Director of Patuxent Institution v. DANIELS OF PATUXENT INSTITUTION

221 A.2d 397, 243 Md. 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 17, 1966
Docket[No. 520, September Term, 1965.]
StatusPublished
Cited by97 cases

This text of 221 A.2d 397 (Director of Patuxent Institution v. DANIELS OF PATUXENT INSTITUTION) 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
Director of Patuxent Institution v. DANIELS OF PATUXENT INSTITUTION, 221 A.2d 397, 243 Md. 16 (Md. 1966).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Samuel Daniels, an appellee and cross-appellant, was found to be a defective delinquent in 1959 by the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County pursuant to the provisions of the Maryland Defective Delinquent Act, Code (1964 Supp.), Art. 31B (the Act), and was remanded to Patuxent Institution, the place of confinement, and treatment and rehabilitation if possible, established by the Act for those judicially determined to be de *22 fective delinquents. In 1964 he sought a redetermination of his status in the same trial court, as permitted by the Act, a jury again decided that he was a defective delinquent, and again he was remanded to Patuxent. He sought leave to appeal to this Court in accordance with the procedure provided by the Act. In Daniels v. Director, 238 Md. 80, we rejected all his contentions save the one that the trial court had denied him the right and opportunity to show that he was not being given treatment for the causes of his defective delinquency as contemplated by the Act, but rather was being punished by being confined indefinitely, probably for life, in a penal institution in violation of his constitutional rights. Leave to appeal was granted as to this claim and the case remanded for a determination of whether the continued detention of Daniels in Patuxent is a violation of his constitutional rights in light of the questions as to the constitutionality of the Act in operation posed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Sas v. State of Maryland, 334 F. 2d 506, in June 1964.

The present appeal is essentially from the determination of the trial court on remand that the Act in operation and application is constitutional but it comes to us in an unusual posture which requires explanation. After the taking of extensive testimony and but a day or two before the opinion of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County was to be filed, it was discovered for the first time that, contrary to what was indicated by the docket entries of his criminal trial in 1958, which showed a plea of guilty to storehouse breaking and larceny, Daniels had actually then entered a plea of guilty only of petty larceny and that it was on the conviction following this plea that he was sentenced to not more than three years in the Maryland State Reformatory for Males and subsequently referred to Patuxent for diagnosis as a possible defective delinquent, found to be one and committed to Patuxent. After this discovery, it was realized that there was at least a strong probability that Daniels’ conviction of petty larceny was not, under § 6 of Art. 31B, one of the crimes which would serve as a basis for referral to and confinement in Patuxent and Daniels’ lawyer on behalf of Bradley Arlington Avey, then in Patuxent for diagnosis as a possible defective delinquent, concededly properly so under *23 the Act, filed a bill for a declaratory judgment that Avey was being held in violation of his constitutional rights, assigning all of the general reasons that had been urged in behalf of Daniels and were under consideration in his case. The State answered the bill and the Avey case was consolidated with the Daniels case upon a stipulation that all of the testimony and exhibits in the Daniels case (except as applied to Daniels individually) “shall be accepted in evidence in this [the Avey] case and shall be considered by the court to the same extent as if the testimony had been testified to in this case and as if the exhibits had been produced in this case.” Thereupon on December 15, 1965, the court filed its opinion in the consolidated cases that the Act is constitutional and is being constitutionally applied, both generally and specifically as to Daniels and its order as to Avey adopting, to the extent of its general application, its opinion in Daniels “including the Findings of Fact and conclusions of law,” and ordering “that it is hereby declared that Article 31B of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1957) is constitutional * * * [and] that no constitutional rights of the plaintiff, Bradley Arlington Avey, are being violated by his confinement at Patuxent Institution * * *.”

The court nevertheless ordered that Daniels be released forthwith for the reason that he had been improperly found to be a defective delinquent in that the supposed basis for his referral to Patuxent under § 6 of Art. 3IB did not exist and he had served all sentences imposed upon him. The court held that if legally necessary it would treat Daniels’ petition for redetermination as one for the writ of habeas corpus, and cast aside the arguments of the State (a) that the crime of petty larceny was a crime of violence (the commission of which would have justified referral to Patuxent under § 6 of Art. 31B, and (b) that the crime of escape from Patuxent for which he was convicted in Howard County, before he was determined originally to be a defective delinquent, constituted a second crime which was enough under § 6 of Art. 31B (“two or more convictions for any offenses or crimes punishable by imprisonment in a criminal court of this State”) to justify the determination that he was a defective delinquent. The State, through the Director of Patuxent Institution, appealed the order releasing Daniels, *24 and Daniels cross-appealed the findings that the Act was constitutional and being constitutionally applied, and Avey also appealed the declaratory order of constitutionality. 1

We agree with the trial court that Daniels had to be released because under § 6 of Art. 31B there can be no referral to Patuxent for a diagnosis of possible defective delinquency until one or more of the five prerequisites of conviction for a specified crime therein set out exists and none did when Daniels was referred, and with its underlying views that the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County lacked power to make the referral and, that assuming the Circuit Court for Howard County (as the court which last sentenced the defendant and so under § 6 (e) of Art. 3IB the only court then with power to do so) could have made the referral after Daniels was convicted of escape, it did not do so.

We pass to further consideration of the merits and of the Sas case, which triggered the consideration of the constitutionality of the Act in actual operation.

In Sas five inmates of Patuxent Institution, one of whom was John Sas, had filed petitions for writs of habeas corpus in the United States District Court in Baltimore, seeking their releases from Patuxent on the ground that the Act, under which they were confined, is unconstitutional, and had appealed when their petitions were denied. In its opinion in the consolidated appeals, the Circuit Court of Appeals found the Act and its statutory definition of a defective delinquent to be facially constitutional but, almost inexplicably, read the decision in Palmer v. State, 215 Md. 142, 137 A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mostofi v. Midland Funding, LLC
117 A.3d 639 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2015)
Pollard v. State
904 A.2d 500 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2006)
Thompson v. Commonwealth
438 N.E.2d 33 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1982)
Watson v. State
407 A.2d 324 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
Waine v. State
377 A.2d 509 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1977)
Moss v. Director
369 A.2d 1011 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1977)
State v. Williams
361 A.2d 122 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1976)
Moss v. Director, Patuxent Institution
359 A.2d 236 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1976)
Davis v. Director, Patuxent Institution
351 A.2d 905 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1976)
Williams & Fulwood v. Director, Patuxent Institution
347 A.2d 179 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
Arbaugh v. Director, Patuxent Institution
341 A.2d 812 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
Dower v. Director, Patuxent
396 F. Supp. 1070 (D. Maryland, 1975)
Weeder v. State
337 A.2d 67 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
Aero Motors, Inc. v. Administrator, Motor Vehicle Administration
337 A.2d 685 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
Bush v. Director, Patuxent Institution
324 A.2d 162 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1974)
Lincoln v. Director, Patuxent Institution
320 A.2d 552 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1974)
In Re Formal Inquiry Concerning Judge Foster
318 A.2d 523 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1974)
Savage v. State
308 A.2d 701 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1973)
Director, Patuxent Institution v. Cash
305 A.2d 833 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 A.2d 397, 243 Md. 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/director-of-patuxent-institution-v-daniels-of-patuxent-institution-md-1966.