Martin v. State

116 A.2d 685, 49 Del. 344, 10 Terry 344, 1955 Del. Super. LEXIS 91
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 1, 1955
Docket353, Civil Action, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 116 A.2d 685 (Martin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. State, 116 A.2d 685, 49 Del. 344, 10 Terry 344, 1955 Del. Super. LEXIS 91 (Del. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

Herrmann, J.:

In the Municipal Court of the City of Wilmington, the defendant below (hereinafter called defendant) entered a plea of guilty to an information which charged that he * * did then and there operate a motor vehicle * * * recklessly, or at a rate of speed greater than was reasonable and proper ” * * or so as to have caused a collision * * * or so as to have endangered life or limb * * The Municipal Court imposed a sentence of imprisonment for thirty days 1 and denied the defendant’s application for the allowance of an appeal to this court. The defendant obtained the issuance of a writ of certiorari out of this court and he now asserts that the proceedings of the court helow were conducted unlawfully because:

1) The information failed to plainly and fully inform the defendant of the nature of the accusation against him; and
2) The Municipal Court is unlawfully depriving the defendant of an appeal to this court.

There is no merit in the contention that the judgment below must be reversed because the information was “vague, uncertain, amhiguous and duplicitous.” It does not appear that such objection to the information was made prior to the plea and sentence. The failure to make a timely objection of this type constitutes a waiver thereof. See Ray v. State, 6 Boyce 440, 100 A. 472; Criminal Rule 12(b) (2), Del. C. Ann.

*346 The second contention of the defendant presents more difficulty. It is asserted that the Municipal Court is wrongfully depriving the defendant of a statutory right of appeal from that corut to this court. This contention is based upon the following provision of the Motor Vehicle Law, being 21 Del. C. § 708:

“Any person convicted under the provisions of this title [Motor Vehicles] shall have the right of an appeal, unless otherwise stated in this title to the Superior Court, upon giving bond in the sum of $500 to the State with surety satisfactory to the Mayor, justice of the peace, or a judge before whom such person was convicted, such appeal to be taken and bond given within 15 days from the time of conviction. Such appeal shall operate as a stay or supersedeas of all proceedings in the court below in the same manner that a certiorari from the Superior Court operates. The taking of such appeal shall constitute a waiver by the appellant of his right to a writ of certiorari in the Superior Court.”

The question for decision is this: Does the word “convicted”, as used in 21 Del. C. § 708, include the status of the defendant who pleaded guilty in the court below?

The word “convicted” is ambiguous: it is “verbum aequivocum”. Francis v. Weaver, 76 Md. 457, 25 A. 413, 415. The meaning of the word usually varies with the context of the statute in which it is used. See State v. DeBery, Me., 103 A. 2d 523, 524. In its technical legal sense, the word includes the status of being guilty of, and sentenced for, a criminal offense, whether that status is established after confession of guilt by a guilty plea or after the decision of a tribunal upon an assertion of innocence. See State v. Exum, 3 W. W. Flarr. 93, 130 A. 854. In common parlance, however, a person has been “convicted” when he has asserted his innocence and has been found guilty by jury or court. See Francis v. Weaver, supra; Commonwealth v. Minnich, 250 Pa. 363, 95 A. 565, 566, L. R. A. 1916B, 950; Commonwealth v. Gorham, 99 Mass. 420. In The American College Dictionary, *347 the word “convict” is defined: “To prove or declare guilty of an offense, esp. after a legal trial.”

A similar problem of statutory construction confronted the Supreme Court of Colorado in People v. Brown, 87 Colo. 261, 286 P. 859, 860. The Court there stated:

“So numerous and irreconcilable are the definitions of ‘conviction,’ as found in the adjudicated cases, that authority, as a guide to interpretation, fails us. An examination of 13 C. J. pp. 903 to 910, inclusive, and the cases there cited, will disclose that the word may mean anything from an inner consciousness of guilt to a combination of indictment, trial, verdict, order, and sentence, matured into finality by lapse of time. Hence we turn for aid to the more promising rule of reason. To the layman of average education and intelligence the statement that one has been ‘convicted’ of a crime conveys the impression that he who maintained his innocence has been legally declared guilty. Let the average lawyer be told that an acquaintance has been sentenced for a crime, and his natural inquiry would be, ‘Did he plead guilty or was he convicted?’ Before sentence can be pronounced in a criminal case the record must show guilt. This may appear by plea admitted on order, or by conviction. In this sense the word conveys the idea of the judicial determination of a contested fact as distinguished from the judicial entry of an admitted fact. In such sense, we are confident, the lawmakers used it in the section before us. Otherwise it would have been easy and conclusive to have said, ‘If any person sentenced for any criminal offense before any justice of the peace shall wish to appeal to the county court,’ etc.”

For the reasons so well expressed in the Brown case, supra, it is concluded that, in 21 Del. C. § 708, the Legislature used the word “convicted” according to its common, usual and ordinary meaning, i.e., a judicial determination of guilt after an assertion of innocence and not merely a judicial entry of an admission of guilt after a guilty plea.

*348 The defendant relies upon State v. Stevens, 3 W. W. Harr. 479, 139 A. 78. In that ease, the defendant pleaded guilty in the Municipal Court to a charge of assault and battery and the sentence was a fine of $500 and imprisonment for two years. The defendant there claimed a right of appeal to this court under the provision of the Delaware Constitution which states that there shall be an appeal to this court “in all cases in which the sentence shall be imprisonment exceeding one (1) month, or a fine exceeding One Hundred Dollars ($100.00).” Del. Const. Art. 4, § 28, Del. C. Ann. This court there held that the method of ascertaining guilt did not affect the constitutional right of appeal and that the defendant was not barred from his constitutional appeal to this court by reason of his admission of guilt by his guilty plea entered in the lower court.

The Stevens case is not helpful in answering the question here presented for decision. The word “sentence” 2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 A.2d 685, 49 Del. 344, 10 Terry 344, 1955 Del. Super. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-state-delsuperct-1955.