Com. v. Basinger, L. ( 2017 )


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  • J-S86006-16
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                              :
    :
    :
    LISA BASINGER                              :
    :
    Appellant                :   No. 1666 WDA 2015
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence August 12, 2015
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-30-CR-0000173-2014
    BEFORE: GANTMAN, P.J., MOULTON, J., STEVENS, P.J.E.*
    MEMORANDUM BY STEVENS, P.J.E.:                        FILED JANUARY 06, 2017
    Appellant Lisa Basinger appeals from the judgment of sentence
    entered by the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County after a jury
    convicted Appellant of harassment and disorderly conduct.1 Appellant claims
    there was insufficient evidence to support her convictions and argues that
    the trial court should have granted a mistrial or a curative instruction based
    on the prosecutor’s improper comment in closing argument. We affirm.
    Appellant was originally charged with burglary, criminal trespass,
    harassment (graded as a third degree misdemeanor), harassment (graded
    as a summary offense), and disorderly conduct. On May 20, 2015, the trial
    court conducted Appellant’s jury trial in which the following testimony was
    ____________________________________________
    1
    18 Pa.C.S. § 2709(a)(4) (misdemeanor), 18 Pa.C.S. § 5503(a)(1)
    (summary offense), respectively.
    *Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S86006-16
    presented.     In the evening hours of June 12, 2014, Appellant went to
    retrieve her estranged husband’s truck from the home of her husband’s
    paramour, Krista Bedilion. After entering the home without knocking on the
    front door, Appellant encountered Krista’s daughter, sixteen-year-old Paige
    Bedilion, and began to yell profanities at her. Paige testified that Appellant
    called her an “F’ing B” and “all kinds of other derogatory names for females.”
    N.T. Trial, 5/20/15, at 51. The Bedilions’ Rotweiler, Shaya, pushed against
    Appellant in an attempt to prevent her from progressing further into the
    home.     Appellant threatened that if Paige would not take the dog away,
    Appellant would kill the dog.
    When Krista entered the room, Appellant began repeating the
    profanities.   Paige testified that Appellant did not seem very focused, but
    was “cussing at everyone in the room.”       N.T. at 52.   In addition, Paige
    indicated that Appellant lunged at her, perhaps in attempt to scare her.
    Thereafter, Paige indicated that her mom, Krista, pushed Appellant out the
    door and shut it. Paige then heard someone bang and kick the front door
    with force and listened as Appellant continued to scream.         After Paige
    observed Appellant walk around the yard and fall down a few times, Paige
    saw another individual escort Appellant to a car, which left the scene. Krista
    called the police. Neither the Commonwealth nor the defense called Krista
    to testify at trial.
    Appellant testified on her own behalf, stating that she went to Krista
    Bedilion’s home, simply to retrieve her estranged husband’s truck. Appellant
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    was accompanied by her son, Steven, and his friends, Elijah and Ryan.
    Appellant shared that she has Guillain-Barre disease, a neuromuscular and
    nerve condition that affects her ambulation.
    After Appellant discovered that her husband’s truck was blocked in by
    another vehicle, Elijah helped Appellant walk to the door of the Bedilion
    home. Appellant admitted to opening the door without knocking. Appellant
    admitted that when she initially saw Paige open the door, she mistakenly
    thought Paige was Krista Bedilion. Appellant asserted that she showed Paige
    the truck keys and said “I don’t want any problems here, I just need that
    white car moved so that I can get that truck out of there, and I will be
    gone.” N.T. at 125. Appellant asserted that Paige slammed the door in her
    face, causing Appellant to simply turn around and leave the premises.
    Appellant admitted to saying “I don’t know why that F bitch slammed the
    door in my face, all I want is my truck.”        N.T. at 126.   Appellant denied
    entering the home, screaming obscenities at Paige, or seeing a dog at the
    Bedilion residence.   Appellant admitted that she had not been taking her
    prescribed Xanax at the time of this incident.
    At the conclusion of the trial, the jury acquitted Appellant of burglary
    and criminal trespass, but convicted her of misdemeanor harassment of
    Paige Bedilion. As the parties had agreed that the trial court would resolve
    the summary charges, the trial court acquitted Appellant of summary
    harassment of Krista Bedilion but convicted Appellant of summary disorderly
    conduct.   On August 12, 2015, the trial court sentenced Appellant to fifteen
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    days incarceration to be followed by forty-five days of house arrest to be
    followed by ten months probation.      On August 21, 2016, Appellant filed a
    post-sentence motion, which the trial court denied on October 9, 2015.
    Appellant filed a timely appeal and complied with the trial court’s direction to
    file a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b).
    Appellant raises the following issues for our review:
    [1.] Does an angry profane outburst of “fucking bitch” or other
    unspecified profanity, made by a separated wife blocked from
    retrieving her truck, said to her husband’s paramour in the
    presence of the paramour’s 16-year-old child at the doorstep of
    the paramour’s house, after the wife asks them to move the car
    that blocks the truck, constitute a crime of harassment
    committed with intent to harass, annoy, or alarm another by
    communication of lewd, lasvicious, or obscene words in violation
    of 18 Pa.C.S. 2709(a)(4)?
    [2.] Did the trial court err in failing to grant a mistrial or
    corrective instructions when the prosecuting attorney informed
    jurors at closing argument that she did not call the eyewitness’s
    mother because she would have testified exactly like her
    daughter?
    Appellant’s Brief at 11.
    First, we will address Appellant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence supporting her harassment conviction. Our standard of review is
    as follows:
    We must determine whether the evidence admitted at trial,
    and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom, when viewed in a
    light most favorable to the Commonwealth as verdict winner,
    support the conviction beyond a reasonable doubt. Where there
    is sufficient evidence to enable the trier of fact to find every
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    element of the crime has been established beyond a reasonable
    doubt, the sufficiency of the evidence claim must fail.
    The evidence established at trial need not preclude every
    possibility of innocence and the fact-finder is free to believe all,
    part, or none of the evidence presented. It is not within the
    province of this Court to re-weigh the evidence and substitute
    our judgment for that of the fact-finder. The Commonwealth's
    burden may be met by wholly circumstantial evidence and any
    doubt about the defendant's guilt is to be resolved by the fact[-
    ]finder unless the evidence is so weak and inconclusive that, as
    a matter of law, no probability of fact can be drawn from the
    combined circumstances.
    Commonwealth v. Rodriguez, 
    141 A.3d 523
    , 525 (Pa.Super. 2016)
    (quoting Commonwealth v. Tarrach, 
    42 A.3d 342
    , 345 (Pa.Super. 2012)).
    In this case, the jury convicted Appellant of misdemeanor harassment
    under Subsection 2709(a)(4) of the Crimes Code which provides that “[a]
    person commits the crime of harassment when, with intent to harass, annoy
    or alarm another, the person … communicates to or about such other person
    any lewd, lascivious, threatening or obscene words, language, drawings or
    caricatures.” 18 Pa.C.S. § 2709(a)(4).
    While Appellant admits calling Paige Bedilion a “fucking bitch,”
    Appellant argues that this comment does not warrant a harassment
    conviction as she did not communicate “lewd, lascivious, or obscene” words.
    In support of her assertion that the word “fuck” is not obscenity, Appellant
    cites to Commonwealth v. Fenton, 
    750 A.2d 863
    (Pa.Super. 2000), in
    which     this   Court   vacated   Fenton’s    conviction   of   harassment    by
    communication conviction as it concluded that Fenton’s threat to “shoot the
    fucking head off” a Congressman and his aide did not constitute a “lewd,
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    lascivious, or indecent” comment within the meaning of the then-applicable
    harassment statute in 18 Pa.C.S. § 5504.
    However, this Court’s decision in Fenton is distinguishable from this
    case.     In Fenton, the defendant was charged with harassment by
    communication under 18 Pa.C.S. § 5504, which was subsequently repealed.
    The applicable language of Section 5504 stated that an individual could be
    convicted of harassment by communication if with intent to harass another,
    he “addresses to or about such other person any lewd, lascivious or indecent
    words or language.”     18 Pa.C.S. § 5504(a) (emphasis added) (repealed).
    The Fenton Court noted that the words “lewd, lascivious, or indecent” only
    pertain to “matters of a sexual and salacious nature.” 
    Fenton, 750 A.2d at 866
    . As a result, this Court reversed Fenton’s harassment conviction as it
    found that Fenton’s use of the “F word” to describe the heads of the people
    he threatened to shoot did not constitute harassing language of a sexual
    nature as required by Section 5504. 
    Id. However, the
    Legislature has since repealed Section 5504 and enacted
    the current harassment statute in Section 2709, which broadens the scope
    of the crime to include communication beyond inappropriate sexual
    comments. The statutory language now allows for a harassment conviction
    when an individual “with intent to harass, annoy or alarm another …
    communicates to or about such other person any lewd, lascivious,
    threatening or obscene words, language, drawings or caricatures.”
    18 Pa.C.S. § 2709(a)(4) (emphasis added). In Commonwealth v. Hartzell,
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    988 A.2d 141
    , 144 (Pa.Super. 2009), this Court affirmed the appellant’s
    harassment conviction under Section 2709 when the appellant exited his
    home, began yelling obscenities at the victims, and fired his weapon at the
    victims.
    Viewing the record in this case in a light most favorable to the
    Commonwealth as verdict winner, we conclude that there was sufficient
    evidence to support Appellant’s harassment conviction under Section
    2709(a)(4).    Appellant went to the home of her estranged husband’s
    paramour, Krista Bedilion, to take back her husband’s truck.     She entered
    the Bedilion home without permission and encountered Paige Bedilion, a
    sixteen-year old child. Appellant shouted profanities at Paige, threatened to
    kill her dog, and lunged at her. The totality of the circumstances permit the
    inference that Appellant shouted the profanity and made her threats with the
    intent to harass, annoy, or alarm the child victim.     Accordingly, we find
    Appellant’s sufficiency claim to be meritless.
    Second, Appellant asserts that the trial court should have granted a
    mistrial when the prosecutor informed the jury that she did not call Krista
    Bedilion to testify as she would have testified exactly like her daughter,
    Paige. Appellant argues that this statement was prosecutorial misconduct as
    it bolstered the testimony of Paige Bedilion by claiming she testified
    consistently to what her mother, a missing witness, would have said.       In
    addition, Appellant asserts that she was entitled to a “missing witness
    instruction that the failure of the prosecutor to call the eyewitness’s mother
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    gives rise to the inference that the testimony would be favorable to the
    defendant whether in direct or cross-examination.” Appellant’s Brief, at 33.
    We disagree.
    Our Supreme Court summarized the missing witness adverse inference
    as follows:
    When a potential witness is available to only one of the
    parties to a trial, and it appears this witness has special
    information material to the issue, and this person's testimony
    would not merely be cumulative, then if such party does not
    produce the testimony of this witness, the jury may draw an
    inference that it would have been unfavorable.
    Commonwealth v. Boyle, 
    733 A.2d 633
    , 638 (Pa.Super. 1999) (quoting
    Commonwealth v. Manigault, 
    501 Pa. 506
    , 510-11, 
    462 A.2d 239
    , 241
    (1983)). A defendant is not entitled to the missing witness instruction under
    the following circumstances:
    1. The witness is so hostile or prejudiced against the party
    expected to call him that there is a small possibility of obtaining
    unbiased truth;
    2. The testimony of such a witness is comparatively unimportant,
    cumulative, or inferior to that already presented;
    3. The uncalled witness is equally available to both parties;
    4. There is a satisfactory explanation as to why the party failed to
    call such a witness;
    5. The witness is not available or not within the control of the party
    against whom the negative inference is desired; and
    6. The testimony of the uncalled witness is not within the scope of
    the natural interest of the party failing to produce him.
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    Boyle, 733 A.2d at 638
    (quoting Commonwealth v. Evans, 444 Pa.Super.
    545, 
    664 A.2d 570
    , 573-74 (1995)).
    While Appellant claims she was entitled to a missing witness
    instruction, she does not assert that Krista’s testimony was unavailable to
    the defense.   See 
    Manigault, 501 Pa. at 511
    , 462 A.2d at 241 (where
    record is devoid of any evidence that a witness was available only to
    Commonwealth, refusal to give missing witness charge not error). Thus, we
    find that Appellant has not shown she was entitled to the missing witness
    adverse inference.
    Nevertheless, the trial court agreed to give a standard jury instruction
    related to the Commonwealth’s failure to call Krista as a witness:
    There is a question about what weight, if any, you should give to
    the failure of the Commonwealth to call Krista Bedilion as a
    witness. If, however, three factors are present and there is no
    satisfactory explanation for a party’s failure to call a potential
    witness, the jury is allowed to draw a common sense inference
    that her testimony would have been unfavorable to that party,
    and the three necessary factors are first, that the person is
    available to that party only and not the other; second, it appears
    the person has special information material to the issue, and
    third, the person’s testimony would not merely be cumulative.
    Therefore, if you find these three factors present and there is no
    satisfactory explanation for the Commonwealth’s failure to call
    Krista Bedilion to testify, you may infer if you choose to do so
    that her testimony would have been unfavorable to the
    Commonwealth.
    N.T. at 212.
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    Moreover, the trial court issued the following curative instruction to
    address the prosecutor’s assertion that Krista’s testimony would have been
    cumulative:
    It is for the jury to decide credibility with regard to what is
    testified from the witness stand, and it is not for anyone else but
    the jury to determine credibility. You should not decide the case
    either based on which side presents the greater number of
    witnesses or greater amount of evidence. Instead, you must
    decide which witnesses to believe and which evidence to accept
    on the basis of whether that testimony or evidence is credible.
    N.T. at 208.
    With these two instructions, we find that the law was clearly,
    adequately     and   accurately   presented    to   the   jury   for   consideration.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not err in denying
    Appellant’s request for a mistrial.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 1/6/2017
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