Cover v. State

466 A.2d 1276, 297 Md. 398, 1983 Md. LEXIS 312
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 26, 1983
Docket[No. 121, September Term, 1982.]
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 466 A.2d 1276 (Cover 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
Cover v. State, 466 A.2d 1276, 297 Md. 398, 1983 Md. LEXIS 312 (Md. 1983).

Opinion

Rodowsky, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petitioner, Nancy Austin Cover (Cover), was convicted of hindering "the Bethesda Special Assignment Team of the Montgomery County Police from performing their lawful duties” at a de novo, non-jury trial in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County on an appeal from her conviction in the District Court of Maryland. We granted Cover’s petition for a writ of certiorari.

*400 Both this Court and the Court of Special Appeals have said that resisting, hindering, or obstructing an officer of the law in the performance of his duties is an offense at common law. See Busch v. State, 289 Md. 669, 675, 426 A.2d 954, 957 (1981); Roddy v. Finnegan, 43 Md. 490, 505 (1876); Howard v. State, 32 Md. App. 75, 82, 359 A.2d 568, 573 (1976). See also, R. Perkins, Criminal Law, 495-97 (2d ed. 1969). The question presented here is whether the facts in the instant case make out the crime. At 2:30 a.m. in a commercial and residential section of Bethesda, Montgomery County, the accused drove slowly along a public street sounding her automobile horn for up to two minutes for the purpose of alerting an unknown third person that he was under observation by a plainclothes police officer who was suspicious that the third person might attempt to break and enter a storehouse. We shall hold that Petitioner’s conduct does not constitute the crime charged.

The facts most favorable to the State are these. Sergeant Francis W. Young (Young) of the Montgomery County police was assigned to the Bethesda Special Assignment Team (SAT). He was in charge of a group of plainclothes officers who daily patrolled the area in unmarked vehicles from 9:30 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. On Wednesday, February 10, 1982 at approximately 2:20 a.m. Young noticed a man in a sidewalk telephone booth outside the front of a building occupied by the Wagon Wheel Restaurant, where a break-in had recently been perpetrated. To set forth what thereafter transpired requires a description of the general area.

The Wagon Wheel Restaurant is in the front of a one-story, freestanding building located on the north side of Bethesda Avenue in the block bounded on the west by Arlington Road and on the east by Wisconsin Avenue. The next east-west street to the north of Bethesda Avenue is Elm Street. Testimony estimated the depth of the block from Bethesda Avenue to Elm Street at 300 feet. Photographs in evidence reveal that, on the north side of Bethesda Avenue, at the Wisconsin Avenue corner of the block, there is an eight-story, office-type building. The next building to the *401 west is the building housing the Wagon Wheel. Between these two structures is a driveway, two traffic lanes wide, which appears to lead to an underground garage. To the west of the Wagon Wheel building is a service road approximately three lanes wide. On the west side of this service road is an open parking area, one car length in width, which affords perpendicular parking for a one-story building. To the rear, or north, of the one-story building is an open parking lot which is accessible from the service road. What lies immediately behind the Wagon Wheel building, on the east side of the service road, does not appear in the record. West of the one-story building are railroad tracks which cross the subject block diagonally in relation to Bethesda Avenue on a northeast-southwest course. There are other buildings along the north side of Bethesda Avenue from the railroad tracks to Arlington Road. Behind the buildings which face on the north side of Bethesda Avenue, and facing the south side of Elm Street in the portion of the block to the north and slightly to the west of the Wagon Wheel building, are two large, one-story commercial buildings. The more westerly of these is apparently a supermarket and the more easterly an automobile service facility. These two buildings are separated by an open air parking area. There is also open area for parking on the south side of the automobile facility, extending to the railroad tracks, as well as on the east side of that facility. The sidewalk telephone booth in which Young first observed a male subject stands at the western corner of the front of the Wagon Wheel premises, next to the wide service road. Thus, the area from the telephone booth on Bethesda, extending on a somewhat direct course to Elm, consists of the service road, next a parking area, next the railroad tracks, next the parking area behind the auto service facility building, and finally that building with open parking areas on both sides.

On the south side of Bethesda Avenue, at the eastern end of the block, i.e., at the Wisconsin Avenue corner, is a highrise apartment house. To the south of the apartment house is an alley called Miller Avenue which leads to a *402 county-owned, public parking lot occupying the south side of Bethesda west of the apartment house and directly across Bethesda from the restaurant. The parking lot also has a Bethesda Avenue entrance. On the morning in question the parking lot was "loaded” with the cars of persons who reside in the apartment house.

While Young was driving eastbound on Bethesda in a green Volkswagen, the subject male left the telephone booth and walked around the corner formed by the front and west sides of the restaurant building. When Young reached the end of the block, he proceeded south on Wisconsin Avenue and then by way of Miller Avenue onto the county parking lot. He parked facing west, with the rear of his car to the apartment building, so that the front and part of the east side of the restaurant were in view.

When Young had turned onto Wisconsin Avenue, he noticed that a blue Mazda station wagon had pulled within 15 to 20 feet behind him. Cover was driving the Mazda and was accompanied by a passenger, later identified as Theresa Bowen (Bowen). 1 Petitioner followed Young onto the parking lot, passed in front of his vehicle, made a U-turn, and parked facing to the east in the first space directly to Young’s left on the other side of the Miller Avenue entrance to the parking lot. Young recognized Cover and her vehicle because he had seen them many times before.

Cover had previously followed Young, and other SAT officers as well, in the early morning hours on numerous occasions, although there was no evidence that she had ever interfered with any of these plainclothes policemen in the performance of their duties in the past. On one prior occasion Bowen and Cover had been parked opposite the place where the unmarked SAT vehicles were garaged. The pair were observing the officers as they returned from patrol. When Young had gone over to speak to them, Bowen pointed a camera at Young and flashed its lighting attachment. *403 Young testified that, on that occasion, while Bowen denied having film in the camera, Cover said the two were preparing a flier containing pictures of the SAT officers and cars for distribution to the burglars of Bethesda and for posting on telephone poles.

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Bluebook (online)
466 A.2d 1276, 297 Md. 398, 1983 Md. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cover-v-state-md-1983.