Com. v. Tyler, D. ( 2020 )


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  • J-S25009-20
    
    2020 Pa. Super. 145
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    DAVID JAMES TYLER                          :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 1639 MDA 2019
    Appeal from the Order Entered September 9, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-01-CR-0000551-1992
    BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., DUBOW, J., and KING, J.
    OPINION BY LAZARUS, J.:                        FILED: JUNE 22, 2020
    David James Tyler appeals pro se from the order, entered in the Court
    of Common Pleas of Adams County, denying his motion for post-conviction
    DNA testing pursuant to section 9543.1 of the Post Conviction Relief Act
    (“PCRA”).1 Upon review, we affirm.
    Tyler was convicted of first-degree murder and related charges in April
    1993; he was sentenced on February 23, 1994, to life imprisonment, plus five
    to ten years in prison. In the ensuing years, Tyler filed numerous appeals and
    PCRA petitions, all of which resulted in the denial of relief. Relevant to the
    instant appeal, on April 12, 2019, Tyler filed a serial PCRA petition alleging the
    ineffective assistance of all prior counsel on issues related to DNA evidence.
    The PCRA court denied that petition as untimely on June 28, 2019. Tyler filed
    a timely appeal to this Court on July 22, 2019. While that appeal was pending,
    ____________________________________________
    1   42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9541-9546.
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    on August 5, 2019, Tyler filed a petition requesting DNA testing pursuant to
    section 9543.1. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9543.1. Specifically, Tyler sought DNA
    testing to compare his own DNA with that taken from under the fingernail of
    the victim at the time of autopsy. He asserted that “DNA testing of the specific
    evidence will have exculpatory results showing actual innocence [of the
    crimes] for which the applicant was convicted.”      Petition for DNA Testing,
    8/5/19, at [2]. The Commonwealth filed a response and, on September 5,
    2019, the court denied relief without a hearing on the basis that it lacked
    jurisdiction to consider the petition because Tyler had a collateral appeal
    pending before this Court.2 Tyler filed a timely notice of appeal followed by a
    court-ordered Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statement of errors complained of on
    appeal. On appeal, Tyler asserts that the PCRA court erred by denying his
    motion for DNA testing without a hearing.3 See Brief of Appellant, at 4.
    Prior to considering the merits of Tyler’s appeal, we must determine
    whether the PCRA court possessed jurisdiction to consider his motion.
    Pennsylvania law makes clear that “when an appellant’s PCRA appeal is
    pending before a court, a subsequent PCRA petition cannot be filed until the
    resolution of review of the pending PCRA petition[.]”     Commonwealth v.
    Lark, 
    746 A.2d 585
    , 588 (Pa. 2000); see also Commonwealth v.
    ____________________________________________
    2 The PCRA court also concluded that Tyler was not entitled to relief on the
    merits of his claim because he failed to establish a prima facie case of actual
    innocence.
    3   We have combined and rephrased Tyler’s claims for ease of disposition.
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    Montgomery, 
    181 A.3d 359
    , 364 (Pa. Super. 2018) (en banc) (reaffirming
    that Lark precludes consideration of subsequent PCRA petition while appeal
    of prior PCRA petition is pending).
    However, although a motion for DNA testing “falls under the aegis” of
    the PCRA, Commonwealth v. Kunco, 
    173 A.3d 817
    , 823 (Pa. Super. 2017),
    this Court has long differentiated between motions for DNA testing under
    section 9543.1 and petitions for relief under section 9543 of the PCRA. In
    Commonwealth v. McLaughlin, 
    835 A.2d 747
    (Pa. Super. 2003), we
    explained that a motion for DNA testing under section 9543.1 was not a PCRA
    petition. Rather, “it allows for a convicted individual to first obtain DNA testing
    which could then be used within a PCRA petition[.]”
    Id. at 750,
    quoting
    Commonwealth v. Weeks, 
    831 A.2d 1194
    , 1996 (Pa. Super. 2003).
    Accordingly, we concluded that such a motion was not subject to the PCRA’s
    one-year time bar for petitions under section 9545.4
    Our Supreme Court addressed the distinction between motions for DNA
    testing and PCRA petitions in Commonwealth v. Scarborough, 
    64 A.3d 602
    (Pa. 2013), in which it held that the denial of a motion under section 9543.1
    was not an interlocutory order within a PCRA proceeding, but a final,
    appealable order under Pa.R.A.P. 341(b). The Court explained that, although
    the legislature placed section 9543.1 “within the larger statutory framework
    ____________________________________________
    4 Section 9545 requires that a PCRA petition be filed within one year of the
    date the judgment of sentence becomes final, unless the petitioner pleads and
    proves one of three enumerated exceptions. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9545(b).
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    of the PCRA,” the litigation of a motion for DNA testing “is, in substance, a
    wholly separate proceeding from litigation of a PCRA petition.”
    Id. at 609.
    In light of the foregoing, we conclude that Tyler’s motion for DNA testing
    under section 9543.1 constituted a separate and distinct litigation from his
    PCRA appeal.        Accordingly, the PCRA court erred in finding that it lacked
    jurisdiction to entertain Tyler’s motion due to his pending PCRA appeal. Thus,
    we may address the merits of Tyler’s appeal.
    Post[-]conviction DNA testing falls under the aegis of the PCRA,
    and thus, our standard of review permits us to consider only
    whether the PCRA court’s determination is supported by the
    evidence of record and whether it is free from legal error. This
    Court can affirm a PCRA court’s decision on a motion for post-
    conviction DNA testing if there is any basis to support it, even if
    this Court relies on different grounds to affirm.
    
    Kunco, 173 A.3d at 823
    (citation, quotation marks, ellipses and brackets
    omitted).
    Tyler claims that the PCRA court erred by denying his request for DNA
    testing where DNA evidence “would clearly undermine the theory that [he]
    was guilty of First[-]Degree Murder.” Brief of Appellant, at 9. He argues that,
    if the DNA evidence found under the victim’s fingernails proves to be that of
    someone else, it will undermine his conviction because the Commonwealth’s
    theory at trial “acknowledges that it may not have been [Tyler] who actually
    assaulted and murdered” the victim.
    Id. at 11,
    12. Tyler is entitled to no
    relief.
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    To qualify for relief under section 9543.1, an applicant must, inter alia,
    “present a prima facie case demonstrating that the . . . identity of or the
    participation in the crime by the perpetrator was at issue in the proceedings
    that resulted in the applicant’s conviction and sentencing” and that
    exculpatory results of DNA testing of specific evidence would establish “the
    applicant’s actual innocence of the offense for which the [he] was convicted[.]”
    42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9543.1(c)(3).
    Here, Tyler’s convictions were based on a theory of accomplice liability
    and the existence of a conspiracy to abduct and murder the victim, who was
    scheduled to testify against Tyler in a drug-related trial later on the very same
    day she was killed. Accordingly, while the Commonwealth indeed conceded
    that “it may very well not have been Tyler who actually assaulted and
    murdered” the victim, Brief of Appellee, at 12, because his convictions were
    based on a theory of accomplice liability, the absence of Tyler’s DNA under
    the victim’s fingernails would not establish Tyler’s innocence.
    Moreover, this Court has repeatedly held that the mere absence of a
    defendant’s DNA, by itself, does not satisfy the “actual innocence”
    requirement under section 9543.1(d)(2)(i).5 See Commonwealth v. Smith,
    
    889 A.2d 582
    , 586 (Pa. Super. 2005) (applicant not entitled to DNA testing
    ____________________________________________
    5In Commonwealth v. Conway, 
    14 A.3d 101
    (Pa. Super. 2011), this Court
    defined “actual innocence” in the context of section 9543.1 to mean that the
    DNA evidence must make it “more likely than not that no reasonable juror
    would have found [applicant] guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Id. at 109,
    quoting Schlup v. Delo, 
    513 U.S. 298
    , 327 (1995).
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    on material under victim’s fingernails where no evidentiary basis existed on
    which to infer assailant deposited DNA there during attack); Commonwealth
    v. Brooks, 
    875 A.2d 1141
    , 1144 (Pa. Super. 2005) (DNA testing properly
    denied where no evidence of record supported contention that perpetrator left
    behind biological material); Commonwealth v. Heilman, 
    867 A.2d 542
    , 547
    (Pa. Super. 2005) (affirming denial of DNA testing where applicant’s entire
    argument depended on premise that “an absence of DNA evidence would
    conclusively absolve him of culpability”). Rather, a petitioner must present
    some quantum of additional evidence in addition to the absence of petitioner’s
    DNA to establish entitlement to relief.
    The quantum of evidence necessary to satisfy section 9543.1(d)(2)(i)
    above and beyond the absence of the applicant’s DNA has never been
    explicitly defined and must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.       In re
    Payne, 
    129 A.3d 546
    , 559 (Pa. Super. 2015).        For example, in 
    Conway, supra
    , the appellant was convicted in the stabbing death of the victim.
    Conway claimed he did not kill the victim, but discovered her body when he
    entered her store to make a purchase. He claimed to have touched her to
    determine whether she had a pulse and untie her hands, and may have tripped
    and fallen on her. At trial, the Commonwealth introduced no DNA or other
    scientific evidence tying Conway to the body of the victim or the bathroom
    where the body was discovered, and he was convicted on purely circumstantial
    evidence.
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    Conway subsequently sought post-conviction DNA testing of several
    items preserved from the crime scene under section 9543.1, which the PCRA
    court denied. On appeal, this Court noted that, because Conway admitted to
    having touched the victim’s body, the presence or absence of his DNA on the
    body or surrounding area would not be not dispositive. However, Conway
    advanced three additional arguments in support of his claim:
    (1) a ‘redundancy’ theory, which postulates that if the individual
    DNA tests reveal evidence of a third person on multiple items
    connected with the crime, then those ‘redundant’ results would
    give rise to an inference of a separate assailant; (2) a ‘data bank’
    theory, which postulates that any DNA results that are obtained
    from DNA testing that prove the presence of an unknown person
    could be run through state and federal data banks for a match,
    which, if successful, would lead to the identification of a separate
    assailant; and (3) a ‘confession’ theory, which postulates that an
    assailant who is discovered by using the data bank theory could,
    when confronted with the DNA evidence, confess to the crime.
    Id. at 110.
    The Court found Conway’s proffered theories to be “plausible,”
    id., and after
       considering    overarching      policy   considerations   as   embodied   in
    Pennsylvania’s DNA testing statute,6 concluded that, under the facts of the
    case, “there is no question that the development of additional evidence—
    evidence that can be easily obtained by DNA testing—will add to the reliability
    of the reconstruction of the events of that tragic day.”
    Id. at 112.
    Unlike the appellant in Conway, here, Tyler presented no additional
    theories, circumstances, or evidence that, taken in combination with the
    ____________________________________________
    6   44 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 2301-2336.
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    absence of his DNA under the victim’s fingernails, would establish “more likely
    than not that no reasonable juror would have found him guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt,” where his convictions were based on a theory of
    accomplice liability.
    Id. at 109.
    Accordingly, because Tyler failed establish a
    prima facie case under section 9543.1(c)(3), the PCRA court did not err in
    denying Tyler’s request for DNA testing.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 06/22/2020
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