HomeMy WebLinkAbout92-2011 CriminalCOMMONWEALTH
v.
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
NO. 2011 CRIMINAL 1992
CHARGE: DRIVING UNDER THE
FRANK E. MARQUART INFLUENCE
IN RE: DEFENDANT'S SUPPLEMENTAL OMNIBUS PRE-TRIAL MOTION
BEFORE OLER, J.
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this30K day of March, 1993, upon consideration of Defendant's
Supplemental Omnibus Pre -Trial Motion in the form of a Motion To Quash, the
Motion is DENIED.
BY THE COURT,
Wesley Oler, Jr. J.-
District
;
District Attorney's Office
William Braught, Esq.
Assistant Public Defender
:rc
COMMONWEALTH IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
V.
NO. 2011 CRIMINAL 1992
CHARGE: DRIVING UNDER THE
FRANK E. MARQUART INFLUENCE
IN RE: DEFENDANT'S SUPPLEMENTAL OMNIBUS PRE-TRIAL MOTION
BEFORE OLER. J.
OPINION AND ORDER OF COURT
Oler, J.
For disposition in the present case, in which the Defendant is charged with
driving under the influence,' is a supplemental omnibus pre-trial motion filed on
behalf of Defendant in the form of a motion to quash. The motion seeks to quash the
information to the extent that it charges a violation of Section 3731(a)(1) of the Vehicle
Code (driving under the influence of alcohol to a degree which renders the person
incapable of safe driving), inasmuch as this charge was dismissed at a preliminary
hearing in which only a charge of violation of Section 3731(a)(4) (driving under the
influence of alcohol while the amount of alcohol by weight in the blood is 0.10% or
greater) was bound over, and inasmuch as the dismissed charge was not refiled. On
the basis of the reasoning of the majority of this court, sitting en banc, in
Commonwealth v. Jacobs, No. 1409 Criminal 1991 (March 26, 1993), the Motion must
be denied. A copy of the Opinion in Jacobs is attached hereto and made a part hereof.
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this V, day of March, 1993, upon consideration of Defendant's
1 Act of June 17, 1976, P.L. 162, §1, as amended, 75 Pa. C.S. §3731 (1992 Supp.).
N0. 2011 CRIMINAL 1992
Supplemental Omnibus Pre -Trial Motion in the form of a Motion To Quash, the
Motion is DENIED.
District Attorney's Office
William Braught, Esq.
Assistant Public Defender
:rc
BY THE COURT,
J. esley Oler, Jr
2
COMMONWEALTH IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
V.
DAVID TODD JACOBS 1409 CRIMINAL 1991
IN RE: MOTION OF DEFENDANT FOR ARREST OF JUDGMENT
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this �? b day of March, 1993, the motion of defendant for an arrest
of judgment, IS DENIED.
By tl�Court,
Edgar B. Baylej',
Alison Taylor, Esquire
Assistant District Attorney
Brian J. Puhala, Sr., Esquire
For Defendant
COMMONWEALTH IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
V.
DAVID TODD JACOBS 1409 CRIMINAL 1991
IN RE: MOTION OF DEFENDANT FOR ARREST OF JUDGMENT
BEFORE SHEELY P J HOFFER, J. BAYLEY J., HESS J AND OLER J
OPINION AND ORDER OF COURT
BAYLEY, J., March 26, 1993:
On May 25, 1991, defendant was arrested for driving under the influence in
violation of the Vehicle Code at 75 Pa. C.S.A. Section 3731 (a)(1) and (a)(4), that
provides:
(a) Offense defined. A person shall not drive, operate or be in actual
physical control of the movement of any vehicle while:
(1) under the influence of alcohol to a degree which renders the
person incapable of safe driving;
(4) the amount of alcohol by weight in the blood of the person is
0.10% or greater.
At a preliminary hearing a District Justice bound the case over on the
subsection (a)(1) charge but dismissed the subsection (a)(4) charge. The
Commonwealth, without refiling the subsection (a)(4) charge before a District Justice,
or seeking court approval to do so, filed an information charging defendant with
1409 CRIMINAL 1991
driving under the influence under both subsections (a)(1) and (a)(4) of Section 3731.
Defendant then filed a motion to quash the information as to the subsection (a)(4)
charge. He alleged in the motion that, "Due to the dismissal of charges pursuant to §
3731(a)(4) Defendant cannot be charged at this time for violation of said section of
the vehicle code." The motion was dismissed by an order dated May 21, 1992. On
June 10, 1992, a jury found defendant guilty of violating subsection (a)(4) of Section
3731, but was unable to reach a verdict on the subsection (a) (1) charge upon which
a mistrial was declared.' Defendant then filed a motion for arrest of judgment.2 He
set forth in his motion that he "[w]as denied his right to rebut a prima facie case as to
the charges of DUI under 75 Pa. C.S.A. § 3731(a)(4) for which he was found guilty
when his Pretrial Motion to Quash the Information as to that charges was denied .i3
Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal Procedure 225 provides in part:
Information: Filing, Contents, Function
(b) The information shall be signed by the attorney for the
Commonwealth and shall be valid and sufficient in law if it contains:
1. The evidence at trial in a light most favorable to the Commonwealth was that
defendant was stopped at 2:00 a.m. His blood alcohol level as measured on an
Intoxilyzer 5000 at 4:05 a.m. was 0.147%. A toxicologist testified that based on a
number of variables defendant's blood alcohol level at the time he was driving was
0.158% at the lowest to 0.183% at the highest. See Commonwealth v. Jarman, 529 Pa.
92 (1992); Commonwealth v. Modaffare, 529 Pa. 101 (1992).
2. The Commonwealth has not retried him on the subsection (a)(1) charge.
3. Defendant raised other issues in his posttrial motion which were not briefed. They
are waived pursuant to C.C.R.P. 210-7.
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1409 CRIMINAL 1991
(5) a plain and concise statement of the essential elements of the
offense _substantially the same as or cognate to the offense alleged in
the complaint. (Emphasis added).
The Commonwealth relies on Commonwealth v. Slingerland, 358 Pa. Super.
531 (1986), and on a decision of this court in Commonwealth v. Miller, 38
Cumberland L.J. 422 (1988). In Miller, defendant filed a motion to quash on facts
that were exactly the same as in the present case. We stated:
The District Attorney has authority to refile a charge without
obtaining court approval. See Commonwealth v. Hebbard, 34
Cumberland L.J. 697 (1986), citing Commonwealth v. Hetherington, 406
Pa. 17 (1975); Commonwealth v. Prado, 481 Pa. 485 (1978);
Commonwealth v. Genovese, 493 Pa. 65 (1981). Rather than take that
course of action he has reinstated the charge under subsection (a)(4) of
the information, by relying on Commonwealth v. Slingerland, 358 Pa.
Superior Ct. 531, 518 A. 2d 266 (1986). In Slingerland, a criminal
complaint filed before a District Justice charged defendant with a count
of driving under the influence in violation of 75 Pa. C.S.A. § 3731(a)(1).
After the charge was bound over at a preliminary hearing, the District
Attorney prepared and filed an information which alleged, in addition to
a violation of subsection (a) (1), that Slingerland had operated a motor
vehicle when the alcoholic content of his blood exceeded .10%, in
violation of 75 Pa. C.S.A. § 3731(a)(4). Slingerland filed an omnibus
pretrial motion to quash the additional charge. The motion was denied
and he was found guilty of violating subsection (a)(4).
The Superior Court affirmed. It noted that the offenses under
subsections (a) (1) and (a) (4) are separate and distinct. See
Commonwealth v. Fry, 340 Pa. Superior Ct. 445 (1985). However, the
Court held that a District Attorney could file an information under
subsection (a)(4), based only upon the return of a charge under
subsection (a)(1), because the two offenses are 'cognate.' The court
concluded:
The word 'cognate' is defined in Webster's Third New
International Dictionary (1965) as 'related, akin or similar esp. in
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1409 CRIMINAL 1991
having the same or common or similar nature, elements, qualities
or origin....' Applying this common usage of the word, it would
seem that the two subsections of 75 Pa. C.S. §3731(a) define
cognate offenses. Even though the elements of the offenses
defined in subsections (a)(1) and (a)(4) are not identical, the
offenses are similar in nature and spring from a common
concern. The substantive nature of the offenses is clearly the
same, namely the operation of a vehicle after alcohol has been
consumed to a degree which renders the operation a hazard to
others and to himself or herself. Subsection (a) (4) presumes that
an operator with a blood alcohol content of 0.10% or greater is
unfit to drive, see: Commonwealth v. Mikulan, 504 Pa. 244, 249-
251, 470 A.2d 1339, 1341-1342 (1983); whereas subsection (a) (1)
requires proof that the defendant was, in fact, incapable of safe
driving because of an excessive consumption of alcohol. Both
subsections, therefore, proscribe the same conduct: driving a
motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. We conclude,
therefore, that the criminal complaint charging Slingerland with
driving while under the influence of alcohol to an extent which
rendered him incapable of safe driving was sufficient to allow the
District Attorney to include in the information the cognate offense
of driving while the defendant's blood alcohol content exceeded
0.10%.
It 'seems' to us that the facts of this case show that subsection
(a) (1) and (a) (4) are not cognate offenses. However, while we are not
enamored with the holding in Slingerland, we are bound thereunder.
Accordingly, we conclude that the District Attorney in the case sub
judice, had an option either refiling the charge under subsection (a)(4),
or in adding it to an information filed upon the District Justice's return of
a prima facie case under subsection (a)(1). Therefore, we will dismiss
defendant's motion to quash count II of the information. (Emphasis
added).
If, as stated in Slingerland, "[t]he criminal complaint charging [Appellant] with
driving while under the influence of alcohol to an extent which rendered him
incapable of safe driving was sufficient to allow the District Attorney to include in the
information the cognate offense of driving while the defendant's blood alcohol content
ME
1409 CRIMINAL 1991
exceeded 0.10%," then, in the present case, the decision of the District Justice in
binding over the subsection (a)(1) charge was sufficient to allow the District Attorney
to include in an information a subsection (a)(4) offense which is cognate to the
subsection (a) (1) offense. An offense is either cognate to another offense at the time
the criminal conduct takes place or it is not. Since the Superior Court has held that
subsection (a) (1) and (a) (4) offenses are cognate, then the fact that the District
Justice dismissed the subsection (a)(4) charge, in contrast to where that charge was
not originally filed in Slingerland, is a distinction of no legal significance. The
cognate offense never had to be filed in the first place as long as the subsection
(a) (1) offense was bound over by the District Justice. Since it was bound over, the
District Attorney legally added a subsection (a)(4) offense to the information exactly
as in Slingerland.' Accordingly, our pretrial order refusing to quash the information
on the subsection (a)(4) violation was properly entered, and defendant is not now
entitled to an arrest of judgment of his conviction on that charge.5
4. See also Commonwealth v Dungan, 372 Pa. Super. 323 (1988).
5. In his omnibus pretrial motion for relief, defendant did not challenge the
sufficiency of the evidence to support the subsection (a)(4) charge. We note that his
only averment in his posttrial motion, that he is entitled to an arrest of judgment because
he "was denied his right to rebut the prima facie case" as to the subsection (a)(4)
charge, could not have prejudiced him because the Commonwealth proved beyond a
reasonable doubt that he did violate that subsection.
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1409 CRIMINAL 1991
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this 26 day of March, 1993, the motion of defendant for an arrest
of judgment, IS DENIED.
SHEELY, P.J., DISSENTING JOINED BY OLER, J.
I respectfully dissent. It is my position that the facts sub judice are
distinguishable from Commonwealth v Slingerland, 358 Pa. Super. 531, 518 A.2d 266
(1986). In Slingerland, the subsection (a)(1) offense was bound over and the
subsection (a)(4) offense was added to the information without determination of
whether a prima facie case was established by the Commonwealth. Under these
facts, the Slingerland Court held that cognate offenses can be added to the
information. In the case sub judice, however, the subsection (a)(4) offense was
dismissed for a lack of evidence to establish a prima facie case. The well-written
majority opinion characterizes this as a distinction with no legal significance. I
disagree. Where the (a)(4) charge is dismissed at the preliminary hearing, the District
Attorney should be required to refile the charge before proceeding. To hold
otherwise is to make a mockery of the significance of a preliminary hearing. To hold
1409 CRIMINAL 1991
that the Slingerland holding applies, would extend that holding beyond its facts.
Since it is my opinion that Slingerland does not apply, it follows that the
Commonwealth under these facts, may not add the subsection (a)(4) offense and the
information should have been quashed.
Alison Taylor, Esquire
Assistant District Attorney
Brian J. Puhala, Sr., Esquire
For Defendant
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