Pete v. State

862 A.2d 419, 384 Md. 47, 2004 Md. LEXIS 779, 2004 WL 2775916
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 2004
Docket19, September Term, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 862 A.2d 419 (Pete 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
Pete v. State, 862 A.2d 419, 384 Md. 47, 2004 Md. LEXIS 779, 2004 WL 2775916 (Md. 2004).

Opinion

HARRELL, Judge.

We issued a writ of certiorari in this case to explore again the bounds of § 6-221 of the Maryland Criminal Procedure Article of the Maryland Code, which allows a sentencing court discretion to suspend a defendant’s sentence and order probation on “the conditions that the court considers proper.” Md.Code (2001), § 6-221. 1 Our exploration leads us to conclude that the restitution ordered in this case was an illegal sentence and not properly imposed as a condition of probation.

Scott Alan Pete was convicted, after a bench trial in the Circuit Court for Dorchester County, of second degree assault and reckless driving, among other charges included in Case No. 11332. 2 He was sentenced to eighteen months imprisonment for the assault, with all but two months suspended in *50 favor of three years probation upon his release. He also was fined $250 for the reckless driving conviction. As one of the conditions of probation, Pete was ordered to make restitution in the amount of $355.06 to the victim of the assault and $6,490.53 to the Local Government Insurance Trust (LGIT) for repairs to Patrolman Michael Cheesman’s police cruiser, which was damaged in the incident underlying the reckless driving conviction.

Pete appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, challenging, among other things, the Circuit Court’s restitution order. The intermediate appellate court, in an unreported opinion, affirmed the trial court’s judgment. We granted Pete’s petition for writ of certiorari, 381 Md. 324, 849 A.2d 473 (2004), to consider the following questions:

1. Did the trial court have authority to order, as a condition of probation for assault, restitution for damages directly resulting from an unrelated act of reckless driving — an offense other than the conviction on which the court suspended sentence and imposed probation?
2. Where a court orders restitution for damages resulting from the commission of a non-jailable offense, may the court order the restitution paid as a condition of probation for an unrelated offence which carries a maximum prison sentence of ten years’ imprisonment?

We conclude that the trial court’s restitution order with regard to LGIT, as a condition of probation, is an illegal sentence. This is so because restitution to the LGIT was unavailable, as a matter of law, as a sentencing option for either the second degree assault or reckless driving convictions in this case. 3 We shall vacate that portion of the restitution order, and the parallel condition of probation for the second degree assault conviction, requiring payment of $6,490.53 to the LGIT.

*51 I.

A.

On 23 April 2002 Pete entered the Cambridge apartment of Susan Raickle and, during an argument, hit Ms. Raickle on the back of the head. 4 Ms. Raickle called the police after Pete left the apartment and Officer Gilbert McCall responded to the police call at 3:59 p.m. After a brief investigation, the police broadcast a lookout for Pete, alerting that, among other things, he may have a gun. 5

At 4:45 p.m. Patrolman First Class Michael Cheesman, while in his marked police car, heard a radio dispatch to be on the lookout for Pete and that he likely would be driving a late model, tan Ford pickup truck. At approximately 5:45 p.m., Patrolman Cheesman saw a man, resembling the broadcast description of Pete, in a truck (also matching the given description) stopped at a traffic light at the comer of Cedar Street and Academy Street in Cambridge. After driving past the person in the truck to confirm the apparent identification, Patrolman Cheesman turned his vehicle around and activated his overhead lights in an attempt to effectuate a traffic stop. Pete turned onto Hughlett Street after the police vehicle closed to within approximately twenty feet of the truck.

Patrolman Cheesman testified that Pete drove the truck away from his police cruiser at a “very fast rate,” characterizing his speed as “well above 20 — a lot of dust was thrown up off the roadway.” He later testified on cross-examination that, in his opinion, Pete “was trying to get away from [him].” Neither Pete nor his passenger acknowledged seeing Patrolman Cheesman in pursuit with the cruiser’s overhead lights activated.

*52 As Pete approached Washington Street on Hughlett Street, he stopped abruptly, slamming on his brakes, five feet beyond the intersection’s stop line. Patrolman Cheesman testified that the truck’s “front end went down[,] [t]he back end went up” when this stop took place. The police cruiser struck the rear of the truck, resulting in $6,490.58 in damage to the cruiser. Pete left the accident scene, headed towards Maryland Route 50. 6

B.

At Pete’s sentencing on 22 August 2002, the trial judge stated:

So, in Case No. 11382 the Court sentences you to 18 months to the Dorchester County Detention Center, and I’m going to suspend the last six months of that sentence. Now, that’s on — only on Count 1, the second-degree assault upon Susan Raickle. And you’ll be on probation for a period of 3 years, subject to the standard conditions of probation, the special conditions of probation, the special conditions that you avoid contact with Susan Raickle and that you pay any fines ordered in this case, that is, Case No. 11332 and that you make restitution within 3 years in the amount of $6,845.59, and of that total $355.06 would be to Dorchester General Hospital, and $6,490.53 would be to the Local Government Insurance Trust.
Now, as to the next count, reckless driving, the Court imposes a fine of $250. As to attempting to elude police in an official police vehicle by failing to stop, the court imposes a sentence of 4 months to the Dorchester County Detention Center. That will be consecutive to the sentence imposed on Count 1. And on count, failure to stop vehicle at the scene of accident involving bodily injury, the Court sentences you to 6 months to the Dorchester County Detention Center and that’ll be consecutive to the 4 months on at *53 tempting to elude police in an official police vehicle by failing to stand and also ... [by] failing to stop, and also consecutive to the 18-month sentence on Count 1, that is, second-degree assault upon Susan Raiekle, 16 months of which were suspended.
On the tenth count, failure to return and — return to and remain at the scene of accident involving attended vehicle, the Court sentences you to 6 months to the Dorchester County Detention Center, and that’ll be concurrent to other sentences imposed in Case No. 11332. So — that’s a total to serve of 12 months.[ 7 ]

The Court’s order for probation, also signed on 22 August 2002, ordered three years of probation for the second degree assault on Ms. Raiekle.

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Bluebook (online)
862 A.2d 419, 384 Md. 47, 2004 Md. LEXIS 779, 2004 WL 2775916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pete-v-state-md-2004.