Evans v. State

23 A.3d 223, 420 Md. 391, 2011 Md. LEXIS 430
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 2011
DocketNo. 72
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 23 A.3d 223 (Evans 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
Evans v. State, 23 A.3d 223, 420 Md. 391, 2011 Md. LEXIS 430 (Md. 2011).

Opinion

BATTAGLIA, J.

In this case, we pen a sequel to Chen v. State, 370 Md. 99, 803 A.2d 518 (2002), a case in which we determined that a provision that prohibited an activity and a separate provision that penalized that same activity, though separated during a recodification, could nonetheless be read in pari materia as penalizing the act of possessing unstamped cigarettes. We now address whether a statute criminalizing conduct, which does not contain or have a related penalty provision, as a result of substantive revisions by the Legislature, can constitute a crime.

Petitioner, Leroy Evans, Jr., seeks to overturn his conviction on Count Nine of the Indictment against him for the unlawful obliteration, removal, change, or alteration of a manufacturer’s identification mark or number on a firearm, pursuant to Section 5-142 of the Public Safety Article, Maryland [395]*395Code (2003),1 asserting that Section 5-142 does not contain a penalty provision and that the penalty provision in Section 5-143(b) of the Public Safety Article does not apply.2 The Court of Special Appeals affirmed Evans’s conviction on Count Nine of the Indictment, and we granted certiorari, Evans v. State, 415 Md. 607, 4 A.3d 512 (2010), to answer the following question:

Did the circuit court err in sentencing Petitioner for obliterating the serial number on a firearm where the Legislature has not provided a penalty for that offense?

We shall hold that the omission of a penalty provision in or related to Section 5-142, which prohibits obliterating, removing, changing, or altering the manufacturer’s identification mark or number, renders Section 5-142 incapable of sustaining a criminal conviction, so that Evans’s conviction on Count Nine of the Indictment must be reversed.3

[396]*396Evans was indicted and tried before a jury in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County in 2007 on eleven drug and firearm counts, one of which was Count Nine, which charged him as follows: “Leroy Evans, Jr. on or about the 28th day of December, Two Thousand Six, in Prince George’s County, Maryland, did obliterate the manufacturer’s mark or number on a firearm in violation of § 5-142 of the Public Safety Article.” Evans was convicted on Count Nine, and the court sentenced him to a five-year term of incarceration,4 which was to run consecutive to a different sentence on another count.5 [397]*397Evans noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals and argued that the Circuit Court erred by imposing multiple sentences for possession of a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime, for imposing multiple sentences for unlawful possession of a firearm and for imposing a sentence for obliterating the serial number on a firearm on Count Nine.6 The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the trial court’s sentences in an unreported opinion, and as to Count Nine, reasoned that “[b]y obliterating the serial number on the handgun, appellant knowingly participated in the illegal possession of a regulated firearm in violation of the subtitle, and he was properly sentenced to imprisonment for a period of five years pursuant to PS § 5-143(b).”

Why we appear to be absorbed by the issue of what to do when a statute internally does not contain a penalty provision is because, generally, criminal statutes must contain language that criminalizes the forbidden act, as well as a provision that penalizes the behavior.7 This proposition, as hornbook law, is succinctly stated by Wayne R. LaFave in the 2010 edition of one of our oft-quoted tomes:

[A] crime is made up of two parts, forbidden conduct and a prescribed penalty. The former without the latter is no [398]*398crime. The modern criminal penalties are: the death penalty, imprisonment with or without hard labor, and the fine. In many cases the section of the statute that describes the forbidden conduct concludes with a statement of the punishment; or perhaps one section sets forth the forbidden conduct and the next section the punishment.

Wayne R. LaFave, Criminal Law § 1.2(d), at 12 (5th ed.2010) (footnotes omitted). See Gargliano v. State, 334 Md. 428, 438, 450, 639 A.2d 675, 680, 685 (1994), in which we reversed a trial court’s application of a mandatory ten-year penalty for drug offenders that “previously [have] been convicted” of similar offenses to an offender who had been convicted of a drug offense after the conviction of the principal offense. In so doing, we relied on the fundamental principle that “criminal statutes [must] be sufficiently clear and definite to inform a person of ordinary intelligence what conduct is punishable and what the penalty for such conduct might be before the criminal conduct is committed.” Id. at 445, n. 16, 639 A.2d at 683, n. 16.

When a statute, as the instant one, fails to internally contain a penalty provision, its ability to criminalize conduct becomes more complicated. LaFave is of assistance in identifying the spectrum of issues in this regard, including in the first instance, those about which there is “little difficulty” for a court to determine criminality:

Sometimes, however, the statute forbidding the conduct may refer to another statute for the punishment, such as the rather common statute providing that whoever commits embezzlement (defining it) shall be punishable as if he committed larceny, with the larceny statute providing for a certain penalty of fine or imprisonment. Another method sometimes encountered is for the statute, after forbidding certain conduct, to conclude “shall be guilty of a felony” (or “misdemeanor”), without setting forth the penalty; but another catch-all statute provides that one who commits a felony (or a misdemeanor) not otherwise punishable shall be punished in a prescribed way. Similarly, the statute defining certain conduct as criminal may say that this crime is a [399]*399felony or misdemeanor of a certain classification; another statute then indicates the permissible punishment for each classification. In all of these cases there is little difficulty in concluding that, since the statutes set forth both forbidden conduct and criminal penalty, the legislature has created a crime.

LaFave, § 1.2(d), at 12-13. For example, in Chen v. State, 370 Md. 99, 803 A.2d 518 (2002), we were faced with a penalty provision that, due to a recodification, appeared in a different title of the Tax-General Article than the forbidden conduct it punished, namely the possession of unstamped cigarettes.8 We determined that the two sections in issue could be read in para materia in a plain meaning analysis to warrant application of the penalty provision in what was a separate statutory provision.

In the more difficult situation, however, the omission of a penalty provision in or related to a statute cannot support a criminal conviction for its violation:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A.3d 223, 420 Md. 391, 2011 Md. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-state-md-2011.