Huggins v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 7, 2022
Docket59/21
StatusPublished

This text of Huggins v. State (Huggins 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
Huggins v. State, (Md. 2022).

Opinion

Luis Felepe Huggins v. State of Maryland, No. 59, September Term 2021. Opinion by Gould, J.

SUPPRESSION OF EVIDENCE – OBJECTION AT TRIAL

The right to appeal the denial of a motion to suppress evidence is not waived if the defendant does not object to the admission of the relevant evidence at trial. The right is not waived whether the defendant remains silent or affirmatively states there is no objection. Circuit Court for Howard County Case No.: C-13-CR-19-000521 Argued: May 5, 2022

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 59

September Term, 2021

LUIS FELEPE HUGGINS

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND

Fader, C.J. Watts Hotten Booth Biran Gould Eaves,

JJ.

Opinion by Gould, J.

Filed: July 7, 2022

Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2022-07-07 14:51-04:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk On February 27, 2019, Luis Felepe Huggins was indicted in the Circuit Court for

Howard County on charges of possessing a regulated firearm after having been convicted

of a crime of violence and other related crimes. Mr. Huggins moved to suppress the gun

and the loaded magazine that police recovered inside a closed overnight bag while

conducting a warrantless search of Mr. Huggins’s hotel room. After an evidentiary

hearing, the Honorable Timothy J. McCrone denied the motion to suppress.

The State filed a superseding indictment under a new case number to add additional

charges. Mr. Huggins renewed his motion to suppress in the new case. This time, the

motion to suppress was heard by the Honorable Richard S. Bernhardt. At the hearing on

the motion, defense counsel explained that the motion had been argued and denied in the

case filed under the original indictment and that Mr. Huggins renewed the motion under

the new case number only to ensure that the denial of the motion to suppress was preserved

for appeal. Judge Bernhardt understood, explaining:

Now, my reading of the two indictments, it seems to me that the motion that was litigated in front of Judge McCrone is precisely the same motion that is before this Court. The new counts on the superseding indictment don’t impact the motion, doesn’t create any legal arguments that weren’t available before, doesn’t include any evidence that wasn’t available before, doesn’t include any witnesses that weren’t relevant before. The new counts have nothing to do with the motion. That’s the way I looked at it.

Judge Bernhardt further explained that “for judicial economy, it makes sense to just

incorporate the old motion,” and that he “wouldn’t rehear it because we’re just not going

to do do-overs unless there’s a reason for it, a unique reason for it.” Judge Bernhardt

suggested that defense counsel scan the transcript from the prior motions hearing and have it incorporated into the record. Defense counsel agreed to do so but emphasized that Mr.

Huggins was preserving his objections from the original motion. The State agreed.

Judge Bernhardt directly addressed Mr. Huggins to make sure he understood what

was happening:

THE COURT: What’s being agreed to by your attorney and the State’s attorney today is, instead of just having a brand-new hearing, bringing witnesses in and starting all over again, we’re going to take a transcript that’s a full and complete transcript of the motion before Judge McCrone. Mr. Clerk will scan it in, and it’ll be incorporated by agreement into the record of this case. In other words, that will be the Motion for Suppression in this case. By agreement, six exhibits that were presented before Judge McCrone will become part of this record, too. So if you are found guilty in this case, the Appellate Courts will have a transcript to read. I mean, a transcript is a transcript.

THE DEFENDANT: Right.

THE COURT: They’ll have this transcript to read which will be the entire hearing before Judge McCrone and they’ll have the same exhibits to look at. In other words, [it] seems to me that they’ll be in the same position that they would have been had you been found guilty in the first case and then you appealed it. Have I made myself clear to you?

THE DEFENDANT: Yeah, I understand.

As they waited for the transcript to be scanned, Judge Bernhardt stated:

[W]hat [defense counsel is] doing now, the Public Defender’s Office, I did that for like fifteen years, most of it in this county. And what I say is – you know, I don’t know anything about your case beyond what I’ve seen in court. I don’t know about your conversations with her nor am I asking. None of my business. But many times, the motion litigation is the most important part of a case. I mean, I would have guys where stuff is in their pocket. There’s no doubt. Everyone knows the stuff was in their pocket and nobody’s disputing that stuff was in their pocket. The real question is, when the police officer’s hand went in his pocket, was that okay? So, we’d litigate motions and if I won, I won. Good for us. The stuff is suppressed. The jury gets hung. If I lost, well, then I lost. But you can’t plead guilty and have an appeal.

2 *** *** ***

And the value to the Defendant is that the Appellate issue, whether or not the suppression ruling by the judge was right, is preserved and you can appeal it . . . .

The transcript and all exhibits from the motion filed in the first case were admitted

and then incorporated into the record. No additional argument was heard.

During Mr. Huggins’s subsequent trial, the police officer testified about his search

of the overnight bag, and the items found therein—the handgun, pictures of the handgun,

and the gun’s magazine—were admitted into evidence. As each was offered into evidence,

defense counsel stated: “No objection.”

Mr. Huggins was convicted of first-degree assault, use of a firearm during the

commission of a crime of violence, possession of a regulated firearm after having been

convicted of a crime of violence, and possession of ammunition after having been

prohibited from possessing a regulated firearm.

Mr. Huggins appealed, arguing in part that the circuit court erred in denying his

motion to suppress. In an unreported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals sua sponte

considered whether Mr. Huggins had waived this argument. Luis Felepe Huggins v. State,

No. 816, Sept. Term 2020, 2021 WL 4893362 (filed Oct. 20, 2021). Relying primarily on

Jackson v. State, 52 Md. App. 327 (1982), Erman v. State, 49 Md. App. 605 (1981), and

Brice v. State, 225 Md. App. 666 (2015), the Court concluded that Mr. Huggins had waived

his right to appeal the denial of his suppression motion, stating:

In short, if a court denies a motion to suppress and the defendant says nothing at all when the State moves to introduce the challenged evidence at trial, the

3 defendant has preserved an objection to the denial of the motion to suppress. Jackson v. State, 52 Md. App. at 331. If, on the other hand, the court denies a motion [to] suppress and the defendant affirmatively states that the defense has no objection to the introduction of the challenged evidence at trial, the defendant has waived the objection to the denial of the motion to suppress. Erman v. State, 49 Md. App. at 630.

The Honorable Daniel A. Friedman filed a concurring opinion. Concluding he was

bound by that Court’s decision in Jackson, 52 Md. App. 327, Judge Friedman concurred

in the result, but wrote separately to emphasize his belief that Mr. “Huggins has a strong

claim that the warrantless search of his closed bag found in his hotel room was

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