Sharp v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 25, 2016
Docket58/15
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Sharp v. State, (Md. 2016).

Opinion

Justin Sharp v. State of Maryland, No. 58, September Term, 2015

PRESERVATION FOR APPELLATE REVIEW – ALLEGED IMPERMISSIBLE CONSIDERATIONS DURING SENTENCING – DECISION NOT TO PLEAD GUILTY – Court of Appeals held that: (I) defendant preserved for appellate review issue of whether trial court considered during sentencing defendant’s decision not to plead guilty; and (II) record did not support inference that trial court might have been motivated during sentencing by impermissible consideration of defendant’s decision not to plead guilty. Circuit Court for Baltimore County Case No. 03-K-13-002447

Argued: February 9, 2016 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 58

September Term, 2015 ______________________________________

JUSTIN SHARP

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND ______________________________________

Barbera, C.J. Battaglia Greene Adkins McDonald Watts Hotten,

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Watts, J. Battaglia, J., joins in judgment only. ______________________________________

Filed: This case concerns the worrisome issue of whether, in imposing a sentence, a trial

court impermissibly considered the defendant’s election not to plead guilty, and, more

specifically, whether the trial court impermissibly considered that the defendant declined

the “court’s offer” of a plea agreement.

We decide: (I) whether, here, the defendant preserved for appellate review the issue

of whether the trial court impermissibly considered during sentencing the defendant’s

decision not to plead guilty; and, if so, (II) whether, here, the record supports the inference

that the trial court might have been motivated during sentencing by the impermissible

consideration of the defendant’s decision not to plead guilty.

We hold that, here: (I) the defendant preserved for appellate review the issue of

whether the trial court impermissibly considered during sentencing the defendant’s

decision not to plead guilty; and (II) the record does not support the inference that the trial

court might have been motivated during sentencing by the impermissible consideration of

the defendant’s decision not to plead guilty.

BACKGROUND

In the Circuit Court for Baltimore County (“the circuit court”), the State,

Respondent, charged Justin Sharp (“Sharp”), Petitioner, with attempted first-degree

premeditated murder, first-degree assault, and openly wearing and carrying a dangerous

weapon with the intent to injure. These charges arose out of a St. Patrick’s Day party

during which Sharp allegedly severely beat a young man.

Plea Offers

On April 30, 2014, the scheduled trial date, the parties appeared before the circuit court;1 Sharp was represented by counsel. At that time, the circuit court advised Sharp of

the possible sentences that he would face if convicted and that it had offered a “counter-

proposal” to the State’s plea offer. The circuit court advised Sharp as follows:

[C]ount [O]ne of [the] indictment charges you with attempted first[-]degree [premeditated] murder[. T]hat carries a prison term of up to life [] imprisonment. Count [T]wo of the indictment charges you with first[- ]degree assault . . . . [T]hat carries up to twenty-five years [of] imprisonment. Count [T]hree is [openly] carrying a [dangerous] weapon with [the] intent to injure[. T]hat’s three years [of imprisonment.]

The following exchange regarding plea offers occurred:

[CIRCUIT COURT]: [Prosecutor], why don’t you place on the record what your offer is[. T]he Court will then place on the record what it[]s offer is.

[PROSECUTOR]: Your Honor, the State had agreed to offer [C]ount [T]wo, which charges [Sharp] with first[-]degree assault. Upon a finding of guilt, the State would recommend a sentence of twenty-five years [of imprisonment], suspend all but ten [years] to serve. It’s my understanding that [Sharp] does not wish to take advantage of that offer.

[CIRCUIT COURT]: All right[,] and the Court has offered a counter- proposal of twenty years [of imprisonment], suspending all but the first eight years[. A]nd[, Sharp’s counsel], you’ve had a chance to discuss . . . those offers with [Sharp]?

[SHARP’S COUNSEL]: Yes, I have, Your Honor.

[CIRCUIT COURT]: And what is his election[]?

[SHARP’S COUNSEL]: He respectfully wishes to proceed to a trial.

[CIRCUIT COURT]: All right[,] and do you understand the offer, sir?

[] SHARP: Yes, sir.

[CIRCUIT COURT]: All right. It is your desire to plead not guilty[.]

1 According to the docket entries, due to a lack of jurors, trial was continued to the next day, May 1, 2014.

-2- On May 1, 2014, a jury trial began. On that day, before the jury panel arrived at the

courtroom, the following exchange occurred, during which the circuit court re-extended

the “court’s offer”:

[CIRCUIT COURT]: I’m just going to reiterate the Court’s offer to [] Sharp. The State is offering you, sir, if you wanted to plead guilty . . . to the second count, [which] is first[-]degree assault, which has a maximum penalty of up to twenty-five years [of imprisonment], the Court is offering you a twenty[- ]year sentence, suspending all but the first eight [years] as a cap. You and your attorney would be free to argue for anything that you feel is more appropriate than that. If you wanted a pre-sentence investigation or any other delayed disposition, I would afford you that. But I would guarantee you that I would not give you anything more than eight years of incarceration. Your attorney would be free to argue for anything less. Does [Sharp] understand that offer from the Court[]?

[SHARP’S COUNSEL]: Well, Your Honor, I apologize to Your Honor. I thought it was twenty [years of imprisonment], suspend all but eight [years]. I didn’t realize that was the cap, so I did not explain that to [] Sharp.

[CIRCUIT COURT]: Okay. Well, why don’t you go ahead and do that.

[SHARP’S COUNSEL]: Okay.

After a pause in the proceedings, the following exchange occurred:

[SHARP’S COUNSEL]: All right. Your Honor, I’ve had the opportunity to explain that to [] Sharp and he, with all due respect to Your Honor, he’d rather go forward by way of a trial.

[CIRCUIT COURT]: Okay. The Court withdraws its offer.

Trial Testimony

At trial, as a witness for the State, Kristopher Summers (“Summers”) testified as

follows. On March 17, 2013, Summers and his roommate, Brian Mast (“Mast”), hosted a

St. Patrick’s Day party, which Sharp and a Raymond Evianiak (“Evianiak”) attended.

Evianiak, who was “[b]elligerent and drunk[,]” insulted Sharp, who said that he wanted to

-3- kill Evianiak. Sharp punched Evianiak in the face “a couple [of] times[.]” Evianiak did

not do anything to defend himself, and passed out on the couch in the living room.

Summers went to bed. The next morning, Summers awoke and saw Evianiak, who had a

bloody nose. A jacket that Sharp had been wearing was “blood covered” and on the floor,

and there was also broken glass on the floor.

As a witness for the State, Mast testified as follows. On the night of March 17, 2013

and the early morning of March 18, 2013, Mast, Summers, Evianiak, and Sharp were

drinking at Summers’s house. At 1:00 a.m., Evianiak and Sharp got into an oral altercation,

and Mast went to bed. At 4:00 a.m., Mast was awakened by the sounds of screaming and

bottles being broken. Mast entered the living room, saw broken glass “all over the floor[,]”

and saw blood on the walls, floor, and furniture. Sharp was on top of Evianiak, who was

on the floor bleeding. Mast saw Sharp hit Evianiak with a bottle.

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Bluebook (online)
Sharp v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-state-md-2016.