State v. Brookman State v. Carnes

190 A.3d 282, 460 Md. 291
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 31, 2018
Docket29/17
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 190 A.3d 282 (State v. Brookman State v. Carnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brookman State v. Carnes, 190 A.3d 282, 460 Md. 291 (Md. 2018).

Opinion

Panel Barbera, C.J., Greene, Adkins, McDonald, Watts, Hotten, Getty, JJ.

McDonald, J.

**294 The past three decades have seen the growth, in Maryland and elsewhere, of treatment programs operated under the auspices of the judiciary. In those programs, sometimes identified by the generic phrase "problem-solving courts," judges, counsel, probation officers, and treatment professionals work together to address an underlying issue that brings an individual into the criminal justice system. Problem-solving courts **295 focus on therapy for the individual defendant, in the hope that both the individual and society will be better off in the long run. Preeminent among such programs are those known as "drug courts."

Drug court programs are conceived of as collaborative rather than adversarial. However, the coercive powers of the court under the criminal law are used as an important instrument to achieve the program's goals. This creates a tension: For a drug court's goals to be achieved, there must be swiftness and certainty of sanction for violation of its protocols. For the criminal justice system to work, there must be due process and respect for appellate rights.

These consolidated cases concern whether a circuit court's exercise of its coercive powers to incarcerate a drug court program participant in aid of the swiftness and certainty of program sanctions (1) is subject to appellate review and (2) can violate the participant's right to due process.

Respondents Crystal Brookman and Marvin Carnes were defendants in separate criminal prosecutions in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The Circuit Court determined that each was eligible to participate in the court's drug court program as a special condition of probation after each pled guilty in their respective cases. Each did so and fared well in the program for many months.

In early 2016, Ms. Brookman was alleged to have had a negative urinalysis - based not on a positive finding of illicit drugs, but on a test result that suggested she may have attempted to dilute her urine. At approximately the same time, Mr. Carnes appeared late for a randomly-scheduled drug test. At subsequent hearings concerning their respective alleged *285 violations of the program conditions, each was represented by counsel. Ms. Brookman's counsel asked for a postponement to gather and present evidence contesting her test result; Mr. Carnes' counsel asked the court to consider mitigating evidence before imposing the program sanctions. However, in both cases, the Circuit Court declined to exercise discretion and imposed immediate sanctions from the program's **296 sanctions menu. In both cases, those sanctions included overnight incarceration.

Ms. Brookman and Mr. Carnes filed applications for leave to appeal, which were accepted by the Court of Special Appeals and consolidated for appellate review. The intermediate appellate court held that Ms. Brookman and Mr. Carnes had the right to seek appellate review of the incarceration sanction. Upon that review, it held that the procedure followed in the Circuit Court did not comply with the requirements of due process.

We agree with the holdings of the Court of Special Appeals.

I

Background

A. Drug Court Programs

1. Problem-Solving Courts and Emerging Issues

Although one would hope that most courts contribute to the solution of society's problems, the phrase "problem-solving court" is generally used to denote a special docket in a trial court that targets defendants whose presence in the criminal justice system appears to be traceable, at least in part, to an underlying issue such as substance abuse. 1 To address that underlying issue, participants in the program are subject to a highly structured probation that includes treatment and monitoring. A typical drug court program is divided into several phases of diminishing intensity as the participant progresses in accordance with the program's goals. 2 To encourage a participant's compliance with treatment and monitoring, most **297 programs require frequent status review hearings involving a judge assigned to the program and other court personnel. As a further incentive for participants to comply with the program's conditions, violations of program requirements are generally punished with a series of graduated sanctions, some of which derive from the court's coercive powers. 3

As some courts and commentators have noted, the use of coercive powers, coupled with the informal, collaborative nature of the program, can raise issues as to whether a participant has received the procedural due process guaranteed to criminal defendants and probationers. 4 Moreover, because of the intensive monitoring of the *286 participant without counsel, or with counsel who is regarded as a member of a treatment team rather than an advocate, there can be ethical issues, such as the potential for ex parte communications between the judge and a defendant. 5

2. Problem-Solving Courts in Maryland

Problem-solving court programs were first established in Maryland in the early 1990s. 6 According to the most recent **298 annual report of the Office of Problem Solving Courts, there are 53 such programs associated with circuit courts and the District Court, focused on various underlying issues that bring individuals within the jurisdiction of the judicial system - substance abuse, mental health issues, truancy, and veterans' issues. See https://www.courts.state.md.us/sites/default/files/import/opsc/pdfs/annualreports/fy2017opscannualreport.pdf (last visited June 4, 2018).

Nature of a Problem-Solving Court

In 2009, this Court was presented with the issue of whether a "problem-solving court" had fundamental jurisdiction, such that it could sanction a criminal defendant who violated a program condition. The Court held that, because the "drug court" in question was essentially a division of the circuit court - a court of original general jurisdiction - it had the fundamental powers of the circuit court. Brown v. State , 409 Md. 1 ,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A.3d 282, 460 Md. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brookman-state-v-carnes-md-2018.