Brooks v. State

552 A.2d 872, 314 Md. 585, 1989 Md. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 3, 1989
Docket60, September Term, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 552 A.2d 872 (Brooks v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. State, 552 A.2d 872, 314 Md. 585, 1989 Md. LEXIS 8 (Md. 1989).

Opinion

ADKINS, Judge.

We shall here hold that the evidence in this case was insufficient to establish that a lightweight toy plastic pistol was a deadly or a dangerous weapon within the meaning of Maryland Code (1987 Repl.Yol.) Article 27, • § 488. 1 The framework within which we reach this conclusion is straightforward.

On 22 December 1986 a Fotomat store in Baltimore City was robbed. The store clerk testified that the robber pulled up his shirt and showed her “a gun” tucked into the waistband of his trousers. She gave him money from the cash register because she believed “[t]hat if I didn’t give him what he wanted, he would have shot me.”

On 11 February 1987 petitioner Donald Brooks was arrested and charged with the robbery. At the time of the arrest, the police seized from Brooks’s jacket a lightweight toy plastic automatic pistol. Later that day Brooks confessed to the Fotomat robbery and to the use of . the toy gun during it. He explained that he always used the toy gun in his robbery activities “because he didn’t want to hurt anybody.”

Brooks went to trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City (Prevas, J., presiding); he was charged with various *587 offenses, including robbery with a dangerous or deadly weapon, simple or common law robbery (Art. 27, § 486), and use of a handgun in the crime of violence (Art. 27, § 36B(d) (Supp.1988)). The State placed in evidence his confession as well as the toy gun, which the Fotomat clerk said looked “the same” as the one the robber had displayed. In response to a question by the court, the clerk confirmed that the toy gun in evidence was in no way different from the one she had seen the night of the robbery.

Despite defense counsel’s argument that the plastic pistol was not a deadly or dangerous weapon, the court overruled Brooks’s motion for judgment of acquittal on that count. The State dropped the use of a handgun charge; the armed robbery and common law robbery counts were submitted to the jury, which convicted Brooks of the former. 2 The court imposed a 20-year sentence. In an unreported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed. Brooks v. State, No. 1239, Sept. Term, 1987 (Md.App. filed 18 Apr. 1988).

Brooks now contends that the evidence was insufficient to convict him of armed robbery because the only evidence of a weapon used in the robbery was the toy gun. He insists that a lightweight toy plastic gun is neither dangerous nor deadly. Additionally, he asserts that the court’s instructions were plain error because they permitted the jury to convict him of armed robbery with a toy gun if they found the victim believed the weapon was real and was intimidated thereby. He also raises a question about improper closing argument. As we have indicated, we are in essential agreement with Brooks on the first issue and shall *588 reverse the Court of Special Appeals on that ground.- As we explain our reasons for doing so, it will become clear that the court’s instructions were incorrect. In view of our disposition of the case, we need not consider the third issue.

I.

Before we turn to that explanation, however, we must dispose of the State’s argument that we need not even address the toy gun question because the jury could have decided, as a matter of fact, that the instrumentality used in the robbery was a real handgun, not the toy that the State introduced into evidence. This argument was accepted by the Court of Special Appeals, but we do not believe we can avoid so facilely the important issue before us.

Although the trial court did suggest that the jury might find that a real gun was used, the thrust of its instructions on the dangerous or deadly weapon issue was that a toy gun could qualify as such if the victim believed it to be genuine and thus was intimidated by it. But on the facts of this case, any jury finding that the gun was real would have been based on nothing more than speculation and thus improper. See McQuiggan v. Boy Scouts of America, 73 Md.App. 705, 712, 536 A.2d 137, 140 (1988). In the trial court, the State, defense, and judge all proceeded on the unquestioned assumption that the toy gun was the “dangerous or deadly weapon” used by Brooks.

In a motion in limine, Brooks asked the court to suppress the toy gun. The basis for the motion was that since the robbery had occurred in December, but the gun was not seized until the following February, there was insufficient connection between the toy subsequently in Brooks’s possession and the instrument used in the robbery to show that the two were the same. The State countered this by means of Brooks’s oral confession, in which he admitted using that very toy gun in the Fotomat robbery. As we have seen, both the toy gun and the confession were before the jury. Moreover, during argument on the motion for judgment of acquittal, both sides assumed that the toy gun was the *589 instrument used in the robbery. In point of fact, the State made frequent references to the “toy handgun” and its connection with Brooks (via the seizure of the gun and the subsequent confession) in an effort to overcome the principal defense, which was insufficient identification of Brooks as the culprit.

In short, the State proved its case by persuading the jury that the toy gun was the instrument used in the robbery and that it was a dangerous or deadly weapon. It is too late for it now to hypothesize the existence of something other than a toy handgun. 3

II.

Having established that this robbery must be viewed as one that was committed with a toy gun, we now proceed to explain why it does not qualify as a “dangerous or deadly weapon.” The controversy swirls about two approaches to the interpretation of this phrase. One, used by the trial *590 court and now championed by the State, is subjective: a weapon is deadly or dangerous if the victim believes it to be of that character and is, therefore, intimidated by its use. The other, espoused by Brooks, is objective: to be deadly or dangerous a weapon must be inherently of that character or must be used or useable in a manner that gives it that character. Our cases are somewhat unclear as to the test to be used. 4 A summary of these cases demonstrates the problem.

In Hayes v. State, 211 Md. 111, 126 A.2d 576 (1956), we held that an unloaded pistol could be a dangerous or deadly weapon. Judge Henderson, for the Court, first noted that “[a] dangerous weapon is one likely to produce death or great bodily injury.” Hayes, 211 Md. at 114, 126 A.2d at 577. This reasoning follows the objective analysis. We recognized that the unloaded pistol used by Hayes could be used as a bludgeon and could be loaded, “under some circumstances within a matter of seconds,” thus making it objectively dangerous or deadly. Id.

The opinion went on, however, to offer a subjective analysis when it argued that the Maryland armed robbery statute

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Bluebook (online)
552 A.2d 872, 314 Md. 585, 1989 Md. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-state-md-1989.