Burkett v. State

245 A.2d 911, 5 Md. App. 211, 1968 Md. App. LEXIS 365
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 7, 1968
Docket382, September Term, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 245 A.2d 911 (Burkett 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
Burkett v. State, 245 A.2d 911, 5 Md. App. 211, 1968 Md. App. LEXIS 365 (Md. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Dennis Furman Burkett and Thomas Calvin Burkett, the appellants, were convicted of storehouse breaking, Md. Code Art. 27, § 32, breaking and stealing to the value of $5 or more, Md. *214 Code Art. 27, § 33 and being rogues and vagabonds, Md. Code Art. 27, § 490 in a nonjury trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. Each appellant was sentenced to two years for being a rogue and vagabond and eight years consecutively for storehouse breaking. The sentence for breaking and stealing was suspended generally as to each. On appeal it is contended that a hammer and a chisel were illegally seized, and therefore improperly admitted into evidence, and that the evidence was insufficient to support the convictions.

On January 16, 1967, police officers in Baltimore County were keeping a special watch on churches and synagogues on Liberty Road as a result of a burglary which had occurred at the Epworth Chapel Church located at the corner of St. Lukes Lane and Liberty Road on the preceding night. That burglary is not directly connected with the present appeal. At 3 :00 A.M. on the 16th Corporal Anthony Vitek, Jr. observed a 1955 red and white Ford -turn into the parking lot of the aforesaid church and make a circle therein. Although the vehicle was being operated in an apparently lawful manner the uniformed officer stopped it and requested the operator to show his operator’s license and registration card for the vehicle. The operator produced his operator’s license but could not produce a registration card. He stated that the vehicle belonged to one of the occupants of the car, Dennis Furman Burkett, one of the appellants, who together with the second appellant, was riding as a passenger in the vehicle on the front seat with the operator. A radio check of the tag number revealed that the tags were issued for another vehicle titled in the name of one Charles F. Grover. Dennis Burkett attempted to explain that he had borrowed the tags from his father’s station wagon and placed them on the car. Whereupon the officer informed them that they could not drive without a registration card; that they could not drive on fictitious tags and that the vehicle would have to be checked out as to ownership. The operator of the vehicle was instructed to drive it to the police station where the occupants locked the car and went into the station with the officers; the operator was issued an appropriate traffic summons. While at the station Dennis Burkett produced the title to the vehicle signed over to him by his brother, Jerry Burkett, whereupon he was *215 issued a summons for permitting the operator, one Shuman, to operate the vehicle; after which the appellants and the operator were permitted to leave the station but the vehicle was kept until proper registration could be furnished. After the occupants of the car had left the station, Corporal Vitek reported to Detective Robert H. LeCain, Jr. that when he had stopped a car the night before and arrested the occupants for motor vehicle violations, he had observed on the floor of the car, immediately behind the driver’s seat, brown gloves, a screwdriver, a lug wrench, a carpenter’s hammer and other miscellaneous tools, and that he thought Detective LeCain would be interested in observing the vehicle at the station. After Detective LeCain looked through the window of the car and observed two crowbars, a wrench, a claw hammer, some tire irons, screwdrivers and chisels and three or four pairs of gloves, he obtained a search warrant for the vehicle and removed the tools that were visible through the window as well as other tools that were in the trunk of the car. 1

A duly qualified agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation made a comparison of a hammer which was removed from the rear floor of the car and a chisel which was removed from the trunk of the car with tool marks on a safe that had been taken from Dave’s Court Lane Service Station in a breaking and entering which had occurred on January 11, 1967. The agent testified that the tools were the identical ones that had been used in opening the safe. On cross-examination of Detective LeCaiu it was brought out that, in his questioning of Dennis Burkett, Dennis had stated that the tools were his and that he used them in his carpentry work, but that he had been unemployed for eight months. Although neither of the appellants testified, their brother, Jerry Lee Burkett, testified that he broke into the gas station alone and that he carried the safe to the car by himself. He further testified that the tools belonged to him. In his finding of fact the trial judge stated that he did not believe that portion of the testimony of Jerry Burkett when he stated that he had committed the crime without assistance.

*216 Appellants contend that the search warrant was defective, but only because it was the fruit of the illegal stopping of the vehicle in the first instance. They allege that Md. Code Art. 66^4, § 97 permitting a uniformed police officer to inspect a motor vehicle operator’s driver’s license and Md. Code Art. 66J4 § 31 permitting a uniformed police officer to inspect the registration card which must be carried by every motor vehicle operator are not valid unless the operator has committed some traffic or other violation of law to justify the initial stopping of the vehicle. They cite no authority in the argument but allege that all of the Maryland cases approving the statutes have done so on the basis that the officer observed a violation of law prior to the initial stopping.

In Bradley v. State, 202 Md. 393, 96 A. 2d 491 in discussing this problem the Court pointed out at page 493:

“By Chapter 1007, of the Laws of Maryland of 1943, Article 66^4, Section 96, [now 97] 1951 Code, the hereinbefore quoted Act was repealed and re-enacted in substantially the same form but there was omitted the provision ‘provided that no operator of a motor vehicle shall be stopped by any officer for the sole purpose of exhibiting his operator’s license.’ ”

This would clearly indicate a legislative intent the statute was not limited as here contended. In that case, however, it was true that the officer did observe a traffic violation prior to the stopping of the vehicle and the stopping was approved even though the operator was subsequently acquitted of the traffic charge. Since the officer believed that the vehicle was being operated on the wrong side of the road he had reasonable grounds to stop it.

In Sharpe v. State, 231 Md. 401, 190 A. 2d 628 the Court also approved a stopping where there was a traffic violation involved.

In Shipley v. State, 243 Md. 262, 220 A. 2d 585 police officers were held justified in approaching a parked vehicle and in making an arrest when they saw a concealed weapon within the vehicle, saying at page 587:

“It has long been recognized that in an appropriate *217

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Bluebook (online)
245 A.2d 911, 5 Md. App. 211, 1968 Md. App. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burkett-v-state-mdctspecapp-1968.