Com. v. Kolovich, R. , 170 A.3d 520 ( 2017 )


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  • J-S26009-17
    
    2017 Pa. Super. 274
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                      IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    v.
    ROBERT ANTHONY KOLOVICH
    Appellant                  No. 1505 MDA 2016
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence August 19, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Mifflin County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-44-CR-0000401-2014
    BEFORE: BOWES, DUBOW, AND FITZGERALD,* JJ.
    OPINION BY BOWES, J.:                                 FILED AUGUST 23, 2017
    Robert Kolovich appeals from his judgment of sentence of twenty-
    seven to seventy-two months imprisonment, which was imposed following
    his conviction of six counts of theft by deception, and twelve counts of
    deceptive business practices pursuant to 18 Pa.C.S. § 4107.1 We affirm.
    Appellant challenges the trial court’s denial of his pre-trial motion to
    dismiss charges based on the mandatory joinder rule and double jeopardy.
    He also maintains that it was error to deny his motion to quash the
    Commonwealth’s petition to amend the information to add twelve counts of
    ____________________________________________
    1
    Appellant was convicted of six counts of “selling, offering or exposing for
    sale, or delivery of less than the represented quantity of any commodity or
    service” in violation of § 4107(a)(2), and six counts of “making or inducing
    others to rely on a false or misleading written statement for the purpose of
    obtaining property or credit” in violation of § 4107(a)(6).
    * Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S26009-17
    deceptive or fraudulent business practices as he contends the statute, 18
    Pa.C.S. §§ 4107(a)(2) and (6), is unconstitutional.
    The facts relevant to the issues before us are as follows. Appellant ran
    a business, Lifetime Choice Windows, in Selinsgrove, Snyder County,
    Pennsylvania. Prior to and during 2013, he met with homeowners in their
    homes in numerous counties across the Commonwealth and contracted to
    sell and install decking, windows, and doors. The charges in this case arose
    from contracts between Appellant and six Mifflin County residents during the
    summer of 2013.       The homeowners paid Appellant down payments for
    decking materials and construction services, but the date of performance
    passed without delivery of any product or service outlined in the contracts.
    Appellant did not return any portion of the down payments.
    Appellant initially was charged with six counts of theft by deception.
    He sought several continuances over an eighteen-month period because he
    confronted similar charges in other counties.     He was convicted in Snyder
    and Bradford counties on multiple theft counts, and acquitted on similar
    charges in Union County.
    On April 28, 2016, Appellant filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to 18
    Pa.C.S. § 110, the compulsory joinder provision, and the double jeopardy
    clauses of both the state and federal constitutions, alleging that the six theft
    charges herein were part of the same series of occurrences culminating in
    the charges in the other counties. According to Appellant, all of the offenses
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    constituted one criminal episode that should have been prosecuted in Snyder
    County.      N.T., 5/10/16, at 5-6.            Appellant asked the trial court to
    dismiss/quash the Mifflin County criminal information and direct that the
    charges be joined and tried in Union County.2 In the alternative, Appellant
    alleged that prior dismissals in Sullivan and Luzerne Counties resulted from
    the same criminal episode, and thus, the current prosecution was barred
    under double jeopardy.          The trial court disagreed and denied the motion,
    reasoning that the prior charges in different counties were not part of the
    same criminal conduct or episode.              Trial Court Opinion, 5/12/16, at 1.
    Further, the court declared Appellant’s double jeopardy motion to be
    frivolous, thus precluding Appellant from pursuing an interlocutory appeal.
    
    Id. at 2.
    On May 23, 2016, the Commonwealth sought leave to amend the
    information to add twelve additional counts pursuant to 18 Pa.C.S. §
    4107(a)(2)     and    (a)(6),    governing     “deceptive   or   fraudulent   business
    practices.” Appellant moved to quash, arguing that § 4107(b) impermissibly
    shifted the burden of proof to the defendant to negate the intent to deceive
    ____________________________________________
    2
    Snyder and Union Counties constitute one judicial district as they share
    one court of common pleas.
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    element of the crime, and was unconstitutional.3 After a hearing, the court
    granted the Commonwealth leave to amend, and denied Appellant’s motion
    to quash.
    On July 11, 2016, a jury convicted Appellant of all counts. Appellant
    timely filed the within appeal and complied with the trial court’s order to file
    a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statement of errors complained of on appeal.
    The trial court authored its Rule 1925(a) opinion and the matter is ripe for
    our review. Appellant raises the following contentions:
    1. Whether the trial court erred in denying [Appellant]’s motion
    to dismiss pursuant to 18 Pa.C.S. § 110 and the double
    jeopardy clauses of the United States and Pennsylvania
    Constitutions?
    2. Whether the trial court erred in determining [Appellant]’s
    motion to dismiss pursuant to 18 Pa.C.S. § 110 and the
    double jeopardy clauses of the United States and
    Pennsylvania Constitutions was a frivolous pleading?
    3. Whether the trial court erred in overruling [Appellant]’s
    objection to the Commonwealth’s motion to amend
    information and [Appellant]’s motion to quash amendment of
    information?
    4. Whether the trial court erred in finding 18 Pa.C.S. § 4107(a)
    and § 4107(b) are not violative of the United States and
    Pennsylvania Constitutions?
    Appellant’s brief at 9 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    ____________________________________________
    3
    Title 18 Pa.C.S. § 4107(b) provides that, “It is a defense to prosecution
    under this section if the defendant proves by a preponderance of the
    evidence that his conduct was not knowingly or recklessly deceptive.”
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    Appellant’s first issue is a challenge to the trial court’s denial of his
    motion to dismiss for an alleged violation of the compulsory joinder rule, 18
    Pa.C.S. § 110, and the double jeopardy clauses of the United States and
    Pennsylvania Constitutions. Since the issue presents a question of law, our
    standard of review is de novo and our scope of review is plenary.
    Commonwealth v. Fithian, 
    961 A.2d 66
    (Pa. 2008).
    Appellant claims that the offenses herein occurred, at least in part, in
    Snyder County, where his business was located. He contends that the trial
    court    should     have   dismissed   the    instant   prosecution   due   to   the
    Commonwealth’s failure to consolidate it with the prior prosecution of the
    charges in the judicial district encompassing Snyder and Union counties.
    The compulsory joinder rule, 18 Pa.C.S. § 110, is entitled, “When
    prosecution barred by former prosecution for different offense,” and provides
    in pertinent part:
    Although a prosecution is for a violation of a different provision
    of the statutes than a former prosecution or is based on different
    facts, it is barred by such former prosecution under the following
    circumstances:
    (1)    The former prosecution resulted in an acquittal or in
    a conviction as defined in section 109 of this title
    (relating to when prosecution barred by former
    prosecution for the same offense) and the
    subsequent prosecution is for:
    (i)      any offense of which the defendant could
    have   been    convicted  on   the  first
    prosecution;
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    (ii)    any offense based on the same conduct or
    arising from the same criminal episode, if
    such offense was known to the appropriate
    prosecuting officer at the time of the
    commencement of the first trial and
    occurred within the same judicial district as
    the former prosecution unless the court
    ordered a separate trial of the charge of
    such offense; or
    (iii)   the same conduct, unless:
    (A)    the offense of which the
    defendant was formerly convicted
    or acquitted and the offense for
    which     he      is    subsequently
    prosecuted each requires proof of a
    fact not required by the other and
    the law defining each of such
    offenses is intended to prevent a
    substantially different harm or evil;
    or
    (B) the second offense was not
    consummated when the former
    trial began.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 110.
    The rule “is a legislative mandate that a subsequent prosecution for a
    violation of a provision of a statute that is different from a former
    prosecution, or is based on different facts, will be barred in certain
    circumstances.”     Fithian, supra at 71.   It was designed “(1) to protect a
    defendant from the governmental harassment of being subjected to
    successive trials for offenses stemming from the same criminal episode;
    and (2) to ensure finality without unduly burdening the judicial process by
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    repetitious litigation.” 
    Id. at 75-76
    (internal quotations omitted). To that
    end, our High Court held that the legislature intended that the compulsory
    joinder statute be limited to mandating joinder only of those offenses
    occurring in a single judicial district, even when offenses were part of the
    same criminal episode. 
    Id. at 68.
    Appellant contends that compulsory joinder was warranted on the
    facts herein.   He argues that: all of the cases were filed within thirteen
    months and involved the same or similar offenses; the charges arose from
    his business’s retention of monies despite the failure to perform construction
    agreements; and the business was located in the 17th judicial district
    comprised of Snyder and Union Counties.      He was previously convicted in
    Snyder and Bradford counties and acquitted in Union and Centre Counties on
    similar charges. Appellant’s brief at 19. He alleges that the offenses herein
    occurred at least in part in Snyder County, the county where his business
    was based. Where, as here, the offenses occurred in more than one judicial
    district, and the former prosecution was brought in one of those judicial
    districts, Appellant maintains the subsequent prosecution in Mifflin County
    should have been consolidated.        The consequence of the failure to
    consolidate is that the prosecution herein was barred.
    The Commonwealth points out that § 110 has been construed as
    barring subsequent prosecution only if all of the following four prongs are
    satisfied:
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    (1) the former prosecution resulted in an acquittal or conviction;
    (2) the current prosecution was based on the same criminal
    conduct or arose from the same criminal episode;
    (3) the prosecutor in the subsequent trial was aware of the
    charges before the first trial; and
    (4) all charges [are] within the same judicial district as the former
    prosecution.
    Fithian, supra at 72 (quoting Commonwealth v. Nolan, 
    855 A.2d 834
    ,
    839 (Pa. 2004)).
    The Commonwealth concedes the satisfaction of the first and third
    prongs, i.e., that there was a former prosecution that resulted in an acquittal
    or conviction, and that the prosecutor herein was aware of the instant
    charges prior to the first trial. However, the Commonwealth contends that
    the facts herein do not meet the second prong of the test as the instant
    prosecution did not involve the same criminal conduct or arise from the
    same criminal episode as the prior charges. Commonwealth’s brief at 5. We
    agree for the reasons that follow.
    At issue herein, and in Commonwealth v. Reid, 
    77 A.3d 579
    , 582
    (Pa. 2013), was whether a defendant’s criminal actions were based on the
    same criminal conduct or arose from the same criminal episode for purposes
    of § 110’s second prong.     The Reid Court focused on “the temporal and
    logical relationship between the charges” in determining whether they
    constituted the same criminal episode.       
    Id. at 582
    (internal quotations
    omitted). The Court noted that, in general, contemporaneously filed charges
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    against a defendant “are clearly related in time.” 
    Id. A logical
    relationship
    involves a “substantial duplication of factual, and/or legal issues” raised by
    the charges. 
    Id. However, it
    does not require a double jeopardy-like “same
    elements” analysis. 
    Id. Instead, in
    determining if the ‘logical relationship’ prong of the test has
    been met, we must . . . be aware that a mere de minimis
    duplication of factual and legal issues is insufficient to establish a
    logical relationship between offenses. Rather what is required is
    a substantial duplication of issues of law and fact.
    
    Id. Hence, the
    Reid Court clarified that simply committing the same crime
    multiple times within a short interval is not enough to constitute a criminal
    episode.   See Commonwealth v. Anthony, 
    717 A.2d 1015
    , 1019 (Pa.
    1998) (“[a] logical relationship is not conditioned upon the duplication of
    identical criminal acts”); see also Commonwealth v. Bracalielly, 
    658 A.2d 755
    , 761 (Pa. 1995) (“de minimis duplication of factual and legal issues
    is insufficient to establish a logical relationship between offenses”).
    The trial court found there was no substantial duplication of fact or law
    between this prosecution and the prior prosecutions, and, therefore, no
    logical relationship between the two sets of charges. The testimony in the
    instant case was elicited from each of the victims, who were not involved in
    or related to the other cases, and the documentation resulted from separate
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    contracts.4    Thus, the trial court found that the facts did not satisfy the
    second prong of the test.
    We agree.       Herein, the only logical connection between the prior
    prosecutions and the instant charges was the nature of the offenses. There
    was little duplication of the evidence.        The facts in this case differ sharply
    from those in 
    Anthony, supra
    , where mandatory joinder was held
    applicable. The two trials therein required a majority of the same witnesses
    and testimony that demonstrated a substantial duplication of law or fact.
    The same type of evidentiary overlap does not exist in the instant case. The
    Commonwealth summarizes the distinction:
    [Appellant] advertised separately in every county in which he did
    business, conducted in-home sales calls in each of those
    counties, entered into a contract with different victims in each
    county, gave differing excuses for lack of performance in each of
    those counties, and was investigated separately by different
    police forces in each county.
    Commonwealth’s brief at 6.          Thus, the second prong of the test requiring
    both a logical and temporal relationship was not met, and joinder was not
    mandated under §110.5
    ____________________________________________
    4
    Pursuant to Pa.R.E. 404(b)(2), the Commonwealth was permitted to
    introduce the conviction orders and testimony from several victims in other
    cases to prove Appellant’s fraudulent intent to deceive. N.T. Motion in
    Limine Hearing, 7/7/16, at 12.
    5
    We concur with the trial court that the contracts and the associated
    criminal conduct occurred entirely within Mifflin County, which was not the
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    Appellant also alleges that dismissal was warranted on double
    jeopardy grounds.         However, Appellant did not articulate or develop any
    argument in support of a constitutional violation.     Thus, we find the issue
    waived.    See Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a) (requiring argument in brief to contain
    “discussion and citation of authorities as are deemed pertinent”); see also
    Commonwealth v. McNear, 
    852 A.2d 401
    , 408 (Pa.Super 2004) (failure to
    comply with Rule 2119(a)’s requirement of discussion and citation to
    relevant authorities constitutes waiver).
    Even if the issue was not waived, it lacks merit. Both the federal and
    state double jeopardy clauses are intended to protect defendants from
    subsequent prosecutions for the same act. The Pennsylvania Constitution’s
    double jeopardy clause has been interpreted as “coextensive” with the
    federal Constitution’s Fifth Amendment. Commonwealth v. Ball, 
    146 A.3d 755
    , 763 (Pa. 2016). The Pennsylvania Supreme Court applies the “same-
    elements” test articulated in Blockburger v. United States, 
    284 U.S. 299
    (1932); Commonwealth v. Yerby, 
    679 A.2d 217
    , 219 (Pa. 1996). Under
    the same-elements test, each offense or subsequent prosecution must
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    situs of the prior prosecutions. Thus, Appellant could not meet the fourth
    prong of the test. See Commonwealth v. Fithian, 
    961 A.2d 66
    , 77 (Pa.
    2008) (“The General Assembly intended to preclude from the reach of the
    compulsory joinder statute those current offenses that occurred wholly
    outside of the geographic boundaries of the judicial district in which the
    former prosecution was brought, even though part of a single criminal
    episode.”).
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    require proof of at least one fact that the other offense or prosecution did
    not.   Blockburger, supra at 304.          Thus, the double jeopardy clause
    protects defendants from subsequent prosecutions for the same act.
    Different acts supported this prosecution.           Furthermore, having
    concluded that Appellant could not meet the less stringent § 110 test, it
    logically follows that the subsequent prosecution in Mifflin County was not
    violative of the stricter double jeopardy standards.        Hence, we find that
    Appellant’s prosecution herein was not precluded under either § 110 or the
    double jeopardy clauses of either the state or federal constitutions, and we
    affirm the trial court’s order denying Appellant’s motion to dismiss.
    Appellant’s challenge to the trial court’s order finding his motion to
    dismiss based on double jeopardy to be frivolous is moot because his double
    jeopardy claim was indeed frivolous. Nor do we agree with Appellant that
    this is an issue that evades review. See Commonwealth v. Orie, 
    22 A.3d 1021
    , 1027 (Pa. 2011) (upon dismissal of a pre-trial double jeopardy
    challenge as frivolous, a defendant is authorized to file a petition for review
    pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1511, and seek a stay under Pa.R.A.P. 1781).
    Appellant’s third issue is a challenge to the trial court’s denial of his
    motion to quash the Commonwealth’s petition seeking leave to amend the
    information to add new charges under 18 Pa.C.S. § 4107, a statute which he
    maintained was constitutionally infirm.       His fourth issue is a constitutional
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    challenge to that statute. Appellant’s brief at 24. Since the issues overlap,
    we will address and dispose of them together.
    Title 18 Pa.C.S. § 4107 provides, in relevant part:
    (a)   Offense defined. — A person commits an offense if, in the
    course of business, the person:
    ...
    (2) sells, offers or exposes for sale, or delivers less than
    the represented quantity of any commodity or service;
    ...
    (6) makes or induces others to rely on a false or
    misleading written statement for the purpose of obtaining
    property or credit;
    ...
    (b)   Defenses. — It is a defense to prosecution under this
    section if the defendant proves by a preponderance of the
    evidence that his conduct was not knowingly or recklessly
    deceptive.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 4107.
    Our review of a challenge to the constitutionality of a duly enacted
    statute is plenary.     Villani v. Seibert, 
    159 A.3d 478
    (Pa. 2017).       The
    following principles inform our review.
    Preliminarily, we recognize that acts passed by the General
    Assembly are strongly presumed to be constitutional and that we
    will not declare a statute unconstitutional unless it clearly,
    palpably, and plainly violates the Constitution. If there is any
    doubt that a challenger has failed to reach this high burden, then
    that doubt must be resolved in favor of finding the statute
    constitutional.
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    Zauflik v. Pennsbury Sch. Dist., 
    104 A.3d 1096
    , 1103 (Pa. 2014) (internal
    citations     and   quotations    omitted).    Thus,   one   challenging    the
    constitutionality of a statute bears a heavy burden of persuasion, and any
    doubt is to be resolved in favor of a finding of constitutionality. Pa. State
    Ass'n of Jury Comm'rs v. Commonwealth, 
    78 A.3d 1020
    (Pa. 2013);
    Commonwealth v. Barud, 
    681 A.2d 162
    (Pa. 1996).
    Appellant contends that §4107 violates the due process clauses of the
    Pennsylvania and United States Constitutions because subsection (b)
    impermissibly shifts the burden of proof to the defendant to negate the
    mens rea element of the crime.          Appellant’s brief at 27.   Specifically,
    Appellant points out that it requires the defendant to prove “by a
    preponderance of the evidence that his conduct was not knowingly or
    recklessly deceptive.”      
    Id. He claims
    that affirmative defenses are
    unconstitutional if they negate any of the elements of the crime as defined.
    Appellant posits that the statute has thus far escaped constitutional
    challenge because it does not expressly state the mens rea required,
    although he acknowledges that this Court held in Commonwealth v. Eline,
    
    940 A.2d 421
    , 433 (Pa.Super. 2007), that “fraud, which includes a wrongful
    intent to deceive, is an element of the crime of deceptive business
    practices.”
    Appellant’s argument in this regard is convoluted. He contends that,
    since “scienter” is often used to connote the mens rea of common law fraud,
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    and scienter means “knowingly,” or “a degree of knowledge that makes a
    person legally responsible for the consequences of his or her act or
    omission,” according to Black’s Law Dictionary, § (b)’s “knowingly” language
    overlaps with the scienter element of § (a).           He makes the latter leap by
    bootstrapping the reasoning of the court of common pleas’ non-binding
    decision in the civil case of Glessner v. Twigg, 
    22 Pa. D. & C. 3d
    727, 732
    (Somerset Co., 1982), in which the court found that “a wrongful intent to
    deceive” is synonymous with “knowingly” or “recklessly” in the civil context.
    He concludes that the affirmative defense requiring him to prove “his
    conduct was not knowingly or recklessly deceptive” negates the element of
    “knowingly” misrepresenting an existing fact and is unconstitutional under
    Mullaney v. Wilbur, 
    421 U.S. 684
    (1975), and Patterson v. New York,
    
    432 U.S. 197
    (1977).
    We find first that “intentional” and “knowing” are not the same level of
    culpability in the criminal context.6          In Commonwealth v. Hill, 140 A.3d
    ____________________________________________
    6
    18 P.S. § 302, General requirements of culpability, defines the
    difference between acting intentionally and knowingly:
    (1)    A person acts intentionally with respect to a material
    element of an offense when:
    (i) if the element involves the nature of his conduct
    or a result thereof, it is his conscious object to
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    713, 718 (Pa.Super. 2016) (emphasis added), involving 18 Pa.C.S. §
    4107(a)(2), this Court held that “[p]roof of deceptive or fraudulent business
    practices requires that a defendant (1) with a wrongful intent to
    deceive;” (2) "in the course of business;" (3) "sells, offers or exposes for
    sale, or delivers less than the represented quantity of any commodity or
    service." We noted that an intentional misrepresentation connotes a higher
    degree of culpability than “knowingly” and the culpability of an intentional
    act subsumes the culpability of a knowing act, and concluded that knowledge
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    engage in conduct of that nature or to cause such a
    result; and
    (ii) if the element involves the attendant
    circumstances, he is aware of the existence of such
    circumstances or he believes or hopes that they
    exist.
    (2)    A person acts knowingly with respect to a material
    element of an offense when:
    (i) if the element involves the nature of his conduct
    or the attendant circumstances, he is aware that his
    conduct is of that nature or that such circumstances
    exist; and
    (ii) if the element involves a result of his conduct,
    he is aware that it is practically certain that his
    conduct will cause such a result.
    18 Pa.C.S. § 302.
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    was a lesser-included mens rea of intent. See Commonwealth v. Nero, 
    53 A.3d 802
    , 809 (Pa.Super. 2012).
    Furthermore, Appellant’s affirmative defense due process analysis does
    not withstand scrutiny.    Jurisprudence in this area arose largely in the
    context of homicide prosecutions.       The United States Supreme Court
    reaffirmed in 
    Mullaney, supra
    , that, in order to pass muster under the Due
    Process Clause, the state must prove every fact necessary to constitute the
    crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt. See In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364 (1970). Under the Maine statutory scheme at issue in Mullaney, a
    defendant charged with murder was required to prove that he acted in the
    heat of passion in response to sudden provocation to reduce the homicide to
    manslaughter.    The jury was further instructed, however, that if the
    prosecution established that the homicide was both intentional and unlawful,
    malice aforethought was to be conclusively presumed unless the defendant
    proved by a fair preponderance of the evidence that he acted in the heat of
    passion on sudden provocation.      The defendant argued that the statute
    impermissibly   placed   the   burden   on   the   defendant   to   negate   that
    presumption of malice with proof of sudden provocation or heat of passion.
    
    Id. at 688-89.
    The Court of Appeals agreed with the defendant, and the
    Supreme Court affirmed. The High Court held that the Due Process Clause
    required the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
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    defendant did not act in the heat of passion on sudden provocation when the
    issue was properly presented in a homicide case.
    The Supreme Court subsequently narrowed this holding in 
    Patterson, supra
    , emphasizing that the New York statute examined therein, unlike the
    Maine statute in Mullaney, did not presume an element of the crime, and,
    therefore, did not shift the burden of proving an element to the defendant
    and thus did not violate the federal constitution.   
    Id. at 206.
      Hence, a
    burden of proof for an affirmative defense can be placed on a defendant
    without running afoul of the due process clause, provided the statute does
    not create a presumption of guilt as to one of the elements of the underlying
    crime.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court adopted the Patterson reasoning in
    Commonwealth v. Hilbert, 
    382 A.2d 724
    (Pa. 1978), in the context of the
    propriety of a jury instruction.    More recently, in Commonwealth v.
    Mouzon, 
    53 A.3d 738
    , 743 (Pa. 2012), our Supreme Court articulated the
    current state of the law.   Cognizant of the United States Supreme Court’s
    then-recent decision in Dixon v. United States, 
    548 U.S. 1
    (2006), which
    involved a duress defense, the Court stated that “the overall principle that
    emerges from the High Court's decisional law is that federal due process
    permits States to place a burden on the defendant to prove an affirmative
    defense by a preponderance of the evidence, so long as the defendant is not
    thereby required to negate an element of the offense.” 
    Mouzon, supra
    at
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    743 (emphasis added). The Mouzon Court clarified that overlap between an
    element of the crime and the affirmative defense is permissible “in the sense
    that evidence to prove the latter will tend to negate the former.” Martin v.
    Ohio, 
    480 U.S. 228
    (1987). It concluded that the test is not a mechanical
    one that inquires whether the affirmative defense and element are related,
    but a functional test that ensures the defendant is not burdened with
    disproving an element of the crime.     See also 
    Mullaney, supra
    at 699
    (noting that the due process analysis of affirmative defenses is “concerned
    with substance rather than . . . formalism”).
    Thus, only an affirmative defense that shifts the burden of proof to the
    defendant and requires the defendant to negate an element of the
    underlying offense violates federal due process rights.   
    Mouzon, supra
    at
    743; see also Smith v. United States, 
    568 U.S. 106
    (2013) (summarizing
    the due process rules concerning affirmative defenses). Such is not the case
    herein.   Pennsylvania case law has supplied the culpability element for
    deceptive business practices: “fraud, which includes a wrongful intent to
    deceive, is an element of the crime.”    Hill, supra at 717 (quoting Eline,
    supra at 433).    The Commonwealth has the never-shifting burden during
    trial to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant possessed the
    wrongful intent to deceive as to each charge under 18 Pa.C.S. § 4107(a), a
    burden the prosecution acknowledged herein.       See N.T. Motion in Limine
    Hearing, 7/7/16, at 5-6. Nevertheless, Appellant had the right, but was not
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    required, to offer evidence tending to show that he merely engaged in the
    deceptive conduct knowingly or recklessly, rather than intentionally.
    The Commonwealth never suggested during trial or closing arguments
    that Appellant had any burden to prove that he lacked the intent to defraud.7
    Nor was the Commonwealth under any obligation to disprove every fact that
    could lead to Appellant’s exoneration or address every potential justification
    Appellant may have raised.          Reilly, supra at 510.   “Proof of facts which
    exonerate the accused from his guilt remains solely the province of the
    criminal defendant.” 
    Id. Under §
    4107(a) and (b), as interpreted by this
    Court in Eline, the burden remains upon the prosecution to prove
    Appellant’s intent to deceive beyond a reasonable doubt or the accused
    would be acquitted. Eline, supra at 433.
    Thus, we conclude Appellant has not met the heavy burden required to
    overcome the presumptive constitutionality of an act of the General
    Assembly. Zauflik, supra at 1103. Section 4107 of Title 18, as interpreted
    by this Court, i) requires the prosecution to prove fraud beyond a reasonable
    doubt, which includes an intent to deceive, as an element of the crime; (ii)
    does not create a presumption of guilt as to any element of the crime; and
    (iii) does not require the defendant to assert an affirmative defense or
    ____________________________________________
    7
    In any case, Appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence or
    the prosecution’s conduct, but instead limits his attack to the facial validity
    of § 4107.
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    J-S26009-17
    negate any element of the crime.           Therefore, 18 Pa.C.S. § 4107(b) is not
    violative of the due process clauses of either the Pennsylvania or the United
    States Constitutions.8
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 8/23/2017
    ____________________________________________
    8
    As judicially construed and applied, the statute at issue passes
    constitutional muster. However, if the Legislature were to amend the
    statute to expressly provide that specific intent to deceive is an element of
    the offense, similar constitutional challenges likely could be averted.
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