Green v. State

371 A.2d 1112, 35 Md. App. 510, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 501
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 11, 1977
Docket699, September Term, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 371 A.2d 1112 (Green 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
Green v. State, 371 A.2d 1112, 35 Md. App. 510, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 501 (Md. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

*512 Moylan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Involved in this appeal are several subtle wrinkles of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment law on identification, the resolution of which is implicit in United States v. Wade, 388 U. S. 218, 87 S. Ct. 1926, 18 L.Ed.2d 1149 (1967); Gilbert v. California, 388 U. S. 263, 87 S. Ct. 1951, 18 L.Ed.2d 1178 (1967); Stovall v. Denno, 388 U. S. 293, 87 S. Ct. 1967, 18 L.Ed.2d 1199 (1967); and Smith and Samuels v. State, 6 Md. App. 59, 250 A. 2d 285 (1969), but which have not before been flatly ironed out. The appellant, Milton Thomas Green, was convicted by a Montgomery County jury of armed robbery and attendant offenses. Although he raises six assignments of error, the most significant one is that dealing with identification.

Fundamental to an understanding of the identification problem here (or anywhere) is an appreciation that the suppression hearing contemplated by Wade-Gilbert-Stovall is but a specific instance of a more generic constitutional device — a “taint” hearing under the “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine. We are here asked to consider, in an identification setting, 1) what is a primary illegality, and 21 what constitutes an exploitation of a primary illegality.

The key dispute in the case was over the criminal agency of the appellant. Pivotal on that question was the in-court identification of the appellant made by the robbery victim. The victim was Commander Rene Alfredo Molina, a member of the Ecuadorian Navy assigned to Washington. Commander Molina’s native language is Spanish and it was necessary at trial to employ the services of a Spanish-English interpreter. His, however, was only one of the language problems. At approximately 11:15 p.m. on November 16, 1975, Commander Molina had dropped his wife and three other persons off at their apartment in the Wheaton area of Montgomery County following their return from the Dulles International Airport. Commander Molina drove to the parking area of his apartment complex to park the car for the evening. He noticed that he was being followed by a Datsun sportscar, occupied by two persons. He was ultimately held up at gunpoint by the passenger of that *513 sportscar and had his own car keys taken from him by the driver of the sportscar. Commander Molina was unable to identify the appellant in at least one pretrial photographic viewing. The critical impasse in this case occurred as, during Commander Molina’s testimony, the question of in-court identification drew near.

An In-Court Identification Wets Made

Before focusing in upon that impasse, we leap forward to state that, in our judgment, an ultimate in-court identification was made. The State seeks adroitly to dodge the constitutional issue by urging upon us the factual proposition that no in-court identification was ever made and that the question of procedural inadequacies is, therefore, moot. The premises for our conclusion are these. Commander Molina’s narrative definitely establishes that both of his assailants were Negro males. The record further establishes unequivocally that at this critical juncture in the trial, the appellant was the only Negro male in the courtroom. When, therefore, the robbery victim responded in the affirmative that he did see one of his assailants (the one who had been the driver of the Datsun sportscar ) in the courtroom, this was an effective identification of the appellant notwithstanding the fact that all systems ground to an abrupt halt before the appellant was literally pointed to or identified by name. That the intellectual thought process involved two steps rather than one does not diminish the end product that the appellant was effectively singled out. The process of elimination is within a jury’s intellectual competence. We hold that an in-court identification was made and we proceed from that point.

The Point Was Preserved

Although, as will be more fully discussed hereinafter, sound and unsound arguments mingled confusingly into each other and although legal discussions ran off on unrelated tangents, the appellant clearly sought an exclusionary “taint” hearing before any in-court iden *514 tification should be made and eaually clearly objected to its denial. The problem in this case is not with the state of the law but rather with the fact that two or three cognate issues blurred together and that the common attention of appellant’s counsel, the assistant prosecutor and the trial judge never focused on the same question. The exchanges among all three parties were not sharply responsive and there appears to have been a communications gap as to precisely what the material issue was. The preliminary skirmishing began at the following point:

“MR, MILLER: It would seem to me we have reached a point where Mr. Heeney is going to get into both out-of-court identification and in-court identification. I think we ought to exclude the jury at this time.
THE COURT: I understood that he could not make an out-of-court identification from the pictures. Is that correct?
MR. HEENEY: That is correct.
MR. MILLER: But he now wants to make an in-court. identification. I think the lack of the out-of-court identification may very well taint any in-court identification.
THE COURT: We are going to have to take that when we get to it, Mr. Miller. If he wants to bring out as part of the State’s case that he could not make this identification from the photo array, I think he is privileged to do that. I don’t think that —
MR. MILLER: I understand. But at that point in time when any out-of-court identification proceeds to in-court —
THE COURT: He hasn’t asked that question yet. It may be he is not going to ask it.
MR. HEENEY: I am. My position on this, and I think you are right, it is premature, but my position is that once I ask for the in-court identification, it is Mr. Miller’s burden to show *515 somehow or another the failure to make an identification out of court tainted the in-court; the absence of an identification tainted it. I don’t think that is what the law is. The law is something has to be wrong, where you have to do something wrong to screw up the identification, to taint it, to make it illegal. That is the issue.
THE COURT: I think, Mr. Miller, that when we get to that point we will have to take that one at a time. I think he can testify that he was shown these photo arrays and that he could not make an identification. That is not objectionable.
MR.

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

Related

Parker v. State
742 A.2d 28 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1999)
Chase v. State
706 A.2d 613 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1998)
State v. La Madrid
1997 NMCA 057 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1997)
Meyer v. State
406 A.2d 427 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
State v. Cefalo
396 A.2d 233 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1979)
Godwin v. State
382 A.2d 596 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1978)
Green v. State
380 A.2d 43 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
371 A.2d 1112, 35 Md. App. 510, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-state-mdctspecapp-1977.