Brown v. State

388 A.2d 130, 39 Md. App. 497, 1978 Md. App. LEXIS 222
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 8, 1978
Docket1056, September Term, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 388 A.2d 130 (Brown 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
Brown v. State, 388 A.2d 130, 39 Md. App. 497, 1978 Md. App. LEXIS 222 (Md. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

Lowe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

If, as it has been said, law is common sense as amended by the Legislature, it is an unfortunate fact that common sense is judicially modified as well.

At common law the crime of arson was a homeowner’s protection, criminalizing the wilful and malicious burning of *499 the dwelling house of another. Rather than modify that common sense protection, the Legislature expanded its scope to include any building, whether owned by the person who burned it or by anyone else; 1 however, the safeguard for the innocent of requiring proof of a wilful and malicious state of mind was statutorily retained. Yet the possible consequences of that broadened scope still portend problems even for one who chooses to use fire to raze or demolish an old unwanted building on his own property, because despite an environmental or other governmental “permit”, there appears to be no absolution in the statute allowing its sanctions to be waived by anyone for any purpose. The only hedge against conviction for innocently doing away with a dilapidated building eyesore in such a manner is the apparently substantial burden placed upon a prosecutor to prove that an accused “wilfully” burned such a building with a “malicious” intent.

Even that protection, however, has been judicially eroded over the years to such an extent that a showing of an intent to burn by the accused — even his own dilapidated building — is sufficient for a jury to convict. Wilfulness has been judicially equated with malice, and malice has been eroded to mean criminal intent. Thus we have come full circle. In disposing of an eyesore, one who elects to burn it, rather than raze it, is a felon if he merely intended to do so — because that which he intended is criminally proscribed, and he is charged with knowledge of that statutory proscription. That may sound a little scary, but if it appears absurdly improbable, let’s look at the analogous case of Mike Brown.

“Fire giveth lyght to things farre off, and burneth that which is next to it. The Court shineth to me that came not there, but singeth those who enter.” 2

— the building —

Because he caused the abandoned and derelict clubhouse at Laurel Raceway to be burned rather than razed or *500 otherwise demolished, Mike Brown (a Laurel officer, director and substantial stockholder) was convicted of arson. The physical facilities at Laurel Raceway had deteriorated so badly that its 1975 summer meet could not be held at its own facility. On Brown’s behalf, and at his request, a Laurel administrative assistant named Patricia Ann Gorman obtained demolition bids for the clubhouse in anticipation of a major improvement of the track facilities. In light of the extensive estimates (in the vicinity of $15,000), Brown then had Ms. Gorman investigate the possibility of having the clubhouse burned by the Savage Fire Department. After initially agreeing, the Department subsequently declined because, upon looking into the situation, it determined that the proposed burning would be unsafe and environmentally unsound. Continued efforts through other fire departments were also unavailing. The building was ultimately burned (by a part-time employee and another person) at the direction of Ms. Gorman, who testified that she contracted for this extra-legal burning upon the instructions of Brown.

Seven questions are raised on appeal following Brown’s conviction by a jury in the Circuit Court for Howard County. 3 The first two relate to the structure that was burned. As pointed out, that structure was a 20-year-old shell of an unused clubhouse, primarily of “[s]teel skeleton construction with a frame flooring interior and bearing walls with a built up roof”. The windows (including the viewing panels) had been removed or broken, utilities had been turned off, copper piping removed and the interior severely vandalized.

*501 Initially, appellant calls upon us to define the term “building” as used in the arson statute, Md. Code, Art. 27, § 7, and though he would have it narrower, presses upon us as a starting point the definition extracted from Freeform Pools v. Strawbridge, 228 Md. 297, 301:

“Taken in its broadest sense it can mean only an erection intended for use and occupancy as a habitation, or for some purpose of trade, manufacture, ornament, or use, such as a house, store, or a church.” (emphasis added).

Presumably attracted by the “intended for use and occupancy” language, appellant veers south to a qualifying definition more applicably used in the arson case of State v. Cuthrell, 235 N. C. 173, imposing the condition that the edifice burned be “usable for some useful purpose”. Assuming we will adopt his composite definition of usable or intended for use, appellant then points out that the State failed to provide sufficient evidence to meet either criteria, an issue which he preserved by motion for judgment of acquittal.

We are not persuaded that because of the “intended for use” language used by the Court of Appeals in Freeform, the buildings the Legislature intended to protect from an arsonist’s torch are only those “usable” at the time of burning. In Freeform, a case ultimately limited to its facts, the litigant sought to encompass a swimming pool within the mechanics’ lien definition of a building. Quoting from Black’s Law Dictionary (4th ed. 1951), the Court there pointed out that:

“ ‘The identity or difference of meaning of the words ‘building’, ‘improvement’ and ‘structure’ depends upon context in connection with which they are used.’ ” Id. at 301.

Quite obviously a special lien for work and materials imposed upon a building already erected or improved logically would require the use limitations imposed by the Court’s definition. The Legislature, however, just as reasonably could use the term building in a statute enacted to protect real property *502 from wilful malicious destruction, regardless of the prospective utilitarian purpose for which the building is left to stand. It is apparent from the statutory pattern that the legislative scheme is to criminalize any uncontrolled burning. Without regard to ownership of the thing burned, § 6 of Art. 27 forbids the burning of a dwelling house or “other outhouse that is a parcel thereof”; § 7 attaches that prohibition to any other building not a parcel of a dwelling house; and, presumably to include whatever combustibles that might be missed by the foregoing sections, § 8 appears to be a miscellaneous catchall ranging from haystacks to vehicular conveyances, and including a wide range of possible combustibles, such as “any pile of planks, boards, posts, rails or other lumber;...”. See appendix. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language definition for “building” is:

“Something that is built; a structure; an edifice.”

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Brown v. State
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403 A.2d 788 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
388 A.2d 130, 39 Md. App. 497, 1978 Md. App. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-state-mdctspecapp-1978.