Jones v. State

616 A.2d 422, 328 Md. 654, 1992 Md. LEXIS 191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 11, 1992
DocketNo. 40
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 616 A.2d 422 (Jones 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
Jones v. State, 616 A.2d 422, 328 Md. 654, 1992 Md. LEXIS 191 (Md. 1992).

Opinion

MURPHY, Chief Judge.

John Jones seeks reversal of his criminal conviction on the ground that he was deprived of his constitutional right to counsel. This is so, he contends, because the lawyer who conducted his defense was then under suspension from the practice of law in Maryland for failure to pay the annual assessment required by law.

I

Consistent with ch. 779 of the Acts of 1965,1 the Clients’ Security Trust Fund of the Bar of Maryland was created by what is now Maryland Rule 1228. Its purpose, as set forth in paragraph b3 of the Rule, is “to maintain the integrity and protect the good name of the legal profession by reimbursing, to the extent authorized by this Rule and deemed proper and reasonable by the trustees, losses caused by defalcations of members of the Bar of the State of Maryland or out-of-state attorneys authorized to practice in this State.” Paragraph fl of the rule requires that each lawyer admitted to practice law in this State shall “as a condition precedent to the practice of law ... in this State, pay annually to the treasurer of the trust fund the sum ... [which the Court of Appeals] may fix.” Paragraph g2(i) provides that a lawyer who is in default of payment of the [657]*657assessment levied by the Fund shall, by order of this Court, be prohibited from further practice of law in the State. The rule further provides in paragraph g2(ii) that an attorney who practices law notwithstanding this Court’s order prohibiting such practice may be proceeded against for contempt of this Court.

II

Jones was tried before a jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City for murder in the first and second degrees, felony murder, rape in the first and second degrees, sexual offenses in the first, second, and third degrees, assault with intent to commit sexual offenses, armed robbery, kidnapping, carrying a deadly weapon with intent to injure, and two handgun violations.

The State’s principal witness, Bertrina McCants, testified that on the night of November 27-28, 1989, Jones and Gerald Parkey came to the apartment she shared with her companion, Willis Madison. She stated that while in the bedroom, she heard a disturbance from the living room, after which Jones entered the bedroom, ordered her at gunpoint to open a safe, and took money and jewelry. She testified further that Jones and Parkey then abducted her and drove her to two motels on the outskirts of Baltimore City, where they repeatedly raped and otherwise sexually attacked her before she escaped.

The State established that Willis Madison was found stabbed to death on the floor of the apartment. The prosecution’s corroborative evidence included Jones’s fingerprints found on a wine bottle at the apartment, and his palm and fingerprints found on a window of Parkey’s car. The State also presented scientific evidence related to semen stains found on McCants’s underpants and on a bed sheet retrieved from one of the motels. Analysis of the semen indicated that it had come from a man with type 0 blood; Jones’s blood tested type 0, while the blood of both Parkey and Madison did not. Expert microbiologists fur[658]*658ther testified for the State that DNA comparisons between the semen and Jones’s blood indicated a match that, expressed most conservatively in statistical form, would occur in 1 of 2,300 individuals.

Jones offered witnesses whose testimony suggested that he was elsewhere during the events in question. The defense also elicited from McCants that she had not attempted to escape earlier, even though she had several opportunities to do so.

The jury found Jones guilty on one count of committing a sexual offense in the third degree. It acquitted him on the charges of carrying a deadly weapon with intent to injure, committing a sexual offense in the second degree, and assault with intent to commit sexual offenses. The jury being deadlocked on the remaining charges, a mistrial was declared on those counts.

Prior to sentencing, the trial court (Prevas, J.) learned that Jones’s lawyer, Gerald Shipley, was in default of payment of his assessment to the Fund and had, by order of this Court dated June 6, 1988, been “prohibited from the further practice of law in the State of Maryland.” The court found that Shipley had no actual knowledge of this prohibition at the time of trial. It raised, sua sponte, the question of whether Shipley’s failure to pay the assessment, with its resulting prohibition from further law practice, denied Jones his right to counsel under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments, thereby rendering the verdict null and void. Judge Prevas concluded that a new trial was not required:

“[GJranting a motion to have a new trial because of the fact that Mr. Shipley was technically not licensed at that particular moment would neither protect the integrity of the judicial system nor vindicate the interests of a party victimized by the unlicensed practice of law.
“I don’t find that Mr. Jones was victimized at all. I think he had the counsel of his choice and employed the [659]*659strategy of his choice, and he got a result much better than he could have hoped for.
“There was no defect in the sense of the proceedings. Mr. Shipley didn’t do anything as a suspended lawyer that he wouldn’t have done as a lawyer in practice.
“So there is nothing the defendant has to complain of in terms of how the trial was conducted; but, secondly, there was no prejudice. Again, Mr. Shipley did everything that could be expected.”

The circuit court sentenced Jones to ten years in prison. He filed a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. On our own motion, we issued a writ of certiorari prior to consideration of the appeal by the intermediate appellate court to decide the novel question presented by the case.

Ill

Jones urges us to adopt a per se rule declaring that a criminal defense conducted by a suspended lawyer violates the constitutional guarantee to counsel. He insists that, for constitutional purposes, he was deprived of counsel altogether during his trial. He argues that this Court’s order of June 6, 1988, had caused Shipley’s name to be stricken from the list of members of the Bar in good standing and, in effect, had rendered him a non-lawyer ineligible to practice.2 Jones thus believes that the issue turns on Shipley’s status regarding bar membership.

As earlier observed, Rule 1228 provides a mechanism by which lawyers annually contribute a sum, not to [660]*660exceed $20, to a Fund used to satisfy certain losses incurred by clients of Maryland attorneys. See Monumental Life Ins. Co. v. Trustees, 322 Md. 442, 444, 588 A.2d 340 (1991). The Trust Fund thus functions as a protection for clients of unscrupulous lawyers who misappropriate money. Rule 1228 further sets forth the procedural steps leading to decertification of an attorney for nonpayment of the annual contribution. It also provides in paragraph g3 that a lawyer prohibited from practicing law for failure to pay the assessment may, upon payment of the arrearage, remove the default and have this Court rescind its order precluding the lawyer from further practice in Maryland.3

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Bluebook (online)
616 A.2d 422, 328 Md. 654, 1992 Md. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-state-md-1992.