Com. v. Becher, C. ( 2023 )


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  • J-A06034-23
    2023 PA SUPER 58
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant               :
    :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    CHARLES MICHAEL BECHER                     :   No. 155 WDA 2022
    Appeal from the Order Entered January 26, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-02-CR-0001032-2021
    BEFORE: OLSON, J., NICHOLS, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    OPINION BY PELLEGRINI, J.:                          FILED: April 4, 2023
    The Commonwealth appeals from the order of the Court of Common
    Pleas of Allegheny County (trial court) granting a new trial to Charles Michael
    Becher (Becher) after a jury convicted him of third-degree murder.
    By way of background, Becher shot and killed the victim but claimed
    self-defense at trial.     Several witnesses testified that before the shooting,
    Becher’s cousins threatened the group that the victim was in, yelling that they
    planned to get Becher and that he was going to “smoke” them.              Becher
    objected to the testimony on hearsay grounds, but the trial court overruled
    him. The trial court gave a precautionary instruction to the jury that it could
    not use the threats of his cousins as proof of Becher’s intent. After the verdict,
    Becher moved for a new trial but limited his claim to the weight of the
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A06034-23
    evidence.      At sentencing, however, the trial court announced that it was
    granting Becher a new trial because the testimony about the threats was
    “blatant, inadmissible hearsay” going to Becher’s intent. The court explained
    that it had authority to grant a new trial “in the interest of justice” under
    Commonwealth v. Powell, 
    590 A.2d 1240
    , 1243 (Pa. 1991) (“[I]f a trial
    court determines that the process has been unfair or prejudicial … it may, in
    the exercise of its discretionary powers, grant a new trial ‘in the interest of
    justice.’”).
    Recently, though, in Temple v. Providence Care Ctr., LLC, 
    233 A.3d 750
     (Pa. filed July 21, 2020), our Supreme Court limited a trial court’s
    authority to grant a new trial sua sponte when a party recognizes an error but
    fails to preserve it. In those cases, our Supreme Court held that a trial court
    may exercise its sua sponte authority only in “truly exceptional circumstances”
    involving “exceedingly clear error” that results in a “manifest injustice.” Id.
    at 766.
    Applying that standard here, we find that the trial court abused its
    discretion in granting Becher a new trial “in the interest of justice” because it
    is not “exceedingly clear” that the testimony about the threats was “blatant,
    inadmissible hearsay” that prejudiced Becher. Accordingly, we reverse and
    remand with instructions.
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    J-A06034-23
    I.
    A.
    On January 29, 2021, Becher, along with his cousin (who he considers
    to be his “sister”) Khaiya Richards (Khaiya), his cousins Amanda Becher and
    Cailyn Richards (Cailyn), and another friend Khalil Walls (Walls), went to Club
    Erotica, an adult “strip club” in McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania. There was also
    a group of motorcycle club members that included Seth McDermit, along with
    William Especto, Robert Johnson, David Li, Ryan Kass and Christopher Butler.1
    Some members of the motorcycle club went outside to smoke when a
    confrontation occurred between some of the club members and an intoxicated
    patron who was leaving the club and stumbled into them. After words were
    exchanged, a fight ensued and the intoxicated patron was beaten by the club
    members until he was bleeding. After that individual fled the scene, Khaiya,
    who was outside smoking with Amanda Becher, began to taunt the men who
    had beaten the intoxicated patron.
    Christopher Butler took offense at the woman’s comments and the two
    of them then got into a physical struggle, exchanging blows. Eventually the
    club members were able to separate Mr. Butler and Khaiya.          During this
    confrontation, Khaiya told them that she was going to get her cousin and that
    ____________________________________________
    1 Mr. Butler was also shot and killed that evening, but Becher was not charged
    in his shooting. Rather, Walls was charged in his death.
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    J-A06034-23
    he was going to “smoke every single one of you.” Becher was inside the club
    during this time.    He was not informed about the fight but when Amanda
    Becher ran into the club and screamed “Khaiya,” he went outside to see what
    was happening.
    Having finally separated Khaiya and Mr. Butler, Mr. Li convinced his
    fellow club members that they should leave. As they were dragging Mr. Butler
    to the parking lot, however, Cailyn and Khaiya confronted the men, and Cailyn
    began to fight with Mr. Butler. Cailyn then confronted Mr. Johnson and started
    slapping him in the face.
    At that point, Becher pulled out his gun and struck Mr. Johnson with it.
    In doing so, he dropped the weapon and a “scrum” then occurred where
    people were fighting in a group with some on the ground and some standing.
    It was during this part of the melee that Becher recovered his weapon, was
    shot (alleged by Becher to be Mr. Walls), and then shot Mr. McDermit; Mr.
    Johnson was shot twice (nonlethal wounds); and Mr. Butler was also shot and
    killed. Becher stayed at the scene, with his firearm in his possession, and told
    responding police officers that he acted in self-defense.
    Becher was charged with criminal homicide in relation to the death of
    one of the victims, Mr. McDermit. Walls was charged with criminal homicide
    in relation to the death of Mr. Butler. Becher’s case was severed from Walls’
    case.    Becher’s counsel also indicated that he (Becher’s counsel) would
    contend that Walls shot Becher during the confrontation while Becher was
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    fighting with members of the motorcycle club, and that Becher, having been
    shot, was a substantial factor in Becher's decision to use his own weapon.
    B.
    At trial, three members of the motorcycle club, David Li, William Especto
    and Robert Johnson, testified that during the altercation, Khaiya kept
    screaming that she was going to get her “cousin”—Becher—to come and
    “smoke” them. After it had been mentioned several times, Becher’s counsel
    objected on hearsay grounds to the admission of the cousins’ threats. The
    trial court overruled the objection.        After closing arguments where the
    Commonwealth referred to Khaiya’s testimony, the trial court provided the
    jury with an unrequested precautionary instruction cautioning that those
    statements could not be used against Becher to prove his intent.           That
    instruction provided:
    Now you also heard evidence that Ms. Richards made statements
    to the effect that my cousin will smoke you, my cousin will shoot
    you. There’s conflict as to whether those statements were made.
    If you find that she did make such a statement, you cannot regard
    the statement standing alone as proof of any intent or state of
    mind of the defendant. You may regard that evidence if you find
    that it happened in evaluating and find out other facts that might
    bear on the events of this case, but the statement made outside
    the presence of the defendant cannot be proof of the defendant’s
    intent or state of mind unless you determine from the evidence
    that the defendant was conscious of and promoted the statement,
    or endorses that statement in some fashion.
    T.T. at 1282-83.
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    C.
    After the jury found him guilty of third-degree murder, Becher filed a
    motion for new trial claiming that the verdict was against the weight of the
    evidence.2 As the sentencing hearing opened, the trial court stated it would
    grant Becher a new trial on “an alternate basis,” that is, because of the
    testimony that during the altercation Khaiya threatened that her “cousin” was
    going to “smoke” them.           This testimony, the court found, was “blatant,
    inadmissible hearsay” that was so prejudicial that even if it was not hearsay,
    a new trial was warranted “in the interest of justice.” The trial court explained:
    It was not fair to have this evidence come in that Mr. Becher
    was going to smoke all of them. He was going to shoot all of
    them. He wasn’t there. There’s no evidence that he endorsed
    that statement. There was no evidence that he even knew the
    statement was made. By the time Mr. Becher is on the scene and
    actions occur, the evidence is already in that his intent is to smoke
    them, at least from his cousin, who continues to promote the
    hostility. Promote the fight. She was the most -- in my view, the
    most active person in this whole mess that caused this to
    continue. I gave a limiting instruction at the end of the case. That
    instruction was not sought by either lawyer. I did it because I was
    disturbed by the evidence when I heard it. When I heard it again
    from another witness. And the prejudicial -- arguably it’s relevant.
    Arguably because it occurred during the events of this case. But
    it is highly prejudicial. It’s blatant hearsay. I cannot even come
    close to justifying the inception. And yet, it goes directly to the
    Defendant’s state of mind. What intent he had when he used the
    gun when he used it. When he used it.
    ____________________________________________
    2 A defendant can raise a weight challenge “with the trial judge in a motion
    for a new trial: (1) orally, on the record, at any time before sentencing; (2)
    by written motion at any time before sentencing or (3) in a post-sentence
    motion.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 607(A).
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    Now, [the Commonwealth] argued this in his closing, and
    rightfully so, that [Becher] introduced the gun into this. He pulled
    the gun, albeit the other side said he pulled it to use it as a club,
    not as a gun. But the fact is he introduced it. What was his intent
    when he introduced the gun? Is it colored by the fact that his
    cousin already told all these people he’s going to smoke you with
    this? I would say it is. I would say you can’t unring that bell. And
    my instructions to the Jury at the end of the closing arguments
    was way too little and way too late.
    N.T., 1/19/22, at 8-9 (some paragraph breaks omitted).
    After the Commonwealth filed this appeal,3 the trial court expanded on
    its reasoning in its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, emphasizing that the
    Commonwealth elicited the statements several times during its case-in-chief
    and mentioned them four times in its closing argument.
    The principal issues in the trial were (a) Becher’s state of
    mind and/or intent and (b) whether Becher was acting in self-
    ____________________________________________
    3   Under Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 311(a)(6), the
    Commonwealth may appeal from “an order in a criminal proceeding awarding
    a new trial … where the Commonwealth claims that the trial court committed
    an error of law.” Pa.R.A.P. 311(a)(6). Becher argues that we lack jurisdiction
    of this appeal under Rule 311(a)(6) because our standard of review of an order
    granting a new trial “in the interest of justice” is an abuse of discretion. See
    Powell, 590 A.2d at 1243. As we have explained, though, “it is well settled
    that an abuse of discretion includes committing an error of law.”
    Commonwealth v. Andre, 
    17 A.3d 951
    , 957 n.7 (Pa. Super. 2011). Here,
    among other things, the Commonwealth alleges that the trial court erred in
    concluding the testimony about the threats constituted hearsay. In similar
    circumstances, we have found that we have jurisdiction under Rule 311(a)(6).
    See Commonwealth v. Bell, 
    167 A.3d 744
    , 746 n.1 (Pa. Super. 2017)
    (Commonwealth permitted to take appeal from trial court order granting new
    trial based on claim that court erroneously admitted evidence of defendant’s
    refusal to submit to a blood test at his DUI trial); see also Commonwealth
    v. Dorm, 
    971 A.2d 1284
    , 1285 n.1 (Pa. Super. 2009) (finding this Court had
    jurisdiction of Commonwealth appeal from order granting new trial “in the
    interest of justice.”).
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    defense when he used a firearm which caused the death of Mr.
    McDermit.      In this Court’s view, the inadmissible hearsay
    statements attributed to Ms. Richards were prejudicial to the point
    of depriving Becher of a fair trial because these statements went
    directly to the issues of malice and to whether the Commonwealth
    disproved self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.               The
    significance placed on this evidence by the Commonwealth at trial
    cannot be overstated.         The Commonwealth elicited these
    statements at least seven times during its case-in-chief through
    three different eyewitnesses. The Commonwealth referenced the
    statements at least four times during its closing argument in order
    to convince the jury that it fulfilled its burden of proof. As set
    forth above, in his closing argument to the jury, the
    Commonwealth’s attorney argued: “We have shown you that
    Khaiya [sic] Richards threatened to get her cousin to go and
    smoke these men;” later, in his closing argument, the prosecutor
    argued that the victim group was trying to walk away, “they
    weren’t following anybody until Khaiya [sic] Richards started
    telling them that she was going to get their cousin to ‘smoke’
    them. That’s the real essence of it” [emphasis supplied]. In this
    Court’s view, it improperly permitted the jury to repeatedly hear
    and consider blatantly inadmissible hearsay that was irreparably
    prejudicial to [Becher].
    Trial Court Opinion (TCO), 6/30/22, at 12 (footnoted omitted).
    The trial court reiterated that its determination was unaffected by its
    limiting instruction to the jury because it was insufficient to cure the prejudicial
    effect of those statements.
    This Court’s unsolicited limiting instruction cannot be
    regarded as sufficient and curative. As an initial matter, the
    Court’s instruction was simply not accurate. Contrary to the
    language of the instruction, the evidence was blatant hearsay and
    should not have been offered to the jury for the purpose intended.
    Furthermore, the prejudicial impact of this inadmissible evidence
    was enormous given that the evidence was presented numerous
    times through three separate Commonwealth witnesses and given
    that the Commonwealth implored the jury that this evidence was
    the “essence” of this case in its closing argument to the jury.
    While this Court attempted to ameliorate the impact of this
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    evidence prior to verdict, it is clear that the Court’s attempt did
    not, and could not have had, the appropriate curative effect.
    Id. at 13.
    The same held true for Becher’s failure to object to the inadmissible
    hearsay until after the jury had heard it several times.
    The fact that defense counsel did not object to the admission
    of the threats evidence until well after it had been admitted is of
    no moment. The substance of the statements went directly to the
    ultimate issues in this case and the Commonwealth extolled the
    statements as “the essence” of this case. The curative instruction
    read by this Court was legally insufficient. Under the unusual
    circumstances in this case, this Court cannot permit the verdict in
    this case to stand. The interest of justice requires that Becher be
    given a new trial such that a new jury can deliberate and reach a
    verdict after considering only legally admissible evidence. The
    motion for a new trial was properly granted.
    Id. at 13.
    The Commonwealth then filed this appeal contending that the trial court
    abused its discretion when it sua sponte granted Becher a new trial “in the
    interest of justice” because none of the reasons given by the trial court
    justified it taking such an extreme measure.
    II.
    Neither party in this case denies that the trial court had the authority
    under Powell to grant a new trial “in the interest of justice.” We recently
    summarized Powell as follows:
    In Powell, the defendant was represented by the public
    defender’s office. [Powell, 590 A.2d] at 1241. On the day of
    trial, his counsel became ill and was replaced with substitute
    counsel. Id. Substitute counsel requested a continuance to
    review the case properly, but the trial court denied the request.
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    J-A06034-23
    Id. After the defendant waived a jury trial and proceeded with
    substitute counsel, the trial court found him guilty of the charged
    offenses. Id. at 1241-42. The defendant obtained new counsel,
    and filed a motion for a new trial nunc pro tunc alleging the
    ineffectiveness of trial counsel. Id. at 1241. The trial court then
    granted the defendant a new trial “in the interest of justice.” Id.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed, concluding: “A trial
    court has an immemorial right to grant a new trial, whenever, in
    its opinion, the justice of the particular case so requires.” Id. at
    1242 (citations and quotation marks omitted) (“[T]his Court has
    expressly approved of a trial court’s granting a new trial, sua
    sponte, for the promotion of justice, if sufficient cause exists.”).
    The Court opined:
    It is the trial judge’s review of the conditions and activity
    surrounding the trial which leaves him or her in the best
    position to make determinations regarding the fairness of
    the process and its outcome. It is apparent, therefore,
    if a trial court determines that the process has been
    unfair or prejudicial, even where the prejudice arises
    from actions of the court, it may, in the exercise of
    its discretionary powers, grant a new trial “in the
    interest of justice.”
    ***
    This concept of “in the interest of justice” is merely
    a recognition of the trial court’s discretionary power
    to ensure the fairness of the proceedings during the
    adjudicatory stage. ...
    Id. at 1243 (emphases added and citations omitted).
    Commonwealth v. Lang, 
    275 A.3d 1072
     (Pa. Super. filed May 16, 2022).
    Not addressed in our summary in Lang, though, was Temple v.
    Providence Care Ctr., LLC, 
    233 A.3d 750
     (Pa. 2020), where our Supreme
    Court held that when a party recognizes an error but fails to preserve that
    error, a trial court may then exercise its sua sponte authority only where an
    “exceedingly clear error” results in “manifest injustice.” There, the plaintiff’s
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    mother was a resident at a nursing home. After she fell down a ramp and
    suffered injuries, the plaintiff filed a complaint on his mother’s behalf against
    the nursing home for negligence. At the jury trial, issues arose about (1) the
    admission of evidence about understaffing of the facility; (2) testimony about
    the nursing home’s “star rating,” and (3) plaintiff’s closing argument. The
    nursing home objected to each issue but never moved for a mistrial, choosing
    instead to proceed with the trial. At the end of trial, the jury found the nursing
    home negligent and awarded compensatory damages. After the verdict, the
    nursing home filed a post-trial motion for a new trial that was granted, in part,
    based on the above unpreserved issues.         On appeal, this Court affirmed,
    finding that the nursing home’s failure to request a mistrial did not preclude
    the trial court’s power to sua sponte order a new trial.
    Our Supreme Court reversed, finding that the trial court abused its
    discretion in granting the nursing home a new trial. After first finding the
    nursing home did not properly preserve a request for a mistrial during trial,
    the Court addressed whether “the trial court did grant, or even could have
    granted, a new trial on the strength of its sua sponte authority.” See Temple,
    233 A.3d at 764.
    To answer this, the Court noted that it has “long recognized that trial
    courts ‘are not prevented ... from granting of themselves a new trial, if from
    a view of the evidence they see reason for it.’” Id. at 765 (quoting Ewing v.
    Tees, 
    1 Binn. 450
    , 455-56 (Pa. 1808)).          While Temple was an appeal
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    involving a civil case, our Supreme Court noted that this authority was
    recognized in Powell that a trial court may only use this sua sponte authority
    when the “interest of justice” requires it.    
    Id.
     (citing Powell, 590 A.2d at
    1242). It went on to note that this authority under Powell was not limitless
    and warned:
    Make no mistake, the “interest of justice” standard remains a very
    high threshold, the invocation of which should occur only in rare
    circumstances. In Powell, for example, the trial court invoked its
    authority only after the court itself, “albeit unintentionally,
    coerced the [defendant] to waive his fundamental right to a jury
    trial and forced him to proceed with counsel who was admittedly
    ill prepared to present an effective or competent defense.”
    Powell, 590 A.2d at 1243. We found that these serious (and
    prejudicial) errors, which involved the defendant’s constitutional
    rights to representation and a jury trial, supported the trial court’s
    use of its discretion in granting a new trial sua sponte. See id. at
    1244.
    Temple, 233 A.3d at 765 (some internal citations omitted).
    The Temple Court then differentiated between errors raised by the trial
    court independently and those recognized by a party but not preserved.
    Addressing the former, which would fit under the circumstances presented in
    Powell, the Court clarified:
    For errors recognized independently by the trial court, without any
    party calling attention to those errors, the “interest of justice”
    standard remains the threshold by which a trial court must
    determine whether it can grant a new trial sua sponte. In Powell,
    for example, the trial court recognized its own errors and granted
    a new trial sua sponte without the defendant moving for a new
    trial based upon the errors noted above. See Powell, 590 A.2d
    at 1242 n.4. Today’s decision does not disturb or abrogate our
    ruling in Powell, nor does today’s decision eliminate the “interest
    of justice” standard.
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    Temple, 233 A.3d at 765-66.
    As for errors recognized by a party but not preserved, the Court
    concluded that a slightly higher standard was needed for a trial court to grant
    a new trial sua sponte.
    But in an age in which our system relies upon “alert professional
    representation at trial,” when a party recognizes an error, but fails
    to preserve that error, the bar for a trial court to grant a new trial
    sua sponte must be even higher than the already substantial
    hurdle of the “interest of justice.” In such a situation, a trial court
    may exercise its sua sponte authority only in truly exceptional
    circumstances. A trial court should make such a ruling only
    where “exceedingly clear error” results in “manifest
    injustice.” That “exceedingly clear error” should be of a
    constitutional or structural nature, and “manifest
    injustice” must be of such a magnitude as to amount to a
    severe deprivation of a party’s liberty interest. Although
    these requirements are more difficult to prove than the “interest
    of justice” standard, we reject the notion that today’s decision will
    result in the “virtual elimination of the sua sponte power.” If a
    trial court determines that the above-noted conditions are met,
    then that court can still declare a new trial sua sponte based upon
    that recognized, but unpreserved, error. Additionally, while we do
    not restrict invocation of this authority to either criminal or civil
    cases, the point is well taken that such prejudice would seem more
    likely to occur in the criminal context (though, even in such
    situations, would be exceedingly rare).
    Id. at 766 (internal citations omitted, emphasis added).
    Under the Powell-Temple standard then, where none of the parties
    recognized the errors, the trial court can grant a new trial under the “interest
    of justice” standard. Where, however, the error in the trial court proceedings
    was recognized in the trial court that led to the new trial in the “interest of
    justice,” there must be an “exceedingly clear error” of a constitutional or
    structural nature, i.e., not in accord with law, and the result must be a
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    “manifest injustice” that amounts to a severe deprivation of a party’s liberty
    interest.4
    Because the error here—the purported hearsay nature of the statements
    made by Becher’s cousin to members of the motorcycle club that he was
    coming to “smoke” them when he was not there or aware of the comments
    and its purportedly severe prejudicial effect—was known by the parties and
    the court at trial, we find that the standard established in Temple for granting
    a new trial in the “interest of justice” is applicable. We will then conduct our
    review to see if there is an “exceedingly clear error” of a constitutional or
    structural nature, i.e., not in accord with law, resulting in a “manifest injustice”
    if a new trial is not awarded.5
    ____________________________________________
    4 The trial court does have the power when a motion for a new trial is made
    to reverse a verdict if it would result in a serious miscarriage of justice, even
    when the jury’s findings are against the great weight and clear preponderance
    of the evidence, even though credible evidence supports the findings.
    “Although, generally, issues of credibility are solely for the jury, [w]hen a
    motion for new trial is made on the ground that the verdict is contrary to the
    weight of the evidence, ... [t]he [trial] court need not view the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the verdict; it may weigh the evidence and in so doing
    evaluate for itself the credibility of the witnesses. If the court concludes that,
    despite the abstract sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, the
    evidence preponderates sufficiently heavily against the verdict that a serious
    miscarriage of justice may have occurred, it may set aside the verdict, grant
    a new trial, and submit the issues for determination by another jury.”
    Commonwealth v. Widmer, 
    744 A.2d 745
    , 752 n.3 (Pa. 2000) at 752 n.3
    (citation omitted).
    5 “While the scope of a trial court’s discretionary powers to deal with the
    factual circumstances it confronts is broad, it is not unlimited. It necessarily
    follows that the requirement that appellate courts defer to that exercise of
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    III.
    The trial court found that that a new trial was necessary in the “interests
    of justice” because:
        The statements by Khaiya that her “cousin” was going to
    smoke the members of the motorcycle club were inadmissible
    hearsay to which defense counsel did not timely object.
          That the Commonwealth in closing used those statements
    to infer motive on Belcher’s part.
         That even if those statements were not hearsay, they were
    so prejudicial that it deprived Belcher of a fair trial.
         Finally, the trial court’s precautionary instruction that this
    testimony did not go to Becher’s intent or motive when he entered
    the fray was insufficient to cure the prejudicial effects of that
    testimony.
    ____________________________________________
    discretion is not without limitation either. The propriety of such an exercise
    of discretion may be assessed by the appellate process when it is apparent
    there was an abuse of that discretion. It is well settled that a reversible error
    occurs when an abuse of discretion is committed.
    “Abuse of discretion” is synonymous with a failure to exercise a
    sound, reasonable, and legal discretion. It is a strict legal term
    indicating that the appellate court is of the opinion that there was
    the commission of an error of law by the trial court. It does not
    imply intentional wrong or bad faith, or misconduct, nor any
    reflection on the judge but means the clearly erroneous conclusion
    and judgment--one is that clearly against logic and effect of such
    facts as are presented in support of the application or against the
    reasonable and probable deductions to be drawn from the facts
    disclosed upon the hearing; an improvident exercise of discretion;
    an error of law.”.
    Powell, 590 A.2d at 1244. (citations omitted; cleaned up.)
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    We examine each of these reasons to determine whether any of them
    individually or in combination justify the grant of a new trial.6
    A.
    To determine whether the introduction of the statements was an
    “exceedingly clear error,” we must first determine whether the testimony
    about the statements was impermissible hearsay. “‘Hearsay’ is ‘a statement
    that (1) the declarant does not make while testifying at the current trial or
    hearing; and (2) a party offers in evidence to prove the truth of the matter
    asserted in the statement.’” In re A.J.R.-H., 
    188 A.3d 1157
    , 1167 (Pa. 2018)
    (quoting Pa.R.E. 801(c)). “Under the Pennsylvania Rules of Evidence, hearsay
    evidence is incompetent and inadmissible unless it meets an exception set
    ____________________________________________
    6 Becher also raises several claims of waiver against the Commonwealth, none
    of which we find convincing. He first argues that except for those objections
    it raised on the record immediately after the trial court announced its ruling,
    the Commonwealth should have filed a subsequent motion in the trial court to
    preserve its arguments. He cites no case law for this proposition in the
    criminal context, however, and our independent research has uncovered none
    for the proposition that the Commonwealth must file a motion to preserve its
    objections to a trial court granting a new trial on grounds it raises sua sponte.
    Second, he argues that the Commonwealth has waived its arguments because
    its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement raised “redundant, frivolous, and verbose”
    claims. While not a model of clarity, the statement was concise enough to
    allow the trial court to author a comprehensive and cogent Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a)
    statement explaining its reasoning for granting a new trial, which is the
    purpose of a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement.              Third, and finally, the
    Commonwealth’s brief is not “woefully underdeveloped” to the point that we
    need to deem all its issues waived.
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    forth in the Rules or one prescribed by this Court or statute.” 
    Id.
     (citation
    omitted).
    Nevertheless, “[n]ot all remarks which a witness attributes to another
    person can properly be characterized as ‘hearsay.’” In re I.R.R., 
    208 A.3d 514
    , 519 (Pa. Super. 2019) (citation omitted).
    An out-of-court statement is not hearsay when it is introduced
    purely for the purpose of establishing that the statement was
    made and not to establish its truth. Likewise, an out-of-court
    statement is not hearsay if it is offered to explain a course of
    conduct or to reflect the declarant’s state of mind.
    
    Id.
     (citation and brackets omitted).
    As it seemed to acknowledge, the trial court recognized that the
    evidence about the cousins’ threats was relevant to proving what effect they
    had on the members of the motorcycle club.        See TCO at 5 n.3.      While
    recognizing that when admitted the evidence was not necessarily “blatant,
    inadmissible hearsay,” the trial court intuited that the Commonwealth’s
    purpose in admitting the evidence was to later use it in its closing argument
    to posit the truth of the matter asserted in the statement: that Becher would
    come and shoot the members in the group.
    We note that properly admitted evidence does not turn into improperly
    admitted evidence, as the trial court seems to suggest, just because an
    improper conclusion or argument was made based on that evidence. Whether
    the Commonwealth’s unobjected-to closing was improper and so prejudicial
    that a new trial was warranted in the interest of justice is separate from the
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    issue of whether the evidence was improperly admitted when it was
    introduced.7     However, Khaiya’s statements that Becher was coming to
    “smoke” them was properly admitted, and a new trial in the interest of justice
    could not be granted on that basis.
    B.
    As mentioned, the trial court found that it was not until the
    Commonwealth gave its closing argument that its real purpose in admitting
    the statements—to prove Becher’s intent—became apparent. In support of
    this notion, the trial court emphasized that the Commonwealth mentioned the
    threats four times during its closing arguments.
    After reviewing each of those four instances cited by the trial court, we
    find none of them supports its finding that the Commonwealth used the
    statements to disprove Becher’s self-defense claim that he came outside in
    response to Khaiya’s statements or that he acted with malice.          The first
    instance came at the beginning of its closing when the Commonwealth
    summarized the evidence:
    ____________________________________________
    7 The Commonwealth asserts that the cousins’ threats could have also been
    admitted as excited utterances under Pa.R.E. 802(3). The Commonwealth,
    however, failed to include this claim in its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement. See
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(4)(vii) (“Issues not included in the Statement and/or not
    raised in accordance with the provisions of this paragraph (b)(4) are
    waived.”). Even if preserved, it is clear the cousins’ statements would not
    qualify as excited utterances, since they were not “relating to a startling event
    or condition, made while the declarant was under the stress of excitement
    that it caused.” Pa.R.E. 802(3).
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    J-A06034-23
    At the beginning of this trial, I told you that the evidence
    will show that [Becher] and his group pushed this confrontation
    far further than it needed to go. During the course of the last two
    weeks, we have shown you that [Becher] and his cousins chased
    down a group of men that were trying to walk away. We have
    shown you Khaiya Richards threatened to get her cousin to
    go and smoke those men. We have shown you, that they
    followed those men all the way out to their cars even as the men
    were trying to get inside and leave. We have shown you that at
    that point they pushed, shoved, punched, and attacked those men
    even though they were doing nothing more than trying to extricate
    themselves from that situation. We have shown you that no one
    in the victim’s group had any weapons on them, but that [Becher]
    still pulled his out, swung it around, and then hit somebody with
    it. Whatever happened after that point happened at his invitation.
    T.T. at 1217-18 (emphasis added). There is no dispute that this is an accurate
    recitation of the evidence of what was presented at trial and was used to
    describe how the incident unfolded.
    The second instance included the “essence” comment that the trial court
    highlighted as showing that the Commonwealth was using the evidence as
    proof of Becher’s intent. The Commonwealth’s full remarks, however, show
    that it was not made to prove intent, but to respond to Becher’s arguments
    that the motorcycle club members started the whole incident by unjustifiably
    beating up a drunk patron in front of the club.
    The Defense has repeatedly harked on this idea of this
    Cimino fight. That fight was over, those men were trying to walk
    away. You saw that video, they were leaned up against the
    side of the building, they weren’t following anybody until
    Khaiya Richards started telling them that she was going to
    get their cousin to “smoke” them. That’s the real essence
    of it. You can see they stopped after that fight was done, they
    stayed on the side of the building. But [Becher’s] cousin still had
    to keep all of this going. The fight is a distraction. Everything
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    J-A06034-23
    that happens after has to be viewed through the lens of them
    trying to walk away because they did not pose a threat anymore….
    Id. at 1221 (emphasis added).
    Contrary to the trial court’s finding then, the “essence” comment was
    not referring to Becher’s action or his intent in eventually shooting the victim.
    Instead, the Commonwealth made the comment in the context of responding
    to Becher’s argument that the motorcycle club members were the real
    aggressors of the whole situation, eventually leading to Becher’s necessary
    use of self-defense. To counter that, the Commonwealth merely made the
    argument that the original fight had ended and the motorcycle club members
    were not doing anything until Khaiya began threatening them.
    The Commonwealth reiterated this point the third time it mentioned the
    threats in its closing.
    All of those witnesses were upfront about the Cimino fight,
    they didn’t conceal anything about it. And incidentally, only one
    of them said that he did any stomping and it was because Cimino
    was clinging to his leg. They all told you that Chris clocked
    Khaiya, that they apologized for it, and that they tried to
    walk away. You saw them drag Chris out, and everybody
    that was present for the altercation, that was within
    earshot, told you that Khaiya said that she was going to go
    and get her cousin to “smoke” all of them, a detail I will add
    that William Especto, in particular, could not have fabricated
    because at the point that he first said it, nobody knew that those
    two had any sort of the familial relationship.
    Id. at 1223 (emphasis added).
    The final mention of the threats came a little later when the
    Commonwealth conceded that some of its witnesses testified inconsistently.
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    J-A06034-23
    At the same time, the Commonwealth urged that these inconsistencies should
    not detract from their testimony being consistent on “major things.”
    So, yes, the Commonwealth’s witnesses accounts do have
    some gaps. Gaps that were shown to you during their testimony,
    explained to you because we don’t have anything to hide. They
    lost some minor details. They remember the major things.
    They remember Chris was drunk and out of control. They told you
    that. They remember that the girls threatened to have their
    cousin come and smoke them. They remember being told to
    leave.   They remember corralling Chris to the car.         They
    remembered that as they were loading him in, the girls came back
    and they started again. …
    Id. at 1233-34 (emphasis added).
    Again, as the full context shows, the Commonwealth did not reference
    the threats to prove Becher’s state of mind or intent. Indeed, like the other
    instances, the Commonwealth makes no mention of Becher in connection to
    its reference to the evidence about the threats, focusing instead on the actions
    of the motorcycle club members and its contention that they were not the
    aggressors of the events that eventually led to the shooting.
    C.
    Having found that the Commonwealth did not improperly use the
    evidence in its closing statement to prove Becher’s intent, we next address
    the trial court’s conclusion that, in any event, the evidence was inadmissible
    under Pa.R.E. 403 because whatever relevancy the evidence had was
    outweighed by its potential for unfair prejudice to support a finding that a new
    trial was warranted “in the interest of justice.”
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    J-A06034-23
    Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 401 defines “relevant evidence” as that
    which has “any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of
    consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable
    than it would be without the evidence.” Pa.R.E. 401. However, “[r]elevant
    evidence may nevertheless be excluded ‘if its probative value is outweighed
    by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the
    jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless
    presentation of cumulative evidence.’” Commonwealth v. Broaster, 
    863 A.2d 588
    , 592 (Pa. Super. 2004) (citing Pa.R.E. 403).
    Because all relevant Commonwealth evidence is meant to
    prejudice a defendant, exclusion is limited to evidence so
    prejudicial that it would inflame the jury to make a decision based
    upon something other than the legal propositions relevant to the
    case. As this Court has noted, a trial court is not required to
    sanitize the trial to eliminate all unpleasant facts from the jury’s
    consideration where those facts form part of the history and
    natural development of the events and offenses with which [a]
    defendant is charged.
    
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    As noted, our standard under Powell-Temple is whether there was an
    “exceedingly clear error” of a constitutional or structural nature. Applying that
    standard here, we cannot find that it was “exceedingly clear” that the
    relevance of the evidence about the threats was outweighed by its danger of
    unfair prejudice. Again, as the trial court recognized, the evidence tended to
    make the existence of a fact that is of consequence to the determination of
    the action—the effect of the threats on the motorcycle club members and their
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    J-A06034-23
    course of conduct—more probable.            Accordingly, the evidence met the
    threshold for relevancy under Pa.R.E. 401.
    Moreover, we cannot find that the evidence’s potential for being unfairly
    prejudicial outweighed its probative value. The evidence formed an integral
    part of the history and natural development of the events just before the
    shooting in explaining what the motorcycle club members had been told.
    Indeed, as the Commonwealth points out in positing why Becher never sought
    to exclude the evidence, the jury could infer from the evidence that it was the
    motorcycle club members (and not Becher) that were the real aggressors
    because they thought Becher was there to “smoke” them when he unwittingly
    walked into the ongoing altercation. Thus, we conclude that the trial court
    abused its discretion in finding that the evidence about the statement, even if
    not admitted for hearsay purposes, was inadmissible under Rule 403.
    D.
    Finally, the trial court found that a new trial was warranted because its
    precautionary instruction to the jury about the statement made by Khaiya that
    her cousin was going to “smoke” the motorcycle club members was insufficient
    to cure the prejudicial effects of that testimony.
    As discussed, with the agreement of both parties, the trial court
    instructed the jury that if it determined that Khaiya did, in fact, make the
    statement, it could not “regard the statement standing alone as proof of any
    intent or state of mind of the defendant.”       T.T. at 1282.   The trial court
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    J-A06034-23
    continued that the jury “may regard that evidence if [it found] that it
    happened in evaluating and find out other facts that might bear on the events
    of this case, but the statement made outside the presence of the defendant
    cannot be proof of the defendant’s intent or state of mind unless you
    determine from the evidence that the defendant was conscious of and
    promoted the statement, or endorsed that statement in some fashion.” Id.
    at 1282-83.
    Contrary to the trial court’s conclusion after the verdict, we find that the
    trial court’s thoughtful instruction accurately characterized the evidence about
    the threats. “It is well settled that the jury is presumed to follow the trial
    court's instructions.” Commonwealth v. Cash, 
    137 A.3d 1262
    , 1280 (2016).
    Here, the trial court properly instructed the jury that the evidence about the
    threats, if found to be credible, still had no relevance concerning Becher’s
    intent or state of mind unless it also found that Becher knew about the threats.
    Of course, as the Commonwealth stresses, there was no evidence of the latter,
    nor did it argue at any point in its closing statement that Becher knew about
    the threats and acted in accordance with them. Under our well-settled law,
    we must presume that the jury followed the trial court’s instruction and did
    not misuse the evidence about the threats as evidence of Becher’s intent since
    there was no evidence that he was present or knew about the threats when
    they were made.
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    J-A06034-23
    For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the trial court abused its
    discretion in granting Becher a new trial “in the interest of justice” on grounds
    that Becher recognized but never reserved.          Again, under the Temple
    standard, for the trial court to have authority to grant a new trial under these
    exceptional circumstances, there needed to be an “exceedingly clear error”
    that resulted in “manifest injustice.”       No such “exceedingly clear error”
    happened here where the Commonwealth admitted evidence about threats
    relevant for their effect on the hearer (the motorcycle club members), and
    any possibility of prejudice was cured by the trial court’s limiting instruction
    that the jury is presumed to have followed. As our review indicates, even if
    the ”interest of justice” standard under Powell applied here where no one
    recognized the error involved, we would still not hold that the proceeding
    below would have justified the standard because none of the reasons cited for
    a new trial involve error, let alone clear error.
    Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order granting Becher a new
    trial and remand for the trial court to address Becher’s motion for a new trial
    based on that it was against the weight of the evidence.
    Order reversed.       Case remanded with instructions.         Jurisdiction
    relinquished.
    Judge Olson joins the Opinion.
    Judge Nichols concurs in the result.
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    J-A06034-23
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 4/4/2023
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