Opert v. Criminal Injuries Compensation Board

943 A.2d 1229, 403 Md. 587, 2008 Md. LEXIS 110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 11, 2008
Docket67, Sept. Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 943 A.2d 1229 (Opert v. Criminal Injuries Compensation Board) 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
Opert v. Criminal Injuries Compensation Board, 943 A.2d 1229, 403 Md. 587, 2008 Md. LEXIS 110 (Md. 2008).

Opinion

*590 ALAN M. WILNER, Judge,

Retired, specially assigned.

The issue before us is whether petitioner, Jeffrey Opert, was the victim of a “crime,” as that term is defined in the law relating to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Act (Maryland Code, § ll-801(d) of the Criminal Procedure Article). The Criminal Injuries Compensation Board, the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, and the Court of Special Appeals held that he was not. We disagree with that conclusion and shall direct a remand to the Board for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

The Criminal Injuries Compensation law, now codified in §§ 11-801 through 11-819 of the Criminal Procedure Article (CP), was enacted in 1968 for the purpose of enabling innocent victims of certain crimes to receive State-funded compensation for physical injury sustained by them as a result of the crime. See Criminal Inj. Comp. Bd. v. Remson, 282 Md. 168, 171, 384 A.2d 58, 61 (1978) and cases cited there. With certain exceptions not relevant here, the law makes a “victim” eligible for an award. A “victim” includes a person who suffers physical injury as a result of a “crime.” CP § ll-801(f)(l).

Section ll-801(d)(l) defines the word “crime,” in pertinent part, as “a criminal offense under state, federal, or common law” that is committed either in Maryland or against a resident of Maryland in another State. Section ll-801(d)(2), however, provides that “crime” does not include “an act involving the operation of a vessel or motor vehicle” unless “the act” is (i) in violation of § 20-102, § 20-104, § 21-902, or § 21-904 of the Transportation Article, 1 or (ii) operating a motor vehicle or vessel that results in intentional injury.

*591 The relevant facts underlying Mr. Opert’s claim are not in substantial dispute and may be taken from the claim form he filed with the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board, from subsequent letters by his attorney to the Board, and from a police report of the incident. In the claim form, Opert stated that, on September 7, 2003, he was riding his motorcycle on I-695—the Baltimore Beltway—when “offender, a pedestrian, crossed said highway causing Claimant to wreck.” In a subsequent letter, his attorney added that Opert was riding on the inner loop of the beltway, a controlled access highway, when, without warning, Edward Burgess, a pedestrian, “walked out onto the highway with or on a bicycle.” Opert, who was traveling about 40 miles per hour, “was forced to lay down his motorcycle on the roadway to avoid hitting Mr. Burgess,” and, as a result, was “launched into the air,” fell, and was injured. The police report was consistent with that statement. Burgess was not charged with any offense; nor was Opert.

In support of his contention that he was the victim of a crime, Opert noted that Maryland Code, § 27-101(a) of the Transportation Article (TR) makes the violation of any of the provisions of the motor vehicle laws (not otherwise declared to be a felony) a misdemeanor, and averred that, by his conduct, Burgess committed the following offenses: (1) walking on a controlled access highway, in violation of TR § 21-509, (2) failing to yield the right of way when not crossing in a crosswalk, in violation of TR § 21-503, and (3) having or riding a bicycle on a roadway where the speed limit is 50 miles per hour or more, in violation of TR § 21-1205.1. He did not contend that Burgess had engaged in any intentionally injurious conduct, that he had violated TR § § 20-102, 20-104, 21-902, or 21-904, or that he had committed any other statutory or common law criminal offense.

Opert acknowledged that, under CP § ll-801(d)(2), “crime” does not include an act involving the operation of a motor vehicle, which would include a motorcycle, but he contended that the exception was intended to disqualify only persons “who were victims of acts caused by persons operating a *592 motor vehicle,” i.e., to fall within the exception, it must be the perpetrator who was operating a motor vehicle, not the victim. The violation of any traffic offense on the part of a pedestrian or bicyclist that causes a person in a motor vehicle to be injured would therefore constitute a crime and render the person eligible for a compensation award.

In November, 2004, the Board informed Opert of its tentative decision to deny the claim and advised him that, if he disagreed with that decision, he could request a hearing before the Board. In its tentative decision, the Board found as fact that Opert had “suffered multiple injuries in a motor vehicle accident in Baltimore County on September 7, 2003” and that he “was riding a motorcycle on 1-695 when he swerved to avoid a pedestrian and crashed.” The Board announced as a conclusion of law, however, that “the claimant’s injuries were not the result of a crime.” The Board’s tentative order denying the claim was dated November 23, 2004.

Opert promptly informed the Board that he disagreed with the decision and requested a hearing. A hearing was held on April 27, 2005, although, because, with Opert’s acquiescence, no transcript was prepared, it is not clear what transpired at that hearing. The parties seem to agree that Opert was the only witness. The Board denied reconsideration of its tentative decision, the Secretary of Public Safety and Correctional Services approved the decision, and Opert filed a petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County.

In the Circuit Court, Opert made the same argument he presented to the Board—that Burgess committed a crime because what he did was in violation of various traffic laws contained in the Transportation Article, that those violations constitute misdemeanors, and that the exception in CP § 11-801(d)(2) for acts involving a motor vehicle encompasses only conduct by the perpetrator that involves a motor vehicle. 2 *593 Both parties acknowledged that there were no material facts in dispute and that the issue was one of statutory construction. The court concluded that the law was not meant to cover victims of a motor vehicle accident, even if “the perpetrator of the accident may have violated a statute,” and it therefore affirmed the Board’s decision. In an unreported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals, after reviewing the legislative history of the Criminal Injuries Compensation law, agreed that the General Assembly did not intend for the law to cover motor vehicle accidents, even if caused by the conduct of a pedestrian, and it therefore affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court.

DISCUSSION

The issue before us is, indeed, one of statutory construction and therefore one of law. The overarching rule is that, in construing statutes, “our primary goal is always ‘to discern the legislative purpose, the ends to be accomplished, or the evils to be remedied by a particular provision ...’” Barbre v. Pope, 402 Md. 157, 172, 935 A.2d 699, 708 (2007), citing

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Bluebook (online)
943 A.2d 1229, 403 Md. 587, 2008 Md. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opert-v-criminal-injuries-compensation-board-md-2008.