Stanley v. State

851 A.2d 612, 157 Md. App. 363, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 22, 2004
Docket345, Sept. Term, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 851 A.2d 612 (Stanley 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
Stanley v. State, 851 A.2d 612, 157 Md. App. 363, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 97 (Md. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

JAMES R. EYLER, Judge.

Charles Stanley, appellant, was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City of possessing a firearm after having been previously convicted of a crime of violence and discharging a firearm within the City of Baltimore. The trial court sentenced appellant to a term of five years’ incarceration without the possibility of parole for the firearm possession and to a concurrent sentence of time served for the conviction of discharging a firearm. Appellant presents two questions on appeal:

*366 I. Did the trial court err in admitting evidence that appellant was previously convicted of a crime of violence?
II. Did the trial court impose an illegal sentence?

Perceiving no error, we affirm the judgments of the circuit court.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

At approximately 3:00 on the morning of October 30, 2001, Baltimore City Police Officer Joe DiCandaloro went to 4114 Haywood Avenue in Baltimore City in response to a call for discharging of a firearm. He approached appellant, who was at that address, and asked if he had a weapon inside the house. Appellant told the officer that he had a handgun inside his house, but that he had dropped it into the heating duct. Appellant took the officer into the basement, where the officer ripped out a piece of the heating duct and recovered a loaded .32-caliber handgun. The gun had four rounds of ammunition and two empty shell cases in the cylinder. Appellant told the officer that he had fired the gun twice outside his bedroom window to see if the gun was operational.

A true-test copy of appellant’s prior conviction for second degree assault was admitted into evidence without objection.

On cross-examination, Officer DiCandaloro testified that he initially charged appellant with unlawful firing of a firearm in the City of Baltimore and possession of a regulated firearm after having been convicted of a misdemeanor assault, in violation of an ex parte order. The officer acknowledged that he initially charged appellant with a misdemeanor for the gun possession, but that appellant’s current charge was a felony.

Appellant sought jury nullification. 1 He testified that he was 57 years old, that he was retired from General Motors, *367 where he had worked for thirty years, and that he had three grown children.

Appellant said that he bought a handgun and, after drinking, he wanted to see if the gun worked. He said that he fired the gun out of his back window, then threw it in the corner. He recounted that the police officer came the next morning and he decided to give up the gun because “I didn’t want nobody to get hurt -with it and I didn’t want the gun anymore.” He related that, when the officer asked about the gun, he decided “here’s my chance to do the right thing, and [he] told him the truth.” He said that he told the officer he had fired the gun, but was sorry, and that he did not want to hurt anyone.

Appellant discussed a previous conviction for second degree assault. He related that his son “was trying to put [him] out of the house.” He said that his son was “a big guy,” and that he had not hit his son but “just had him by the legs.” Appellant explained, with regard to the ex parte order, that he was supposed to stay out of his house. He also told the jury, however, that he and his wife were back together and “everything [was] fine.”

On cross-examination, the prosecutor elicited that the incident in which he was convicted of second-degree assault on his son was separate from the assault conviction based on violation of an ex parte order.

*368 DISCUSSION

I.

Prior to trial, the following occurred:

THE COURT: Do you have to offer the prior conviction?
[PROSECUTOR]: Absolutely.
THE COURT: That is what I thought you did, that is my understanding.
[PROSECUTOR]: In this case, since we are trying this case alone.
THE COURT: Now how much do you think people can get into what it really was?
[PROSECUTOR]: I do not think they are supposed to get into what it was, it does not matter.
THE COURT: It is going to be—it is going to read off the record as what?
[PROSECUTOR]: Assault, second-degree assault.
THE COURT: Second-degree assault.
THE COURT: Yes, which is a statutory crime of violence.
THE COURT: All right, and which is a legal—
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: See, I do not understand—
THE COURT:—dispute in terms of what it means in the statute, but that is the law.
[PROSECUTOR]: That is why I kind of object to that question, because—
THE COURT: What was the date of it.
[PROSECUTOR]: I think it was 1996.
THE COURT: Is it that recent? I thought it was older, but maybe I—
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I think that—oh, well, second degree assault was added in 1996 because that is when they broke assault into degrees. Before, it was just generally assault and battery common law. But that part, the thing that defines crime of violence, that has been around since, I think the 1970’s.
*369 [PROSECUTOR]: Actually, it might be even later than that, 1999—1999.
THE COURT: What were the facts? Are you going to try to offer the facts of that assault?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: It was domestic violence. I don’t know.
[PROSECUTOR]: Because there are three really that are connected to it. I am only offering one because that is all I need in my statutory verdict.
THE COURT: I mean, there are cases that clearly say, as I recall from reading them, that you are allowed to do that and there is not reversible error.
[PROSECUTOR]: That is the only way to prove the case in this situation.
A short while later, the issue was revisited.
[PROSECUTOR]: It is an essential element of the State’s proving and it is case law.
THE COURT: Right, and I think that is the case law.
[PROSECUTOR]: Right.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I know, but I do not see how anybody can get a fair trial if that is what the law is.
THE COURT: Look, I am happy to tell you—

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Bluebook (online)
851 A.2d 612, 157 Md. App. 363, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-state-mdctspecapp-2004.