Robinson v. State

503 A.2d 725, 66 Md. App. 246, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 248
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 5, 1986
Docket324, September Term, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 503 A.2d 725 (Robinson 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
Robinson v. State, 503 A.2d 725, 66 Md. App. 246, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 248 (Md. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

MOYLAN, Judge.

The appellant, Jacqueline Camille Robinson, was convicted by a Prince George’s County jury, presided over by Judge Howard S. Chasanow, of 1) assault with intent to disable and 2) the use of a handgun in the commission of a felony. Upon this appeal, she raises four contentions:

1) That the evidence was not legally sufficient to sustain the convictions;
*248 2) That Judge Chasanow erroneously refused to give a requested instruction on accidental shooting and erroneously instructed the prosecutor to clarify the concepts of specific intent to murder and specific intent to disable;
3) That the opening statement of the prosecuting attorney amounted to prosecutorial misconduct; and
4) That Judge Chasanow erroneously limited the cross-examination of a State’s witness.

The appellant’s fourth contention, imperfectly preserved but partially salvaged for appellate review, involves a subtle and interesting point of evidence — one of the less routine exceptions to the Hearsay Rule. There is nothing to the first three contentions, and we will dispose of them summarily to clear the deck for a fuller consideration of the fourth.

LEGAL SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

,We have reviewed the evidence and find it legally sufficient to support the convictions. The appellant, at the time of the shooting, was a medical student at the Howard University Medical School where the victim, Dr. Henry Lloyd Garvey, was a Professor of Pharmacology. Although Dr. Garvey was married, there was a romantic liaison between himself and the appellant, punctuated by several domestic quarrels in the weeks immediately preceding the shooting. On September 3, 1984, the appellant shot Dr. Garvey in the upper thigh. Dr. Garvey drove himself to the hospital, where surgery revealed that the bullet had entered and exited his thigh and then entered his abdomen, causing extensive bleeding. Several months later, Dr. Garvey suffered a stroke which prevented him from appearing at the trial or testifying. Despite the appellant’s self-serving explanation that the shooting was an accident as she and her estranged lover struggled for possession of her gun in the course of an argument, the fact finders had it within their unfettered prerogative to disbelieve utterly that expla *249 nation. The physical circumstances of the shooting, buttressed by other surrounding circumstances, clearly established a prima facie case with respect to both convictions.

Those other surrounding circumstances, indeed, carried the State’s burden of production far beyond that barely minimal level necessary to support a prima facie case. Officer Douglas Betman, a Takoma Park City policeman, testified that he and another officer responded to the appellant’s apartment toward the end of July after a neighbor had reported “a lot of crying coming from” the apartment. Responses received from the appellant on that occasion indicated to the officers that there had been a “domestic problem, crying over a problem with a boyfriend or something.” Officer Betman testified to another incident approximately three weeks before the shooting when he again responded to the appellant’s apartment for “screaming and crying” and “a loud disturbance.” Finding the appellant alone, screaming and crying hysterically, he asked what was wrong and received the reply that, “it was her boyfriend.”

Even more damaging testimony came from Victorine Patricia Garvey, the shooting victim’s wife of eleven years. She testified to having received a telephone call at her place of employment on August 7, 1984, and “about three times subsequent” from the appellant. The appellant told Mrs. Garvey that she wanted her to leave her husband, that the appellant had been seeing Dr. Garvey for quite awhile, and that she had no intention of giving him up. Mrs. Garvey testified to another call on August 21 wherein the appellant asked if Mrs. Garvey had signed divorce papers and wherein the appellant informed Mrs. Garvey that she, the appellant, was pregnant. In a third call on August 31, the appellant asked Mrs. Garvey if she was “going to New York with Lloyd this weekend” and telling her that “if you go to New York and you spend the weekend with him this weekend, when you get back, you’ll be sorry.”

*250 On September 3, three calls came in from the appellant asking to speak to Dr. Garvey. In one of them, the appellant told Mrs. Garvey that she had “some unfinished business to discuss with him and that if I didn’t put him on and let him talk to her, I would be sorry.” At about 8:30 that evening, the telephone rang again and was answered by Dr. Garvey, who left the home ten or fifteen minutes after the telephone conversation.

Under all of the circumstances, it is to state the self-evident to hold that Judge Chasanow was not in error in submitting the case to the jury. Williams v. State, 5 Md.App. 450, 459, 247 A.2d 731 (1968); Metz v. State, 9 Md.App. 15, 23, 262 A.2d 331 (1970).

JURY INSTRUCTIONS

The second “contention” consists of two essentially unrelated subcontentions, the only common thread being that they both relate to jury instructions.

With respect to the appellant’s requested instruction on the excuse of accident, it is well settled that if the instruction actually given adequately covers the subject, no particular additional instruction and no particular version of the instruction is necessary. In this case, Judge Chasanow fully and correctly instructed the jury that the crime of assault with intent to disable required a finding that there was a “deliberate, intentional wounding,” with the “specific intent to incapacitate or physically impair the victim” without “any legal excuse or justification.” It is clear beyond doubt that an accidental shooting would not satisfy that stringent mens rea requirement. It is not necessary to reiterate in negative terms what is already fully and adequately expressed in affirmative terms.

The other subcontention is that Judge Chasanow somehow erred “in delegating to the prosecutor [the court’s] duty to instruct the jury by requesting ... that the prosecutor clarify to the jury the concept of specific intent to *251 commit assault with intent to murder and assault with intent to disable.” The short answer to this subcontention is that whatever transpired in this regard at an off-the-record bench conference at the conclusion of the State’s argument, nothing has been preserved for appellate review. Following the bench conference, no record of which is before us, the prosecuting attorney addressed the jury again, briefly but quite accurately, on the mutually exclusive natures of a specific intent to kill and a specific intent to disable. There was no objection by the appellant before this brief reargument, during the reargument, or following the reargument. The merits of what may or may not have happened are not before us, and we decline to consider them, even assuming we could.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
503 A.2d 725, 66 Md. App. 246, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-state-mdctspecapp-1986.