COMMONWEALTH of Pennsylvania, Appellant v. Michael PRUITT, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
Decided April 25, 2012.
41 A.3d 1289
Submitted Oct. 21, 2011.
David M. Osborne, Federal Public Defender‘s Office, for Michael Pruitt.
BEFORE: CASTILLE, C.J., SAYLOR, EAKIN, BAER, TODD, MCCAFFERY, ORIE MELVIN, JJ.
ORDER
PER CURIAM.
AND NOW, this 25th day of April, in light of the Appellee‘s counsel‘s representation that the Commonwealth “is in full compliance” with the trial court‘s July 19, 2010 discovery order, which is the subject of this appeal, and that “there are no additional documents that the Commonwealth can be compelled to produce,” Appellee‘s Brief at 14-15, the Commonwealth‘s appeal of that order is dismissed as moot.
Chief Justice CASTILLE files a concurring statement in which Justices McCAFFERY and ORIE MELVIN join.
I concur in the Court‘s sua sponte decision to dismiss the Commonwealth‘s appeal as moot. I write separately to explain the basis for the dismissal and to address other matters not addressed by the Court‘s order.
Appellee Michael Pruitt, a death-sentenced prisoner, filed a petition seeking relief pursuant to the Post-Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA“),
This Court has made clear that a PCRA discovery request must be more than “a fishing expedition” for possible exculpatory evidence in order to satisfy the “good cause” requirement governing PCRA discovery which is set forth in
Appellee first raised the possibility of mootness in federal counsel‘s brief to this Court, claiming that the appeal had become moot because the Commonwealth “has voluntarily complied in full with the Discovery Orders by producing all responsive documents.” Brief of Appellee, at 14. Appellee also stated that there were “no additional documents that the Commonwealth can be compelled to produce.” Id. at 15. In its reply brief, the Commonwealth emphasized that it indeed had complied with the discovery request “in the spirit of comity,” but noted that “there has not been any reciprocal willingness to request the vacating of the [appellee‘s] Discovery Order.” Reply Brief of the Commonwealth at 2-3. Thus, the Commonwealth has argued that the matter is not moot because the Commonwealth was “obligated for the foreseeable future” to comply with the court‘s discovery order. Id. at 3.
The Court‘s brief per curiam order dismissing the appeal as moot attempts to address the Commonwealth‘s legitimate residual concern by memorializing federal counsel‘s concession that the Commonwealth has fully complied with the PCRA discovery order, irrespective of its propriety. The notation is important because our determination of mootness is not record-based or in response to a motion and is, instead, based upon the representations of federal counsel as to compliance. In the ordinary course, we could remand the matter to the PCRA court to make the mootness determination in the first instance, or issue a rule upon appellee requiring him to show cause why the Commonwealth‘s appeal should not move forward.
In my view, the question whether to dismiss this appeal on mootness grounds is a close one. The Commonwealth‘s decision to comply with the discovery order is singular, and the import of such accommodation should not be interpreted as a forfeiture of its right to seek review of a facially unsupported and overbroad discovery order in similar situations. Moreover, this case does not involve mere error review. There are important issues, obviously capable of repetition, presented in
Finally, I note that as the interlocutory appeal before this Court is made final by today‘s entry of an order dismissing the appeal as moot, there is an outstanding issue related to appellee‘s request to proceed pro se, which is to be decided by the PCRA court upon remand, as set forth in this Court‘s earlier order dated September 16, 2011. In its analysis of this issue, the PCRA court should be careful to examine and determine the federal court authority under which appellee‘s federal counsel is acting in this purely state collateral proceeding. Even if the request to proceed pro se is denied or withdrawn, there is the separate question of the legality of federal counsel‘s participation. See
Justices McCAFFERY and ORIE MELVIN join this concurring statement.
Notes
1. Whether the PCRA court‘s discovery order is appealable as a collateral order under
(a) whether PCRA discovery orders that allegedly violate rules of discovery, see e.g.,
(b) whether PCRA discovery orders that allegedly compel the discovery of protected or privileged information are appealable under Rule 313 on a category-wide basis; and if not,
(c) whether an assessment of the merits of the challenge to the PCRA discovery order may be used to differentiate those discovery orders that are appealable under Rule 313 from those discovery orders that are not.
