Roes v. State

182 A.3d 301, 236 Md. App. 569
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 4, 2018
Docket0147/17
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 A.3d 301 (Roes 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
Roes v. State, 182 A.3d 301, 236 Md. App. 569 (Md. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Panel: Meredith, Arthur, James R. Eyler (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned), JJ. *

Eyler, James R., J.

*574 A jury in the Circuit Court for Caroline County convicted Appellant, Eric Roes, of two counts of abandoning a vessel, in this case, two houseboats, and two counts of littering in an amount exceeding 500 pounds. Appellant was sentenced to concurrent sentences of six months on all counts, all suspended, with two years of supervised probation. Appellant timely appealed and presents the following questions for our review:

1. Was the evidence sufficient to convict Appellant of abandoning a vessel?
2. Was the evidence sufficient to convict Appellant of littering in an amount exceeding 500 pounds?
3. Was it proper to impose separate sentences for abandoning a vessel and littering?

For the following reasons, we shall vacate appellant's sentences for abandoning a vessel, but otherwise affirm.

*305 BACKGROUND

In late 2015 and early 2016, Corporal Stephen Hunter, of the Department of Natural Resources Police, investigated numerous complaints concerning two sunken houseboats in the Choptank River near 11672 Greensboro Road, in Greensboro, Caroline County, Maryland. 1 Corporal Hunter phoned appellant, and asked him whether he owned the boats in question. Although appellant admitted that he owned the boat that was *575 tied to his pier, and registered in his name, he denied that he owned the second boat, named the "Laughing Loon," that was tied to a nearby tree upriver from appellant's pier.

Asked at trial about the condition of the Laughing Loon, Corporal Hunter testified that it was "in a state of disrepair um, if you walk down and look at the boat, when the tide's up it's half submerged. You can look down the sides um, the boats are starting to buckle out and rot and decay." Further, "when the water is out it sits in the mud, and when the water's up it's half submerged, still sitting on bottom, like it doesn't float at all." Testifying from a photograph of the vessel, Corporal Hunter continued:

[S]o it's just sitting in the mud, but, and if you look around it's, if you look on the inside it's half full of mud and leaves and debris. It actually appeared to me likes [sic] it's sinking down into the mud of the river. You could observe when the tide's out there's you know a rusted motor block and the stern of the boat. And just in general like I stated on the sides, I mean the actual hull itself is buckled and starting to come apart.

Corporal Hunter further testified that appellant told him that an unidentified individual placed the Laughing Loon at its location. Appellant stated that this boat "hadn't really bothered him," therefore, he never reported it as abandoned. Corporal Hunter confirmed that the Department had received numerous complaints about the Laughing Loon. Corporal Hunter was unable to find registration information, or any other indicia of ownership, for the Laughing Loon.

As for the second boat tied to appellant's pier, Corporal Hunter testified that it was unnamed but appeared to be a Seagoing brand houseboat (Seagoing boat). A photograph of the boat, depicting its condition, was admitted into evidence at trial. Some time in February 2016, Corporal Hunter told appellant that he had fourteen (14) days to repair the Seagoing boat attached to his pier to get it into a "floating condition." Appellant agreed to comply with respect to that boat, *576 but did not make any agreement with respect to the Laughing Loon.

After expiration of the fourteen days, Corporal Hunter visited appellant in March 2016. Corporal Hunter testified:

Um, the boat tied to Mr. Roes['s] pier the physical condition of the boat didn't seem to have changed, it was buoyant at the time um, through the hatches you could still see there was some water down in the bilge of the haul [sic], but I physical tested the boat at the stern and the bow and it was floating. It was buoyant.

Corporal Hunter clarified, with respect to the Seagoing boat, that "I would call it buoyant but just the overall condition, you know going into the future, I wouldn't be surprised if it ended up sunk again." Asked to explain, the officer continued:

*306 Um, based upon the prior times I observed the vessel, and the overall condition, you could see, it seems especially when I saw it even when it was floating there's still water in the haul [sic], any rainwater you get or any tide water that got in would just keep collecting and cause the boat to sink.

On or about September 9, 2016, Corporal Hunter took more photographs of both vessels. As to the condition of both, he testified:

The condition, I believe I went down when the water was higher, the boat at the pier was full of water and sunk: And the Laughing Loon that vessel was still in the same, or worsening condition, as prior occasions to, that I saw it.

He further testified that the Laughing Loon remained "sitting in the mud, still sitting on bottom" and was "buckled out where you can show where the condition of the haul [sic] itself is buckled and starting to rot apart." Further, "parts of the boat have started to deteriorate and [were] falling off the sides," and it was possible to see "the scum line, or when the ah, the tide comes up." He also observed "mud and leaves [and] other stuff, you know sticks and twigs, and anything else you find in the river down inside the boat." As recently as December 2016, just a few months before trial, Corporal *577 Hunter confirmed that the Laughing Loon was still in the water in a state of disrepair.

With respect to the Seagoing boat tied to appellant's pier, Corporal Hunter testified that, on or around September 9, 2016, at high tide, the boat was not "floating." A photograph showed that "water is over the bow. And um, the overall condition is it's sitting on bottom." On cross-examination, Corporal Hunter agreed that this houseboat did not appear to have an engine.

Officer Robert Karge, also with the Natural Resources police, testified that he also investigated this case and agreed that, from March to December 2016, both vessels in question were in a state of disrepair, meaning, "in a condition to where it's not going to be operable." On December 21, 2016, the railing for the Laughing Loon was falling off, and "water was seeping out of the interior with a lot of leaves and debris throughout the bottom," the scum line was high on the boat, and "pieces were obviously missing off the back, you can barely see an engine compartment from the back." And, the Seagoing boat, tied to the pier, was "full of water, and was inline with the ah ... the front of the vessel was inline with the waterline.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 A.3d 301, 236 Md. App. 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roes-v-state-mdctspecapp-2018.