Setzer v. State

348 A.2d 866, 29 Md. App. 347, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 329
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1975
Docket287, September Term, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 348 A.2d 866 (Setzer 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
Setzer v. State, 348 A.2d 866, 29 Md. App. 347, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 329 (Md. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Gilbert, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal we are required to reverse the judgment of *348 the Criminal Court of Baltimore, entered upon a jury verdict finding the appellant, James Steven Setzer, guilty of the crime of rape. We take that action because the prosecution, over objection, was allowed to inject into the trial of appellant, in the guise of rebuttal testimony, the “bad man” theory that we strongly condemned in Dobson v. State, 24 Md. App. 644, 335 A. 2d 124 (1975), cert. denied 275 Md. 747 (June 2, 1975).

Although the appellant disputes what he perceives as two rulings relating to the intromitting of evidence, we view the two as being so intervolved that they are virtually inseparable.

The State in its case in chief against appellant showed that he had met the prosecutrix on the morning of March 11, 1974. They had known each other for approximately six years. The intensity of their acquaintanceship is a matter of dispute. The prosecutrix told the jury that appellant offered to take her to a shoe manufacturing company in order that she could seek employment there. En route the appellant stopped his vehicle in front of the building in which he resided in a basement apartment. He told the prosecutrix that he was expecting a telephone call from his cousin, but that he wanted to take a bath before going to work. The prosecutrix was asked to wait in appellant’s apartment and to answer the telephone if it rang while the appellant was taking his bath. She agreed. The apartment consisted of a large, combination livingroom-bedroom, a kitchen and a bathroom. Instead of immediately proceeding to take his bath, appellant, according to the prosecutrix, took a “gun” from the wall, told her “this is a rip-off’, and ordered her to disrobe. The young woman refused to obey and appellant produced a knife which he placed against her throat, and “ .. . the blade just came right out of it [the knife].” He unbuttoned some of her clothing and she removed the rest. When she was nude, she was thrown on the bed and ravished. After completing the sexual attack, appellant began to cry, apologized for what he had done and requested that the prosecutrix not tell the police. Appellant filled the bathtub, hopped in and hopped out, all the time keeping the *349 prosecutrix with him in the bathroom. Appellant drove the prosecutrix to a place near her home, and she “ran” into the house crying. Later that day she telephoned her stepmother, told her what had occurred, and on the stepmother’s advice, called the police. Appellant was apprehended and charged.

Appellant’s version of the events differed sharply with those of the prosecutrix. He testified that the sexual relationship that took place between himself and the prosecutrix was consensual. In fact, he related a series of times that sexual intercourse had occurred between the two, and he supplied a witness. The witness told the jury that appellant and the prosecutrix had used the witness’s apartment on a number of occasions for their sexual gratification.

During the course of his direct examination appellant was asked:

“Did you at any time during the 11th day of March hold a knife up to her body, or threaten her with a knife of any kind?”

He responded:

“No sir. There was never a knife.”

The transcript of the cross-examination of the appellant’s wife by the Assistant State’s Attorney reveals:

“Q Does your husband own a knife?
A Not that I know of.
Q Okay. Now, particularly attempting to describe a knife, that it’s almost like a cutting box cutter kind of knife which sort of appears to be a switch-blade, where you would push something on the side and push out a blade, do you ever recall seeing any knife like that in your apartment?
A No.
Q Do you recall seeing your husband with possession of a knife like that in or outside of the apartment?
*350 A No.
Q You never saw a knife like that in or outside of the apartment?
A No.
Q Ever seen a knife like that in the car?
A No.
Q To the best of your recollection, both today and that day, there was no knife as I described to you on your premises, or that you had ever seen your husband in possession of, that may have been on your premises, correct?
A Wait a minute. What was the question again?
Q I’ll simplify it. What I’m saying is that you had no reason to believe that there was a knife that I have described to you either on your premises, from having personally seen it, or in your husband’s possession at anytime? You had no reason to believe that the knife was in your premises?
A I never saw that kind of knife. My husband never had a knife like that that I know of.
Q The only kind of knife you had, would be the normal kitchen knives or utility things?
A Yes.”

Over strenuous objection, the State, in rebuttal, produced another young woman who testified that she had known the appellant for about five years. Sometime during the early part of 1974 — she could not remember whether the event about which she testified took place before or after the date of the happenings in the instant case — she was picked up by the appellant and taken in his vehicle to an area in Baltimore County near Sparrows Point. There appellant produced a knife, a “box cutter”, that he held to her throat, and he ordered her to undress. After a conversation in which she steadfastly refused to disrobe, he and she alit from the car. After some conversation between appellant and the *351 witness, she re-entered the vehicle, and he drove her to a bar in the Highlandtown area of Baltimore City.

It is, of course, the testimony of the rebuttal witness that the appellant strenuously assails in this Court. He argues that the obvious purpose of the State’s using the rebuttal witness was to show that the appellant was a “bad man”, likely to have committed the offense in the instant case because, according to the rebuttal witness, he had attempted to commit a similar offense in a time frame encompassing three months, and occurring during that time, either before or after the events of the case now before us. Patently, the witness was also used to underpin the prosecutrix’s statement that the appellant had a knife where “ . . . the blade just came right out of it,” that he held to her throat. The evidence was further intended, we think, to demonstrate that appellant was in the habit of carrying, and threatening to use, a retractable blade knife.

The State, in response to the appellant’s argument, seizes upon appellant’s above quoted answer, “No sir.

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Bluebook (online)
348 A.2d 866, 29 Md. App. 347, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/setzer-v-state-mdctspecapp-1975.