Court Opinion

ID: 9700596
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-25 21:36:49.158347+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:21:11.974148
License: Public Domain

JOHNSON, Judge,
dissenting:
The majority today holds that in an appeal from a summary conviction before a magistrate, the court of common pleas is required to “determine the facts of the case and render [ed] a verdict”, even where the defendant fails to appear. Because I find no rational support for this conclusion in the law, and since the result cannot but have an adverse effect upon the administration of our criminal justice system, I must dissent.
The hearings on the statutory appeals were, on November 13, 1980, scheduled for trial de novo in the court of common pleas on January 6, 1981 before the then statutory appeals judge, the Honorable Nicholas P. Papadakos. However, on the date set for the hearings, both defendants failed to appear. Pursuant to appellants’ failure to appear for their appeals without having obtained a continuance, both appeals were dismissed on the scheduled trial date.
Relying on Commonwealth v. Kyle, 307 Pa.Super. 446, 453 A.2d 668 (1982), the majority here reverses the orders dismissing the appeals and remands, presumably, to require the common pleas court to proceed with a trial. In Kyle, the majority relied on Commonwealth v. Gula, 300 Pa.Super. 445, 446 A.2d 938 (1982); Commonwealth v. Carter, 230 Pa.Super. 401, 326 A.2d 530 (1974); and Commonwealth v. Gamarino, 299 Pa.Super. 144, 445 A.2d 189 (1982) in declaring that “in an appeal from a summary judgment to the court of common pleas, the judgment of common pleas court should be either ‘guilty’ or ‘not guilty’.” Kyle, supra, 307 Pa.Super. 446, 453 A.2d 668. In all three of these cases, however, it is clear that this court was con*69sidering the proper disposition of a statutory appeal following a hearing on the merits. Neither Gula, nor Carter, nor Gamarino provide any support for the proposition, advanced by the majority here, that a judgment must be either “guilty” or “not guilty” where no trial de novo has been held.
In the Kyle case, the majority seemingly interpreted Pa.R.Crim.P. 1117 as requiring the de novo court to determine the facts and render a verdict. After citing the following sentence from the rule, with emphasis:
The defendant’s absence without cause shall not preclude proceeding with the trial including the return of the verdict[,]
the Kyle majority went on to conclude:
In the instant case, not only was there an improper verdict, but there was no determination of the facts of the offense. The trial court, even if empowered to proceed without a defendant, must determine the facts and render a verdict.
Kyle, supra, 307 Pa.Super. 446, 453 A.2d 668 (footnotes omitted, emphasis in original).
With this proposition of law, I am unable to agree. The Kyle majority concedes, in a footnote, that our earlier decision in Commonwealth v. Smith, 237 Pa.Super. 506, 352 A.2d 90 (1975), presented identical facts to those confronting the Kyle court but goes on to assert that our holding in Smith, to the effect that Rule 1117 does not require the Commonwealth to proceed with trial in the defendant’s absence, was overruled by this court’s decision in Commonwealth v. Koch, 288 Pa.Super. 290, 431 A.2d 1052 (1981). Since the Koch court was primarily concerned with the proper interpretation of Pa.R.Crim.P. 1123 providing for written motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, and the application of Rule 1123 to appeals from summary convictions, and since the facts in Koch involved a full hearing on the merits in the common pleas court, I am unable to accept the conclusion of my colleagues in the *70recent Kyle decision that Commonwealth v. Smith, supra, has been “effectively overruled.”
On the contrary, I believe that the analysis of my brother, Judge CAVANAUGH, in his dissenting opinion filed in Kyle is irrefutable, and that the decision of the majority in that case should, and must, be re-examined. Admittedly, the facts presented on this appeal are indistinguishable from those which confronted the Kyle court. But the same must be said for the facts which arose in Commonwealth v. Smith, supra. I’m convinced that we were wrong in departing from the clear guideposts erected in Smith, and that that departure resulted from misreading signs intended to assist the judicial traveler along a road ending at a different, unrelated destination.
Traveling down the well-beaten path of appeals from summary conviction where no hearing has been held, the end of the journey seems clear to me. To quote Judge CAVANAUGH:
The instant case was not heard de novo. The appellant did not appear in court when his case was called and ... did nothing to pursue his right on appeal. Since he did not see fit to appear at trial there is no obligation on the court to proceed to trial in the defendant’s absence. The majority opinion overlooks the fact that the appellant stands convicted of a summary offense. In the absence of pursuing his appeal his conviction stands....
The majority would require the totally futile act of having a trial following a summary conviction, in every case where the defendant appeals to the courts of common pleas but does not deign to attend his trial, notwithstanding his demand for a trial implicit in his appeal. This would require a blatant waste of judicial manpower.
Commonwealth v. Kyle, supra, Dissenting Opinion, Cavanaugh, J., 307 Pa.Super. 446, 453 A.2d 668.
Because I believe that the courts of common pleas are fully justified in dismissing statutory appeals in a proper case, Commonwealth v. Smith, supra, 237 Pa.Super. at 509, 352 A.2d at 91, I would address the sole issue raised by *71the appellants on these appeals: Did the trial court abuse its discretion by not granting a continuance.
On the day before the hearing, defense counsel went to the judge’s chambers for an unrecorded meeting. Defense counsel requested the court to grant a continuance on the grounds that the defendant was out of the country,1 but the request was denied. On the scheduled hearing date, after the cases were called, the court dismissed the defendants’ appeals for the reason that they had failed to appear.
In their briefs, appellants allege that at the conference in the judge’s chambers the court declared that it had a policy to deny continuances brought under statutory appeals and further that counsel’s efforts in explaining the reasons for the continuance would be fruitless (Appellants’ Briefs at 4).
These allegations are only to be found in the appellants’ briefs. They are absent from the record. The appellant has the responsibility to assume that his claims of error are secured on the record. See Commonwealth v. Kollock, 246 Pa.Super. 16, 22-3, 369 A.2d 787, 790-91 (1977). Appellate courts are to decide cases based only on what the record contains, and may not consider assertions raised by briefs of counsel. Dile v. Dile, 284 Pa.Super. 459, 465 n. 5, 426 A.2d 137, 141 n. 5 (1981) (per curiam); Marine Bank v. Huhta, 279 Pa.Super. 130, 139 n. 5, 420 A.2d 1066, 1070 n. 5 (1980).
The record demonstrates that the appeals were dismissed following the defendants’ failure to appear on the scheduled date. There was no error in denying the continuance. The trial court has the discretion to grant or refuse a continuance, and its decision will not be reversed except in clear cases of abuse. Blackledge v. Commonwealth, Pennsylvania State Police, 62 Pa.Commw. 188, 191-92, 435 A.2d 309, *72311 (1981); Krull v. Krull, 236 Pa.Super. 207, 210, 344 A.2d 619, 620 (1975).
Although not raised by appellants, I believe that the more appropriate question for review, on the records before us, is whether the trial court palpably abused its discretion by dismissing the appeals after the appellants did not appear or answer when the cases were called on the scheduled hearing date. My review of the record satisfies me that the trial court did not abuse its discretion.
Since I find no abuse of the trial court’s discretion, and since I am unable to agree with my colleagues that these appeals should be returned to the trial court for mandatory hearings without regard to the efforts of appellants in pursuit of their appeals, and since I believe that the order under review should be affirmed, I hereby register my dissent.

. We note that both briefs for the individual appellants contain a verbatim Statement of the Case, each contending that "the defendant was out of the country.” Since the certified record contains no testimony on this point, we do not reach the question of whether either, or both, of the appellants were out of the country.