Dawson v. State

395 A.2d 160, 40 Md. App. 640, 1978 Md. App. LEXIS 282
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1978
Docket1328, September Term, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 395 A.2d 160 (Dawson 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
Dawson v. State, 395 A.2d 160, 40 Md. App. 640, 1978 Md. App. LEXIS 282 (Md. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

Mason, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Betty Davis Dawson, appellant, was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County of manslaughter and use of a hand gun in the commission of a crime of violence. She admits killing the victim, but contends it was in self-defense.

According to the evidence adduced at trial, on the evening of 2 June 1977 appellant and Ray Dawson, her ex-husband with whom she had resumed living, became involved in a heated argument. When Dawson indicated he was going out appellant attempted to stop him by twisting and bending the metal license plates on his car with her bare hands. Apparently angered by this, Dawson knocked appellant to the ground and drove off. After having a couple of drinks, appellant obtained a ride with Diane Aubinoe to the Summit Apartments in Rockville to look for her husband. On arriving at this apartment complex they rode around until Dawson's car was seen. Appellant and Diane got out of the car and approached two people sitting in lawn chairs drinking beer. Upon recognizing Dawson as one of the persons, appellant inquired, “what in the hell are you doing here?” to which he answered, “none of your damn business.” Appellant then smacked him across the face, whereupon he retaliated by hitting her a number of times and, according to Diane, “fought her like a man.” During the fight Margaret Bress, the victim, remained seated in the other lawn chair as if nothing were happening. During the melee, appellant leaped on top of Mrs. Bress and wrapped her arms around Mrs. Bress’s neck. Dawson, however, pulled her off and continued striking her. Diane indicated that she did not join the fight because appellant was doing a pretty good job of defending herself, and Dawson was getting the worst of it. Eventually, Dawson walked away and Mrs. Bress went into her apartment and closed the sliding door to the patio. Appellant then banged on the door several times and yelled, “open the *642 door bitch.” Soon thereafter, Mrs. Bress opened the patio door and apparently stood in the doorway.

According to appellant, when Mrs. Bress opened the door she had a knife in her hand. “I asked her to come out, I would like to talk to her” and she said: “No, I am not coming no damn place.” Mrs. Bress swung the knife in front of her and said, “she would cut my damn guts out.” She became •frightened and reached in her pocket book and pulled her gun out. When Mrs. Bress stepped toward her again swinging the knife, “I touched the trigger just a little too hard, I guess, and it went off.” After the shooting she put the.gun in her pocketbook and walked to the parking lot where she was .stopped by Mr. Papadopoulas, a tenant who lived in the apartment above the victim.

The State’s version of the incident, as testified to by the victim’s husband and children who were in the apartment, was that the victim did not have a knife and that she was shot immediately after opening the door. There is nothing in the record to show that the victim left her apartment prior to the shooting, or that the appellant attempted to enter it.

On appeal appellant contends (1) that the trial court erred in its instructions to the jury on the issue of self-defense; (2) that the trial court erred in denying her motion to suppress the gun seized from a pocketbook during a warrantless search; (3) that the trial court erred in denying her motion to suppress a series of statements taken while she was in custody.

I.

INSTRUCTIONS

The trial judge’s instructions to the jury regarding self-defense were as follows:

“The defendant has raised the. issue of self-defense, that is, legal justification. In order to justify the crime charged on the basis of self-defense, the defendant must have had reasonable grounds to believe, and must have, in *643 fact, believed herself to be in apparent, imminent or immediate danger of bodily harm from her assailant or potential assailant. The circumstances under which the defendant acted must have been such as to produce in the mind of a reasonably prudent person, similarly situated, the reasonable belief that the other person was about to kill her or to do her serious bodily harm.
“You must determine whether the defendant was justified in meeting force with force. If you find such justification, the force used against another must not have been unreasonable or excessive. There must not have been used more force than the exigency reasonably demanded. One is not entitled to use any greater force that he or she has reasonable grounds to believe, and actually did believe, to be necessary under the circumstances to save her life or to avert serious bodily injury.
“If the defendant actually did believe that she was in imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm from which she could save herself only by using deadly force, and had reasonable grounds to so believe, then she had a right to employ deadly force to defend herself. Deadly force is that which is intended to or likely to cause great bodily harm or death.
“Deadly force is unreasonable if non-deadly force is sufficient to avert the threatened harm. However, deadly force may be entirely reasonable under some circumstances.
“Generally, ladies and gentlemen, the law does not require one to retreat. There used to be a concept, and still is in some jurisdictions, that you always had to retreat to the wall before you could use any self-defense or force to oppose someone else who was coming after you. That is no longer the law with respect to a person who is blameless in the first instance, who is not the aggressor or did not provoke the incident. A non-aggressor does not have to *644 retreat,[ 1 ] CD but if you are the aggressor, even with this limited intent going in, then the law says that you must retreat if there is a reasonably available area of retreat for you and if time and circumstances permit the retreat, and if you don’t retreat and you use fatal force, then you may be guilty of manslaughter.
“The burden is upon the State to prove to you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did not act in self-defense of this case.”

Appellant did not take exception to the Court’s charge, but requested additional instructions — which were denied. The narrow issue then is whether the Court committed reversible error in refusing to give appellant’s requested instructions:

“MR. AARONSON: First, Your Honor, with respect to retreat: We request that the jury be instructed that if you find the defendant was the aggressor and that there is a duty to retreat, the retreat is a subjective concept and the test is: Subjectively in the circumstances of the moment did she have an obviously safe retreat. It’s not the question of whether a reasonable person looking back with hind sight would have retreated, but whether the defendant in the circumstances of the moment had an obviously safe retreat.

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Bluebook (online)
395 A.2d 160, 40 Md. App. 640, 1978 Md. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-state-mdctspecapp-1978.