State v. Tejada

18 A.3d 865, 419 Md. 149, 2011 Md. LEXIS 217
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 26, 2011
Docket103, September Term, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 A.3d 865 (State v. Tejada) 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. Tejada, 18 A.3d 865, 419 Md. 149, 2011 Md. LEXIS 217 (Md. 2011).

Opinion

*151 BARBERA, J.

Respondent, Emanuel Tejada, was convicted by a jury of two counts of attempted murder, armed robbery, and related offenses. He appealed the judgments of conviction, arguing, inter alia, that the bifurcated jury selection process denied him the right to an informed and comparative rejection of prospective jurors. The Court of Special Appeals held that Respondent preserved that claim for appellate review and the trial court erred in bifurcating the jury selection process.

We granted the State’s petition to review the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals. The State has opted not to challenge that court’s judgment on the merits and argues only that Respondent failed to preserve his objection for appellate review. For the reasons that follow, we hold that the Court of Special Appeals did not err in finding the issue to be preserved for review.

I.

In October 2007, Respondent and a co-defendant stood trial in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, on various charges stemming from an attempted robbery of an armored truck in Silver Spring, Maryland. 1 The trial was scheduled to take seven days.

The jury selection process began with a venire of 60 prospective jurors. The trial court dismissed 17 of them for cause, leaving 48 venirepersons for the peremptory challenge phase of the process. Respondent and his co-defendant were each entitled to exercise 20 peremptory challenges and the State, 20 (10 per defendant). 2

*152 Midway through the exercise of peremptory challenges, the court noted that the parties were “going to run out of jurors.” By that time, Respondent had used 14 challenges, his codefendant 12, and the State 6. The parties and the court discussed the situation 3 :

[Co-defendant’s Counsel]: Your Honor, I know that I have strikes left, and I know that—
[The Court]: You’ve got more strikes than we have jurors left.
[Co-defendant’s Counsel]: Well, that’s what I was going to raise.
[The State]: We’re going to have to do another panel.
[The Court]: Oh, yes, we’re going to have to do it when I get back [later today].

The trial court then asked the clerk to inform the jury commissioner that the court would “need another panel, but not until later this afternoon, 3:30.” The parties exercised several more challenges. The court then recessed for lunch, noting at that time that Respondent had four challenges remaining, his co-defendant eight, and the State five.

When proceedings resumed after the luncheon recess, the court instructed the lawyers of “a problem” with the new jurors requested from the jury commissioner:

[The Court]: We got a little problem, Houston. The jurors that we have, first of all most of them down there have already been through, they were not screened for seven *153 days. In fact, the jury commissioner knows that these jurors that they have left cannot stay five days. And so [there is no] point in us going through that exercise in futility because that’s going to be a problem. So there are two proposals ... we can either start all over tomorrow. [The commissioner can bring in] about 100 jurors and maybe we’ll even be able to get the bigger courtroom, and ... just start all over, or we can, which is the proper procedure!,] keep the seven or eight or whatever we have and then just select the rest of them tomorrow morning. Now, understand something, finishing the selection today is not an option. We don’t have enough in the venire.

Counsel for Respondent’s co-defendant indicated that she was “inclined to start over” with the entire jury selection process. The State opposed that proposal, stating: “I don’t know why we would start again and excuse [the jurors already selected]. We’ve been through the process with them,” and selecting an entirely new jury would “knock [the State] a half a day or a day behind [schedule].” The State was willing to hear defense counsel’s reasons for “startling] fresh” but did not know of a reason requiring the court to do so. The court responded:

[The Court]: I’m not so sure you can—I suppose anything that the parties agree to, you could do it, but I’m not sure that ... you can do that, start over unless you all agree. [The State]: I don’t know why we would.
[The Court]: Because we’re basically in the middle of the jury selection process. If we were carrying it on today and just had a group of jurors come up, we would never get rid of the ones we’ve already picked.

After a short discussion regarding a possible break to allow the parties to review the relevant law on jury selection, the exchange continued:

[The Court]: ... I’m not so sure that there’s any real choice, Mr. State. I mean, I suppose as long as it’s not anything that’s illegal or against any rule, the parties could agree to anything, but absent an agreement we’re still *154 basically in the middle of selecting a jury, and we would never start over in the middle of that process simply because—
[The State]: I agree.
[The Court]: Right, go ahead.
[The State]: The only thing I’ve stated is if the Defense believes there is prejudice because of this, that they put it on the record now so we know what it is, and then we can address that now.
[The Court]: You’re not going to find a lot of help in the rules. I know you’ve already looked at that. Well [Md. Rule 4-312(f) ] addresses the question of additional jurors. “When the number of jurors of the regular panel may be insufficient to allow for selection of a jury, the Court may direct that additional jurors be summoned at [] random from the qualified jury wheel and thereafter [ ] at random in a manor [sic] provided by the statute.” So the rule provides that we can do exactly what I’m going to do, and that’s summons additional jurors. I don’t know that we can—
[Co-defendant’s Counsel]: I just maintain my objection for the record, Your Honor.
[The Court]: Sure. Now if you come up with some reason overnight why we can do anything different, then we can still, we can still, dismiss this group.

The discussion then diverted briefly towards determining the appropriate time for the venirepersons to return the follow morning, and then continued:

[Respondent’s Counsel]: And at this particular point, I would just join in the general objection and look at things tonight and let Your Honor know if anything is different.
[The Court]: I think the State’s Attorney makes a good point.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 A.3d 865, 419 Md. 149, 2011 Md. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tejada-md-2011.