Com. v. Kimmel, L. ( 2014 )


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  • J.S76035/13
    
    2014 PA Super 186
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,               :     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :          PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee          :
    :
    v.                      :
    :
    LEE ALLEN KIMMEL,                           :
    :
    Appellant         :     No. 126 MDA 2013
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence December 18, 2012
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland County
    Criminal Division No(s).: CP-21-CR-0003380-2011
    BEFORE: ALLEN, LAZARUS, and FITZGERALD,* JJ.
    OPINION BY FITZGERALD, J.:                           FILED AUGUST 29, 2014
    Appellant, Lee Allen Kimmel, appeals from the judgment of sentence
    entered in the Cumberland County Court of Common Pleas following his jury
    neral impairment
    with refusal,1 and related summary offenses. He avers the trial court erred
    in: (1) denying his suppression motion, where the arresting officer stopped
    *
    Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    1
    75 Pa.C.S. §§ 3733(a), 3802(a)(1), 3804(b)(4).
    J. S76035/13
    officer had violated the Municipal Police Jurisdiction Act2
    finding the evidence was sufficient for DUI-refusal;3 (3) finding the DUI-
    refusal conviction was not against the weight of the evidence; and (4)
    holding the sentences for his DUI and F3-fleeing convictions did not merge.4
    We agree that the DUI and F3-fleeing merge for sentencing purposes but
    convictions     but   vacate   the   judgment     of   sentence     and   remand   for
    resentencing.
    vember 22, 2011, around 10:45 p.m., Cumberland County
    Dispatch received a call from Linda Cheskey indicating that a man[,
    Appellant,5] appeared very intoxicated at the Sheetz gas station in Mt. Holly
    at 3.6   She
    2
    42 Pa.C.S. §§ 8951-8954.
    3
    See 7
    4
    As we discuss in detail infra, fleeing is generally graded as a misdemeanor
    However,
    committed the offense while also committing driving while under the
    influence of alcohol. See 75 Pa.C.S. § 3733(a.2)(2)(i).
    5
    At trial, Ms. Cheskey identified Appellant.
    6
    The    Honorable   Christylee   L.   Peck    presided   over   the    suppression
    suppression issue.      Trial Ct. Op., 5/3/13.      The Honorable M. L. Ebert, Jr.
    -2-
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    described his vehicle as a blue pickup truck and provided his license plate
    number.   Appellant left the Sheetz parking lot and turned right onto Mill
    Street, northward to South Middleton Township.         Within thirty to forty
    aw a police car approaching with its emergency
    Id. at 4.
    The officer in the police vehicle was Officer Jason Beltz of the Mt. Holly
    Springs Borough Police Department, and he was responding to the call about
    Appellant. Officer Beltz did not se
    lot, but travelled in the same direction Appellant was reported to have gone.
    -11, 25-26. Officer Beltz continued on
    Mill Street to the borough border, which was approximately 3,000 feet from
    Sheetz. Id. at 27. The officer initially had his lights and sirens activated,
    Id.   He continued another half mile in South Middleton
    Township and then turned right onto Zion Road. Id. at 28. When asked at
    the suppression hearing why he turned onto Zion Road, Officer Beltz replied
    that in the interim, dispatch advised him of the home address of the
    registered owner of the vehicle, and Officer Beltz knew that Zion Road led to
    Id. at 11-
    Middleton Township is patrolled by the Pennsylvania State Police, but Officer
    presided over trial and authored a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion addressing
    -3-
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    at 5.
    7
    -                     Id.
    Eventually the truck stopped, by which time Officer Beltz had driven a
    mile to a mile and a half outside h
    31.
    Officer Beltz . . . conduct[ed] a traffic stop and asked
    [Appellant] to produce his license and registration, which
    [Appellant] had difficulty finding. According to Officer
    Beltz, [Appellant] had a distinct odor of alcohol on his
    breath, appeared disheveled, and spoke with slurred
    speech. When Officer Beltz asked [Appellant] to exit his
    vehicle to perform a field sobriety test, [Appellant] initially
    complied but was unstable on his feet. [Appellant] then
    told the Officer that he had done nothing wrong and . . .
    reenter[ed] and attempt[ed] to restart the engine. Officer
    Beltz removed the keys, but [Appellant] exited the vehicle
    and pushed Officer Beltz away. [Appellant] then produced
    a second set of keys, reentered the vehicle, and locked the
    door. He turned on the engine and drove away.
    After a brief attempt to pursue [Appellant] as he drove
    home in an attempt to relocate [Appellant]. Officer Beltz
    wheels spinning. [Appellant] exited his vehicle and was
    taken into custody by Officer Beltz. The arrest took place
    in South Middleton Township.
    After [taking Appellant] to Cumberland County Prison
    for processing, Officer Beltz read [Appellant] the DL-26
    form verbatim. According to Officer Beltz, after reading
    the form and asking if [Appellant] would submit to a blood
    7
    At the suppression hearing, Officer Beltz referred to this area as both a
    -4-
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    ed out of his seat and basically
    shown to the jury[, which] personally observed what
    [Appellant] did at the Booking Center.
    Id. at 5-6 (citations to trial transcript omitted).
    Appellant was charged with fleeing, DUI, and related offenses.       On
    April 13, 2012, he filed a motion to suppress all evidence obtained from the
    vehicle stop, on the ground that Officer Beltz violated the Municipal Police
    J
    jurisdiction.   The court held a suppression hearing on May 25, 2012, and
    denied the motion on September 26th. The court found that Officer Beltz
    lacked the requisite probable cause to suspect Appellant had committed an
    offense and thus violated Section 8953, but nevertheless found the infraction
    was minimal and did not necessitate suppression of the evidence.
    A jury trial commenced on December 4, 2012.            The jury found
    Appellant guilty of an F3 fleeing, DUI     third offense, DUI with refusal-third
    offense.8 Furthermore, the trial court found Appellant guilty of the summary
    offenses of public drunkenness and careless driving.9      On December 18th,
    the court imposed sentences of imprisonment as follows: (1) DUI with
    refusal fourteen months to four years; and (2) fleeing      a consecutive eight
    8
    The DUI convictions were Appellant
    9
    18 Pa.C.S. § 5505; 75 Pa.C.S. § 3714(a).
    -5-
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    months to two years.10 Appellant filed a timely post-sentence motion, which
    was denied. He then filed a timely notice of appeal and complied with the
    appeal Appellant challenges: the denial of his suppression motion, the
    sufficiency and weight of the evidence for DUI-
    finding that his DUI convictions did not merge with fleeing. We agree that
    suppression motion, where it had found Officer Beltz violated Section 8953
    of the Municipal Police Jurisdiction Act.    Appellant avers that the officer
    lacked probable cause, where he relied solely on a 911 call.          Appellant
    hout having any idea where . . . the
    catching sight of [Appellant] could indicate a certain degree of bad faith . . .
    Id. at 36.    Appellant further
    10
    The aggregate sentence is twenty-
    sentence of ten months and fifteen days for DUI/general impairment with
    refusal and an RRRI sentence of six months for fleeing. See 61 Pa.C.S. §§
    4501-4512 (recidivism risk reduction incentive). Additionally, the court
    imposed fines and costs.    The court found that both DUI and public
    drunkenness merged with DUI with refusal.
    -6-
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    Id. We find no relief
    is due.
    We first note the standard of review of a suppression ruling:
    factual findings are supported by the record and whether
    the legal conclusions drawn therefrom are correct. We
    may consider the evidence of the witnesses offered by the
    Commonwealth, as verdict winner, and only so much of
    the evidence presented by defense that is not contradicted
    when examined in the context of the record as a whole.
    We are bound by facts supported by the record and may
    reverse only if the legal conclusions reached by the court
    were erroneous.
    Commonwealth v. Hilliar, 
    943 A.2d 984
    , 989 (Pa. Super. 2008) (citation
    omitted).
    Section 8953(a) of the MJPA provides in pertinent part:
    § 8953. Statewide municipal police jurisdiction.
    (a)     General rule. Any duly employed municipal
    police officer who is within this Commonwealth, but
    beyond the territorial limits of his primary jurisdiction,
    shall have the power and authority to enforce the laws of
    this Commonwealth or otherwise perform the functions of
    that office as if enforcing those laws or performing those
    functions within the territorial limits of his primary
    jurisdiction in the following cases:
    *    *    *
    (2) Where the officer is in hot pursuit of any person
    for any offense which was committed, or which he has
    probable cause to believe was committed, within his
    primary jurisdiction and for which offense the officer
    continues in fresh pursuit of the person after the
    commission of the offense.
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    42 Pa.C.S. § 8953(a)(2). This Court has summarized:
    Under subsection two, if a police officer possesses probable
    cause that an offense has been committed in his or her
    primary jurisdiction, and is in hot and fresh pursuit of the
    perpetrator of the offense, the officer is vested with the
    same powers of law enforcement when the officer crosses
    out of his or her primary jurisdiction.
    Hilliar, 
    943 A.2d at 989
    . In reviewing
    whether a violation of the MPJA has occurred, and if so,
    whether suppression of the evidence is warranted[, w]e
    have taken a case by case approach, noting that the MPJA
    promote     public    safety    while     maintaining   police
    accountability to local authority; it is not intended to erect
    impenetrable jurisdictional walls benefit[ing] only criminals
    
    Id. at 990-91
     (citation omitted).
    In Commonwealth v. Peters, 
    915 A.2d 1213
     (Pa. Super. 2007), this
    Court
    held that suppression of the evidence was not warranted
    even if there had been a violation of the MPJA.[ ] . . .
    One of the principal purposes of the MPJA is to
    promote public safety while placing a general
    limitation on extraterritorial police patrols. It is in
    the interest of promoting public safety, therefore,
    that the MPJA exceptions contemplate and condone
    extra-territorial activity in response to specifically
    identified criminal behavior that occur[s] within the
    primary jurisdiction of the police.
    Because of this purpose, our Supreme Court has
    explained that suppression of evidence is not always
    an appropriate remedy when there has been a
    violation of the MPJA. [The Supreme Court has]
    stated:
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    In Commonwealth v. Mason, . . . 
    490 A.2d 421
     (1985), we held that suppression of
    evidence was an inappropriate remedy for a
    violation of the Rules of Criminal Procedure
    relating to the issuance and execution of a
    primary jurisdiction where said violation did
    not implicate fundamental, constitutional
    concerns, was not conducted in bad faith or did
    not substantially prejudice the accused in the
    sense that the search would not otherwise
    have occurred or would not have been as
    intrusive.   Automatic exclusion of evidence
    obtained    by   searches      accompanied   by
    relatively minor infractions of the rules of
    criminal procedure would be a remedy out of
    all proportion to the violation, or to the
    benefits gained to the end of obtaining justice
    while preserving individual liberties.
    Hilliar, 
    943 A.2d at 991-92
     (some citations omitted).
    In the case sub judice, Appellant emphasizes that at the time Officer
    court considered.   While the court found that Officer Beltz did not have
    minimal. Officer Beltz received information of a potentially
    intoxicated driver in his jurisdiction who posed a risk to
    public safety.    In response, Officer Beltz immediately
    sought out to trail the intoxicated driver, who had just left
    a business located within his jurisdiction, and soon
    thereafter found [Appellant] not far outside of his
    jurisdiction. He responded to no other calls during the
    pursuit of the intoxicated driver and did not engage in any
    other police business. This deviation from the letter and
    -9-
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    spirit of the MPJA was minimal and intended to protect the
    public.
    Trial Ct. Op., 5/3/13, at 3.
    See
    ns were
    undertaken in the interest of promoting public safety, namely, stopping an
    intoxicated person from driving. See Hilliar, 
    943 A.2d at 991-92
    . Although
    the total distance the officer travelled was relatively short.      Officer Beltz
    testified that it was approximately 3,000 feet from Sheetz to the borough
    border, and another half mile to Zion Road,11 which the officer knew led to
    owner. Accordingly, we agree
    Had Officer Beltz located [Appellant] within his jurisdiction,
    Officer Beltz clearly would have had reasonable suspicion
    to initiate a valid traffic stop based on the identified
    See e.g. Commonwealth v.
    Anthony, 
    977 A.2d 1182
    , 1187 (Pa. Super. [ ] 2009)
    officers need not personally observe the illegal or
    suspicious conduct, but may rely upon the information of
    had Officer Beltz contacted the State Police after traveling
    11
    We note that 3,000 feet is 0.568 miles.
    - 10 -
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    outside of his jurisdiction as required by the MJPA, the
    driving under the influence would have been identical.
    Trial Ct. Op., 5/3/13, at 3.
    On appeal, Ap
    Id. at 36. In light of the policy of
    the MJPA, we decline to grant relief on this rationale. See Hilliar, 943 A.2d
    Smokey and the Bandit,
    Appellant would have this Court hold that law enforcement officers should
    step on the brakes at the borough line and watch the suspected criminal
    drive away on safe ground.      . . .   The MPJA was not enacted to afford
    that in this case, suppression
    was not warranted.
    the sufficiency of the evidence for DUI-refusal. He avers the Commonwealth
    a meaningful
    Brief at 40.   He claims that the video played at trial showed Officer Beltz
    -
    statement to certify he was provided meaningful opportunity to the motorist
    - 11 -
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    Id. at 40-41.   Appellant maintains that in the video, he
    Id. at 41. Appellant describes
    enough that Ptl. Beltz should have attempted to determine if the action was
    Id. at 43.
    In his next issue, Appellant challenges the weight of the evidence for
    DUI-refusal.12 He
    -
    Id. at 49.    He again maintains that no evidence was presented
    showing that refused chemical testing by actions or words. Id. at 50. We
    hold no relief is due.
    Subsection 1547(a) of the Motor Vehicle Code, also known as the
    implied consent law, sets forth a general rule that any person who operates
    to determine blood alcohol content or the presence of a controlled substance
    Section 3802, DUI. 75 Pa.C.S. § 1547(a); see Commonwealth v. Olsen,
    12
    This issue is preserved for appeal, as Appellant raised it in his post-
    sentence motion. See Pa.R.Crim.P. 607(A)(1)-(3) (requiring claim that
    verdict was against weight of evidence to be raised with trial judge in motion
    for new trial orally any time before sentencing, by written motion any time
    before sentencing, or in post-sentence motion).
    - 12 -
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    82 A.3d 1041
    , 1046 (Pa. Super. 2013).
    Subsection 1547(b)(1) provides in pertinent part that if any person
    arrested for a DUI violation under Section 3802 refuses to submit to
    prescribed duration of time.         75 Pa.C.S. § 1547(b)(1).       Subsection
    1547(b)(2) provides,
    (2) It shall be the duty of the police officer to inform the
    person that:
    upon refusal to submit to chemical testing; and
    (ii) if the person refuses to submit to chemical
    testing, upon conviction or plea for violating section
    3802(a)(1), the person will be subject to the penalties
    provided in section 3804(c) (relating to penalties).
    75 Pa.C.S. § 1547(b)(2)(i)-(ii). This Court has explained:
    Thus, pursuant to the implied consent law, any person
    who drives a vehicle and refuses a request for a blood
    draw, when such request is predicated upon reasonable
    grounds to believe that the driver was driving under the
    influence of alcohol, will be sentenced to the enhanced
    penalties codified at 75 Pa.C.S. § 3804(c). That section
    states, in pertinent part, as follows:
    Incapacity; highest blood alcohol; controlled
    substances. An individual who violates section
    3802(a)(1) and refused testing of blood or breath . .
    . shall be sentenced as follows:
    *      *      *
    (3) for a third or subsequent offense, to:
    - 13 -
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    (i) undergo imprisonment of not less than one
    year;
    (ii) pay a fine of not less than $2,500; and
    (iii) comply with all drug and alcohol treatment
    requirements under sections 3814 and 3815.
    75 Pa.C.S. § 3804(c)(3).
    Olsen, 
    82 A.3d at 1046-47
    .
    We set forth the standard of review for a sufficiency of the evidence
    claim:
    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 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.
    
    Id. at 1046
     (citation omitted).
    We note that in reviewing a weight of the evidence challenge:
    the underlying
    question of whether the verdict is against the weight of the
    - 14 -
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    -finder is free to believe all, part, or
    none of the evidence; an appellate court will not make its
    tri
    refusal to award a new trial only when we find that the
    trial court abused its discretion in not concluding that the
    motion for a new trial based on a weight of the evidence
    
    Id. at 1049
     (citations omitted).
    We note that our Commonwealth Court has stated,13
    In order to sustain a suspension of operating privileges
    under section 1547 of the Code, DOT must establish that:
    (1) the licensee was arrested for drunken driving by a
    police officer who had reasonable grounds to believe that
    the motorist was operating a motor vehicle while under the
    influence of alcohol; (2) the licensee was requested to
    submit to a chemical test; (3) the licensee refused to
    submit; and (4) the licensee was warned that refusal
    would result in a license suspension. In proving whether a
    licensee refused to submit to chemical testing, DOT has
    the burden of showing that the licensee was offered
    a meaningful opportunity to comply with section
    1547 of the Code. Once DOT satisfies its burden, the
    licensee must establish that the refusal was not knowing or
    conscious or that the licensee physically was unable to
    take the test.
    13
    Commonwealth Court.       However, such decisions provide persuasive
    authority, and we may turn to our colleagues on the Commonwealth Court
    Lockley v. CSX Transp., Inc., 
    66 A.3d 322
    , 326 n.5 (Pa. Super. 2013), appeal denied, 
    74 A.3d 127
     (Pa. 2013)
    (citation omitted).    Appellant relies on Broadbelt and related
    -42, 44-45.
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    Broadbelt v. DOT, Bureau of Driver Licensing, 
    903 A.2d 636
    , 640 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2006) (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
    In Olsen, a police officer arrested the defendant for DUI and was
    transporting her to the hospital for blood alcohol testing. Olsen, 
    82 A.3d at 1044
    . During the ride, the defendant
    began to get loud, was screaming and continued on a
    vulgar tirade about law enforcement and about [the
    officer] specifically. [The officer] described that he
    read the chemical testing warnings from the DL-26 Form,
    but it was clear that [the defendant] was not paying
    officer] did not actually read very much of the DL-26 Form,
    he read the beginning of the form and only abandoned the
    would not permit him to finish. [The officer abandoned his
    effort to take [the defendant] into the hospital for a blood
    draw, and instead [drove] towards the [p]olice
    [d]epartment in order to have [the defendant] processed
    on the DUI charge.]
    
    Id. at 1044-45
    .
    On appeal from her conviction of DUI, the defendant challenged the
    refused chemical testing under Section 1547. 
    Id. at 1045, 1049
    . This Court
    fficer attempts to administer the warnings,
    completing the recitation, the arrestee will be deemed to have refused the
    
    Id.
     at 1049 (citing Commonwealth v. Xander, 
    14 A.3d 174
    ,
    - 16 -
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    against the police, preventing [him] from
    Olsen, 
    82 A.3d at 1048
    . This Court thus held
    reasonable doubt that [the defendant] had knowingly refused the blood
    dr      
    Id.
     With respect to the weight of the evidence, the Court reasoned
    
    Id. at 1049
    .    The jury
    credible.   
    Id.
    supported by the record. 
    Id.
    In the instant case, Officer Beltz testified at trial that he read the DL-
    Form 26 verbatim to Appellant.       N.T. Trial, 12/4/12, at 44.    The officer
    testing, he jumped up out of his seat and basically made a threatening move
    Id. at 45.   As stated above, the Commonwealth played a
    video depicting the reading of DL-Form 26 to Appellant. Id. at 72.
    see                             uires this Court to discredit
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    we cannot do. See Olsen, 
    82 A.3d at 1049
    . Furthermore, we note the trial
    her in
    words or by uncooperative conduct after examining all the surrounding facts
    with the Pennsylvania Suggested Standard Jury Instruction.14 Appellant did
    not object to this instruction at the time it was given or at the conclusion of
    all the instructions. See N.T. Trial, at 100, 107. In light of all the foregoing,
    not shock its conscience.     See Olsen, 
    82 A.3d at 1049
    .       We rely on the
    claim.
    sentences, we note the following statutory authority.       Section 3802 of the
    Vehicle Code defines DUI/general impairment as follows:
    14
    Suggested Standard Criminal Jury Instruction 17.6502C states:
    1. The Commonwealth contends that the defendant
    refused to give a sample of [[his] [her]] [[blood] [urine]]
    conduct. You should consider everything said and done by
    the [police] [official] and the defendant, and all the
    surrounding circumstances, at the time of the alleged
    refusal when determining whether the defendant did in
    fact refuse to give the sample. [If a person refuses, that
    initial refusal can still be regarded as a refusal even if he
    or she later offers a sample for testing.]
    Pa. SSJI (Crim) 17.6502C(1).
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    An individual may not drive, operate or be in actual
    physical control of the movement of a vehicle after
    imbibing a sufficient amount of alcohol such that the
    individual is rendered incapable of safely driving, operating
    or being in actual physical control of the movement of the
    vehicle.
    75 Pa.C.S. § 3802(a)(1).
    Section 3733(a) defines the offense of fleeing or attempting to elude a
    police officer as follows:
    Any driver of a motor vehicle who willfully fails or refuses
    to bring his vehicle to a stop, or who otherwise flees or
    attempts to elude a pursuing police officer, when given a
    visual and audible signal to bring the vehicle to a stop,
    commits an offense as graded in subsection (a.2).
    75 Pa.C.S. § 3733(a). Subsection 3733(a.2) sets forth the grading of this
    offense:
    (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), an offense
    under subsection (a) constitutes a misdemeanor of the
    second degree. . . .
    (2) An offense under subsection (a) constitutes a felony
    of the third degree if the driver while fleeing or attempting
    to elude a police officer does any of the following:
    (i) commits a violation of section 3802 (relating to
    driving under influence of alcohol or controlled
    substance)[.]
    75 Pa.C.S. § 3733(a.2)(1), (2)(i).
    In the instant appeal, Appellant argues that the trial court erred in
    holding his DUI and DUI with refusal convictions did not merge with his F3
    fleeing conviction. He points out that while fleeing is generally graded as an
    M2, if an individual commits fleeing while also committing DUI, fleeing is
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    then graded as an F3.      See 75 Pa.C.S. § 3733(a.2)(2)(i).   Appellant thus
    degree felony, [it] must find beyond a reasonable doubt that each and every
    determine whether a violation of § 3802 occurred while a violation of § 3733
    Id.
    Id.    He avers instead that under Apprendi v. New Jersey,
    an element of an offense is any fact which the jury
    must find beyond a reasonable doubt in order to convict the defendant of the
    Id.       Appellant accordingly urges this Court to find that the
    offenses merged. We agree.
    ine is codified at section 9765 of the
    Sentencing Code:
    No crimes shall merge for sentencing purposes unless the
    crimes arise from a single criminal act and all of the
    statutory elements of one offense are included in the
    statutory elements of the other offense. Where crimes
    merge for sentencing purposes, the court may sentence
    the defendant only on the higher graded offense.
    [Section 9765] is clear.     It prohibits merger unless two distinct facts are
    present: 1) the crimes arise from a single criminal act; and 2) all of the
    statutory elements of one of the offenses are included in the statutory
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    Commonwealth v. Tanner, 
    61 A.3d 1043
    , 1046
    (Pa. Super. 2013) (cita
    sentencing     is   a   question   implicating   the   legality   of   [a]   sentence.
    Consequently, our standard of review is de novo and the scope of our review
    
    Id. at 1046
    .
    Our review of relevant decisional authority has not revealed a
    discussion on whether the crimes of fleeing-F3 and DUI merge. However,
    we find guidance in Tanner. In that case, the defendant pleaded guilty to
    homicide by motor vehicle while DUI, aggravated assault by vehicle while
    DUI, and DUI highest rate of alcohol.15            
    Id. at 1045
    .        The trial court
    imposed sentences at all three counts, to be served consecutively. 
    Id.
     On
    appeal, this Court sua sponte reviewed whether the DUI conviction merged
    with the convictions for homicide by motor vehicle while DUI and aggravated
    assault by vehicle while DUI.         
    Id. at 1046
    .     This Court considered the
    following.
    The Vehicle Code defines homicide by vehicle while DUI as follows:
    result of a violation of . . . section 3802 (relating to [DUI]) and who is
    convicted of violating section 3802 is guilty of a felony of the second degree
    
    Id. at 1046
     (quoting 75
    15
    75 Pa.C.S. §§ 3735(a), 3735.1(a), 3802(c).
    - 21 -
    J. S76035/13
    Pa.C.S.A. § 3735(a)). Aggravated assault by vehicle while DUI is defined as
    person as the result of a violation of . . . section 3802 (relating to [DUI]) and
    who is convicted of violating section 3802 commits a felony of the second
    Tanner, 
    61 A.3d at 1046
     (quoting 75 Pa.C.S.A. § 3735.1(a)).
    The Tanner
    from a single criminal act. Tanner, 
    61 A.3d at 1047
    . It found that
    homicide by motor vehicle while DUI and aggravated
    assault by vehicle while DUI.       Indeed, the crimes of
    homicide by motor vehicle while DUI and aggravated
    assault by vehicle while DUI require, as essential elements,
    convicted of DUI. Therefore, the statutory elements of
    DUI are completely subsumed within the crimes of both
    homicide by motor vehicle while DUI and aggravated
    assault by vehicle while DUI. As such, for sentencing
    purposes, [the] DUI conviction merged with both
    [the]homicide by motor vehicle while DUI and aggravated
    assault by vehicle while DUI convictions.
    
    Id.
     (citations omitted).
    In the case sub judice, the trial court further reasoned that the
    legislative intent for the fleeing-F3 subsection was to increase sentencing for
    fleeing when it is committed during a DUI, and not to merge the two crimes
    for sentencing purposes.     Trial Ct. Op., 3/28/13, at 8.      We respectfully
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    J. S76035/13
    disagree, and instead hold that the rationale in Tanner applies.16 Fleeing-F3
    includes the element of committing DUI, 75 Pa.C.S. § 3733(a.2)(2)(i),
    similar to homicide by vehicle while DUI and aggravated assault while DUI.
    75 Pa.C.S. §§ 3735(a), 3735.1(a).      Accordingly, we hold that DUI merges
    with fleeing-
    illegal. Our
    See Olsen, 
    61 A.3d at 1048
    .
    Judgment of sentence affirmed in part and vacated in part.        Case
    remanded for resentencing. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Allen, J. files a concurring and dissenting opinion.
    16
    Commonwealth v. Everett, 
    705 A.2d 837
     (Pa. 1998), applies to control
    that the two offenses in the instant matter do not merge. In Everett, the
    -
    felony and attempted murder conviction was a second degree-felony. 
    Id.
     at
    838 n.1, 839. The issue before our Supreme Court was not whether these
    two offenses merged; the Court cited Commonwealth v. Anderson, 
    650 A.2d 20
     (Pa. 1994), which held they did. Everett, 705 A.2d at 838-
    but see Commonwealth v. Coppedge,
    
    984 A.2d 562
    , 564 (Pa. Super. 2009) (noting 2003 merger statute, 42
    Pa.C.S. § 9765, superseded prior common law decisions, including
    Anderson). Instead, the issue before the Everett Court was whether a
    court was required to sentence on the greater offense and not the lesser
    offense. Id.
    rejection of such a claim
    legislature intended that a lesser maximum sentence
    Id. at 839.
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    J. S76035/13
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 8/29/2014
    - 24 -