Gonzalez v. State

878 A.2d 604, 388 Md. 63, 2005 Md. LEXIS 428
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 15, 2005
DocketNo. 103
StatusPublished

This text of 878 A.2d 604 (Gonzalez 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
Gonzalez v. State, 878 A.2d 604, 388 Md. 63, 2005 Md. LEXIS 428 (Md. 2005).

Opinion

WILNER, J.

Petitioner, Gregorio Gonzalez, was convicted in the District Court of second degree assault, based largely on testimony that, while performing a massage treatment on a customer, Ms. Crane, he inserted his finger into her vagina. Gonzalez noted an appeal to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County where, in accordance with Maryland Code, § 12 — 401(f) and (g) of the Cts. & Jud. Proc. Article (CJP), he received a de novo trial before a jury.

During the Circuit Court proceeding, Gonzalez wished to impeach the testimony of Ms. Crane by showing that, in one respect, she testified differently in the District Court. Because, as the result of an equipment malfunction, the proceedings in the District Court were not recorded, Gonzalez summoned two persons who were present during Ms. Crane’s testimony in the District Court — the interpreter appointed to assist Gonzalez and the District Court bailiff — to recount her [65]*65testimony in the District Court. After a voir dire examination of one of the two witnesses, the court refused to allow them to testify, whereupon Gonzalez moved for a mistrial. When that motion was denied, he attempted to withdraw the appeal, which the court refused to permit him to do. The jury convicted Gonzalez of the second degree assault, and the court imposed a sentence more severe than that imposed in the District Court.

Following an inappropriate appeal to the Court of Special Appeals and a transfer of that appeal to this Court, we granted certiorari to consider two questions: (1) whether the Circuit Court erred in refusing to permit the interpreter and the bailiff to testify as to Ms. Crane’s testimony in the District Court, and (2) whether it also erred in refusing to permit Gonzalez to withdraw his appeal and allow the District Court judgment to stand. We need address only the first issue, which we shall find dispositive, although we shall ask the Court’s Standing Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure to review Maryland Rule 7-112(f)(1) with respect to the second.

BACKGROUND

Gonzalez was employed as a shampoo assistant at a hair salon in Bethesda. While living in Argentina, he had been trained and certified in massage therapy, but he was not certified as a massage therapist in Maryland.1 Apparently as a result of his incorporating neck, shoulder, and arm massages as part of his shampooing, however, one of the salon’s patrons, Ms. Russell, purchased a gift certificate from him for a one-hour massage. Ms. Russell gave the certificate to her brother-in-law, Mr. Crane, as a birthday present. When Mr. Crane’s wife, who was also a customer of the salon and had [66]*66had her neck, shoulders, and arms massaged by Gonzalez during a shampoo, found out about the gift certificate, she scheduled an additional full-body massage for herself, both massages to take place at her home on September 13, 2003.

Ms. Crane had her massage first. During the massage, which occurred in Ms. Crane’s bedroom, Gonzalez allegedly inserted his finger into Ms. Crane’s vagina. She immediately jumped off the table and, wrapped only in the sheet that was covering her during the massage, ran downstairs and complained to her husband, who ordered Gonzalez to leave. As her husband ran upstairs to confront Gonzalez, Ms. Crane, still clad only in the sheet, ran to a neighbor’s house and reported the event to the neighbor.

At some point during the following week, Ms. Crane called a friend who was a sergeant at the Bethesda police department for some informal advice and, with that advice, then formally notified the police of the incident. She also informed the owner of the salon, although the sequence of the reports to the police and the owner of the salon is in dispute and underlies the central issue now before us. As a result of her complaint to the owner of the salon, Gonzalez was discharged from his employment. As a result of her report to the police, Gonzalez was charged in the District Court with second degree assault (Maryland Code, § 3-203 of the Criminal Law Article) and misrepresenting himself as a massage therapist (Maryland Code, § 3-5A-ll(b) of the Health Occupations Article).

Trial in the District Court occurred on November 13, 2003. Although Gonzalez speaks English, that is not his native tongue, and so, at his request, a Spanish interpreter, Ester Davis, was provided for him. Unfortunately, a malfunction of the recording equipment in the court that day led to none of the trial being recorded. Ms. Davis later testified in the Circuit Court that five witnesses testified at the District Court proceeding — Ms. Crane, Mr. Crane, Ms. Russell, Gonzalez, and Gonzalez’s wife. The District Court acquitted Gonzalez of misrepresenting himself to be a massage therapist but convicted him of second degree assault and sentenced him to 180 [67]*67days incarceration, all of which was suspended, a $500 fine, half of which was suspended, and one year of supervised probation.

Gonzalez noted an appeal to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County and elected a jury trial. The first witness was Ms. Crane, who testified to her version of what had occurred. On cross-examination, she was asked how long after the incident she waited to report it to the police and whether her report to the police occurred before or after she complained to the owner of the salon. Ms. Crane responded that she called her friend, the sergeant, the day after the incident, that she made a formal report to the police the following day (two days after the incident), and that she did not complain to the salon owner until after Gonzalez was arrested. She was very precise on that point. She said that the police had advised her not to talk with anyone at the salon until they obtained a warrant and that she did not go to the salon until seven days later. When asked whether she had testified in the District Court that she and Ms. Russell had gone to the salon three days after the incident, she responded “I 100 percent did not testify to that because that didn’t happen.”

After presenting testimony from Mr. Crane and from the neighbor, the State rested. Gonzalez, his wife, and the owner of the salon then testified for the defense. At the conclusion of that testimony, defense counsel called Ms. Davis, the person who had served as interpreter in the District Court, as a witness, to testify as to what Ms. Crane said at the District Court trial with respect to the sequence of her reports to the police and the owner of the salon. Counsel averred that Ms. Crane’s testimony there differed from that in the Circuit Court and that Ms. Davis would be an impeachment witness. Specifically, he proffered that she would testify that she remembered Ms. Crane’s testimony and that Ms. Crane testified in District Court that she went to the salon before she went to the police. Counsel also advised that he intended to call the District Court bailiff for the same purpose. The prosecutor, noting that neither witness had been disclosed, objected on the ground that it was improper to call a person [68]*68who served as interpreter as a witness and that her recollection of what occurred would be irrelevant in any event.

The court wanted to determine the extent of their respective recollections before allowing the interpreter or the bailiff to testify and, during the jury’s lunch break, subjected Ms. Davis to voir dire examination. The court never questioned the bailiff. Ms. Davis confirmed that she had interpreted for Gonzalez in the District Court, that she was present when Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
878 A.2d 604, 388 Md. 63, 2005 Md. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gonzalez-v-state-md-2005.