Baker v. State

371 A.2d 699, 35 Md. App. 593, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 506
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 12, 1977
Docket785, September Term, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 371 A.2d 699 (Baker v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. State, 371 A.2d 699, 35 Md. App. 593, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 506 (Md. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Moylan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal addresses the intriguing question of what latitude a judge should permit counsel when a witness takes the stand and says, “I don’t remember.” What are the available keys that may unlock the testimonial treasure vaults of the subconscious? What are the brush strokes that may be employed “to retouch the fading daguerreotype of memory?” 1 The subject is that of Present Recollection Revived. 2

The appellant, Teretha McNeil Baker, was convicted by a Baltimore City jury of both murder in the first degree and robbery. Although she raises two appellate contentions, the only one which we find it necessary to consider is her claim that the trial judge erroneously refused her the opportunity to refresh the present recollection of a police witness by showing him a report written by a fellow officer.

The ultimate source of most of the evidence implicating the appellant was the robbery and murder victim himself, Gaither Martin, a now-dead declarant who spoke to the jury through the hearsay conduit of Officer Bolton. 3 When Officer Bolton arrived at the crime scene, the victim told him that he had “picked these three ladies up ... at the New Deal Bar”; that when he took them to their stated destination, a man walked up to the car and pulled him out; *595 that “the other three got out and proceeded to kick him and beat him.” It was the assertion made by the victim to the officer that established that his money, wallet and keys had been taken. The critical impasse, for present purposes, occurred when the officer was questioned, on cross-examination, about what happened en route to the hospital. The officer had received a call from Officer Hucke, of the Western District, apparently to the effect that a suspect had been picked up. Before proceeding to the hospital, Officer Bolton took the victim to the place where Officer Hucke was holding the appellant. The appellant, as part of this cross-examination, sought to elicit from the officer the fact that the crime victim confronted the appellant and stated that the appellant was not one of those persons who had attacked and robbed him. To stimulate the present memory of Officer Bolton, appellant’s counsel attempted to show him the police report relating to that confrontation and prepared by Officer Hucke.

The record establishes loudly and clearly that appellant’s counsel sought to use the report primarily to refresh the recollection of Officer Bolton and that he was consistently and effectively thwarted in that attempt:

“BY MR. HARLAN:
Q. Do you have the report filed by Officer Hucke and Officer Saclolo or Saclolo?
A. Right, I have copies.
Q. Okay.
MR. DOORY: I would object to that, Your Honor.
THE COURT: I will sustain the objection. This is not his report.
BY MR. HARLAN:
Q. Can you look at this report and refresh your recollection as to whether or not you ever had the victim in a confrontation with Mrs. Baker?
MR. DOORY: Objection, Your Honor.
MR. HARLAN: He can refresh —
*596 THE COURT: Well, he can refresh his recollection as to his personal knowledge. That’s all right.
A. That is what I am saying, I don’t know who it was that we confronted really.
BY MR. HARLAN:
Q. All right. Would you consult your report and maybe it will refresh your recollection.
THE COURT: I think the response is he doesn’t ■ know who —
MR. HARLAN: He can refresh his recollection if he looks at the report.
THE COURT: He can’t refresh his recollection from someone else’s report, Mr. Harlan.
MR. HARLAN: I would object, Your Honor. Absolutely he can.
THE COURT: You might object, but —
MR. HARLAN: You are not going to permit the officer to refresh his recollection from the police report?
THE COURT: No. It is not his report.
MR. HARLAN: Your Honor, I think I am absolutely within my rights to have a police officer read a report which mentions his name in it to see if it refreshes his recollection. If it doesn’t refresh his recollection, then fine.
THE COURT: Well, he did that.
MR. HARLAN: You have not afforded him the opportunity to do that yet, Your Honor.
THE COURT: He says he does not know who it was before. So, he can’t refresh his recollection if he does not know simply because someone else put some name in there.
MR. HARLAN: He has to read it to see if it refreshes his recollection, Your Honor.
*597 THE COURT: We are reading from a report made by two other officers which is not the personal knowledge of this officer.
MR. HARLAN: I don’t want him to read from that report. I want him to read it and see if it refreshes his recollection.”

On so critical an issue as possible exculpation from the very lips of the crime victim, appellant was entitled to try to refresh the memory of the key police witness. She was erroneously and prejudicially denied that opportunity. The reason for the error is transparent. Because they both arise from the common seedbed of failed memory and because of their hauntingly parallel verbal rhythms and grammatical structures, there is a beguiling temptation to overanalogize Present Recollection Revived and Past Recollection Recorded. It is a temptation, however, that must be resisted. The trial judge in this case erroneously measured the legitimacy of the effort to revive present recollection against the more rigorous standards for the admissibility of a recordation of past memory.

It is, of course, hornbook law that when a party seeks to introduce a record of past recollection, he must establish 1) that the record was made by or adopted by the witness at a time when the witness did have a recollection of the event and 2) that the witness can presently vouch for the fact that when the record was made or adopted by him, he knew that it was accurate. Hall v. State, 223 Md. 158, 162 A. 2d 751; Edwards and Person v. State, 31 Md. App. 562, 358 A. 2d 590; Ringgold v. State, 34 Md. App. 286, 367 A. 2d 35. McCormick, Law of Evidence (1st Ed., 1954), describes the criteria, at 15:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
371 A.2d 699, 35 Md. App. 593, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-state-mdctspecapp-1977.