Morris v. State

13 A.3d 1206, 418 Md. 194, 2011 Md. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 23, 2011
Docket34, September Term, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 13 A.3d 1206 (Morris 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
Morris v. State, 13 A.3d 1206, 418 Md. 194, 2011 Md. LEXIS 81 (Md. 2011).

Opinion

HARRELL, J.

Don Henley sang, “trying to get down to the heart of the matter,” often the “more I know, the less I understand.” 1 Apropos of that sentiment, in the present case, the parties brief and argue an array of issues, only a few of which are actually before this Court and which we shall decide. In the process, they glaze the proceedings with a certain degree of opaqueness.

After an extensive review of the record, we conclude that Franklin Morris (“Morris”) preserved a confrontation right challenge for our review. Moreover, we hold that the “miscellaneous agreement” (equivalent to a guilty plea agreement), applicable to his codefendant at their joint trial, operated to violate Morris’s confrontation right, as protected by the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution (“Constitution”) 2 and Article 21 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights (“Declaration of Rights”), 3 on the peculiar facts of this case. Furthermore, we resolve that that error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt and, accordingly, reverse Morris’s convictions.

I.

A. Factual Background.

Late one Friday morning, 23 February 2007, Stewart Williams (“Williams”) and a compatriot walked into a retail *199 store, The Wine Underground, located at 4400 Evans Chapel Road in Baltimore City. In the midst of unpacking boxes, Richard Seleany, a store employee, looked up and saw the two individuals. In the course of his prior employment with The Wine Underground, Seleany had been robbed. Noticing that at least one of these men was wearing a hood and a mask, he assumed another robbery was in the offing. Taking preemptive action, Seleany charged the would-be robbers and a fight ensued. As the brawl moved out of the store and onto the sidewalk, Williams drew a semi-automatic hand gun and fired a single shot, narrowly missing Seleany’s head.

The assailants then turned and fled. As they ran toward a side road, Williams fired a second shot at the store employee, missing him again. Seleany was unable to get a good look at the would-be robbers’ faces.

Someone, perhaps a neighbor, called the police. One of the responding police officers, Joshua Galemore, gleaned relevant information from witnesses at the crime scene, which data he relayed to police dispatch. In turn, dispatch broadcasted an alert for a white sedan. Officer Raul Alvarez, sitting in his marked police cruiser at the corner of Millbrook Road and Cold Spring Lane and hearing the dispatch, saw a white sedan matching the description and traveling east on Cold Spring Lane with two black male occupants.

Alvarez followed the vehicle as it turned right (south) onto York Road and then left (east) onto Willow Avenue. As the sedan made this second turn, Officer Alvarez observed what he believed was the top of a third person’s head in the back seat. Alvarez activated his emergency lights.

Nearby, Officers Steven Weiss and Kenneth Scott were driving in their unmarked police car. They quickly joined the “pursuit.” The white sedan increased its speed in response. The two police cars tracked the white sedan to the 600 block of Willow Avenue, a residential area. The front passenger, later identified as Williams, ran into a house (numbered 609) where he stowed a handgun. Police learned eventually that it was Williams’s home.

*200 Alvarez drew his sidearm and approached the white sedan. The driver, Morris, the back-seat passenger, and ultimately Williams were taken into custody. They were transported to the Robbery Division, where Detectives Byron Conaway and Robert Jackson interviewed them separately. Williams provided written and taped statements in which he confessed to the crimes at The Wine Underground. In his taped statement, Williams made clear that he entered the store “to rob ... for cash.” “When [he] attempted to rob the store,” however, he claimed to have been alone. Once inside, “the worker[, Seleany,] ... rushed towards me .... [and t]he gun fired once in the air.” At some point, after the fight had moved outdoors, Williams started “r[unning] towards Falls Road.”

Pertinently, the following exchange then occurred.

[Detective]: After you ran towards Falls Road, how did you get into the white [sedan] where the police attempted to pull you over?
[Williams]: Basically, I just entered it.
[Detective]: And the person driving, did they drop you off at your house in front of the door?
[Williams]: Yeah.
[Detective]: What color was the vehicle that you got into at the scene?
[Williams]: White.
[Detective]: What kinds of articles of clothing did you have? Like, what was the description of the clothing that you had on?
[Williams]: Blue jeans, black shirt and I think I had on — I forgot what hoody I had on. I had a hoody.
[Detective]: You had a hoody?
[Williams]: Yeah.
[Detective]: Did you have a black mask on?
[Williams]: Not a mask, but like a shirting, a shirt sleeve.
*201 [Detective]: A shirt sleeve that you, is like a makeshift mask? Did it look like a mask?
[Williams]: Some, yeah.
[Detective]: What color was that?
[Williams]: Gray. Like black-gray. It was faded, though, so I would say gray.

A search warrant was obtained for 609 Willow Avenue. Detective Conaway, while executing the warrant, discovered a handgun in the basement of the house. A ballistics examination revealed that a shell casing, recovered from the scene of the attempted robbery, had been fired from the weapon. A subsequent (and authorized) search of the white sedan yielded a piece of black cloth, along with other black items of clothing.

For his part, Morris denied any involvement with the attempted armed robbery. At trial, he testified that, over the course of a fifteen-year friendship, Williams had telephoned him often and asked for rides — approximately 40-50 times. On the morning of 23 February 2007, Williams assertedly phoned Morris around 11:30 a.m., asking to be picked up at the corner of Falls Road and Coldspring Lane. When Morris and his white sedan arrived at that location, Williams was not there, so Morris called Williams’s cell phone number. According to Morris, when Williams and another man arrived, Williams was not “out of breath[.]” Williams asked Morris to drive him home and, with no query or volunteering about what the two men’s recent activities had been, off they drove.

When Officer Alvarez activated his vehicle’s emergency lights, Morris did not pull over the car and stop immediately because he claimed not to have noticed the lights.

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Bluebook (online)
13 A.3d 1206, 418 Md. 194, 2011 Md. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-state-md-2011.