Gregory v. State

983 A.2d 542, 189 Md. App. 20, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 175
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 24, 2009
Docket2204, September Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 983 A.2d 542 (Gregory 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
Gregory v. State, 983 A.2d 542, 189 Md. App. 20, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 175 (Md. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*24 HOLLANDER, J.

Donald Ray Gregory, appellant, was charged with attempted felony theft and attempted unlawful taking of a motor vehicle. At his jury trial in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County, he claimed that he did not intend to steal the vehicle, and took it because he mistakenly believed that he was God. The jury convicted appellant of both offenses. 1

On appeal, Gregory presents the following questions for our review:

I. Did the trial court err in failing to properly advise the appellant about his right not to testify?
II. Did the trial court err in allowing appellant to be impeached with his prior convictions for robbery and theft when appellant was on trial for attempted theft?
III. Did the trial court err in failing to give the jury instruction on mistake of fact?
IV. Was the evidence sufficient to sustain the convictions for attempted unlawful taking of a motor vehicle and attempted theft over $500?

Finding no error, we shall affirm the judgments of the circuit court.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

The following evidence was adduced at the trial in November 2007.

On May 17, 2007, Brenda Huffman lived on Laurel Road in Mardela Springs and owned a 2004 Hummer H2 truck. She testified that, on that date, she went out with her mother, and the two returned to her home at approximately 3:35 p.m. At that time, she saw an unfamiliar truck in her front driveway, which was running. In her rear driveway, where her 2004 *25 Hummer H2 was parked, Huffman discovered appellant sitting in the driver’s seat, with “his hands ... in the floorboard area.” At trial, she identified appellant as the individual she observed on the driver’s side of her vehicle.

When Huffman asked appellant “what he was doing,” appellant exited the Hummer and told Huffman that he “needed to take the truck.” Huffman asked appellant “what was wrong[,]” because he “just didn’t seem right and he kept saying he was in distress.” Appellant replied “that God told him [that] he could take the truck.” After appellant told Huffman that “he wasn’t going to leave without the truck[,]” Huffman called the police.

Huffman had left the Hummer unlocked, although the keys to the Hummer were not in the vehicle. She examined the interior of the vehicle and saw “wiring hanging” underneath the dashboard of the Hummer. These wires were not hanging down before appellant entered her vehicle. Huffman purchased the Hummer for $49,000.

Joyce Caudill, Huffman’s mother, testified that she drove her daughter home on May 17, 2007. Upon arriving, they saw a man in her daughter’s truck. Ms. Caudill identified appellant as the man. Ms. Caudill and her daughter approached appellant and asked him what he was doing. Appellant told them that “God had told him to take the truck,” and he could not leave without it. While inside of the truck, appellant was leaning toward the floorboard of the vehicle. Ms. Caudill told appellant to get out of the truck and he complied.

Trooper Richard Lee Hagel, Jr. of the Maryland State Police, responded to Huffman’s home at approximately 3:59 p.m. He saw appellant “standing approximately [twenty] feet behind the Hummer[.]” Appellant’s vehicle, a 1991 or 1992 Blazer, was parked at the end of the driveway, and it was running. Appellant, who was cooperative, told the trooper that

he was driving by and ... heard a voice inside his truck that told him [that] he had to take the Hummer. So he stopped, pulled into the driveway, and attempted to take the *26 Hummer. He said that the voice he had heard in his truck, he believed there was a device in his truck that allowed ... God to speak to him.

The defense moved for judgment of acquittal. As to the charge of motor vehicle theft, appellant’s attorney argued that “the State has not shown that the Defendant’s actions were knowing and willful____” The court denied the motion.

Appellant was the sole witness for the defense. We quote from his direct examination:

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: [0]n May 17th at any time during the day were you in Mardela ... ?
[APPELLANT]: At Brenda Huffman’s place, the place where I was arrested, that’s where I was but I had been there well before the police was called, possibly an hour or two hours before the police was called.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: When did you arrive there?
[APPELLANT]: [Approximately [fifty] minutes to an hour before her daughter’s school bus arrived. ■
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And what were you doing there?
[APPELLANT]: I was having vehicle trouble. My intention was to pull in her driveway, [make a] three point turn [and] head back to where I just came from[.]
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Well, after you pulled into her driveway, what happened?
[APPELLANT]: My truck—well, when I went to slow down to pull into her driveway, there was an issue about this truck coming to a stop....
So I came in at a speed more than enough to slow down and I buckled into their driveway____So I got in there and I heard this sound, which I hadn’t heard before, as if something snapped----And I hit like it went in gear ... but the tires just spun....
*27 So I was just at this house and I seen the driveway facing, there’s a house right there, I see a Hummer truck[.] ...
... I’m just sitting there, I’m thinking about this Hummer, I’m looking at the Hummer, I’m looking at the truck, I’m like[,] well[,] I keep going through so much stuff with my truck, I keep having to get it fixed every now and then[.]
So I said well, I’ll keep going through the stuff. So it told me that this Hummer truck, ... once the voice said that, it told me that, said this Hummer, the only thing in the yard said this Hummer, it said, told me the Hummer was mine.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: The voice told you to take the Hummer? Did you know whose voice it was?
[APPELLANT]: ... I actually thought that my truck was communicating with me----
Anyhow, I got that telepathy, it was telepathed to me that message there that this Hummer was mine----
And so anyway, ... I’m looking at the Hummer. I opened the door.... I did not get inside of it. And then I closed the door. And I was headed back to my truck. [A]t that exact time, ... the school bus was coming up. And it was a girl, I suppose she was about [eleven] or [thirteen] years old[.] And ... what I said to the little girl, I said listen. I said I am God and my truck knows that I am God. I said my truck will not leave your yard. I said that I want your family to let me have this Hummer.... And she said, well, you want me to get my dad. I said, yeah.

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Bluebook (online)
983 A.2d 542, 189 Md. App. 20, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-state-mdctspecapp-2009.