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Township of Honey Brook v. Les's Auto Salvage

2026-06-30

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

J-S47029-25

2026 PA Super 137

TOWNSHIP OF HONEY BROOK : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF

: PENNSYLVANIA

:

v. :

:

:

LES'S AUTO SALVAGE, LLC, AND :

LESTER J. HELM :

: No. 1750 EDA 2025

Appellants :

Appeal from the Order Entered June 5, 2025

In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County Civil Division at No(s):

2021-04439-IR

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., OLSON, J., and BECK, J.

OPINION BY OLSON, J.: FILED JUNE 30, 2026

Appellants, Les’s Auto Salvage, LLC (“Les’s Auto Salvage”) and Lester J.

Helm (“Mr. Helm”), appeal from the June 5, 2025 order entered in the Court

of Common Pleas of Chester County that held Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm

in contempt of the trial court’s July 10, 2023 permanent injunction order. 1 In

1 The June 5, 2025 order was timestamped as having been filed on June 4,

2025, but notice was not provided to the parties, pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 236, until June 5, 2025. See Pa.R.Civ.P. 236(b) (stating, “[t]he prothonotary shall note in the docket the giving of the notice”). Therefore, the trial court order was entered on June 5, 2025. See Pa.R.A.P. 108(b) (stating, “[t]he date of entry of an order in a matter subject to the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure shall be the date on which the clerk makes the notation in the docket that written notice of entry of the order has been given as required by [Rule] 236(b)”).

We further note that this appeal is properly before this Court pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 742. See 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 742 (stating, “[this Court] shall have J-S47029-25

the June 5, 2025 order, the trial court also amended its July 10, 2023

permanent injunction order such that Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm were

no longer permitted to cure the underlying conditions which, ultimately, led to

the issuance of a permanent injunction on July 10, 2023, as discussed in

greater detail infra. After careful review, we affirm.

The record reveals that, on June 15, 2021, Honey Brook filed a petition

seeking preliminary and permanent injunctions to enjoin Les’s Auto Salvage

and Mr. Helm from continuing to violate Honey Brook’s junkyard and streets

ordinances through the use of the real property located in the Township of

Honey Brook, Chester County, Pennsylvania that was owned by Mr. Helm and

used in the operation of his business, Les’s Auto Salvage, LLC. In its petition,

Honey Brook alleged that Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm violated the

junkyard ordinance because, inter alia, a “foul odor of diesel fuel” could be

detected when entering the property, “a puddle of what appeared to be fuel”

was noted on the ground at the real property, “the main aisle into the junkyard

had automobile parts lying in the road, was filled with wet mud and stagnant

water, and did not contain [a] clear space [that was twenty feet in width,]” ____________________________________________

exclusive appellate jurisdiction of all appeals from final orders of the courts of common pleas, regardless of the nature of the controversy or the amount involved, except such classes of appeals as are by any provision of this chapter within the exclusive jurisdiction of [our] Supreme Court or the Commonwealth Court”). This matter involves an appeal of a contempt order in an action brought by the Township of Honey Brook (“Honey Brook”), a political subdivision, against Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm. We do not find that this type of action falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commonwealth Court. See generally, 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 762. As such, we have jurisdiction to decide this appeal.

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“conditions [of the real property] would not permit firefighting equipment to

access the interior of the junkyard in [the event] of a fire[,”] and “there was

no fence enclosing the rear of the [real property].” Petition for Preliminary

and Permanent Injunctions, 6/15/21, at ¶¶33-36. Honey Brook alleged that

Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm violated the streets ordinance by storing

vehicles and junk in the public right-of-way and by blocking access to the

public right-of-way with vehicles entering the real property or unloading junk

onto the real property. Id. at ¶¶82-86. On August 9, 2021, Les’s Auto

Salvage and Mr. Helm filed an answer to Honey Brook’s petition. On August

17, 2021, the parties entered into a consent agreement and stipulation

(“consent agreement”) in which Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm agreed that

they were in violation of various provisions of Honey Brook’s junkyard and

streets ordinances. As part of the consent agreement, Les’s Auto Salvage and

Mr. Helm also agreed “to bring the [p]roperty into compliance with various

requirements of the [j]unkyard [o]rdinance over the coming 90 days and to

maintain the [p]roperty and operate the junkyard in full compliance with the

[j]unkyard [o]rdinance and [s]treets [o]rdinance.” Consent Agreement,

8/17/21, at ¶14. On August 17, 2021, the trial court approved the consent

agreement and memorialized the agreement in a trial court order. Trial Court

Order, 8/17/21.

On October 29, 2021, Honey Brook filed a petition to enforce the terms

of the consent agreement and to find Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm in

contempt for violating the trial court’s August 17, 2021 order. On November

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3, 2021, the trial court entered a rule against Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm

to show cause as to why Honey Brook was not entitled to the relief it sought

in the enforcement petition. On November 18, 2021, Les’s Auto Salvage and

Mr. Helm filed an answer to Honey Brook’s petition. On May 13, 2022, upon

conclusion of a hearing on the matter, the trial court entered a preliminary

injunction enjoining Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm “from operating the

[junkyard] business at issue in the Township of Honey Brook” and found Les’s

Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm to have violated the terms of the August 17, 2021

trial court order. Trial Court Order, 5/13/22, at ¶¶1-2. The trial court also

directed Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm to pay attorneys’ fees and costs to

Honey Brook in the amount of $16,500.00. 2 Id. at ¶2.

After concluding an evidentiary hearing on the permanency of the

injunction, the trial court, on December 5, 2022, scheduled a telephone

conference call to “facilitate a final settlement of this case [and to] set a new

deadline for the parties’ proposed findings of fact/conclusions of law and

proposed final orders, if necessary.” Trial Court Order, 12/5/22. On July 10,

2023, the trial court approved, and accepted, the stipulation entered into

2 The trial court directed Honey Brook to refrain from seeking enforcement of

the preliminary injunction until July 1, 2022. Trial Court Order, 5/13/22, at ¶3. The trial court further stated that if Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm were in “full compliance of the August 17, 2021 order on July 1, 2022[,] and continuously remain[ed] in compliance until the August 25, 2022 hearing[, which was scheduled to determine the necessity of making the injunction permanent, the] obligation to pay [attorneys’] fees and costs [would] be reduced to $6,500.00[.]” Id.

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between the parties on May 15, 2023. Trial Court Order, 7/10/23. Pursuant

to the stipulation, the trial court granted Honey Brook’s request for a

permanent injunction pertaining to the junkyard property. Id. at ¶A. The

trial court order set forth the agreed-upon conditions of operation for the

junkyard, and the trial court retained jurisdiction over the matter. Id. at ¶¶B

and D.

On October 7, 2024, Honey Brook filed a motion for civil contempt

sanctions and a request to amend and enforce the July 10, 2023 permanent

injunction order. Honey Brook asserted that, “commencing with [its]

December 8, 2023 scheduled inspection [of the junkyard property, Honey

Brook] began to observe conditions in the frontage of the [p]roperty that both

violated the operational conditions of the [July 10, 2023 permanent injunction

order,] and appeared to evidence that [Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm were]

engaging in the business of operating a junkyard, in violation of [the

permanent injunction order].” Motion for Civil Contempt Sanctions, 10/7/24,

at ¶22. In its contempt motion, Honey Brook requested, inter alia, that the

trial court find Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm in contempt of the July 10,

2023 permanent injunction order, impose civil penalties for the alleged

contempt violations, and amend the permanent injunction order “to

permanently and unconditionally enjoin [Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm]

from operating a junkyard on the [p]roperty, with such amended order to

include a requirement that all junk be removed from the [p]roperty and the

[p]roperty be restored to a [permitted use] within 60 days of the date of such

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amended order[.]” Honey Brook also requested that the trial court grant other

relief it deemed appropriate, including “charges of criminal contempt with

penalties of fines and imprisonment.” Id. at Wherefore Clause.

The trial court scheduled a hearing on Honey Brook’s contempt motion

for March 26, 2025. At the March 2025 hearing, the parties reached an oral

agreement to settle the matter and, as the trial court noted, “set forth the

material terms of their settlement agreement [on the record] intending to

later execute a formal document[.]” Trial Court Order, 3/27/25. At the

hearing, Mr. Helm executed a statement in which he acknowledged “there is

no legal right to a junkyard use” on the real property and that the real property

“can only be used in accordance with the township’s zoning regulations[.]”

Defendant’s Exhibit 1, 3/26/25. The parties, however, failed to subsequently

execute a settlement agreement.

At a June 3, 2025 hearing, the trial court granted the motion for

contempt. In doing so, the trial court, inter alia, affirmed its July 10, 2023

permanent injunction order, terminated the ability by Les’s Auto Salvage and

Mr. Helm to cure the underlying conditions, directed Les’s Auto Salvage and

Mr. Helm to pay $13,000.00 in fines and $10,352.00 in attorneys’ fees to

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Honey Brook, and ordered Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm to clear the

property of “all salvage and junk” within 90 days. 3 This appeal followed.4

Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm raise the following issue for our review:

Did the [trial] court abuse its discretion in granting [Honey

Brook’s] motion for civil contempt sanctions by, in addition to fines

and attorneys’ fees, issuing a permanent, non-curable injunction

that prevents [Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm] from operating

[a] junkyard on [the real] property going forward?

Les’s Auto Salvage’s and Mr. Helm’s Brief at 2.

Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm challenge the trial court’s contempt

order on the grounds that there was insufficient evidence to support a finding

that they violated the July 10, 2023 permanent injunction order and that the

trial court was not permitted to impose a sanction that terminated the ability

by Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm to cure the underlying condition. Id. at

25-51.

3 The trial court’s original order finding Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm in

contempt was entered on June 4, 2025, but incorrectly identified the July 10, 2023 order as a “preliminary injunction” order. Trial Court Order, 6/4/25. The trial court entered an amended order on June 5, 2025, correctly identifying the July 10, 2023 order as a “permanent injunction” order. Trial Court Order, 6/5/25.

The June 5, 2025 order is immediately appealable as a final order because the order imposed sanctions on Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm by, inter alia, ordering them to pay attorneys’ fees and costs, and no further trial court order was required before the sanctions took effect. See Foulk v Foulk, 789 A.2d 254, 258 (Pa. Super. 2001).

4 Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm, as well as the trial court, complied with

Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 1925.

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Our standard of review over findings of contempt in the trial court

is “extremely narrow.” This Court will reverse only upon a

showing of an abuse of discretion. A trial court abuses its

discretion in this context if it misapplies the law or exercises its

discretion in a manner lacking reason.

Fetzer v. Fetzer, 336 A.3d 1058, 1064 (Pa. Super. 2025) (citations and some

quotation marks omitted).

For centuries, courts have had the “inherent power to enforce

compliance with their lawful orders through civil [or criminal] contempt[.]”

Cnty. of Fulton v. Sec’y of the Commonwealth, 292 A.3d 974, 1003 (Pa.

2023); see also Commonwealth v. Bowden, 838 A.2d 740, 760 (Pa. 2003).

Proceedings for contempt are of two classes - those prosecuted to

preserve the power and vindicate the dignity of the courts and to

punish for disobedience of their orders, and those instituted to

preserve and enforce the rights of private parties to suits, and to

compel obedience to orders and decrees made for enforcing the

rights and administering the remedies to which the court has

found them to be entitled. The former are criminal and punitive

in their nature, and the government, the courts, and the people

are interested in their prosecution. The latter are civil, remedial[,]

and coercive in their nature, and the parties chiefly in interest as

to their conduct and prosecution are the individuals whose private

rights and remedies they were instituted to enforce.

Penn Anthracite Mining Co. v. Anthracite Miners of Pennsylvania, 174

A. 11, 13 (Pa. Super. 1934), aff’d, 178 A. 291 (Pa. 1935).

“There is nothing inherent in a contemptuous act or refusal to act which

classifies that act as ‘criminal’ or ‘civil’. The distinction between criminal and

civil contempt is rather a distinction between two permissible judicial

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responses to contumacious behavior.” 5 Diamond v. Diamond, 715 A.2d

1190, 1194 (Pa. Super. 1998), quoting In re Martorano, 346 A.2d 22, 27-29

(Pa. 1975). Within the context of a contempt proceeding, a trial court, in

exercising its inherent right to enforce its orders, may impose criminal

contempt sanctions, civil contempt sanctions, or both. Martorano, 346 A.2d

at 28.

“The proper classification of a contempt adjudication is important

because it governs the procedures that must be followed.” Gunther v. Bolus,

853 A.2d 1014, 1016 (Pa. Super. 2004), appeal denied, 853 A.2d 362 (Pa.

2004); see also Bredbenner v. Hall, 353 A.3d 683, 686 (Pa. 2026) (Opinion

Accounting Judgment of Court) (stating, “[i]n any contempt proceeding, the

species of contempt being pursued must be clear”). “Even where the same

facts might give rise to criminal as well as civil contempt, each has its own

distinct procedures and confers distinct procedural rights[. The] two may not

be casually commingled.” Bredbenner, 353 A.3d at 386, citing Barrett v.

Barrett, 470 Pa. 253, 386 A.2d 616, 619 (1977). “If the adjudication is

criminal, then the contemnor is entitled to all of the procedural rights and

safeguards afforded to criminal defendants, including the right to trial by jury.”

Gunther, 853 A.2d at 1016; see also Bredbenner, 353 A.3d at 386 (stating,

5 “Criminal contempt occurs in two ways: direct and indirect. In general, contempt is direct when committed in the court’s presence and indirect when committed beyond its presence.” In re Davis, 302 A.3d 166, 171 (Pa. Super. 2023) (citation and original quotation marks omitted).

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“[i]n a criminal contempt proceeding, the [contemnor] must be provided with

the essential procedural safeguards of the criminal law” (original quotation

marks omitted; citing Barrett, 368 A.2d at 619)); Cipolla v. Cipolla, 398

A.2d 1053, 1056 (Pa. Super. 1979) (recognizing that, in a criminal contempt

proceeding, the contemnor is entitled to, inter alia, admission to bail, the right

to be notified of the charges, the right to prepare a defense, the right to a

speedy and public trial by an impartial jury, the right to assistance of counsel,

and the right to have the elements necessary to establish the criminal

contempt proven beyond a reasonable doubt). Thus, “[t]he civil-criminal

classification of contempt exists solely for determination of a contemnor’s

procedural rights and a court’s sentencing options.” Diamond, 715 A.2d at

1194. In other words, if a contemnor is not provided with his or her criminal

procedural rights, then a trial court cannot impose a criminal contempt

sanction in response to a contemnor’s failure to adhere to a trial court order.

Conversely, if a trial court has imposed a criminal contempt sanction, then the

contemnor must have been afforded his or her criminal procedural rights or

the criminal contempt sanction is invalid.

In classifying the type of contempt, “it is the judicial response to the

violation that determines whether the contempt is civil or criminal.” Gunther,

853 A.2d at 1016.

These judicial responses are classified according to the dominant

purpose of the court. If the dominant purpose is to prospectively

coerce the contemnor to comply with an order of the court, the

adjudication is civil. If, however, the dominant purpose is to

punish the contemnor for disobedience of the court's order or

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some other contemptuous act, the adjudication of contempt is

criminal.

Dominant purpose of coercion or punishment is expressed in the

sanction imposed. A civil adjudication of contempt coerces with a

conditional or indeterminate sentence of which the contemnor

may relieve himself [or herself] by obeying the court’s order, while

a criminal adjudication of contempt punishes with a certain time

of imprisonment or a fine which the contemnor is powerless to

escape by compliance.

Diamond, 715 A.2d at 1194 (emphasis omitted); see also Bowden, 838

A.2d at 760 (stating, “contempt can be criminal or civil in nature, and depends

on whether the core purpose of the sanction imposed is to vindicate the

authority of the court, in which case the contempt is criminal, or whether the

contempt is to aid the beneficiary of the order being defied, in which case it is

civil”); Bredbenner, 353 A.3d at 686-687 (stating, “Civil contempt aims to

coerce compliance with a court order. Criminal contempt punishes [the]

violation of an order and vindicates the court’s authority.” (citing Barrett, 368

A.2d at 619-620)); Cnty. of Fulton, 292 A.3d at 1004 (stating, “the

distinction depends upon whether the sanctions’ dominant purpose is to

punish for the violation of a court order [(criminal contempt)] or to coerce into

compliance with the order [or compensate the complainant (civil contempt)]”

(original quotation marks and footnote omitted)). One of “the [key]

characteristic[s] that distinguishes civil [contempt] from criminal contempt is

the ability of the contemnor to purge himself [or herself] of contempt by

complying with the court’s directive.” Fetzer, 336 A.3d at 1066 (citation and

original brackets omitted). “Stated simply, in a civil contempt order the

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contemnor is able to purge himself [or herself] of the contempt and thus holds

the keys to the jailhouse door.” Diamond, 715 A.2d at 1194; see also

Knaus v. Knaus, 127 A.2d 669, 673 (Pa. 1956) (stating, the contemnor

“carries the keys to his [or her] own prison in his [or her] pocket”).

“Sanctions for civil contempt can be imposed for one or both of two

purposes: to compel or coerce obedience to a court order and/or to

compensate the contemnor’s adversary for injuries resulting from the

contemnor’s noncompliance with a court order.” Mrozek v. James, 780 A.2d

670, 674 (Pa. Super. 2001); see also Bowden, 838 A.2d at 760 (stating,

“[c]ivil contempt orders, in turn, usually occur as one of two sub-species:

compensatory or coercive”). Compensatory civil contempt sanctions, as the

name suggests, involve an award of “compensation that is paid to the party

whom the contempt has harmed.” Bowden, 838 A.2d at 760-761. The

compensation, which is meant to reimburse the complainant for losses, such

as attorneys’ fees and costs due to non-compliance, is viewed as an

unconditional fine because it is a sum certain and beyond the contemnor’s

ability to escape. Diamond, 715 A.2d at 1194 (indicating, the term

“unconditional” means that the sanction is “certain” or fixed and is beyond the

contemnor’s power to escape, i.e., without a purge condition); see also Stahl

v. Redcay, 897 A.2d 478, 487 (Pa. Super. 2006) (stating, a court may impose

“the remedial punishment of [an unconditional] fine payable to an aggrieved

complainant as compensation for the special damages he [or she] may have

sustained by reason of the contumacious behavior of the [contemnor]”

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(citation and original brackets omitted)); Gunther, 853 A.2d at 1016 (stating,

“a court may require the contemnor to compensate the opposing party for

losses incurred as a result of the violation or reimburse the party’s attorneys’

fees and costs”). The amount of the compensation or unconditional fine must

be directly tied to the injured party’s losses. Sutch v. Roxborough Mem’l

Hosp., 142 A.3d 38, 68 (Pa. Super. 2016) (reiterating that, when

compensation is intended as the sanction, “a fine is imposed, payable to the

complainant[, with the amount of the fine] based upon evidence of the

complainant’s actual loss”), appeal denied, 163 A.3d 399 (Pa. 2016).

Coercive civil contempt sanctions, on the other hand, are “intended to

coerce the [contemnor] into compliance with the court’s order through

incarceration and/or monetary punishment.” Bowden, 838 A.2d at 761. This

type of sanction is typically in the form of a conditional fine payable to the

court or a conditional term of imprisonment. Id.; see also Gunther, 853

A.2d at 1016. As indicated supra, a key characteristic of a coercive civil

contempt sanction that takes it outside the realm of a punitive or criminal

contempt sanction is the inclusion of a specific purge condition that the

contemnor may satisfy to avoid the sanction. Bredbenner, 353 A.3d at

387-688 (stating, “[t]he condition that allows the [contemnor] to be released

from the [conditional] sentence [or fine] is colloquially known as the ‘purge

condition,’ as its performance purges the obligor’s contempt”); see also

Knaus, 127 A.2d at 673. This “purge condition” must be within the

contemnor’s power to perform or within his or her ability to pay, otherwise

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the sanction is considered to be punitive. Bredbenner, 353 A.3d at 687,

citing Barrett, 368 A.2d at 620. When fashioning a coercive civil contempt

sanction, the court must consider (1) “the character and magnitude of the

harm threatened by continued contumacy, and the probable effectiveness of

any suggested sanction in bringing about the result desired[;]” and (2), in the

case of imposing a conditional fine, “the amount of [the contemnor’s] financial

resources and the consequent seriousness of the burden to that particular

[contemnor].” Bowden, 838 A.2d at 761. “In imposing sanctions for coercive

purposes, the court must exercise the least possible power to the end

proposed.” Cnty. of Fulton, 292 A.3d at 1004 (footnote omitted).

In civil contempt proceedings the burden is on the complaining

party to prove noncompliance by a preponderance of the

evidence. The corollary of this proposition is that the order which

is said to have been violated must be specific and definite.

Mere noncompliance with a court order is not by itself

sufficient to prove contempt; rather, the complaining party

must prove:

(1) That the contemnor had notice of the specific order or

decree which he [or she] is alleged to have disobeyed;

(2) That the act constituting the contemnor’s violation was

volitional; and

(3) That the contemnor acted with wrongful intent.

Id. (footnotes, brackets and quotation marks omitted).

To establish a claim of indirect criminal contempt, the evidence

must be sufficient to establish the following four elements:

(1) the order [in question] must be definite, clear, specific

and leave no doubt or uncertainty in the mind of the person

to whom it was addressed of the conduct prohibited; (2) the

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contemnor must have had notice of the specific order or

decree; (3) the act constituting the violation must have

been volitional; and (4) the contemnor must have acted

with wrongful intent.

Commonwealth v. Ashton, 824 A.2d 1198, 1203 (Pa. Super. 2003) (citation

omitted); see also Commonwealth v. McMullen, 961 A.2d 842, 849 (Pa.

2008).6 The burden to establish criminal contempt rests with the

Commonwealth or the party requesting the trial court impose a criminal

contempt sanction. Commonwealth v. Brambaugh, 932 A.2d 108, 110

(Pa. Super. 2007).

Although the elements necessary to establish civil contempt and indirect

criminal contempt are analogous, the burdens of proof differ. The elements

necessary to establish civil contempt must be shown by a preponderance of

the evidence while the elements necessary to establish indirect criminal

contempt must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Cnty. of Fulton, 292

A.3d at 1004 (stating, “[i]n civil contempt proceedings[,] the burden is on the

complaining party to prove noncompliance by a preponderance of the

evidence”); see also Commonwealth v. Stevenson, 283 A.3d 196, 205

(Pa. 2022) (stating, “when one is charged with indirect [criminal] contempt,

those charging such contempt are put to the usual proofs required to convict

6 The actions by Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm at issue in the case sub judice did not occur in the presence of the trial court and, as such, the actions cannot implicate a direct criminal contempt. Therefore, we limit our discussion to indirect criminal contempt.

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for any [criminal] charge” (citation, original quotation marks, and brackets

omitted)).

We begin our review by examining whether the trial court held Les’s

Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm in civil or criminal contempt (or combination

thereof) of its July 10, 2023 order. On August 17, 2021, the trial court

approved the consent agreement entered into by the parties under which Les’s

Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm agreed that the real property was not in

compliance with certain junkyard and streets ordinances enacted by Honey

Brook. Consent Agreement and Stipulation, 8/17/21, at ¶¶5-11; see also

Trial Court Order, 8/17/21. As part of the consent agreement, Les’s Auto

Salvage and Mr. Helm agreed to bring the real property into compliance with

the zoning ordinances beginning on August 17, 2021, and continuing through

November 15, 2021 (a 90-day period). Consent Agreement and Stipulation,

8/17/21, at ¶14. “Upon [Les’s Auto Salvage’s and Mr. Helm’s] satisfactory

and timely completion of the action items and adherence to the requirements

set forth in [the consent agreement],” Honey Brook agreed to issue Les’s Auto

Salvage and Mr. Helm a license to operate a lawful junkyard business on the

real property. Id. at ¶18.

On May 13, 2022, the trial court found Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm

in contempt of its August 17, 2021 order that required Les’s Auto Salvage and

Mr. Helm to bring the real property into compliance with the zoning ordinances

and obtain a business license to continue operations. Trial Court Order,

5/13/22, at ¶1. As such, the trial court granted Honey Brook a preliminary

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injunction that enjoined Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm from operating the

junkyard business on the real property and ordered Les’s Auto Salvage and

Mr. Helm to pay attorneys’ fees and costs in the amount of $16,500.00. Id.

at ¶2. The preliminary injunction included a purge condition under which

Honey Brook was directed to refrain from enforcing the preliminary injunction

until July 1, 2022, in order to provide Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm an

opportunity to bring the property into full compliance with the August 17, 2021

order. Id. at ¶3. If Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm complied with the August

17, 2021 order by July 1, 2022, and “continuously remain[ed] in compliance

until the [hearing that was scheduled to address the permanency of the

injunction, then the attorneys’ fees and costs Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm

were obligated to pay Honey Brook would] be reduced to $6,500.00[.]” Id.

On August 24, 2022, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on

the matter. A subsequent evidentiary hearing was conducted on September

23, 2022. Over the next several months, the trial court engaged in a series

of conference calls with the parties intended to facilitate resolution of the

dispute and arrange submission deadlines for proposed factual findings,

proposed conclusions of law, and draft dispositional orders. On March 31,

2023, the trial court directed the parties to “submit to the court a stipulation

with agreed-upon recommended orders for the [trial] court[,] as well as

separate memoranda on the two issues on which the parties agree [the trial]

court should rule.” Trial Court Order, 3/31/23. On July 10, 2023, the trial

court granted Honey Brook a permanent injunction that enjoined Les’s Auto

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Salvage and Mr. Helm from operating a junkyard business on the real

property. Trial Court Order, 7/10/23. The trial court, again, created a purge

condition by which Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm could avoid the

permanent injunction, and resume operations, if it satisfied “the conditions for

operation of a junkyard on the [real p]roperty” and paid “all past due

amounts” owed to Honey Brook. Id. at ¶A.

On October 7, 2024, as discussed supra, Honey Brook filed a motion for

civil contempt sanctions and to amend and enforce the trial court’s July 10,

2023 order because Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm, in Honey Brook’s

opinion, failed to comply with the July 10, 2023 order. Ultimately, the trial

court conducted a hearing on the motion on June 3, 2025. On June 5, 2025,

the trial court granted Honey Brook’s motion for contempt sanctions and, in

doing so, ordered the following:

1. [The trial] court’s order entered July 10, 2023[,] granting

the permanent injunction is affirmed and the ability to cure

the underlying conditions is terminated;

2. [Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm] shall within [90] days

pay $13,000.00 in fines for continuing to operate a salvage

and junkyard in violation of the injunction;

3. [Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm] shall within [90] days

pay $10,352.00 in [attorneys’] fees to [Honey Brook];

4. [Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm] shall clear the [real]

property located [in the Township of Honey Brook] of all

salvage and junk within [90] days. Should [Les’s Auto

Salvage and Mr. Helm] fail to comply with this order, [Honey

Brook] may enter the [real] property upon [24] hours of

written notice and clear the [real] property of all salvage or

junk. [Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm] shall reimburse

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[Honey Brook] for any reasonable costs incurred by [Honey

Brook] in clearing the [real] property;

5. This order is without prejudice to [Les’s Auto Salvage’s and

Mr. Helm’s] rights to seek any variances, approval of

nonconforming use, or the like for the [real] property; and

6. [Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm are] subject to further

fines for continued operation of the [real] property in

violation of [the trial] court’s injunction.

Trial Court Order, 6/5/25 (extraneous capitalization omitted).

Upon review, we find that that two of the sanctions imposed on Les’s

Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm had the dominant purpose of punishing Les’s Auto

Salvage and Mr. Helm for their non-compliance with the trial court’s July 10,

2023 permanent injunction order and, thus, were indirect criminal contempt

sanctions.7 In particular, the sanctions that affirmed the permanent injunction

(Id. at ¶1) and required Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm to pay $13,000.00

in fines (Id. at ¶2) had the dominant purpose of punishing Les’s Auto Salvage

and Mr. Helm for their failure to comply with the permanent injunction order

because neither sanction included a purge condition by which Les’s Auto

7 Paragraphs 1 – 3 of the trial court’s June 5, 2025 order, as set forth supra,

impose sanctions on Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm, as discussed in greater detail infra. Paragraph 4 of the trial court order is functionally a part of the sanction imposed in Paragraph 1, as it explains the punitive consequences for the failure by Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm to comply with the permanent injunction within 90 days, i.e., they will be responsible for the clean-up costs. Paragraphs 5 and 6 of the trial court order do not impose sanctions but, rather, set forth Les’s Auto Salvage’s and Mr. Helm’s rights regarding future use of the real property and put Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm on notice that they may be subject to future fines if they fail to comply with the permanent injunction.

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Salvage and Mr. Helm could free themselves from the sanction. In affirming

the July 10, 2023 permanent injunction, the trial court removed the ability for

Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm to “lift” the permanent injunction by

complying with the May 13, 2022 court order. The removal of the purge

condition resulted in an injunction that permanently enjoined Les’s Auto

Salvage and Mr. Helm from operating a junkyard business on the real property

at any time in the future. The $13,000.00 fine punished Les’s Auto Salvage

and Mr. Helm for thirteen past instances of non-compliance with the July 10,

2023 permanent injunction order by imposing a $1,000.00 fine per instance

of non-compliance. These sanctions were not intended to coerce Les’s Auto

Salvage and Mr. Helm into complying with the ordinances, which would allow

them to continue business operations but, rather, resulted in the permanent

cessation of the junkyard business without the ability to cure. Les’s Auto

Salvage and Mr. Helm were simply required to “clear” the real property by

removing the salvage and junk or Honey Brook would have the right to

undertake such efforts and seek reimbursement for the costs. As such, Les’s

Auto Salvage, as a business entity, and Mr. Helm, as an individual, were each

entitled to certain constitutionally-guaranteed criminal procedural rights. 8 As ____________________________________________

8 Because a trial court possesses inherent power to enforce its orders by imposing criminal sanctions, civil sanctions, or a combination, an individual may be unaware of his or her criminal procedural rights, if any, until after the trial court imposes its sanctions. In other words, an individual may be unaware he or she is entitled to constitutionally-guaranteed criminal procedural rights until after the trial court imposed a criminal contempt sanction.

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discussed supra, those rights included, inter alia, the right to be notified of

the charges, the right to prepare a defense, the right to the assistance of

counsel, and the right to have the elements necessary to establish the indirect

criminal contempt proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Cipolla, 398 A.2d at

1056; see also Diamond, 715 A.2d at 1196 n.10; Gunther, 853 A.2d at

1016.

One instance where the rights afforded Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm

differed, however, was the right to a public and speedy trial by an impartial

jury, if so requested. “The right to a jury trial under the Sixth Amendment to

the United States Constitution and Article I, §§ 6, 9 of the Pennsylvania

Constitution applies when a criminal defendant faces a sentence of

imprisonment exceeding six months.” Commonwealth v. McMullen, 961

A.2d 842, 847 (Pa. 2008). A trial court may impose a fine on a business

entity, such as Les’s Auto Salvage, as a sanction for indirect criminal

contempt, but a business entity cannot be imprisoned. As such, Les’s Auto

Salvage does not enjoy the constitutionally-guaranteed criminal procedure

right to a jury trial in this instance. Mr. Helm, however, as an individual, faced

the possibility of the trial court imposing a fine or a term of imprisonment (or

both) as punishment for his indirect criminal contempt and, therefore, Mr.

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Helm enjoyed the right to have an impartial jury decide whether, or not, his

actions constituted indirect criminal contempt beyond a reasonable doubt. 9

Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm do not dispute that they had notice of

both the July 10, 2023 permanent injunction order and their obligation to fully

comply with the permanent injunction order and, ultimately, the zoning

ordinances. Les’s Auto Salvage’s and Mr. Helm’s Brief at 33. Rather, Les’s

Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm assert that Honey Brook failed to establish that

the violation of the July 10, 2023 permanent injunction order was volitional

and undertaken with wrongful intent. Id. at 34. Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr.

Helm contend that Honey Brook’s inspections of the real property “on August

23, 2023, October 6, 2023, and November 7, 2023, found that the front of

the [real property] was clear of junk, junk vehicles, excessive tow trucks, or

any vehicles parked within [15 feet] of the edge of the cartway, in compliance

with those specific operational conditions of the [July 10, 2023 permanent

injunction order].” Id. Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm argue that it

“completed many of the tasks required and that financial constraints and ____________________________________________

9 In Commonwealth v. McMullen, 961 A.2d 842 (Pa. 2008), our Supreme

Court held that Section 4136(b) of the Judicial Code, which provided a maximum penalty of 15-days’ imprisonment for indirect criminal contempt, to be unconstitutional because Section 4136(b) “unconstitutionally restrict[ed] the court’s ability to punish for contempt.” McMullen, 961 A.2d at 850; see also 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 4136(b) (stating, “punishment for [indirect criminal contempt] may be by fine not exceeding $100[.00] or by imprisonment not exceeding 15 days in jail of the county where the court is sitting, or both, in the discretion of the [trial] court”). As such, it was within the trial court’s discretion to impose a term of imprisonment on Mr. Helm that exceeded six months and, thus, triggered Mr. Helm’s right to a trial by jury.

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adverse weather conditions had hindered and delayed [the] full completion.”

Id.

One of the conditions Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm were required to

satisfy was to fully enclose “the entire junkyard operation and all equipment

involved therein”

by a fence or wall, a minimum of [8 feet] in height that forms a

substantially solid visible barrier, with acceptable fencing to

include either heavy-duty steel chain link fence with privacy

screens/slats, or solid wood stockade fence.

Consent Agreement and Stipulation, 8/17/21, at ¶14(c)(i); see also Trial

Court Order, 8/17/21. The parties stipulated that “as of June [3, 2025,] the

junkyard [] property ha[d] not yet been fully enclosed by a fence or wall[.]”

N.T., 6/3/25, at 8. At the June 3, 2025 hearing, Mr. Helm stated that “I guess

[in] 2022, I was court-ordered to fence in the whole yard[,]” thereby

acknowledging that he had notice of the compliance requirements. N.T.,

6/3/25, at 77. Mr. Helm testified that, as of the June 3, 2025 hearing, the

real property was not enclosed with fencing, as required by the junkyard

ordinance. Id. at 72-73. Mr. Helm testified that he needed additional time to

bring the entire property into compliance, stating that he could have

everything done by the end of July 2025. Id. at 74. He explained that the

delay was caused by the weather. Id. at 74-75. On cross-examination, when

asked if weather was the reason he failed to install the required fencing around

the property for the last three or four years (since being ordering to do so in

2021), Mr. Helm responded, “[p]robably money.” Id. at 98. Counsel for

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Honey Brook pointed out that Mr. Helm inherited money upon his mother’s

death and that he chose to purchase a new tract of real property rather than

use the inheritance to install the fencing, to which Mr. Helm responded, “It

was [my money] to do with what I pleased.” Id. Mr. Helm further stated that

his delay with installing the fencing was due “probably” to a lack of help. Id.

at 100. When asked when he last had “help,” Mr. Helm responded that friends

helped him a few months ago with installing a portion of the fencing. Id.

The record reveals that Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm received notice

of the July 10, 2023 permanent injunction and their obligations thereunder,

as well as the accusations lodged against them in Honey Brook’s motion for

contempt. The parties also had ample time to prepare a defense and were

represented by counsel at the June 3, 2025 hearing. See generally, N.T.,

6/3/25. Moreover there was sufficient evidence, as determined by the trial

court, to establish the elements of indirect criminal contempt beyond a

reasonable doubt. At the start of the June 3, 2025 hearing, the parties

stipulated that, inter alia, “junk or junkyard items and junk vehicles” were

routinely being stored “in the frontage of the [real] property outside of the

fenced area of the property[,]” “the property had not yet been fully enclosed

by a fence or wall[,]” and “a 20-foot wide central aisle through the center of

the junkyard for 250 feet [in] length [had] not been opened and established

clear of all vehicles and junk.” Id. at 7-10. Thus, Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr.

Helm stipulated that the real property was not in compliance with the junkyard

and streets zoning ordinance as of the June 3, 2025 hearing. In particular,

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the real property violated the zoning ordinances because it was not enclosed

with fencing. As of August 17, 2021, Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm

understood, and agreed, that they were required to enclose the real property

with fencing to comply with the zoning ordinance. Almost four years later, on

June 3, 2025, Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm acknowledged that the real

property was not fully enclosed with fencing. Mr. Helm blamed the delay on

weather, lack of money, and the lack of help. He stated, however, that he

knowingly decided to spend available funds on the purchase of a new tract of

real property rather than bring the existing real property into compliance with

the trial court’s order and the zoning ordinances. Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr.

Helm were offered several opportunities over the course of almost four years

to bring the real property into compliance with the zoning ordinances. While

we understand that, at times, the compliance efforts may have been delayed

by weather conditions and the lack of a work force, the trial court’s

determination that Mr. Helm acted, both as an individual and on behalf of Les’s

Auto Salvage, with wrongful intent was not unreasonable, and was supported

by the record. See Commonwealth v. Reese, 156 A.3d 1250, 1258

(Pa. Super. 2017) (stating, “wrongful intent can be imputed to [an individual]

by virtue of the substantial certainty that his [or her] actions will violate the

court order”), appeal denied, 173 A.3d 1108 (Pa. 2017). Therefore, we

discern no error of law or abuse of discretion in the trial court’s finding of

indirect criminal contempt beyond a reasonable doubt. Consequently, we find

that Les’s Auto Salvage was afforded the requisite constitutional rights due a

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business entity in an indirect criminal contempt matter, and affirm the criminal

contempt sanctions imposed against Les’s Auto Salvage.

While Les’s Auto Salvage, as a business entity, was not entitled to a jury

trial in the contempt proceedings, Mr. Helm, as an individual, was entitled to

receive the protections of the constitutionally-guaranteed criminal procedure

right to a trial by jury in the contempt proceeding because, ultimately, the

trial court imposed criminal contempt sanctions. The record, however, does

not demonstrate that Mr. Helm, as an individual, was provided his

constitutional right to a jury trial in the contempt proceeding. 10

Although Mr. Helm was entitled to a trial by jury under the

circumstances herein, a constitutional claim that he was not afforded this right

is, nonetheless, subject to waiver if not properly preserved or raised on

appeal. See Commonwealth v. Knox, 190 A.3d 1146, 1152 n.5 (Pa. 2018)

(stating, “[c]onstitutional claims are subject to waiver regardless of their

importance”). Ordinarily, “[i]ssues not raised in the trial court are waived and

cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.” See Pa.R.A.P. 302(a).

Contempt proceedings, however, can be constitutionally complex and are

structurally problematic given the fact that an individual may not fully

recognize that he or she has certain constitutional criminal procedural rights

that need to be protected until the trial court imposes a contempt sanction

10 Moreover, the record contains no evidence that Mr. Helm waived the right

to a jury trial prior to June 3, 2025 hearing.

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that constitutes a criminal contempt sanction, thereby making clear that the

individual had rights to certain constitutionally guaranteed protections. Stated

simply, an individual may not fully understand the need to preserve a claim

concerning the right to a trial by jury until after a criminal contempt sanction

is imposed. It is only after the criminal contempt sanction is imposed and the

right to a trial by jury becomes fully recognized, that an individual can be

expected to raise a constitutional claim with the trial court in a post-sanction

motion. In the case sub judice, Mr. Helm did not raise the issue with the trial

court regarding his right to a trial by jury in a post-sanction motion. Given

that the complex procedural posture of this case raises an issue of first

impression for this Court, we are not inclined to find that Mr. Helm forfeited

his constitutional claim by failing to raise the issue with the trial court. See

Commonwealth v. Diaz, 191 A.3d 850, 855-856 (Pa. Super. 2018)

(reiterated that, “our courts have long[-]recognized that the failure to

preserve an issue for appeal may be excused when a strong public interest

outweighs the need to protect the judicial system from improperly preserved

issues”). We are constrained, however, to find that Mr. Helm waived his

constitutional claim by failing to raise the issue in his Rule 1925(b) statement

or in his appellate brief, and we cannot raise this structural error sua sponte.11 ____________________________________________

11 “Structural errors,” such as the denial of the right to a trial by jury, when

an defendant is entitled to such right, is “a structural defect in the constitution of the trial mechanism” that affects “the entire conduct of the trial from beginning to end, and [denies] the defendant basic constitutional protections

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See Commonwealth v. Colavita, 993 A.2d 874, 891 (Pa. 2010) (stating,

“[w]here the parties fail to preserve an issue for appeal, [this Court] may not

address that issue sua sponte” and “[t]he rule is no different in the

constitutional context”); see also Commonwealth v. Bonnett, 239 A.3d

1096, 1106 (Pa. Super. 2020) (stating, “[i]t is well-established that any issue

not raised in a Rule 1925(b) statement will be deemed waived for appellate

review” (relying on Commonwealth v. Lord, 719 A.2d 306, 309 (Pa. 1998)),

appeal denied, 250 A.3d 468 (Pa. 2021); Pa.R.A.P. 2116(a) (stating, “[n]o

question will be considered unless it is stated in the statement of questions

involved or is fairly suggested thereby”); Rule 1925(b) Statement, 7/30/25;

Les’s Auto Salvage’s and Mr. Helm’s Brief at 2. Therefore, we affirm the

criminal contempt sanctions imposed by paragraphs 1 and 2 of the June 5,

2023 order against Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm.

which ensure that a criminal trial reliably determines guilt or innocence, and, [ensures] that any punishment imposed as a result of the trial is ‘fundamentally fair[.]’” Commonwealth v. Taylor, 309 A.3d 754, 777 (Pa. 2024).

In federal judicial proceedings, the “plain-error review” rule (Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b)) permits federal appellate courts to review structural errors that have been forfeited by the party for failure to make a timely assertion of the right. See Puckett v. United States, 556 U.S. 129, 135 (2009). Our Supreme Court, however, abrogated application of the “plain-error review” rule in Pennsylvania. See Commonwealth v. King, 234 A.3d 549, 550 (Pa. 2020), citing Commonwealth v. Hays, 218 A.3d 1260, 1267 (Pa. 2019) ( Saylor, C.J., concurring) and Commonwealth v. Clair, 326 A.2d 272, 274 (Pa. 1974).

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Turning to the sanction that required Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm

to pay Honey Brook $10,352.00 in attorneys’ fees and costs (Trial Court Order,

6/5/25, at ¶3), we find this sanction to be a compensatory civil sanction. The

primary purpose of this sanction was to compensate Honey Brook for the

monies expended as a result of the failure by Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm

to comply with the permanent injunction order and did not require a purge

condition to attach to the sanction. The parties stipulated that “since the date

of the July [10, 2023 permanent injunction order, Honey Brook] expended

$10,352.00 in [attorneys’] fees related to enforcement and court action in this

matter.” N.T., 6/3/25, at 11-12. Therefore, the sanction reflected Honey

Brook’s actual losses.

To support the civil contempt sanction of attorneys’ fees and costs, there

must be sufficient evidence to support the finding of contempt. As discussed

supra, to support a finding of civil contempt, Honey Brook was required to

prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr.

Helm had notice of the July 10, 2023 order, that it’s violation of the order was

volitional, and that it acted with wrongful intent. Cnty. of Fulton, 292 A.3d

at 1004.

Upon review, we discern no error of law or abuse of discretion in the

trial court’s determination that there was sufficient evidence to support a

finding of civil contempt for failure to comply with the July 10, 2023 permanent

injunction order by a preponderance of the evidence. As discussed supra,

Les’s Auto Salvage and Mr. Helm had notice of the July 10, 2023 permanent

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injunction, and their obligations thereunder, as well as the allegations lodged

against them in Honey Brook’s motion for contempt. The trial court’s

determination that Mr. Helm acted, both in his individual capacity and on

behalf of Les’s Auto Salvage, with wrongful intent was not unreasonable, and

was supported by the record. Therefore, we discern no error of law or abuse

of discretion in the trial court’s finding of civil contempt by a preponderance

of the evidence.

Order affirmed.

Judge Beck joins this Opinion.

President Judge Emeritus Panella concurs in the result.

Date: 6/30/2026

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