Hooper v. State

443 A.2d 86, 293 Md. 162, 1982 Md. LEXIS 236
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 24, 1982
Docket[No. 72, September Term, 1981.]
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 443 A.2d 86 (Hooper 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
Hooper v. State, 443 A.2d 86, 293 Md. 162, 1982 Md. LEXIS 236 (Md. 1982).

Opinion

Eldridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The petitioners James L. Hooper and Melvin J. Kordon were charged in six-count indictments with false pretenses. The crimes were allegedly committed over a six-year period. Each count in both indictments covered the events of an entire calendar year, with each count alleging that the defendant obtained funds at different times during the year from the State of Maryland "by certain false pretenses” through the delivery to the Maryland Medical Assistance Program of "certain claims for reimbursement for alleged office visits which claims were in truth and in fact false.”

*164 Upon the defendants’ motion, the Circuit Court for Montgomery County dismissed the indictments on the ground that they were duplicitous. The State appealed, and the Court of Special Appeals reversed in an unreported opinion. This Court then granted the defendants’ petition for a writ of certiorari.

At oral argument before us on December 2, 1981, counsel for the defendants began by informing the Court that, during the pendency of the appeal, the State had filed an information against each defendant charging the identical offenses involved in the present case. Each information contained 330 counts alleging false pretenses, with 47 of the counts charging offenses occurring in 1972, 64 counts in 1973,42 counts in 1974, 67 counts in 1975, 84 counts in 1976 and 25 counts in 1977. Defendants’ counsel represented that the trial under the new informations was scheduled to begin on December 14, 1981, and that the State had taken the position that it would move to "drop” the instant case when that trial commenced.

Before hearing defense counsel on the merits of the duplicity issue, we asked the Assistant Attorney General representing the State to address this procedural matter. The Assistant Attorney General began by saying that "the reason that the State at this point has not dropped this appeal is that we are now on a petition for a writ of certiorari which was granted to the other side.” The State then represented that it was "going ahead with the trial” on the informations scheduled in twelve days and that, as soon as the trial began, the present prosecutions under the indictments would be dropped. In response to suggestions from the Court that an opinion handed down after the trial on the informations would be advisory, and that the State was in effect asking the Court to render an advisory opinion, the Assistant Attorney General answered that the State was "willing to dismiss.” The State went on to say that it would "move to dismiss on the ground of mootness.” The following colloquy then took place between different members of the Court and counsel:

*165 "COURT 1 : Do you now make such a motion?
"ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL: I will make such a motion. Thank you.
"COURT: Mr. Baron and Mr. Miller [defense counsel], what do you want to do? We have no motion filed by you to do anything.
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: No, Your Honor, we don’t. Frankly, we had felt that this is an important issue. And, frankly, researching the whole question of when it is and when it isn’t duplicitous, if anybody can find a clear bright line in there, I’d sure like to trade places with them, because I can’t find it. And, what we had hoped was that the — this whole pending information would be put in abeyance until we got a clear signal from this Court as to whether or not the charging — the original charging instrument in this case was good or bad.
"COURT: But there isn’t any way you can object. .. . The effect of what the State has done is to nol pros this case.
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, so be it. But, we’re pretty far down the road at this point, and it seems to me it was unseemly for the State —
"COURT: The State has a right to nol pros, to abandon this one and proceed on to another one.
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: What is unseemly is that they waited until now to do it. They should have dropped it, should have ... made the election way back.
"COURT: Even if it is unseemly, there’s nothing we can do about it.
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: Unless the Court decides that what they’re going to do is stay the *166 pending information until we’ve had to chance to argue.
"COURT: But the State has nol prossed the case.
"COURT: They have every right to do that.
* * *
"COURT: Do you want to confer with [co-counsel] ?
* * *
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: I’ve got a wonderful argument here on the issue of duplicity, if you’d like to hear it.
* * *
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: Your honor, what I’m hearing from the Court is that we really don’t have much choice. If they do have unfettered discretion to drop the case, and they have made such a motion, it seems to me the plug has been pulled.... This whole proceeding is nugatory. And, I can’t really oppose the dropping of the charges against my client.
"COURT: Maybe you can bargain to get the first charging document back. You were in a better position with that.
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: No, I don’t think so.
"COURT: Well, I’m not sure the first charging document, after what [the Assistant Attorney General] says, is any longer alive.
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, it was alive until
"COURT: I think it was alive until [the Assistant Attorney General] opened her mouth.
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: Right.
*167 "COURT: I don’t think it’s alive any longer.
"DEFENSE COUNSEL: If that is the Court’s position, as I said, I’m perfectly prepared to argue duplicity, but I don’t want to waste the Court’s time.
"COURT: I think you’re [position is] well taken, what you’ve done. So we’ll proceed to the next case.”

Consequently, there was no oral argument on the duplicity issue.

Next in January 1982, the State filed in this Court a "Motion to Withdraw Motion To Dismiss Appeal.” In that motion, the State recited that the trial on the informations was not held on December 14, 1981, because "no courtroom or judge was available, and both parties were informed that none would be available within the immediate future.” According to the State, a new trial date has been scheduled for April 26,1982, but because of certain pending motions to dismiss, the trial may be delayed beyond that date.

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Bluebook (online)
443 A.2d 86, 293 Md. 162, 1982 Md. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooper-v-state-md-1982.