Court Opinion

ID: 4539807
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-06-08 19:13:20.951477+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:44:23.943826
License: Public Domain

J-S19008-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

 COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA            :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                         :         PENNSYLVANIA
                                         :
              v.                         :
                                         :
                                         :
 NICHOLAS DUPREE                         :
                                         :
                   Appellant             :    No. 467 EDA 2019

           Appeal from the PCRA Order Entered January 29, 2019
  In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
                     No(s): CP-51-CR-0000172-2010

BEFORE: BOWES, J., McCAFFERY, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                              FILED JUNE 08, 2020

      Nicholas Dupree appeals pro se from the order that dismissed his

petition filed pursuant to the Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”). We affirm.

      The PCRA court summarized the facts and procedural history of this case

as follows:

            Appellant perpetrated several acts of sexual misconduct
      upon his then nine[-]year[-]old biological daughter, N.D.
      Previously, in 2007, Appellant pled guilty to simple assault for
      conduct of sexually inappropriate behavior against the same child
      when she was six years old. In the instant case, N.D. gave a
      detailed account of four incidents which occurred in 2009 where
      Appellant engaged in conduct such as licking her private parts,
      placing his fingers in her anus, and ejaculating in her mouth. He
      also had the child perform oral sex on him. On one occasion
      Appellant had N.D. enter a room where she found him naked and
      masturbating. After the sexual encounters, Appellant gave N.D.
      money and admonished her not to tell. Eventually N.D. disclosed
      to her grandmother who tried to reach the child’s mother,
      Taneisha Sowell, but was unsuccessful in doing so for a period of
      time. Once contacted, the mother filed a police report the
      following day.
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             When Sowell confronted Appellant about the allegations, he
       denied them. Later, Appellant through Sowell sent a letter to N.D.
       stating, inter alia, that he was ‘sorry for all the wrongs’ he had
       done and promised to ‘make up for everything.’ A second letter
       from Appellant to N.D. stated that he was sorry for his conduct
       and asked for forgiveness.

              At trial, Appellant denied the allegations, testifying that he
       was never alone with N.D. after the simple assault plea, and that
       Sowell bribed N.D. to lie because he refused to renew their
       relationship. Evidence of Sowell’s prison visits to Appellant, along
       with text messages and letters between the two were introduced.

              ....

              On November 23, 2009 Appellant was arrested and charged
       with involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, incest, corruption of
       minors, and aggravated indecent assault and on September 14,
       2012, following a jury trial before this court, he was found guilty
       of those crimes. On May 13, 2013 Appellant was sentenced to a
       lengthy term of incarceration followed by probation. On May 22,
       2013 Appellant filed a motion for reconsideration and the motion
       was denied. Appellant filed an appeal on June 3, 2013. On July
       29, 2014 judgement of sentence was affirmed by the Superior
       Court of Pennsylvania. Appellant’s timely pro se [PCRA petition]
       was filed on July 27, 2015. PCRA counsel was appointed and
       entered appearance on September 1, 2016. A Grazier[1] hearing
       was held December 21, 2016 granting Appellant’s motion to
       proceed pro se. Thereafter, Appellant filed an amended pro se
       petition on February 23, 2017 and a supplemental amended
       petition on July 24,2018. PCRA relief was denied without a
       hearing with formal dismissal on January 29, 2019. This timely
       appeal followed on February 5, 2019.

PCRA Court Opinion, 6/13/19, at 2-3, 1 (citations, unnecessary capitalization,

and repetition of amounts in numerical form omitted).

____________________________________________

1 See Commonwealth v. Grazier, 713 A.2d 81, 82 (Pa. 1998) (“When a
waiver of the right to counsel is sought at the post-conviction and appellate
stages, an on-the-record determination should be made that the waiver is a
knowing, intelligent, and voluntary one.”).

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      Appellant presents the following question for this Court’s review:

      The inferior court has abdicated its responsibility to prevent the
      triumph of fraud, and, where a judgment has been obligated by
      fraud, it permitted its own records and processes to be the
      instruments of infamy. Appellant being confined under a void
      judgment procured by fraud is entitled to an unconditional
      discharge and equitable relief by operation of the Due Process
      Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, ‒and on the principle that
      “fraud vitiates everything it touches.” Sallada v. Mock, 121 A.
54, 55 (1923). Accord Brittain v. Hope Enters., 163 A.3d 1029
      (2017) (quoting Sallada v. Mock, 121 A. 54, 55 (1923)). Accord
      Commonwealth v. Harper, 890 A.2d 1078, 1082 (2006);
      Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v. Hartford-Empire Co., 322 U.S. 238,
      64 S. Ct. 997, 88 L. Ed. 1250 (1944); Herring v. United States,
      424 F.3d 384, 390 (3d Cir. 2005).

Appellant’s brief at 4.

      We begin with the principles pertinent to our review. “Our standard of

review regarding a PCRA court’s order is whether the determination of the

PCRA court is supported by the evidence of record and is free of legal error.

The PCRA court’s findings will not be disturbed unless there is no support for

the findings in the certified record.”     Commonwealth v. Garcia, 23 A.3d
1059, 1061 (Pa.Super. 2011).           Further, “[i]t is an appellant’s burden to

persuade    us   that     the   PCRA   court   erred   and   that   relief   is   due.”

Commonwealth v. Miner, 44 A.3d 684, 688 (Pa.Super. 2012).

      While Appellant pled an array of claims in the PCRA court, the only one

he raises in his statement of questions to this Court is his allegation that the

trial court lacked jurisdiction over the underlying case because the charging

instrument was signed by someone without authority to do so. Specifically,

                                         -3-
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Appellant pursues the claim raised in his supplemental PCRA petition that the

bill of information initiating his case was signed by someone who did not work

for the district attorney’s office at the time he was charged. See Motion to

Supplement Petition, 7/24/18, at 3-7. See also Appellant’s brief at 21-28.

        The PCRA court addressed this claim as follows:

              The primary thrust of Appellant’s complaints center about
        his misguided belief that the bills of information are fraudulent
        thereby negating the court’s jurisdiction over him; and, that
        anything or anyone related to those documents are engaged in a
        fraudulent conspiracy to deprive him of due process. This is a
        bogus, unfounded claim.

              Appellant seeks to benefit from the resignation of Seth
        Williams as Philadelphia. District Attorney and his subsequent
        2017 criminal conviction in federal court.     At the time of
        Appellant’s arrest in 2009, throughout trial and sentencing in
        2013, Williams was the Philadelphia District Attorney.     The
        Commonwealth has supplied a copy of the original bills of
        information signature page bearing William’s signature dated
        1/20/2010.

               When Williams resigned as Philadelphia District Attorney in
        June 2017, Kathleen Martin held the position of First Assistant
        District Attorney, and as such, rightfully assumed his duties until
        an Interim District Attorney was appointed by the First Judicial
        Common Pleas Court Judges. Kelly B. Hodge was appointed to
        the interim position in July 2017.        The bills of information
        generated for Appellant at his request in 2017 bore Martin’s
        signature for which the Commonwealth offered an explanation.[2]
        There was no forgery; there was no fraud.
____________________________________________

2   Specifically, the Commonwealth offered the following explanation:

        [T]hese signatures are regenerated at the time they are accessed
        and reprinted. Here, in defendant’s supplemental petition, he
        attaches a copy of the bills of information that have a “date
        printed” timestamp of “08/16/2017,” which would coincide with

                                           -4-
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             Here, Williams’s signature was on the original charging
       document. Moreover, Martin’s signature on documents generated
       during her time as acting district attorney would be valid. The
       laws of Pennsylvania, address precisely this situation for counties
       of the first class, such as Philadelphia:

              16. P.S. § 7723 - The District attorney shall have the
              power to designate and appoint one of the assistant
              district attorneys, herein provided for, as his first
              assistant, who shall, in the absence of the district
              attorney from the jurisdiction or during his disability
              to perform the duties of his office through sickness or
              other cause, be vested with all the duties, powers, and
              privileges now given by law to the district attorney,
              and generally, at such times, be empowered to do and
              perform all things in connection with his office which
              the district attorney may be law be entitled to do or
              perform.

             Appellant is not entitled to relief based on this speculative
       claim. Error was not committed.

PCRA Court Opinion, 6/13/19, at 3-4 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).

       In this Court, Appellant persists in contending that the copy of the

document printed in 2017 that automatically incorporated the signature of the

person then acting as District Attorney was the same one that initiated his

case in 2010. His only acknowledgment of the Commonwealth’s explanation,

____________________________________________

       the period of time that Ms. Martin served as acting District
       Attorney of Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office. Located in the
       Commonwealth’s trial file are the bills of information dated
       “1/20/2010,” and on that document is then District Attorney Seth
       Williams’s signature.

Commonwealth Letter Brief, 9/11/18, at 2-3 (citations omitted).           The
Commonwealth’s filing included a copy of the original 2010 bill of information
signed by Mr. Williams. See id. at Exhibit A.

                                           -5-
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accepted by the PCRA court, is that the PCRA “court’s assessment of the facts

(below) includes unsupported argument; is self-contradicting, and is based on

personal knowledge of disputed facts, and information conveyed through ‘ex

parte communications’ (outside of any record or proceeding in the case) . . . .”

Appellant’s brief at 17 n.11.   However, the information relied upon by the

PCRA court clearly was not ex parte, as it is filed of record and was served

upon Appellant.

      In our review of the record, the PCRA court opinion, and the parties’

briefs, we conclude that the PCRA court’s determinations are supported by the

record and free of legal error. Accordingly, Appellant has failed to convince

us that relief is due.

      Order affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 6/8/20

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