GENIES v. State

43 A.3d 1007, 426 Md. 148
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 1, 2012
Docket11, September Term, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 A.3d 1007 (GENIES 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
GENIES v. State, 43 A.3d 1007, 426 Md. 148 (Md. 2012).

Opinion

BATTAGLIA, J.

In this case, we are asked to consider whether the common law offense of indecent exposure is preempted on the facts of *151 this case by Section 8-803 of the Correctional Services Article, Maryland Code (1999, 2008 Repl.Vol.), which prohibits “[a]n inmate ... with intent to annoy, abuse, torment, harass, or embarrass a correctional officer or authorized personnel [from] lewdly, lasciviously, and indecently exposing] private parts of the inmate’s body in the presence of the correctional officer or authorized personnel.” 1

While incarcerated at the Montgomery County Correctional Facility in 2008, Daniel Genies, Petitioner, masturbated in sight of a female correctional officer, while smiling and making eye contact with her, in spite of her orders to stop. Genies was subsequently charged with committing the common law offense of indecent exposure, as well as with violating Section 8-803. Prior to trial in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, Genies moved to dismiss the common law charge, arguing that Section 8-803 was preemptive. The motion was denied by Judge Joseph A. Dugan, Jr., the presiding judge. The jury subsequently acquitted Genies of the statutory offense but convicted him of the common law offense. Genies, thereafter, filed a motion for new trial, in which he alleged juror intimidation during deliberations, but Judge Dugan denied the motion "without a hearing and ultimately sentenced Genies to three years’ imprisonment.

The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the conviction in a reported opinion, Genies v. State, 196 Md.App. 590, 10 A.3d *152 854 (2010), and Genies petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari, which we granted, 418 Md. 586, 16 A.3d 977 (2011), to consider the following questions:

1. Did the trial court err in failing to dismiss the charge of common law indecent exposure, where the statutory, specific intent crime preempted the field, with respect to indecent exposure by an inmate to a correctional officer?
2. Was it error or an abuse of discretion to deny the motion for new trial, without a hearing?

We shall answer “no” to both questions and shall hold that Section 8-803 did not preempt the common law offense of indecent exposure on these facts and that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion when he ruled, without a hearing, on Genies’s motion for a new trial.

We note at the outset that Genies challenges whether the common law offense of indecent exposure was preempted by the enactment of Section 8-803 in 2002. In his oral argument before this Court, he averred that the common law offense does not apply in a correctional facility, 2 but he does not, however, challenge the evidentiary or legal sufficiency of his conviction for the common law offense of indecent expo *153 sure, defined as “a public exposure, made wilfully and intentionally, as opposed to an inadvertent or accidental one; which was observed, or was likely to have been observed, by one or more persons, as opposed to performed in secret, or hidden from the view of others.” Wisneski v. State, 398 Md. 578, 593, 921 A.2d 273, 282 (2007). We therefore review the trial court’s denial of Genies’s motion to dismiss, the gravamen of which involved whether Section 8-803 preempts common law indecent exposure when an inmate is the perpetrator, under a de novo standard. See Glover v. State, 368 Md. 211, 220, 792 A.2d 1160, 1165 (2002).

We initially consider whether Section 8-803 has preempted the common law by application of the following tenets articulated by Judge Alan M. Wilner in State v. North, 356 Md. 308, 311-12, 739 A.2d 33, 34-35 (1999), when, as an active member of this Court, he addressed the concept of preemption in the context of a common law offense and a statutory one:

[T]he issue before us is one of legislative intent — whether, through its enactment of § 287B, the General Assembly intended to withdraw from the purview of the common law offense of attempt the conduct covered by the new statute. In Robinson v. State, 353 Md. 683, 728 A.2d 698 (1999), we held it to be “a generally accepted rule of law that statutes are not presumed to repeal the common law ‘further than is expressly declared, and that a statute, made in the affirmative without any negative expressed or implied, does not take away the common law,’ ” but we also observed that “[wjhere a statute and the common law are in conflict, or where a statute deals with an entire subject-matter, the rule is otherwise, and the statute is generally construed as abrogating the common law as to that subject.” Id. at 693, 728 A.2d at 702-03, quoting, in part, from Lutz v. State, 167 Md. 12, 15, 172 A. 354, 356 (1934), quoting, in turn, 25 R.C.L. 1054.
This view, generally disfavoring repeal of the common law by implication, has a long history in Maryland. In Hooper v. Mayor & C.C. of Balto., 12 Md. 464, 475 (1859), we quoted with approval from Dwarris on Statutes at 695 that “it is *154 not to be presumed that the legislature intended to make any innovation upon the common law, further than the case absolutely required,” but that “[t]he law rather infers that the act did not intend to make any alteration other than what is specified, and besides what has been plainly pronounced.” (Emphasis in original.) In Anderson v. State, 61 Md.App. 436, 449, 487 A.2d 294, 300 (1985), Judge Moylan explained the jurisprudential underpinning for that view, namely, the fact that, by Article 5 of the Declaration of Rights, the common law is Constitutionally guaranteed to the inhabitants of the State. Although that common law may be altered or repealed through statutes duly enacted by the General Assembly, given the Constitutional underpinning, its erosion is not lightly to be implied.

In the present case, the statute at issue is Section 8-803 of the Correctional Services Article, which provides:

(a) Definitions. — Words or phrases in this section that describe the common-law crime of indecent exposure shall retain their judicially determined meanings except to the extent expressly or implicitly changed in this section.
(b) Prohibited conduct. — An inmate may not, with intent to annoy, abuse, torment, harass, or embarrass a correctional officer or authorized personnel, lewdly, lasciviously, and indecently expose private parts of the inmate’s body in the presence of the correctional officer or authorized personnel.

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

Related

Harris v. State
276 A.3d 1071 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2022)
Williams v. State
272 A.3d 347 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2022)
Cornish v. State
195 A.3d 1236 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2018)
WSC/2005 LLC v. Trio Ventures Assocs.
190 A.3d 255 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2018)
Riley v. State
133 A.3d 1219 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2016)
Johnson v. State
115 A.3d 668 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2015)
Antonio v. SSA Security, Inc.
110 A.3d 654 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2015)
State v. Phillips
68 A.3d 51 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A.3d 1007, 426 Md. 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genies-v-state-md-2012.