Thomas v. State

320 A.2d 538, 21 Md. App. 572, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 430
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 13, 1974
Docket182, September Term, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 320 A.2d 538 (Thomas 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
Thomas v. State, 320 A.2d 538, 21 Md. App. 572, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 430 (Md. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Gilbert, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On March 29, 1974 the appellant, Calvin Edward Thomas, a fifteen year old, appeared at the trial of Larry Anthony Moody. Moody was charged with the robbery and larceny of a watch. Appellant faced the identical charges in the same court because the juvenile court had waived jurisdiction over him on December 20, 1973, although the appellant’s case before the Circuit Court had not come on for trial inasmuch as he had entered an appeal to this Court from the waiver order. 1

We have attached to this opinion Appendix A, which is part of the transcript of both the Moody trial and the appellant’s subsequent contempt hearing. It would be superfluous to set forth in the text of this opinion the divers acts of the appellant that led to the contempt citation. Suffice it to say that the conduct of appellant, as reflected by Appendix A, leads to the inescapable conclusion that appellant so conducted himself as to demean the orderly administration of justice, depicted his contempt for the *574 Circuit Court for Kent County, was rude, discourteous, disrespectful, disruptive, defiant and irascible even after being warned by Judge George B. Rasin that if appellant persisted he would be cited for contempt. The appellant did persist, was cited, adjudged guilty and sentenced to 179 days in the County Jail. Judge Rasin, at the outset of the contempt proceeding, stated that he thought an “appropriate punishment” to be “some deprivation of . . . freedom, for some period of time that would be less than 6 months, which would not require a jury trial.” 2

In Roll v. State, supra at 48, we said:

“As direct contempts are those which occur in the presence of the court or so near to the court as to interrupt its proceedings, the judge is usually an observer of or has personal knowledge of the facts.” 3

Augustine Birrell, In the Name of Bodleian: Contempt of Court, wrote:

“An ill-disposed person may exhibit contempt of court in divers ways — for example, he may scandalize the court itself, which may be done not merely by the extreme measure of hurling missiles at the presiding judge, or loudly contemning his learning or authority, but by ostentatiously reading a newspaper in his presence, or laughing uproariously at a joke made by someone else. Such contempts, committed as they are in facie curiae, are criminal offences, and may be punished *575 summarily by immediate imprisonment without the right of appeal. 4 It speaks well both for the great good sense of the judges and for the deep-rooted legal instincts of our people that such offences are seldom heard of. It would be impossible nicely to define what measure of freedom of manners should be allowed in a court of justice, which, as we know, is neither a church nor a theatre, but, as a matter of practice, the happy mean between an awe-struck and unmanly silence and free-and-easy conversation is well preserved.”

Without attempting to define the “measure of freedom of manners . . . allowed in a court of justice”, we think it indubitable that reasonable men would agree that appellant’s conduct during the Moody trial was contemptuous, and that appellant carried such conduct forward into his own contempt hearing. Appellant’s contention that his “gestures were merely to get the attention of the Court so that he might testify; and his hostility was simply based upon an inner attitude toward a system which he felt was prejudicial” 5 does not excuse him from patently disdainful conduct. We find no merit in appellant’s assertion that “there is no factual support for the finding of contempt.”

An outcrop of appellant’s contemptuous conduct poses an additional question of whether a juvenile who commits a direct contempt of a Circuit Court can be summarily adjudged in contempt or must be referred to a juvenile court for a waiver or delinquency hearing.

By Laws 1969, Ch. 432, § 2, 6 the General Assembly set forth the legislative purpose of “Juvenile Causes”. Those purposes are:

*576 “(1) To provide for the care, protection, and wholesome mental and physical development of children coming within the provisions of this subtitle;
(2) To remove from children committing delinquent acts the taint of criminality and the consequences of criminal behavior, and to substitute therefor a program of treatment, training, and rehabilitation consistent with the protection of the public interest;
(3) To place a child in a wholesome family environment whenever possible;
(4) To separate a child from his parents only when necessary for his welfare or in the interest of public safety;
(5) To provide judicial procedure for carrying out the provisions of this subtitle.
This subtitle shall be liberally construed to effectuate these purposes.”

This Court in the case of In re Hamill, 10 Md. App. 586, 271 A. 2d 762 (1970), in commenting upon the purpose of the Act said, at 590-91:

“. . . [T]he Legislature intended no departure in philosophy from that underlying previous juvenile court enactments in Maryland, as interpreted by the Court of Appeals, viz., that juvenile proceedings are of a special nature designed to meet the problems peculiar to the adolescent (In Re Fletcher, 251 Md. 520 [, 248 A. 2d 364 (1968)]); that the proceedings of a juvenile court are not criminal in nature and its dispositions are not punishments for crime {In the Matter of Cromwell, 232 Md. 409 [, 194 A. 2d 88 (1963)]); that the juvenile law has as its underlying concept the protection of the juvenile, so that judges, in making dispositions in juvenile cases, think not in terms of guilt, but of the child’s need for protection or rehabilitation (In Re Johnson, 254 Md. 517 [, 255 A. 2d 419 (1969)]); that *577 the juvenile act does not contemplate the punishment of children where they are found to be delinquent, but rather an attempt to correct and rehabilitate them in ‘a wholesome family environment whenever possible,’ although rehabilitation may have to be sought in some instances in an institution (Moquin v. State, 216 Md. 524 [, 140 A. 2d 914 (1958)]).”

See also In re Arnold, 12 Md. App. 384, 278 A. 2d 658 (1971).

Courts Art. § 1-501 provides that:

“ . . .

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Bluebook (online)
320 A.2d 538, 21 Md. App. 572, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-state-mdctspecapp-1974.