.C.S.A. [§] 5920. Please let me know whether the defendant
is willing to consider other offers. I’ll see you tomorrow.”) (emphasis added).
4       See Commonwealth v. Shelton, 640 A.2d 892, 895 (Pa. 1994) (“It is well
established in this Commonwealth that the purpose of the discovery rules is to permit the
parties in a criminal matter to be prepared for trial. Trial by ambush is contrary to the
spirit and letter of those rules and cannot be condoned.”).
5      See OISA at 22 (“Importantly, Dunn also never explicitly request[ed] a
continuance, which is generally ‘deemed sufficient to eradicate possible prejudice and
enable the defendant to assimilate new information.’”) (quoting Commonwealth v. Rosa,
609 A.2d 200, 204 (Pa. Super. 1992)).

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“places the burden on the defendant to mitigate the Commonwealth’s violation of the

discovery rules and then penalizes him for not doing so.”6 I would do more than question

such a rule. I would reject it outright. The consequences of one party’s abuse of the

discovery rules should not fall upon the other.          Forcing Dunn to clean up the

Commonwealth’s mess is no remedy at all.

       Moreover, a continuance may not be in the defendant’s best interest.            The

defendant may be incarcerated while awaiting trial, and thus every day that trial is delayed

is a day that he is deprived of his liberty. To make the consequence of that delay more

concrete, the party who requests a continuance is typically the party to whom the delay

is attributable for purposes of assessing the Commonwealth’s compliance with its speedy

trial obligations under Rule 600.7 Accordingly, it very well may be against the defendant’s

interest for him to request a continuance that he would not need but for the

Commonwealth’s gamesmanship or neglect (whichever it may be). Dunn’s trial counsel

here made a reasonable calculation that Dunn’s best interest would be served by

exclusion of the expert testimony, or, failing that, the provision of an adequate expert

report that would fairly apprise him of the substance of the forthcoming testimony. Dunn

should not be punished for declining to request a continuance that would merely have

excused the Commonwealth’s dereliction and given it yet more time to prepare its case

against him.

6      OISR (Donohue, J.) at 15.
7       Pa.R.Crim.P. 600. See Pa.R.Crim.P. 600(C)(3)(a)(i)-(ii) (providing that when a trial
court grants a continuance, it shall “record the identity of the party requesting the
continuance” and shall “record to which party the period of delay caused by the
continuance shall be attributed”). The Comment to Rule 600 gives examples of delays
attributable to the defendant and includes delay resulting from “any continuance granted
at the request of the defendant or the defendant’s attorney.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 600,
Comment.

                            [J-69-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 3
       Turning to the adequacy of the “expert report” in this case, I share Justice

Donohue’s view that Mesar’s boilerplate letter was overly generic and insufficient to

inform Dunn of the substance of Mesar’s proposed testimony.8 But specificity has its own

dangers as well. Should an expert’s trial testimony become too specific, there is a risk of

it running afoul of this Court’s decisions in Commonwealth v. Dunkel9 and Commonwealth

v. Jones10 as impermissible commentary on the credibility of the victim. In Dunkel, we

held that expert testimony concerning the typical behaviors of sexually abused children

was impermissible, in part because it “would infringe upon the jury’s right to determine

credibility.”11 In Jones, we acknowledged that the General Assembly, by enacting 42

Pa.C.S. § 5920, “effectively overruled” Dunkel to the extent that Dunkel held that such

expert testimony was categorically impermissible.12       Yet, we concluded that Dunkel

remains viable to the extent that it prohibits expert commentary on the credibility of the

victim.13   Whether expert testimony violates this prohibition, Jones holds, is to be

“assessed on a case by case basis.”14

       In light of Jones and Dunkel, it would seem that the more that an expert’s testimony

is specifically tailored to the facts of the case and to the behavior of the victim, the more

8      See OISR (Donohue, J.) at 10-12.
9      602 A.2d 830 (Pa. 1992).
10     240 A.3d 881 (Pa. 2020).
11     Dunkel, 602 A.2d at 837.
12     Jones, 240 A.3d at 895.
13    Id. at 896-97. Moreover, as emphasized in Jones, Section 5920(b)(3) additionally
precludes an expert from offering an opinion on the credibility of another witness. 42
Pa.C.S. § 5920(b)(3) (“The [expert] witness’s opinion regarding the credibility of any other
witness, including the victim, shall not be admissible.”).
14     Jones, 240 A.3d at 896-97.

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likely it is to be deemed to constitute impermissible bolstering of the victim’s credibility.

Of course, this is a concern about the conduct of the trial. But it is all the more reason for

prompt and meaningful pretrial disclosure of the substance of an expert’s opinion.

Otherwise, the defendant cannot ascertain whether there is a basis for objection on

Jones/Dunkel grounds or on some other basis.15 For this reason, I join Justice Donohue

in concluding that the purported “expert report” provided to Dunn—a form letter containing

only a few paragraphs of generalities about sexual abuse victims—was woefully

inadequate to apprise Dunn of the testimony that the Commonwealth intended to present

at trial imminently.

       However, like Justice Donohue, my most significant disagreement with the OISA

lies in its analysis of the prejudice that Dunn sustained as a result of the Commonwealth’s

tardy disclosure. The OISA dubiously asserts that Dunn has presented only “broad and

non-specific allegations” of prejudice.16     This characterization is undermined by the

OISA’s own words. Immediately preceding that portrayal of Dunn’s advocacy, the OISA

provides a summary of the “themes” that Dunn argues: that the Commonwealth’s last-

minute disclosure “prevented him from conducting independent research, developing a

comprehensive cross-examination, making a knowing and intelligent decision about

whether to hire his own expert, making a robust pretrial challenge to the admission of the

testimony, and reflecting on how the testimony would bear upon all of the other evidence

15     See Dunn’s Br. at 35 (“In light of Dunkel’s continued viability . . . along with Jones’s
mandate that the appropriate scope of Section 5920 expert opinions must carefully be
assessed on a case-by-case basis, it is nothing short of essential that criminal defendants
be given notice, well in advance of trial, of the Commonwealth’s intent to call such an
expert and that they be provided with a detailed report of the expert’s proposed
testimony.”) (emphasis in original).
16     OISA at 22.

                             [J-69-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 5
presented at trial.”17 These assertions of prejudice are neither “broad” nor “non-specific.”

They are clear recitations of the particular ways in which the Commonwealth’s conduct

deprived Dunn of his ability to optimize his trial preparation and strategy.

       But Dunn’s advocacy is even more precise than that. Dunn’s present counsel

tracked down and reviewed all of the articles that Mesar cited as support in her “expert

report,” and discovered numerous potential inconsistencies between Mesar’s proffered

testimony and the medical research upon which she purported to rely.18               These

inconsistencies could have undercut Mesar’s opinions about matters such as whether

certain characteristics of sexual abuse predict delayed disclosure, whether a familial

relationship between the victim and abuser makes it more difficult for a child to disclose,

and whether an abuser’s threats affect the rate of disclosure.19 Dunn’s counsel notes that

some of these articles were not readily available online, so she had to seek the assistance

of a medical librarian at UPMC-Mercy Hospital, which is “definitely not something trial

counsel could have accomplished overnight.”20 Plainly, had defense counsel been able

to review this medical literature and to discover inconsistencies between the prevailing

research and Mesar’s testimony, this would have allowed for a much more robust cross-

examination. This line of advocacy further distinguishes the present circumstance from

Commonwealth v. Counterman, which the OISA cites for the proposition that “generalized

allegations of prejudice” are insufficient.21    Counterman qualified this “generalized

allegations” characterization by noting that the appellant failed to explain how earlier

17     Id.
18     See Dunn’s Reply Br. at 26-28.
19     Id. at 26-27.
20     Id. at 26 n.12.
21     OISA at 22 (citing Commonwealth v. Counterman, 719 A.2d 284, 298 (Pa. 1998)).

                             [J-69-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 6
disclosure of the statements at issue in that case “would have altered his cross-

examination or voir dire.”22 Not only are Dunn’s allegations of prejudice highly specific,

but he also demonstrates precisely how earlier disclosure of Mesar’s letter would have

allowed him to challenge Mesar’s testimony on cross-examination.

       Moreover, Dunn has identified another expert that the defense could have retained

to counter Mesar’s testimony. William O’Donohue, Ph.D., is a professor of psychology at

the University of Nevada, Reno, who has testified for the defense and been qualified as

an expert under Section 5920 in previous cases in this Commonwealth.23 Dunn provides

a detailed summary of the opinions that Dr. O’Donohue offered in a previous case, which

opinions would have contradicted much of Mesar’s testimony. But the substance of Dr.

O’Donohue’s previous testimony is not the point; Dunn merely uses it to highlight the fact

that there were options available had the defense been afforded sufficient time to retain

its own expert before trial. And it is obvious that the ability to hire a defense expert such

as Dr. O’Donohue would have had a significant impact upon Dunn’s trial strategy.

       For these reasons, the OISA’s dismissive depiction of Dunn’s assertions of

prejudice as “broad and non-specific” is an abject mischaracterization. It is telling that the

OISA makes no effort to address Dunn’s highly particularized illustrations of the ways that

a timely disclosure of the Commonwealth’s intent to call Mesar would have allowed him

to better prepare his defense. Dunn explains exactly how the Commonwealth’s last-

minute notice harmed his trial strategy and preparation. He details precisely how he could

have used Mesar’s own materials to poke holes in her testimony. And he identifies an

expert whom he might have been able to employ in his defense, had he not been deprived

22     Counterman, 719 A.2d at 298.
23     See Dunn’s Reply Br. at 14-26.

                             [J-69-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 7
of time by the Commonwealth’s eleventh-hour ambush. One is left to wonder what more

Dunn possibly could have argued in order to clear the hurdle that the OISA erects.

       Chief Justice Todd likewise finds Dunn’s arguments concerning prejudice to be

inadequate, less because of their substance than their timing. The Chief Justice contends

that Dunn “does not describe, in any detail,” what he would have done differently at trial

had he been provided sufficient notice of Mesar’s testimony, suggesting that he does not,

for instance, “proffer research that would have undermined Mesar’s testimony” or “provide

questions he would have asked on cross examination.”24 Of course, as discussed above,

none of this is correct. Indeed, in her very next sentence, Chief Justice Todd readily

acknowledges that Dunn does, in fact, provide such details; yet, because these

arguments appear in his reply brief, “that effort was too late.”25 This curious conclusion

comes notwithstanding the Chief Justice’s acknowledgment that Dunn provided these

arguments in reply to the Commonwealth’s argument.26 And although the Chief Justice’s

objection to Dunn’s advocacy is that he did not develop these points in his principal brief,

she emphasizes that reply briefs are intended to allow a response to “matters raised by

appellee’s brief . . . and not previously addressed in appellant’s brief,”27 which would

seem to be exactly what we are talking about here. This reasoning—“too late”—is an

elevation of form over substance, and bad form at that. Unlike most overly formalistic

justifications, this one is not even faithful to the language of the governing Rule. Such a

24     OISA (Todd, C.J.) at 2.
25     Id.
26    Id. (“It is true that, after being criticized by the Commonwealth for these lapses,
Dunn attempts to provide some such detail in his reply brief.”) (citation omitted).
27     Id. (quoting Pa.R.A.P. 2113(a)) (emphasis in original).

                            [J-69-2022] [OISA: Mundy, J.] - 8
conclusion comes dangerously close to sending the message to litigants that reply briefs

just don’t really matter.

       Perhaps aware that its analysis of the prejudice to Dunn’s trial strategy is less than

fully persuasive, the OISA falls back upon an assertion that the “incriminating nature of

the facts in this case do not lend themselves to a finding of prejudice.” 28 The OISA then

proceeds through what is effectively a repackaged harmless error analysis, opining that

certain text messages that Dunn sent to the victim were so overwhelmingly inculpatory

that there is no way that the absence of the Commonwealth’s discovery violation could

have affected the outcome.29 It is true that some of this Court’s precedents appear to

endorse such an “outcome-determinative” standard for evaluating prejudice in the context

of discovery violations.30 However, like Justice Donohue, I question whether this variety

of “prejudice” is suitable to the present inquiry, particularly where other precedents of this

Court have analyzed the matter in different ways without acknowledging any disparity,

e.g., by looking for an impact upon the defendant’s trial strategy, or by determining

whether a discovery violation deprived the defendant of a fair trial. The word “prejudice”

carries numerous meanings in the law.31 The resolution of the differing formulations and

28     OISA at 24.
29     Of course, if this is true, then it raises the question of why the Commonwealth
ostensibly believed that it required Mesar’s expert testimony to explain the victim’s
behavior in the first place. Moreover, if this was such an open-and-shut case, then it is
curious that the Commonwealth elected to run the risk of giving Dunn such a late and
minimal disclosure of its intent to call Mesar, effectively handing Dunn a potentially
reversible issue on appeal. Apparently, at the time of trial, the Commonwealth was not
content to rest its case solely on Dunn’s text messages.
30     See OISR (Donohue, J.) at 18 n.13, and the cases cited therein.
31     For instance, “[p]rejudice in the context of ineffective assistance of counsel means
demonstrating there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s error, the outcome
of the proceeding would have been different.” Commonwealth v. Keaton, 45 A.3d 1050,
1061 (Pa. 2012). This is the “outcome-determinative” sense in which the OISA uses the

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adoption of a uniform standard for evaluating prejudice in the context of discovery

violations is an issue that is worthy of this Court’s attention in a future case. That,

however, is outside the scope of the present appeal.

       I agree with Justice Donohue that the OISA’s approach to the prejudice inquiry

“appears to be applying a variation of the harmless error doctrine, albeit with the burden

ostensibly flipped to Dunn.”32 I further agree that the OISA errs in this effort. Although

the OISA is correct that the text messages it highlights appear to be highly inculpatory,

Dunn presented the jury with an explanation for them—namely that he had sent the victim

a risqué photograph of her mother, and that all of the referenced text messages

concerned that photograph.33 To be sure, I do not find this explanation particularly

compelling. Many of Dunn’s text messages strike me as inculpatory. But I am not a juror.

term, at least in part of its Opinion. But that flavor of prejudice is very different than, for
example, the “prejudice” assessed under Rule of Evidence 403, which instructs a court
to exclude evidence “if its probative value is outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair
prejudice.” Pa.R.E. 403. Prejudice in that sense “means a tendency to suggest decision
on an improper basis or to divert the jury’s attention away from its duty of weighing the
evidence impartially.” Pa.R.E. 403, Comment. And that is different still from dismissal of
a claim “with prejudice,” meaning that it may not be brought again. The word “prejudice”
is not a universal signal that we must determine whether an error affected the outcome
of a trial.
32     OISR (Donohue, J.) at 22. Of course, because this Court in Commonwealth v.
Hamlett, 234 A.3d 486 (Pa. 2020), held that appellate courts may raise and decide the
question of harmless error sua sponte, I do not believe that there is anything left of the
Commonwealth’s “burden” to prove harmless error. Rather, it is a matter that this Court
may raise whenever we feel the inclination to advocate on the Commonwealth’s behalf.
See Hamlett, 234 A.3d at 495-523 (Wecht, J., dissenting).
33      The OISA acknowledges this explanation and notes that the victim even
acknowledged that some of the text messages were in reference to the photograph. OISA
at 25 (“According to the victim, Dunn was referencing the circumstances surrounding the
photograph, as well as his past sexual abuse of the victim and fear that additional
information may come to light during any investigation.”) (citation omitted).

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      For an error to be deemed “harmless because there is properly admitted

overwhelming evidence of guilt, the untainted evidence relied upon must be

uncontradicted.”34 As Chief Justice Emeritus Saylor once commented, “while there may

be some divergent views regarding the precise contours of what constitutes contradicted

evidence, the gravamen of that aspect of the harmless error framework is that the

appellate courts should not attempt to replicate the jury’s role in weighing the parties’

competing advocacies when assessing the comparative import of improperly admitted

evidence.”35 However implausible Dunn’s explanation may appear from our appellate

perch, evaluating the credibility of that explanation is not this Court’s prerogative.

Because Dunn refuted the inferences that the Commonwealth sought to have the jury

draw from the text messages, there is no “uncontradicted” evidence upon which we may

premise a harmless error analysis. And because we cannot rely upon contradicted

evidence in the harmless error context, we also should not consider such evidence in

assessing “prejudice,” in the outcome-determinative sense.

      In all other respects, my views align with those expressed by Justice Donohue. I

accordingly would reverse the order of the Superior Court.

      Justices Donohue and Dougherty join this opinion in support of reversal.

34    Commonwealth v. Story, 383 A.2d 155, 166 (Pa. 1978).
35    Commonwealth v. Jacoby, 170 A.3d 1065, 1099 n.4 (Pa. 2017) (Saylor, C.J.,
dissenting).

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