Moosavi v. State

703 A.2d 1302, 118 Md. App. 683, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 7, 1998
Docket54, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 703 A.2d 1302 (Moosavi 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
Moosavi v. State, 703 A.2d 1302, 118 Md. App. 683, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 3 (Md. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

MOYLAN, Judge.

A seemingly insignificant little case may sometimes provide revealing insight into the fundamental operation of our criminal justice system. This may be such a case. In any event, we seize this case as a vehicle through which to offer, interspersed with our formal legal holdings, some observations on the basic nature of appellate review of a criminal conviction.

The numbing reality of senseless and tragic civilian bombings over the last half-decade has so sensitized the national temper that even a passing allusion to a “bombing” or to “blowing up” something will, inevitably, trigger an immediate and decisive reaction. The danger, of course, is that once mobilized to react immediately and decisively, we sometimes overreact. The trigger can easily become a hair-trigger. Locating the almost indiscernible line between reaction and overreaction, moreover, is something that is, generally speaking, beyond the competence of legal rulings and must, in our juridical system, be assigned to the “sensing” or the “feeling” — the proverbial common sense — of lay jurors.

The Present Case

The appellant, Mohammed Moosavi, was convicted by a Frederick County jury of making a false statement involving a bomb threat in contravention of Md.Code Ann. Art. 27, § 151A. On this appeal, he raises two contentions:

*686 1) The evidence was not legally sufficient to support the verdict; and

2) The trial judge erroneously permitted the State to call one Ginger Fogle as a rebuttal witness.

Evidentiary Insufficiency: The Appellant’s Claim

We would agree, if we could, with the appellant’s first contention that the evidence was not legally sufficient to support his conviction, but we would do so for a reason totally unrelated to the appellate contention raised in that regard. Before turning to the very different reason why we think the evidence did not support the verdict, we deem it appropriate, for illustrative purposes, to explain in some detail why we reject the appellant’s specific argument in that regard.

His position is that the total context of the incident should have made it clear that he never intended to bomb the Chevy Chase Bank or any of its branches and that any words he might have spoken even alluding to such a possibility were indisputably nothing more than the undifferentiated venting of anger and frustration. The appellant seems to accept the fact that he was charged with threatening to bomb the bank and confines his challenge to the legal sufficiency of the State’s case to the absence of adequate proof of any actual intent or criminal mens rea.

A Challenge To The Adequacy of Persuasion Is Not A Challenge To The Adequacy of Production

Before turning to the potentially dispositive issue which the appellant did not raise on appeal, we will, for the sake of argument and just for the moment, accept the context in which he raises his challenge and explain why his argument cannot prevail. In a lay sense, his argument is actually very persuasive. What he overlooks is that the questions of what is persuasive and who should win the persuasion war are not appellate concerns. Owens-Corning v. Garrett, 343 Md. 500, 521-22, 682 A.2d 1143 (1996) (‘We refuse to reevaluate the evidence and invade the territory of the jury.”)

*687 From the point of view of the appellant’s argument based on persuasiveness, it is unfortunate that he was not able to try the case before the three judges who are the members of this appellate panel. We would probably have been a good jury for him. We were not in the courtroom, of course, and had no opportunity to observe the demeanor and the manner of testifying of the witnesses. That, along with the austerely limited nature of the appellate function in assessing evidence, is the reason why our opinion as to what probably happened is of no legal significance. This is why we admonish appellate lawyers not to waste time making jury arguments to us, for what we coincidentally believe happened on the street or in the alley does not matter. Nichols v. State, 5 Md.App. 340, 352, 247 A.2d 722 (1968)(“Our function is not to determine whether we would have come to a different conclusion from that of the lower court nor need we be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt of the appellant’s guilt.”)

Even from a cold transcript, however, appellate judges do, at least off the record, inevitably arrive at their personal and idiosyncratic beliefs as to what probably happened in any given case. The reason why such beliefs are seldom formally articulated, even by way of gratuitous dicta, is because what a judge might hypothetically have done had he been the fact finder has no connection with what he must do in his very different capacity as legal referee. This is one of those rare occasions, however, when articulating the normally unartieulated hypothetical of what we might have found had we been the fact finders may help to illustrate the wide range of fact finding that is possible in a controversial case and the significance of discrete bands of fact finding within that wider range.

On the bell-shaped curve of possible verdicts based on fact finding, the two extreme ends of the curve are the exclusive province of the judge as legal referee. In approximately two or three per cent of the cases, the evidence for a proposition may be so woefully inadequate that a judge must declare a forfeit: “No, as a matter of law.” In approximately another two or three per cent of the cases, the evidence for a proposition may be so overwhelming and uncontradicted that a judge *688 must, at least in civil cases and on certain criminal issues, award an automatic victory: “Yes, as a matter of law.” 1 Trovato v. State, 36 Md.App. 183, 188-90, 373 A.2d 78 (1977); Fisher v. State, 28 Md.App. 243, 248-51, 345 A.2d 110 (1975).

The bulging ninety-four to ninety-six per cent of the curve lying between those poles, however, is the autonomous domain of the fact finder, wherein the verdict may be: “Yes or no, as a matter of fact.” Once the ball is properly on the playing field of fact finding, moreover, it is subject to random and eccentric bounces with no second-guessing by legal referees or umpires. Given the “unpredictability of the fact-finding sweepstakes,” the verdict that comes through as a decided “long shot” is just as immune from appellate scrutiny or after-the-fact intervention as is the verdict that goes into the jury room as a “heavy favorite.” Fraidin v. State, 85 Md.App. 231, 241-42, 583 A.2d 1065 (1991).

A Very Likely Version of the Evidence

Had the three judges on this appellate panel been called upon, hypothetically, to render a verdict based on our view of the evidence, we acknowledge freely, albeit completely immaterially, that we would not have been persuaded beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty of anything. We would not have been so persuaded even by the clear and convincing standard of persuasion.

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Related

Clark v. State
981 A.2d 710 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2009)
Graham v. State
807 A.2d 75 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2002)
Starke v. Starke
761 A.2d 355 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2000)
Thomas v. State
737 A.2d 622 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1999)
Moosavi v. State
736 A.2d 285 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
703 A.2d 1302, 118 Md. App. 683, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moosavi-v-state-mdctspecapp-1998.