Morten v. State

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 4, 2019
Docket0215/17
StatusPublished

This text of Morten v. State (Morten 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
Morten v. State, (Md. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Morten v. State, No. 215 of the 2017 Term, Opinion by Moylan J.

UNEXCEPTIONABLE FACTUAL BACKGROUND – HEARSAY TO THE

RESCUE, OSTENSIBLY – INITIAL FOCUS – “MY GOD, IT’S A COBRA!” –

PRESENT SENSE IMPRESSION – AN ALTERNATIVE HOLDING: THE

TRUEALLELE MODALITY OF DNA IDENTIFICATION – THE PRECISE

TARGET IN THE CROSSHAIRS: TRUEALLELE SPECIFICALLY, NOT DNA

GENERALLY – ADMISSIBILITY VERSUS WEIGHT – “A ROSE BY ANY OTHER

NAME . . . ” – THE PRETRIAL HEARING ON ADMISSIBILITY – THE

PRESUMPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE HEARING – QUALIFYING AND

DISQUALIFYING AN EXPERT WITNESS – A HAMSTRUNG DEFENSE –

THEORETICAL RELIABILITY VERSUS AD HOC RELIABILITY –

QUANTITATIVE INSUFFICIENCY OF THE SAMPLE – TWO MINOR

CONTRIBUTORS OR MORE – RELIABILITY IS BOTH A CONTINUUM AND

VARIOUS POINTS ON THE CONTINUUM Circuit Court for Baltimore City Case No. 116123014 REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 215

September Term, 2017 ______________________________________

DELVONTA MORTEN

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND ______________________________________

Friedman, Beachley, Moylan, Charles E., Jr. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Moylan, J. ______________________________________

Filed: September 4, 2019

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

2019-09-04 14:07-04:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk The two contentions raised by the appellant have one thing in common. They each

engage the law of evidence. The first is on familiar turf, however, as we look again at two

of the firmly rooted exceptions to the Rule Against Hearsay—the Excited Utterance and

the Present Sense Impression. The second contention, by contrast, is at the far and

unfamiliar cutting edge of the rapidly evolving science of DNA identification, to wit, at the

newly developed TrueAllele testing modality. The appellant, Delvonta Morten, was

convicted in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City in a jury trial of first-degree murder and

various handgun offenses. On this appeal, he raises the two contentions:

1. that three separate instances of inadmissible hearsay evidence were erroneously admitted against him; and

2. that he was erroneously precluded from adequately challenging the DNA test results introduced against him.

Unexceptionable Factual Background

Each of these contentions, as we shall fully develop infra, is a strong and persuasive

challenge to the prosecution’s case. To illustrate the dispositive significance of the suspect

evidence in each of the two challenges, we will initially set out just how lackluster a case

this would have been in terms of its legal sufficiency without the infusion of the challenged

hearsay and minus the arguably dubious DNA test result. What would have been the quality

of the case to which no exception could have been taken? Would it have been legally

sufficient to have supported the verdict? If necessity begets admissibility, of course, the

State’s case would have been a lock.

On September 21, 2015, at shortly after 5:00 p.m., Kevin Cannady was killed by a

single gunshot to the back of his neck. The autopsy revealed that the bullet shattered the upper spinal column before lodging in the left cheekbone. The bullet itself was too mangled

to permit any ballistic comparisons. The police received the emergency call at 5:11 p.m.

and arrived at the scene at 5:15 p.m. The shooting scene was in the 4900 block of Cordelia

Avenue immediately north of where it T-intersects with Reisterstown Road. A large crowd

had gathered. No one at the scene had been an eyewitness to the shooting.1 Just at the

intersection of Cordelia Avenue and Reisterstown Road, there are located a small grocery

store and a car dealership. A surveillance camera from outside the car dealership showed a

person wearing a black hoodie and grey pants approaching the victim from behind and

shooting him, before running up Cordelia Avenue alongside another person dressed in a

burgundy jacket.

Approximately half an hour after the shooting, the police recovered “at the bottom

of a tree stump” in the alley behind 4907 Cordelia Avenue, about a block from the shooting

scene, a revolver. The firearms inspector was unable to confirm that the bullet taken from

Cannady’s left cheekbone had been fired from the .38 caliber Smith & Wesson revolver

recovered by the police from the alley. They could say, however, that the bullet was a .38

or .357 caliber bullet, which showed “similar class characteristics” with the revolver.

It was two months later that the police first interviewed the appellant. A surveillance

video from inside the grocery store showed a number of persons inside the store on

1 Two days later, a Floyd Montague reported to the police that he had given Kevin Cannady a ride and dropped him off on Cordelia Avenue just where it T-intersects with Reisterstown Road. Cannady had just gotten out of the car and was walking toward its rear when Montague, still sitting behind the steering wheel, heard a shot. He looked around and saw Cannady lying on the ground. He immediately drove away and did not, at that time, report anything to the police.

2 September 21, 2015, at about 4:05 p.m. One of them was wearing a black hoodie. At the

November 22, 2015, interview, the appellant acknowledged that he was the person in the

grocery store wearing the black hoodie. The outdoor surveillance camera also showed a

person wearing a black hoodie walking past the store at 5:01 p.m. and turning into Cordelia

Avenue at 5:08 p.m.

That was the State’s case without the challenged evidence. At that point, there was

no firm linkage between the shooting and the revolver found in an alley about a block away.

But for wearing a hoodie, there was no linkage between the appellant and the shooting.

There was absolutely no linkage between the appellant and the revolver found in a backyard

in the alley. The appellant would have walked.

Hearsay To The Rescue, Ostensibly

The bare bones of the State’s legally insufficient case, however, were soon fleshed

out by three rapid-fire infusions of hearsay evidence. These came from an unidentified

female caller as anonymous calls to 911 at 5:35 p.m., at 5:41 p.m., and at 5:49 p.m. in the

near aftermath of the shooting.

As out-of-court assertions offered, and ultimately received, for the truth of the things

asserted, these anonymous calls were self-evidently hearsay. The appellant objected to

each. Each was admitted, however, as a well-recognized exception to the Rule Against

Hearsay, the first as an Excited Utterance, the second and third as Present Sense

Impressions.

Call No. 1 came into 911 at 5:35 p.m., approximately 35 minutes after the shooting.

It was accepted as an Excited Utterance. Its substance was as follows:

3 Operator: What’s the emergency?

Caller: I just wanted to report that I saw two guys come down the alley. I heard somebody got shot right here on Reisterstown Road and I saw two guys running up the alley. The alley is on Arcadia. It’s right next to 3716[.] And they came down the alley, and it’s about the third house to the left. It’s two empty yards, and they threw -- they put something down in there.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Washington v. State
990 A.2d 549 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
Gross v. State
809 A.2d 627 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2002)
Marquardt v. State
887 A.2d 656 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2005)
Eades v. State
541 A.2d 1001 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
Mouzone v. State
452 A.2d 661 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1982)
Booth v. State
508 A.2d 976 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1986)
Reed v. State
391 A.2d 364 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1978)
Williams v. State
679 A.2d 1106 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1996)
Nance v. State
629 A.2d 633 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1993)
Marquardt v. State
882 A.2d 900 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2005)
Parker v. State
778 A.2d 1096 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2001)
Hunt v. State
540 A.2d 1125 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
Cutchin v. State
792 A.2d 359 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2002)
Harmony v. State
594 A.2d 1182 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1991)
Cobey v. State
559 A.2d 391 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1989)
Cassidy v. State
536 A.2d 666 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
State v. Jones
532 A.2d 169 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1987)
Young v. State
879 A.2d 44 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2005)
Allen & Diggs v. State
103 A.3d 700 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2014)
Varriale v. State
119 A.3d 824 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Morten v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morten-v-state-mdctspecapp-2019.