Com. v. Johnson, S. - Habeas Corpus Denied
Summary
The Pennsylvania Superior Court affirmed a lower court's denial of Scott David Johnson's petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Johnson claimed the Department of Corrections erroneously computed his maximum sentence expiration date. The court found no error in the sentence computation.
What changed
The Pennsylvania Superior Court affirmed the denial of a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed by Scott David Johnson. Johnson contended that the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections incorrectly calculated the expiration date of his maximum sentence. The appeal stems from a July 22, 2025, order by the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County, which denied his petition. The case involves a complex sentencing structure from 1987 for multiple felony convictions, including rape, involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, robbery, and burglary.
This decision affirms the trial court's determination that the sentence computation was accurate. For regulated entities, particularly those involved in correctional systems or legal processes related to sentencing, this case reinforces the importance of precise record-keeping and adherence to established sentencing guidelines. While this specific case involves an individual's appeal, it highlights the potential for litigation around sentence calculations and the need for robust internal processes to prevent errors. No specific compliance actions are mandated for external entities, but it serves as a reminder of the legal scrutiny applied to sentence computations.
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by Stabile](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10813604/com-v-johnson-s/#o1)
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March 23, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Com. v. Johnson, S.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 1045 MDA 2025
- Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
Judges: Stabile
Lead Opinion
by [Victor P. Stabile](https://www.courtlistener.com/person/8247/victor-p-stabile/)
J-S45011-25
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
SCOTT DAVID JOHNSON :
:
Appellant : No. 1045 MDA 2025
Appeal from the Order Entered July 22, 2025
In the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County
Criminal Division at No: CP-06-CR-0000624-1986
BEFORE: STABILE, J., MURRAY, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.*
MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED: MARCH 23, 2026
Appellant, Scott David Johnson, appeals pro se from the trial court’s July
22, 2025, order denying his petition for writ of habeas corpus, in which he
claimed that the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (DOC) erroneously
computed the expiration date of his maximum term of incarceration. Upon
review, we affirm.
The trial court summarized the relevant background as follows.
Following a jury trial in 1987, Appellant was convicted of rape,
involuntary deviate sexual intercourse (IDSI), indecent assault,
burglary, two counts of robbery, theft by unlawful taking,
receiving stolen property, prohibited offensive weapons, and
terroristic threats. On November 4, 1987, he was sentenced as
follows:
Count 1 – Rape – 5 to 15 years;
- Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-S45011-25
Count 2 – IDSI – 5 to 15 years, concurrent to Count 1;
Count 4 – Burglary – 5 to 15 years[,] consecutive to Counts 1 and
2;
Count 5 – Robbery – 5 to 15 years[,] consecutive to Count 4;
Count 6 – [Robbery – 5 to 15 years, concurrent with Count 5,
consecutive to Count 4].
Count 9 – Prohibited Offensive Weapons – 1 to 5 years[,]
concurrent with Counts 5 and 6 and consecutive to Count 4;
Count 10 – Terroristic Threats – 1 to 5 years[,] concurrent with
Counts 5, 6, and 9, and consecutive to Count 4.
Trial Court Opinion, 10/15/19, at 2 (unnumbered, footnotes omitted). Thus,
Appellant’s aggregate term of incarceration was 15 to 45 years.
On January 25, 1988, the trial court vacated Appellant’s sentences at
Counts 1 and 6 on the ground that those offenses should have merged into
Count 2 and Count 5, respectively. However, Appellant’s aggregate term of
incarceration remained the same because the vacated sentences were
imposed concurrently.
Appellant filed a timely direct appeal. We affirmed his judgment
of sentence on August 24, 1988. See Commonwealth v.
Johnson, No. 3225 PHL 1987, unpublished memorandum (Pa.
Super. filed August 24, 1988). Over the ensuing years, Appellant
filed multiple petitions for writs of habeas corpus, as well as
petitions under the Post Conviction Relief Act [], all of which were
denied.
-2-
J-S45011-25
Commonwealth v. Johnson, No. 1552 MDA 2019, unpublished
memorandum (Pa. Super. filed March 18, 2020).
Over the ensuing years, Appellant filed multiple petitions for writs of
habeas corpus, as well as petitions under the Post Conviction Relief Act, all of
which were denied.
Appellant filed the underlying petition for writ of habeas corpus on July
14, 2025, claiming again that he was subject to unlawful detention, as the
January 25, 1988 order vacating the sentences at Counts 1 and 6 rendered
the sentence at Count 2 sufficiently ambiguous to reduce his maximum
sentence date from June 25, 2031 to June 25, 2016. The trial court denied
relief on July 22, 2025. This appeal followed.
On appeal, Appellant raises the following claim for our review.
Did the trial court commit legal error or abuse its discretion when
it dismissed the habeas corpus petition of appellant without a
hearing where the warrant of commitment for count 2 departed in
a matter of substance from the judgment in back of it is void; and
in so far as it departs from the judgment cannot make the
detention of the Commonwealth lawful after the court imposed
concurrent sentence for count 2 has legally expired?
Appellant’s Brief at 4.1
1 “Ordinarily, an appellate court will review a grant or denial of a petition for
writ of habeas corpus for abuse of discretion, but for questions of law, our
standard of review is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary.”
Commonwealth v. Judge, 916 A.2d 511, 521, n.13 (Pa. 2007) (citations
omitted).
-3-
J-S45011-25
As far as we can discern, despite Appellant’s protestation to the
contrary, it appears that Appellant is arguing, again, that the January 25,
1988, order vacating the sentences at Count 1 and 6 affected his sentence at
Count 2. Specifically, Appellant appears to argue that the sentence at Count
2, which, in the original sentencing order ran concurrently to Count 1, now
runs concurrent to the remaining counts because it cannot be deemed to run
concurrently to the vacated sentence. As a result of his proposed
interpretation, his maximum date for release is no longer June 25, 2031, but
June 25, 2016.
The trial court interpreted the above claim as another attempt at
challenging the interpretation of his sentence.2 Appellant responded that “the
trial court’s contentions that ‘[Appellant] again challenges the interpretation
of his sentencing orders’ as a basis for its judgment of dismissal is misplaced
2 The trial court aptly noted the following:
The sentencing orders are unambiguous. As the sentences at
Count 1 and Count 6 were concurrent to the sentences at other
counts, when the sentences were vacated and eliminated from his
sentence, the overall sentence remained the same. Regardless of
any purported (and unsupported) error as to [C]ount 1 or 2, the
order vacating the sentences at [C]ount 1 and 6 occurred in 1988
and certainly could and should have been addressed at an earlier
juncture. At this time, the calculation of [Appellant]’s maximum
sentence was decided by the Board . . . and is subject to the
original jurisdiction of the Commonwealth Court in the nature of a
mandamus action. Accordingly, [the trial court] does not have
jurisdiction and is not the appropriate venue for this challenge.
Trial Court Opinion, 8/21/25, at 2-3 (unnumbered).
-4-
J-S45011-25
and unsubstantiated by the record.” Appellant’s Brief at 9. Yet, a review of
the argument before us reveals that Appellant, once again, is trying to get
relief on a claim that has been raised, reviewed, and rejected multiple times
at multiple levels.
In Johnson v. Pa. Dep’t of Corr., 2018 WL 3826288, unpublished
memorandum (Pa. Cmwlth., filed August 13, 2018), Appellant argued that
“the trial court’s vacating of [Count 1 and Count 6] sentences reduced his
aggregate sentence and maximum sentence date and [sought] an order
compelling DOC to reduce its computation of his sentence.” Id. at *2.
The Commonwealth Court noted:
The undisputed facts here establish that there is no error in DOC’s
computation of [Appellant]’s sentence. The sentencing order
clearly and expressly provides that the burglary sentence is
consecutive to the involuntary deviate sexual intercourse
sentence and that [sentences at Counts 5 and 6 are] consecutive
to the burglary sentence. Because the sentences are consecutive,
DOC is required to aggregate these three 5-to-15-year sentences
and its calculation of [Appellant]’s aggregate sentence as 15 to 45
years is therefore correct.
Id.
It also noted that:
Where a sentence is vacated on merger grounds, the conviction
for the other offense on which merger is based remains fully valid
and the sentence for that other offense is not automatically
vacated. 42 Pa.C.S.[A]. § 9765; Commonwealth v. Lomax, 8
A.3d 1264, 1268-69 (Pa. Super. 2010); Commonwealth v.
Thur, 906 A.2d 552, 569-70 (Pa. Super. 2006). The trial court’s
order vacated only sentences that were concurrent to sentences
that were not vacated and did not alter the consecutive running
of [Appellant’s] three remaining 5-to-15-year sentences. The
vacated [Count 1] sentence was the same length and concurrent
-5-
J-S45011-25
to the [Count 2] sentence and the [Count 6] sentence was the
same length and concurrent to the [Count 5] sentence. The two
vacated sentences therefore had not lengthened [Appellant]’s
aggregate sentence.
Id. at *3.
In light of the foregoing, The Commonwealth Court denied Appellant’s
request for relief.
In Commonwealth v. Johnson, No. 1552 MDA 2019, unpublished
memorandum (Pa. Super. filed March 18, 2020), we characterized Appellant’s
claim as follows:
[Appellant] essentially contends that the DOC erroneously
calculating his maximum sentence date by considering certain of
his counts as running consecutively, when the sentencing order
directs that they run concurrently. Appellant indicates that the
DOC’s error in calculating his sentence stemmed from the court’s
vacating his sentences at Counts 1 and 6, which Appellant
seemingly believes lowered his aggregate term of incarceration.
Because the DOC is considering Appellant’s aggregate, maximum
term of incarceration to still be 45 years, Appellant insists that the
DOC is misinterpreting the court’s sentencing order and illegally
extending his maximum term of incarceration.
Id. at *2.
Upon review, we agreed with the trial court’s conclusion that it lacked
jurisdiction to consider Appellant’s writ of habeas corpus because he is clearly
challenging the DOC’s computation of his sentence. Id. Accordingly, we
concluded that Appellant had to raise his claim in a mandamus action filed in
the Commonwealth Court. Id. at 5.
About three years later, Appellant, once again challenged DOC’s
computation of his sentence. In Commonwealth v. Johnson, 300 MDA
-6-
J-S45011-25
2023, 2023 WL 5097200, unpublished memorandum (Pa. Super. filed August
9, 2023), Appellant argued that the trial court erred in “concluding that
Appellant’s 1988 sentence was unambiguous[3] and that it abused its
discretion by refusing to direct [DOC] to release him from custody.[4]” Id. at
*1. Upon review of the parties’ brief, relevant case law, and the trial court’s
analysis, we affirmed the trial court’s decision, noting that “Appellant’s
sentence is not ambiguous and that, to the extent Appellant intends to
challenge the DOC’s calculation of Appellant’s maximum sentence, that claim
must be raised in a mandamus action before the Commonwealth Court.” Id.
Thus, so far, at least two panels of this Court found that Appellant’s
claim must be raised in the Commonwealth Court because the trial court
lacked jurisdiction to entertain Appellant’s claim, and that, to the extent that
Appellant claimed ambiguity in the sentencing order, the order was not
ambiguous. On the merits, the Commonwealth Court, relying on cases from
this Court, concluded, inter alia, Appellant was not entitled to relief because
“[w]here a sentence is vacated on merger grounds, the conviction for the
other offense on which merger is based remains fully valid and the sentence
3 Specifically, Appellant “argued that his sentence was ambiguous because it
was unclear whether the sentencing court intended to impose a consecutive
or concurrent sentence at [C]ount 2.” Id.
4 Specifically, Appellant “claimed that DOC erroneously concluded that his
sentence at [C]ount 2 was consecutive, rather than concurrent, which resulted
in the DOC improperly calculating his calculating his maximum sentence.” Id.
-7-
J-S45011-25
for that other offense is not automatically vacated.” Johnson, 2018 WL
3826288 at *3 (citing 42 Pa. C.S. § 9765; Lomax, supra; Thur, supra).
There is nothing more that can be said or done about this claim. At
best, the claim is devoid of any merit. In light of the foregoing, we affirm the
order of the trial court.
Order affirmed. Jurisdiction relinquished.
Judgment Entered.
Benjamin D. Kohler, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 3/23/2026
-8-
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