Brooks v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 27, 2014
Docket46/13
StatusPublished

This text of Brooks v. State (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, (Md. 2014).

Opinion

Wardell Monroe Brooks v. State of Maryland No. 46, September Term 2013

Evidence - Impeachment of Witness - Prior Inconsistent Statement. To impeach a witness with extrinsic evidence of a prior allegedly inconsistent oral statement, a party must satisfy the conditions set forth in Maryland Rule 5-613. If the only extrinsic evidence offered is a written summary of the prior oral statement, it must be a substantially verbatim version of the oral statement unless the witness who made the oral statement has previously adopted or ratified the writing as an accurate summary of the prior oral statement.

Evidence - Opinion Testimony - Expert Forensic Nurse - Veracity of Another Witness - Harmless Error. In a case involving an alleged rape, a prosecutor may ask an expert forensic nurse who examined the complaining witness whether the events that the complaining witness reported to the nurse were “consistent or inconsistent with” the physical injuries observed by the nurse during that examination. The nurse’s response that the observed injuries “would verify” the story of the complaining witness, although in some respects synonymous to an appropriate response to the question, might be construed as an impermissible evaluation of the veracity of another witness. In a case in which the prosecutor posed the question in the correct manner, in which the nurse’s testimony otherwise concerned the details of the complaining witness’s physical injuries rather than her credibility, in which the prosecution did not suggest in closing argument that the nurse had vouched for the complaining witness’s credibility, and in which there was overwhelming evidence of a violent sexual assault, the trial court’s decision not to strike the nurse’s answer was, at worst, harmless error.

Sentencing - Merger of Convictions - Rape and False Imprisonment. Two convictions merge for sentencing purposes if (1) they are based on the same act or acts and (2) one offense is a lesser-included offense of the other under the required evidence test. Under Nicolas v. State, 426 Md. 385, 44 A.3d 306 (2012), a court is to resolve factual ambiguities in favor of the defendant. When the record was ambiguous as to whether the jury’s guilty verdict on a false imprisonment court was based on the same act or acts as its guilty verdict on a first degree rape count, the defendant’s conviction for false imprisonment should have been merged into the conviction for first degree rape. Circuit Court for Harford County Case No. 12-K-08-001815 Argued: February 7, 2014 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MARYLAND

No. 46

September Term, 2013

W ARDELL M ONROE B ROOKS

v.

S TATE OF M ARYLAND

Barbera, C.J. Harrell Battaglia Greene Adkins McDonald Watts,

JJ.

Opinion by McDonald, J. Adkins, J., concurs. Harrell and Greene, JJ., dissent.

Filed: August 27, 2014 A jury in Harford County convicted Petitioner Wardell Monroe Brooks of one count

each of first degree rape, second degree rape, second degree assault, and false imprisonment.

Mr. Brooks was sentenced to life imprisonment, all but 50 years suspended, for the first

degree rape conviction, and a consecutive 40-year prison sentence, all but 20 years

suspended, for the false imprisonment conviction. The court merged the convictions for

second degree assault and second degree rape into the conviction of first degree rape. The

convictions were affirmed by the Court of Special Appeals.

Before us, Mr. Brooks asserts that his convictions should be reversed because the trial

court made erroneous evidentiary rulings when it: (1) declined to admit into evidence a

police report that contained a prior allegedly inconsistent oral statement of the complaining

witness and (2) failed to strike testimony of an expert forensic nurse who had examined the

complaining witness and who testified that the complaining witness’s physical injuries

“would verify” what she had told the nurse about her encounter with Mr. Brooks. In the

event that we do not reverse his convictions, Mr. Brooks argues that his conviction for false

imprisonment must be merged into his conviction for first degree rape for sentencing

purposes and that, accordingly, the consecutive sentence imposed for false imprisonment

should be vacated.

We hold that the Circuit Court properly excluded the police report. We further hold

that, even if the nurse’s statement that the injuries she observed “would verify” the account

of the complaining witness could be construed as an impermissible comment on the veracity

of another witness, it was harmless error under the circumstances of this case. Finally, we hold that, under the facts of this case, Mr. Brooks’ conviction for false imprisonment should

be merged into his conviction for first degree rape.

Background

The Trial

We briefly summarize the evidence at trial. The circumstances surrounding the

rulings on the two evidentiary issues that are the subject of this appeal are described in

greater detail in conjunction with the analysis of those issues later in this opinion.

Prosecution Case

In the fall of 2008, Laura B.,1 a 62-year-old resident of Alabama, was staying at the

Harford County home of her deceased mother in order to prepare the home for auction.

While doing yard work one day, she met Mr. Brooks, a 53-year-old man who worked as a

“handyman,” when he walked by her mother’s home. Laura B. offered to hire him to weed

and clean up a ditch in the yard. Mr. Brooks agreed and returned the next day to do the work.

Laura B. hired Mr. Brooks several other times to perform odd jobs and, on several

occasions, drove Mr. Brooks home, approximately three miles from her mother’s house.

According to Laura B., Mr. Brooks would stop by to look for work from time to time, and,

when Laura B. told him that she did not have money to hire him, Mr. Brooks would “chit

chat” and “just kind of hung around.”

1 Consistent with the convention adopted by the Court of Special Appeals and the parties in their briefs, we refer to the complaining witness in this case by her first name and the first initial of her last name.

2 Laura B. testified that, in the early evening hours of October 9, 2008, she was taking

a nap in a bedroom in her mother’s house when she was awakened by a noise. She went back

to sleep, thinking that her sister had come in the house. When she next opened her eyes, Mr.

Brooks was standing beside her bed with his pants on the floor and demanding sex. She

asked Mr. Brooks why he was in her bedroom and told him he was not supposed to be in the

house. When she said, “You need to get out of here,” and tried to push him toward the

bedroom door, Mr. Brooks grabbed her hair and began to drag her. She picked up a ceramic

statue, which was being used as a doorstop, and struck Mr. Brooks on the head with it,

shattering the statue. Mr. Brooks began to beat and choke her. Pleading with him to stop,

Laura B. told Mr. Brooks that she would submit to his demands but that she needed a

moment. He stopped attacking her.

With Mr. Brooks behind her, Laura B. went to the living room, drank some water, and

smoked a cigarette. After a while, Mr. Brooks said “it was time,” and she went in the

bedroom, where Mr. Brooks forced her to have sexual intercourse. She testified that, during

intercourse, Mr. Brooks was bleeding from his head wound. Experiencing physical pain and

wondering when Mr. Brooks would stop, Laura B. asked for a “break.” Mr. Brooks allowed

her to get up and go to the living room. According to Laura B., he then followed her around

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Brooks v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-state-md-2014.