Brooks v. State

234 A.2d 467, 2 Md. App. 291, 1967 Md. App. LEXIS 243
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 27, 1967
Docket312, Initial Term, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 234 A.2d 467 (Brooks 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
Brooks v. State, 234 A.2d 467, 2 Md. App. 291, 1967 Md. App. LEXIS 243 (Md. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

Orth, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On November 18, 1966 the appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree and attempted robbery with a deadly weapon in the Criminal Court of Baltimore, Judge George L. Russell, Jr. presiding without a jury. He was sentenced to im *293 prisonment for the balance of his natural life on the conviction of murder and to imprisonment for a term of five years on the conviction of attempted robbery with a deadly weapon, the sentences to run concurrently.

The questions raised on this appeal go to the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to each conviction. The trial court found, as a fact, that the appellant actively participated in an attempted robbery during the course of which murder was perpetrated. He was therefore guilty of murder in the first degree. Md. Code (1967 Replacement Volume) Art. 27, § 410. The substance of the appellant’s contentions is that there was not sufficient evidence to establish that the murder was committed in the attempt to perpetrate a robbery and that, even if the evidence were sufficient to> so establish, there was not sufficient evidence that the appellant was a participant.

There was evidence before the court as follows. On March 11, 1966 about 10:45 P.M. Arion England, 19 years of age, was going home from a party when he met the appellant and one Eric Johnson outside a bar at Gold Street and North Avenue. 1 He testified that they remained in the vicinity about an hour and fifteen minutes “standing around, boxing (and) playing,” with several other boys. About midnight England, Johnson and the appellant went to a party at a girl’s house on White-lock Street. At one time, while at the party the appellant and Johnson left to go to a liquor store. When they came back they had “some (paper) bags” and asked England if he wanted a drink but he refused. About 12:30 A.M. England told the appellant and Johnson that he was going home and they told him they were leaving also and the three boys left together. They went to North and Rinden Avenues and were on the sidewalk with some other boys outside the Golden Pen Pixie Shop. Finally two policemen told them to leave and after some discussion *294 England, Johnson and the appellant walked down the street a “little after one” A.M. They went to a Little Tavern, “seven or eight doors” from the Pixie Shop and bought some hamburgers and soda. When they left the Little Tavern the same two policemen who had talked to them before were outside. The appellant stopped and “looked at the police kind of hard” until England told him to “come on.” England, Johnson and the appellant walked on Linden Avenue toward Presstman Street. They walked to the 1900 block Eutaw Place and saw a man, later determined to- be Oscar Lewis, staggering across the street. At that time they were 30 to 40 feet behind the man. England then testified:

“Eric Johnson took a look at Brooks and Brooks looked back at him, and Eric Johnson ran down and grabbed the man from the back and hit the man, turned the man around from the back, and hit him.” His further testimony explained that Johnson grabbed the man across the shoulders, spun him around and hit him with his fist in the face. Then the appellant “ran in and hit the man” in the face with his fist and the man fell to the ground by the gutter. Johnson then got on top of the man, kneeling on the man’s arms and started beating him. The appellant was leaning over them about 18 inches away. England was “up the street” about 20 feet away, “scared” because of what the appellant and Jonhnson were doing. A woman at a window in a house in front of which the incident occurred “hollered for the police” and screamed “Get off that man” and England ran. As he started to run the appellant “was still standing over top of the man and Eric Johnson still on the man.” Then the appellant and Johnson also ran catching up to England at Madison Avenue and Robert Street. They walked across Madison Avenue and Johnson “hollered ‘Police’ ” and all three began running again, westbound on Robert Street toward Druid Hill Avenue. They walked up Druid Hill Avenue toward North Avenue and Johnson showed his hand, which had blood on it, to England. The woman at the window was Mrs. Rena Lovelace who resided at 1902 Eutaw Place. She testified that she was at her bedroom window on the second floor when she saw a man come out of a house across the street. He was walking down the street with his hands in his pockets. Two boys were walking *295 “in the back of him a good little ways from him, and all of a sudden they walked up on him * * * Just as they got right in' front of my door they caught up with him right fast and when they caught him they shoved him * * * He fell out in the street. He said, ‘You all leave me alone, I doesn’t have anything’ * * * he said that twice.” One of the boys jumped on him and put his knee on him. That boy “pulled something out of his pocket and stabbed him real fast.” The other boy was very close, about two feet away. She saw “blood coming up real fast, spurt from him.” She screamed for them to leave the man alone and for the police and they started running toward Madison Avenue. One of the boys had on a light trench coat with a belt in the back and one was taller than the other. She called her daughter and they went out and saw the man lying in a pool of blood. They stayed there until the police arrived. The testimony of Officer George Guest and Officer Paul Page of the Baltimore City Police Department was substantially the same as that of the witness England as to the occurrences in the vicinity of the Pixie Shop and the Little Tavern. Each identified the appellant as one of the boys they saw at that time. Each recalled that the appellant was wearing a white or light tan trench coat with a belt in the back. The appellant was taller than the other two boys with him. As a result of information with regard to a homicide in the 1900 Eutaw Place received over the police call-box about 3:00 A.M., the officers patrolled the neighborhood looking for the three boys they had seen earlier that morning. About 5:15 A.M. they saw Johnson and the appellant on Eutaw Place near Robert Street and arrested them. The defendant did not take the stand. The autopsy performed on Oscar Lewis, who was taken from in front of 1900 Eutaw Place, and pronounced dead on arrival at the Provident Hospital at 2:00 A.M. on March 12, 1966 disclosed that the blood alcohol content of the deceased was 0.22 per cent and that there were nine stab wounds in his head and neck. It was the opinion of the Medical Examiner that the deceased died of aspiration of blood from a stab wound of the neck and that the manner of death was homicide.

It has been clearly established that the test of the sufficiency of the evidence in a case tried before the court without a jury, when reviewed by this Court, is whether the evidence, if believed, *296 either shows directly or supports a rational inference of the facts to be proved, from which the court could fairly be convinced, beyond a reasonable doubt, of the defendant’s guilt of the offense charged. Fisher v. State, 1 Md. App. 505 and cases therein cited.

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Bluebook (online)
234 A.2d 467, 2 Md. App. 291, 1967 Md. App. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-state-mdctspecapp-1967.