Epps v. State

634 A.2d 20, 333 Md. 121, 1993 Md. LEXIS 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1993
Docket35, September Term, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 634 A.2d 20 (Epps 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
Epps v. State, 634 A.2d 20, 333 Md. 121, 1993 Md. LEXIS 170 (Md. 1993).

Opinions

McAULIFFE, Judge.

The defendant in this case was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment, consecutive to sentences theretofore imposed, for projecting a colorless, odorless liquid onto the person and clothing of a correctional officer at the Eastern Correctional Institution (ECI) in Somerset County. He appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, contending the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction of battery, and that the sentence was disproportionate to the crime in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution, the 25th Article of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, and the Maryland common law. The intermediate appellate court affirmed the conviction and sentence, 94 Md.App. 755 and we granted certiorari to consider the defendant’s claim of impermissible disproportionality.

I.

On 10 October 1991, Leroy Epps was confined in the segregation unit of the ECI. Correctional Officer Weldon Nelson was walking past a cell occupied only by the defendant [124]*124when he felt a liquid substance come into contact with his person. He described the incident as follows:

Í was on my way past Epps’ cell and as I was walking past his door, a liquid substance came out of the side of his door striking me in my left side leg area. I jumped back and all this liquid was dripping off my arm and everything. And I went up to the window on Leroy’s cell and he was standing inside his cell with his fist clenched beating on the door and he said. “That’s right, you white MF’er, I did it. Now go get your boys and come in here and get me.”

The officer reported the incident to his sergeant by radio, and then continued to the adjoining cell, where he removed a prisoner and escorted him to the exercise area. When he finished that assignment, Officer Nelson went to a bathroom and “wiped [him]-self off.” He said the liquid was colorless and odorless. Officer Nelson said he was not injured and did not seek or require medical attention. Another correctional officer testified that the liquid came from the defendant’s cell and that he could see that Officer Nelson was “a little damp on his uniform” and that “you could see that moisture was on his arm.”

It is not clear from the record how the defendant was able to project the liquid onto Officer Nelson. Because the defendant was in a segregated unit, he was not in a conventional cell. He was enclosed in walls rather than bars, and the door to his cell was solid, with the exception of a fixed window, and a food port that was closed. The only opening between the interior of the defendant’s cell and the area where Officer Nelson was walking was a vertical aperture estimated to be no more than one-and one-half inches wide between the cell door and the jamb of the doorway. Officer Nelson opined that the liquid was “throwed out the door from a cup or squirt bottle, a plastic bottle with a squirt top on it.”1 The prosecutor tried [125]*125the case on the assumption that the odorless, colorless liquid was water, arguing that conclusion to the court and to the jury.

The jury convicted the defendant of battery, the only charge brought by the State.2 The trial judge proceeded immediately to sentencing. The State proffered that the defendant had been sentenced in 1979 to serve 17 years for armed robbery; that in 1980 he was sentenced to seven years for an offense the State could not identify, and the State did not know whether the sentence was concurrent or consecutive to the earlier sentence; and that in 1991 he was given a consecutive sentence of 10 years for battery and three years concurrent for possession of a deadly and dangerous weapon with intent to injure. The State pointed out that the 1991 sentence involved an assault on a correctional officer at ECI, in which the defendant struck the officer in the temple with a sharpened piece of coat hanger.

The trial judge imposed a sentence of 20 years, consecutive to existing sentences, stating:

[I]n view of the fact that he’s previously been convicted of the very same thing, [the sentence] will be greater than the sentence that was imposed last time which probably wasn’t enough to persuade him that he can’t do this. And this court is not going to tolerate this kind of behavior among inmates at the penal institution, at least in this county.

The defendant, through his attorney, filed an application for review of the sentence, alleging that “the sentence imposed was grossly disproportionate to acts constituting the crime for which I was convicted,” and that “[t]he State’s Attorney, prior to trial, had made a plea offer of 6 months for Battery, consecutive to my current sentence, a sentence more consis[126]*126tent with the acts of which the jury convicted me.” A three-judge panel affirmed the sentence, without a hearing.

II.

In Thomas v. State, 333 Md. 84, 634 A.2d 1 (1993), [No. 20, September Term, 1992], filed-today, we discussed the constitutional and common law principles relating to required proportionality of sentences. We there pointed out that under the common law of this State, as set forth in Simms v. State, 288 Md. 712, 421 A.2d 957 (1980), a sentence for battery could be limited by acquittal or by abandonment of a more serious assault arising out of the same conduct and for which the defendant had been placed in jeopardy. Thomas, 333 Md. at 90-91, 634 A.2d at 4. Thus, had Epps been charged in this case with assault with intent to maim, disfigure, or disable,3 and had he been found not guilty of that offense or had the State abandoned the charge after jeopardy attached, the maximum sentence that could have been imposed for the battery would have been 15 years, which was then the maximum penalty for the aggravated assault. Epps was not charged with the greater offense, however, and consequently the doctrine of Simms has no direct application to this case.

We recognized in Thomas, however, that the requirement of proportionality is a component of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 25 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. Perfect proportionality is not required, but gross disproportionality is not permitted. Id. at 93-94, 634 A.2d at 5. We said that:

In order to be unconstitutional, a punishment must be more than very harsh; it must be grossly disproportionate. This standard will not be easily met.

Id. at 96, 634 A.2d at 6.

In making the threshold comparison of the sentence to the offense, we consider the specific facts of the offense rather than simply the elements of the crime charged. The [127]*127common law misdemeanor of battery is generally defined as the “unlawful application of force to the person of another.” Snowden v. State, 321 Md. 612, 617, 583 A.2d 1056 (1991). The type of offenses that fall within the ambit of this crime vary widely and may include kissing without consent, touching or tapping, jostling, and throwing water upon another, State v. Duckett, 306 Md. 503, 510-11, 510 A.2d 253

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Bluebook (online)
634 A.2d 20, 333 Md. 121, 1993 Md. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epps-v-state-md-1993.