Graham v. State

807 A.2d 75, 146 Md. App. 327, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 150
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 6, 2002
Docket1246, September Term, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 807 A.2d 75 (Graham v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. State, 807 A.2d 75, 146 Md. App. 327, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 150 (Md. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

MOYLAN, Judge.

Although the transcript of the suppression hearing, which is all we are going to look at on this appeal, is, from the formality of the introductions to the rendition of the judge’s ruling, a bare forty pages in length, and although the testimony of a single police officer, which is all we are going to evaluate (and, indeed, all that we, if properly disciplined, are *337 entitled to evaluate), is confined within seventeen of those pages, the appeal presents us with a bountiful smorgasbord of closely intertwined Fourth Amendment issues.

Involved are such items as 1) determining the proper factual context for appellate review of a suppression ruling; 2) the allocation of the burden of proof with respect to the reasonableness of a warrantless search or seizure; 3) a mere accosting versus an unconstitutional seizure of the person as the context for evaluating a question of subsequent consent; 4) the true Fourth Amendment significance of a “frisk” or pat-down; 5) the required justification for a Terry-frisk; 6) the dubious notion of a consensual pat-down; 7) the “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine'; 8) the attenuation of taint; 9) both the voluntariness and the scope of an ostensibly consensual automobile search; and 10), perhaps most significantly, the pro’s and con’s of “the field interview” as a constitutional term of art.

Out of this series of interdependent Fourth Amendment sub-analyses, there emerges with unmistakable clarity a picture of a police procedure that is, at least as employed in this case, a wolf in sheep’s clothing. The innocuous surface trappings are all those of a mere accosting, something long sanctioned by the Supreme Court as an everyday occurrence that does not even catch the eye of the Fourth Amendment. The underlying reality, however, is a borderline investigative procedure whereby the police seek to enjoy the full Fourth Amendment benefits of both a Terry-stop and a Terry-frisk without paying the attendant Fourth Amendment dues. Contributing to the camouflaging process is the linguistic recasting of an accosting into something called the “field interview.” Behind that reassuring mask, however, frequently lurks what is, in actuality, a stop-and-frisk. A stop-and-frisk by any other name is still a stop-and-frisk.

The Present Case

The appellant, Robert Graham, was convicted in a non-jury trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City of the possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute it. His single appellate *338 contention is that the trial judge erroneously failed to grant his pretrial motion to suppress the fruits of an unconstitutional search and seizure.

Selecting the Appropriate Appellate Story Line

Before launching into a statement of background facts, it behooves us to make a conscious decision as to what sort of a drift we want those facts to take. At the very least, we probably have a choice of factual narratives that are 1) State-biased, 2) defense-biased, or 3) neutral. Contrary to the instinctive assumption, “neutral” may be, for most appellate purposes, the least desirable choice. An explanatory observation would seem to be in order.

A perennial problem for appellate lawyers and appellate judges alike is that of constructing an appropriate version of the facts of a case. The subtle problem is that, except for a case that has proceeded on an agreed statement of facts, there is no version of the facts that is necessarily appropriate for all purposes. As with the classic Japanese film “Rashamen,” there are almost always widely varying accounts of what happened out there on the street or out there in the forest, and one version is not to be preferred over another until we know the purpose for which the selection must be made. Which version should be pulled from the shelf on a particular occasion depends on what we are going to use it for.

In a criminal case, there are almost always no less than three versions of what happened. Subject only to the limitation that there must be some minimal support by way of admissible evidence, there is 1) an extreme version most favorable to the defendant; 2) an extreme version most favorable to the State; and 3) at some intermediate point between those two extremes, a more likely version of what probably really happened.

Ironically, that third version — the attempt to approximate ultimate truth — is, generally if not universally speaking, not appropriate grist for the appellate mill. It is the subject matter of persuasion, as a matter of fact, and not of produc *339 tion, as a matter of law. It is the exclusive province of the fact finders, a province wherein appellate courts do not enter, but only patrol the borders. It is the broad playing field whereon the resolution of factual questions may take unpredictable bounces and where appellate referees do not presume to second-guess those bounces. It is the arena where the fact finders are free to assess credibilities, to weigh evidence, and to feel and to sense what likely happened, as a matter of fact. Jones v. State, 343 Md. 448, 465, 682 A.2d 248 (1996).

It was of this more reasonable and more tempered, but sometimes immaterial, version of the facts that we spoke in Moosavi v. State, 118 Md.App. 683, 692, 703 A.2d 1302 (1998), reversed on other grounds, Moosavi v. State, 355 Md. 651, 736 A.2d 285 (1999):

This hypothetical version of how we would probably have viewed the evidence and of how the trial judge apparently viewed the evidence, of course, has no appellate significance. It is, after all, a neutral or intermediate version of the evidence. As such, it might have interest for an historian but not for an appellate court. It is only the two most slanted versions of the evidence that have operative legal significance for purpose of appellate review.

(Emphasis supplied).

Appellate concern is, rather, with the two extreme versions — not with the playing field but with the respective end zones, where forfeitures are declared as a matter of law. It is here that even best-case scenarios are sometimes deemed so inadequate, in terms of naked production, as to be disqualified, as a matter of law, from entry onto the fact-finding playing field. That monitoring of legal sufficiency is the only proper function of the legal referees with respect to fact-finding.

Sometimes, depending of course upon the issue, the appellate court and the trial court alike are enjoined to take that extreme version of the facts most slanted in favor of the defendant. Of such a version we also spoke in Moosavi, 118 Md.App. at 692, 703 A.2d 1302:

*340 Had the questions in issue been such things as whether the defendant had generated a genuine jury issue, to wit, a prima facie case, with respect to, e.g., entrapment, self-defense, or mitigation or whether there had been enough evidence to support a defense-requested jury instruction, the appellate court and the trial judge alike would then have looked to that extreme version of the facts most slanted in favor of the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
807 A.2d 75, 146 Md. App. 327, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-state-mdctspecapp-2002.