Commonwealth, Aplt. v. Ford, C. ( 2019 )


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  •                                     [J-37-2019]
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    MIDDLE DISTRICT
    SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                     :   No. 46 MAP 2018
    :
    Appellant                   :   Appeal from the Order of the Superior
    :   Court at No. 620 MDA 2017 dated
    :   November 30, 2017, reconsideration
    v.                                 :   denied February 9, 2018, Reversing
    :   the PCRA order of the Lancaster
    :   County Court of Common Pleas,
    CHRISTIAN LEE FORD,                               :   Criminal Division, at Nos. CP-36-CR-
    :   0001443-2016, CP-36-CR-0001496-
    Appellee                    :   2016, and CP-36-CR-0002530-2016
    :   dated March 10, 2017 and remanding.
    :
    :   SUBMITTED: March 18, 2019
    OPINION
    JUSTICE WECHT                                               DECIDED: September 26, 2019
    The Sentencing Code mandates that trial courts “shall not sentence a defendant
    to pay a fine unless it appears of record that the defendant is or will be able to pay” it. 42
    Pa.C.S. § 9726(c). The question presented in this post-conviction appeal is whether the
    Sentencing Code’s ability-to-pay prerequisite is satisfied when a defendant agrees to pay
    a given fine as part of a negotiated guilty plea agreement. We hold that it is not, and that
    a defendant’s mere agreement to pay a specific fine does not constitute evidence that he
    is or will be able to satisfy the financial obligation.
    This appeal involves three separate criminal cases. The first case began in July
    2015, when Christian Lee Ford drove his vehicle off the road, struck several mailboxes,
    and crashed into a fire hydrant. A police officer who responded to the accident noticed
    that Ford was unsteady on his feet and was unable to follow simple instructions.
    Paramedics transported Ford to the hospital for further evaluation and medical treatment.
    At the hospital, a police officer told Ford that he was under arrest for DUI and
    began reading Ford the required implied consent warnings. See Pa. Dep’t. of Transp. v.
    O’Connell, 
    555 A.2d 873
    , 874 (Pa. 1989). Before the officer could finish reading the
    O’Connell warnings, however, Ford interjected and told the officer that the chemical test
    would likely reveal cocaine, Xanax, Percocet, and marijuana in his blood. That prediction
    turned out to be partially correct; Ford ultimately tested positive for cocaine,
    amphetamines, and heroin. As a result, he was charged with three counts of driving
    under the influence of a controlled substance and one count of driving with a suspended
    license.1 Ford subsequently failed to appear for his preliminary hearing on those charges,
    and a bench warrant was issued for his arrest.
    The events that led to the second of Ford’s criminal cases occurred six months
    after Ford’s failure to appear at his preliminary hearing on the DUI charges. On that day,
    two police officers spotted Ford at a grocery store in Lancaster County. After confirming
    that Ford had an active bench warrant, the officers approached him in the parking lot, but
    he fled on foot. When the officers eventually caught Ford, he continued to resist, and
    substantial force was required to effectuate the arrest.     A search incident to arrest
    revealed that Ford had 159 stamp bags of heroin and a digital scale in his possession.
    He was charged with possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance (“PWID”),
    possession of drug paraphernalia, and resisting arrest.2 Ford posted bail ten days later
    and again was released from custody.
    1     75 Pa.C.S. §§ 3802(d)(1)(ii), 3802(d)(1)(iii), 3802(d)(2), and 1543(b)(1).
    2     35 P.S. §§ 780-113(a)(30), 780-113(a)(32), and 18 Pa.C.S. § 5104.
    [J-37-2019] - 2
    A few weeks after posting bail, Ford went missing. A bail bondsman who was
    attempting to locate Ford and return him to the Lancaster County Prison eventually found
    Ford and detained him. When the bondsman noticed that Ford was carrying a stamp bag
    of heroin and a syringe, he called the police for assistance. This brings us to Ford’s third
    and final criminal case. The police officers who responded to the bail bondsman’s request
    for assistance arrested Ford and charged him with possession of a controlled substance
    and possession of drug paraphernalia.3
    On June 23, 2016, Ford entered into a negotiated guilty plea agreement, which
    disposed of all three of his criminal cases. With regard to the charges stemming from the
    DUI-related accident, Ford pleaded guilty to three counts of driving under the influence of
    a controlled substance and one count of driving with a suspended license. Ford and the
    Commonwealth agreed to a sentence of one to four years’ incarceration and a $1,500
    fine for the DUI charges, and 90 days’ incarceration and a $1,000 fine for driving with a
    suspended license.
    As for his second set of criminal charges, Ford pleaded guilty to PWID, resisting
    arrest, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Under the terms of the plea agreement,
    Ford and the Commonwealth agreed to a sentence of two to four years’ incarceration and
    a fine of $100 for PWID, two years of probation for resisting arrest, and one year of
    probation for possession of drug paraphernalia.
    Lastly, in his third case, Ford agreed to plead guilty to possession of a controlled
    substance and possession of drug paraphernalia.           Ford and the Commonwealth
    negotiated a sentence of three years’ probation and a $100 fine for possession of a
    controlled substance and one year of probation for possession of drug paraphernalia.
    3      35 P.S. §§ 780-113(a)(16), 780-113(a)(32).
    [J-37-2019] - 3
    The agreement stipulated that Ford would serve all periods of incarceration and probation
    concurrently and would be responsible for the costs of prosecution.
    The trial court accepted Ford’s guilty plea and sentenced him in accordance with
    the plea agreement. Ford did not file post-sentence motions or a direct appeal, and his
    judgment of sentence became final in late July 2016. Two months after that, Ford filed a
    pro se “Petition for Review,” which the court correctly treated as a timely-filed Post
    Conviction Relief Act4 (“PCRA”) petition. The court then appointed counsel, who filed an
    amended PCRA petition on Ford’s behalf.
    In his amended petition, Ford alleged that he is indigent, that he cannot afford to
    pay the fines and costs associated with his judgment of sentence, and that his inability to
    pay those fines and costs will prevent him from being paroled. See Amended PCRA
    Petition, 12/27/2016, at 1. The gist of Ford’s claim is that his sentence is illegal because
    the trial court “did not conduct a hearing or find facts related to [his] ability to pay the fines
    and costs” that it imposed. Id.; see 42 Pa.C.S. § 9726(c). Alternatively, Ford argued that
    plea counsel was ineffective in “failing to pursue a sentence modification or direct appeal
    from the unlawful sentence.” Amended PCRA Petition at 2.
    The PCRA court issued a Rule 9075 notice stating that it intended to dismiss Ford’s
    petition without a hearing. Ford did not file a response, and the PCRA court issued an
    opinion and order dismissing Ford’s petition. In its opinion, the court first explained that,
    while defendants are not entitled to a presentence hearing on their ability to pay the
    mandatory costs of prosecution, such a hearing generally is required when a defendant
    4      See 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-46.
    5     See Pa.R.Crim.P. 907(1) (providing that courts may dismiss PCRA petitions
    without a hearing whenever there are no genuine issues concerning any material fact and
    no purpose would be served by further proceedings).
    [J-37-2019] - 4
    is sentenced to pay a fine.6 See PCRA Court Opinion, 3/10/2017, at 11-12 (citing
    Commonwealth v. Childs, 
    63 A.3d 323
    , 326 (Pa. Super. 2013)). Indeed, Subsection
    9726(c) of the Sentencing Code provides that:
    The court shall not sentence a defendant to pay a fine unless it appears of
    record that:
    (1) the defendant is or will be able to pay the fine; and
    (2) the fine will not prevent the defendant from making restitution or
    reparation to the victim of the crime.
    42 Pa.C.S. § 9726(c).
    Despite this statutory language, the PCRA court concluded that no hearing was
    required in Ford’s case because the specific fines imposed were mandated by statute,
    meaning that the court lacked the authority to impose a reduced fine. PCRA Court
    Opinion at 12 (concluding that Subsection 9726(c) “does not . . . apply to the mandatory
    fine provisions applicable in this case”); see Commonwealth v. Gipple, 
    613 A.2d 600
    , 601
    n.1 (Pa. Super. 1992) (holding that Subsection 9726(c) does not apply to mandatory
    fines).
    On appeal to the Superior Court, Ford again argued that his sentence is illegal
    because the trial court did not inquire into his ability to pay the fines specified in the plea
    agreement. The panel acknowledged that Ford explicitly agreed to pay the fines at issue
    when he entered into a negotiated guilty plea. Even so, the panel noted, a claim that
    “there was no record of the defendant’s ability to pay before the sentencing court”
    constitutes a nonwaivable challenge to the legality of the sentence.7 Commonwealth v.
    6      Although a presentence ability-to-pay hearing is not required when costs alone are
    imposed, our Rules of Criminal Procedure provide that a defendant cannot be committed
    to prison for failure to pay a fine or costs unless the court first determines that he or she
    has the financial means to pay the fine or costs. Pa.R.Crim.P. 706(A).
    7     See Commonwealth v. Foster, 
    17 A.3d 332
    (Pa. 2011) (plurality) (citing In re M.W.,
    
    725 A.2d 729
    , 731 (Pa. 1999) for the proposition that a challenge to the sentencing court’s
    [J-37-2019] - 5
    Ford, No. 620 MDA 2017, 
    2017 WL 5943470
    , at *3 (Pa. Super. Nov. 30, 2017) (citing
    Commonwealth v. Boyd, 
    73 A.3d 1269
    , 1273-74 (Pa. Super. 2013)). And challenges to
    the legality of a sentence—even a sentence resulting from a negotiated guilty plea—are
    cognizable under the PCRA. 
    Id. at *2;
    Commonwealth v. Gentry, 
    101 A.3d 813
    , 819 (Pa.
    Super. 2014) (“[A] criminal defendant cannot agree to an illegal sentence, so the fact that
    the illegality was a term of his plea bargain is of no legal significance.”).
    The panel next reviewed the transcript of Ford’s guilty plea and sentencing
    hearing, which revealed that “no inquiry was made, and no record existed, as to [Ford’s]
    ability to pay the agreed-upon fines.” 
    Id. at *3.
    Although a presentence hearing on the
    ability to pay a mandatory fine is not required, see 
    Gipple, 613 A.2d at 601
    n.1, the
    intermediate court disagreed with the PCRA court’s suggestion that all of Ford’s fines
    were mandated by statute.
    Ford’s plea agreement included four fines: $1,500 for driving under the influence
    of a controlled substance, $1,000 for driving while suspended, $100 for PWID, and $100
    for simple possession. Given that Ford had a prior DUI conviction, the $1,500 fine that
    he received indeed was mandatory. See 75 Pa.C.S. § 3804(c)(2)(ii). Thus, the Superior
    Court agreed with the PCRA court’s conclusion that Ford was not entitled to a hearing
    regarding his ability to pay the DUI fine.
    In contrast, the three other fines that the trial court imposed were not mandatory.
    Two of the offenses for which Ford received fines, simple possession and PWID, did not
    subject him to a mandatory fine at all.         And the remaining offense, driving while
    suspended, carries a mandatory fine that is substantially less than the one Ford actually
    statutory authority to impose a particular sentence implicates the legality of the sentence);
    Commonwealth v. Barnes, 
    151 A.3d 121
    , 127 (Pa. 2016) (adopting the lead opinion in
    Foster).
    [J-37-2019] - 6
    received.8 The Superior Court therefore concluded that Ford’s three non-mandatory fines
    were illegal, given that it does not “appear of record” that he is or will be able to pay them.
    For this reason, the panel reversed the PCRA court’s order, vacated Ford’s non-
    mandatory fines, and remanded for resentencing. In a footnote, however, the court noted
    that the Commonwealth may ask the PCRA court to vacate Ford’s entire judgment of
    sentence if it believes “that it is no longer receiving the benefit of [its plea] bargain.” Ford,
    
    2017 WL 5943470
    , at *4 n.4.
    The Commonwealth then petitioned this Court for allowance of appeal, which we
    granted to consider whether the Sentencing Code requires a separate inquiry into a
    defendant’s ability to pay a fine that he or she agreed to pay as part of a negotiated guilty
    plea. To answer that question, we begin with the text of Section 9726, which provides, in
    relevant part, as follows:
    (b) Fine as additional sentence.–The court may sentence the defendant
    to pay a fine in addition to another sentence, either involving total or partial
    confinement or probation, when:
    (1) the defendant has derived a pecuniary gain from the crime; or
    (2) the court is of the opinion that a fine is specially adapted to
    deterrence of the crime involved or to the correction of the
    defendant.
    (c) Exception.–The court shall not sentence a defendant to pay a fine
    unless it appears of record that:
    (1) the defendant is or will be able to pay the fine; and
    (2) the fine will not prevent the defendant from making restitution or
    reparation to the victim of the crime.
    8       As the panel explained, the PCRA court evidently believed that Ford’s conviction
    for driving while suspended carried a mandatory $1,000 fine. See PCRA Court Opinion
    at 12-13. In point of fact, however, the specific subsection of the driving while suspended
    statute under which Ford was charged and to which he pleaded guilty includes a
    mandatory fine of only $500. See 75 Pa.C.S. § 1543(b)(1).
    [J-37-2019] - 7
    42 Pa.C.S. § 9726.9
    Consistent with this unambiguous statutory mandate, all parties agree that a
    sentence is illegal when the record is silent as to the defendant’s ability to pay the fine
    imposed. See Reply Brief for Commonwealth at 2; Brief for Ford at 9. Nevertheless, the
    Commonwealth contends that, “[w]here a defendant specifically bargains for and agrees
    to pay a fine and asks the court to accept the terms of the plea agreement, his conduct
    certifies that he is not only able but willing to pay that fine.” Brief for Commonwealth at 9.
    In other words, the Commonwealth argues, Ford’s agreement to pay the fines at issue
    necessarily proves that he is able to pay those fines. Brief for Commonwealth at 9 (“By
    necessary implication, a party has the ability to perform the terms of the bargain into which
    he enters.”); Reply Brief for Commonwealth at 2 (“[W]hen the fine is the result of the plea-
    bargaining process, it will always appear of record that the defendant is able and willing
    to pay.”).
    If, as the Commonwealth suggests, the General Assembly had intended to allow
    a defendant’s agreement to pay a specific fine to serve as a substitute for evidence “of
    record” that he or she can afford to pay it, then it likely would have exempted negotiated
    guilty pleas from Subsection 9726(c). But the plain language of the statute is clear: trial
    courts are without authority to impose non-mandatory fines absent record evidence that
    the defendant is or will be able to pay them.
    We cannot accept the Commonwealth’s argument that a defendant’s agreement
    to pay a given fine is evidence of his ability to pay for purposes of Subsection 9726(c).
    9      Our interpretation of Section 9726, as with all questions of statutory interpretation,
    is guided by the principle that the plain language of a statute provides the best indication
    of the General Assembly’s intent. Commonwealth v. Kingston, 
    143 A.3d 917
    , 922 (Pa.
    2016). For this reason, when the words of a statute are unambiguous, we do not look
    beyond the law’s plain meaning “under the pretext of pursuing its spirit.” 1 Pa.C.S.
    § 1921(b).
    [J-37-2019] - 8
    The mere fact that a person agrees, as part of a quid pro quo arrangement, to pay a
    specific sum does not necessarily mean that he or she can (or even will be able to) make
    good on that promise. This is especially true in the plea-bargaining context, where it is
    fair to say that the primary concern of most defendants is the length of their incarceration
    rather than the sum of their fines. Put differently, when the Commonwealth extends a
    plea offer that includes a short prison sentence and an exorbitant fine, a rational
    defendant might—either out of shortsightedness or naïve optimism—gladly accept the
    offer even though he or she has no realistic strategy to satisfy the debt.10 For this reason
    alone, we are unpersuaded that Ford’s guilty plea agreement represents the sort of ability-
    to-pay evidence that the Sentencing Code unambiguously requires.
    The Dissent frets that enforcing the Sentencing Code’s unambiguous statutory
    command requiring record evidence of the defendant’s ability to pay will reward “a
    defendant’s misrepresentations while under oath.” Dissenting Opinion at 4. This is a
    straw man. Ford made no representations at all about whether he could afford to pay the
    negotiated fines. That is why the Dissent flips the script, underscoring instead that Ford
    “never expressed concern regarding his ability to satisfy the fines.” 
    Id. at 3.
    That may be
    true, but it is wholly irrelevant. Subsection 9726(c) does not put the burden on defendants
    to inform the court that they might have trouble paying a fine. Instead, it instructs
    10      The Dissent contends that “[t]his assumption is wholly immaterial to discerning the
    plain language of the statute.” Dissenting Opinion at 4. Again, though, all parties agree
    that the Sentencing Code requires record evidence of the defendant’s ability to pay any
    non-mandatory fines. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9726(c) (“The court shall not sentence a
    defendant to pay a fine unless it appears of record that . . . the defendant is or will be able
    to pay the fine[.]”). The Commonwealth’s chief argument is that Ford’s agreement to pay
    the fines in question necessarily proves that he can afford to pay them. Thus, evaluating
    the soundness of the Commonwealth’s agreement-ergo-ability thesis is, in fact,
    necessary to resolve this appeal.
    [J-37-2019] - 9
    sentencing courts not to impose a fine absent record evidence of the defendant’s ability
    to pay. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9726(c).
    The Commonwealth also argues that the decision below contradicts existing
    Superior Court precedent.       Specifically, the Commonwealth cites Commonwealth v.
    Gardner, 
    632 A.2d 556
    (Pa. Super. 1993), a case in which a trial court ordered a
    defendant to pay restitution without considering his ability to pay the same.11 In Gardner,
    the defendant and the Commonwealth entered into a plea agreement which required the
    defendant to, among other things, make full restitution to his victim. Although he agreed
    to these terms, the defendant later appealed his judgment of sentence and challenged
    the trial court’s failure to independently evaluate his ability to pay the full restitution. The
    Superior Court summarily disposed of this argument with virtually no discussion or
    analysis. The court held that the defendant was precluded from challenging his ability to
    pay because he “had agreed to pay restitution as part of the plea agreement.” 
    Id. at 556.
    The Superior Court’s decision in Gardner does not alter our conclusion that a
    defendant’s mere agreement to pay a fine is not, ipso facto, evidence that he is able to
    pay it. Notably, the Gardner Court was not tasked with interpreting an unambiguous
    statute like the one before us today. Instead, the (now defunct) requirement that trial
    courts consider a defendant’s ability to pay before ordering restitution was invented by
    judges. See Commonwealth v. Wood, 
    446 A.2d 948
    , 950 (Pa. Super. 1982). Understood
    this way, Gardner was more of an evolution of the common law governing restitution than
    it was a broad pronouncement that defendants are precluded from challenging the legality
    11     When Gardner was decided, prevailing Superior Court precedent required trial
    courts to consider a defendant’s “ability to pay” before ordering restitution. See
    Commonwealth v. Valent, 
    463 A.2d 1127
    , 1128 (Pa. Super. 1983). The General
    Assembly has since abolished that requirement by statute.                   See 18 Pa.C.S.
    § 1106(c)(1)(i) (providing that courts must order full restitution “[r]egardless of the current
    financial resources of the defendant”).
    [J-37-2019] - 10
    of negotiated guilty pleas. In short, we believe that the rule announced in Gardner—one
    that this Court is not bound to follow and the Superior Court itself has more or less
    abandoned12—is not controlling in the context of non-mandatory fines.
    Lastly, the Commonwealth argues that, as a policy matter, applying Subsection
    9726(c) in the negotiated guilty plea context is unwise. The Commonwealth contends
    that the Superior Court’s decision below has the potential to “substantially burden or even
    derail the plea-bargaining process.” Brief for Commonwealth at 9. This is so, according
    to the Commonwealth, because “[r]equiring a court to conduct an ability-to-pay inquiry
    after accepting a negotiated plea agreement unnecessarily prolongs and complicates
    plea proceedings.”     
    Id. at 10.
       In the Commonwealth’s estimation, it would be “a
    burdensome waste of precious judicial resources” to mandate that trial courts “probe into
    the financial condition of a defendant who has already agreed to pay a particular fine.”
    
    Id. It bears
    repeating that this Court has no authority to disregard the plain language
    of the Sentencing Code in an effort to promote efficiency. See 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921. Beyond
    that, however, we are not convinced that it will be as onerous as the Commonwealth
    suggests for trial courts to enforce the statutory directive that a defendant’s ability-to-pay
    must appear of record.13 Although there may be other means to satisfy Subsection
    9726(c), as a best practice, trial courts should simply consider whether the defendant is
    or will be able to pay any negotiated fines before accepting the parties’ plea agreement.
    12     See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Rivera, 
    154 A.3d 370
    , 381 (Pa. Super. 2017) (“Our
    cases clearly state that a criminal defendant cannot agree to an illegal sentence, so the
    fact that the illegality was a term of his plea bargain is of no legal significance.”); 
    Gentry, 101 A.3d at 815
    (same).
    13      Of course, if the Commonwealth wishes to avoid the prospect that a plea bargain
    will be rejected because of the defendant’s inability to pay a particular fine, it can always
    leave the amount of the fine to the trial court’s discretion in the first instance.
    [J-37-2019] - 11
    If the court finds that the defendant cannot afford to pay one or more negotiated fines,
    then the proposed sentence is illegal and the proposed guilty plea agreement should be
    rejected.    We are confident that this procedure will not “derail the plea-bargaining
    process.” Brief for Commonwealth at 9. Indeed, in many cases the trial court will be able
    to ascertain the defendant’s ability to pay by asking one simple question: “How do you
    plan to pay your fines?”14
    Having rejected all of the Commonwealth’s arguments, we agree with the Superior
    Court’s conclusion that Ford received an illegal sentence when the trial court imposed
    non-mandatory fines without any evidence that Ford was (or would be) able to pay them.
    As for the Superior Court’s chosen remedy, however, the panel should have vacated
    Ford’s entire judgment of sentence rather than simply vacating the illegal fines and
    remanding for resentencing. Indeed, the Commonwealth persuasively argues that it will
    be deprived of the benefit of its bargain if criminal defendants can, for instance, agree to
    pay a larger fine in exchange for a shorter term of incarceration, but then later attempt to
    eliminate or reduce the fine in a post-conviction proceeding. See Brief for Commonwealth
    at 10. Because selectively vacating specific conditions of a plea agreement threatens to
    upset the parties’ underlying bargain, the better remedy is to put both sides right back
    where they started, at which point they can begin plea negotiations anew or proceed to
    trial.
    In summary, the Superior Court correctly held that Subsection 9726(c) of the
    Sentencing Code requires record evidence of a defendant’s ability to pay a fine even in
    14      Although the parties’ briefs and the lower court opinions speak in terms of the trial
    court “holding a hearing on” or “inquiring into” a defendant’s ability to pay, we note that
    Subsection 9726(c) does not necessarily require testimonial evidence. It is certainly
    possible that non-testimonial evidence—like a thorough presentence investigation report
    detailing a defendant’s assets and income—could satisfy Subsection 9726(c)’s mandate.
    But no such evidence exists in this case.
    [J-37-2019] - 12
    the negotiated guilty plea context. Because no such evidence exists in the record before
    us, the trial court imposed an illegal sentence, which we vacate in its entirety. Thus, we
    affirm the Superior Court in part and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    Chief Justice Saylor and Justices Baer, Todd, Donohue and Dougherty join the
    opinion.
    Justice Mundy files a dissenting opinion.
    [J-37-2019] - 13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 46 MAP 2018

Filed Date: 9/26/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/26/2019