Tribbitt v. State

943 A.2d 1260, 403 Md. 638, 2008 Md. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 2008
Docket72, September Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 943 A.2d 1260 (Tribbitt v. State) 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
Tribbitt v. State, 943 A.2d 1260, 403 Md. 638, 2008 Md. LEXIS 117 (Md. 2008).

Opinion

I.

HARRELL, Judge.

Maryland Code (2002, 2007 Cum.Supp.), Criminal Law Article § 3-602 states that “ ‘[sjexual abuse’ means an act that involves sexual molestation or exploitation of a minor.... ” Christopher Larry Tribbitt, Petitioner, convicted of violating this statute, argues essentially that § 3-602 should be given a much more restrictive meaning, with the result that his conduct in this case was not criminal. We do not agree.

II.

During the 2003 through 2006 school years, Kylie, the victim, 1 was a student in a physical education class taught by Tribbitt at a Queen Anne’s County public middle school. Over this time, Tribbitt and the victim grew “close.”

According to Kylie’s testimony at trial, Tribbitt requested, in the Spring of 2005, that she show him her thong underwear by pulling up her shirt and pulling down her pants. She *642 complied. 2 In August 2005, at the beginning of her ninth grade year, Kylie joined the school volleyball team. Tribbitt was its coach. Over the course of the volleyball season, Tribbitt touched Kylie inappropriately on four or five occasions in the school’s locker room. Kylie testified that he requested that she hug him and rub her thighs up against him. During this hug, she noticed Tribbitt’s tumescence. Kylie also claimed that Tribbitt grabbed her “butt” as they walked through the locker room.

On one occasion, when Tribbitt’s shoe was untied, he said to Kylie, “can you bend down there and tie it and while you’re down there,” and, winking at her, “pretty much tugged on his penis....” 3 They then walked together into the equipment room. Kylie testified that, while in the equipment room, Tribbitt “rubbed [her] butt and inner thighs.” Next, they walked into the girls’ locker room where Tribbitt rubbed Kylie’s vaginal area through her pants.

In an encounter later during the volleyball season, Tribbitt grabbed Kylie and played with her thong. She described yet another incident where Tribbitt grabbed her and, with his hand, started “really going down [her] pants and he got like half way down there ...,” stopping just above her vagina.

Following a bench trial on 17 November 2006 in the Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County, the trial judge made the following relevant findings of fact:

[T]here are several things that, probably a lot more than these, that are not in dispute. There was no oral sex; there was no sexual intercourse; there was no digital penetration. In my mind, there was no child pornography. There clearly was somebody who was responsible and that was you, Mr. Tribbitt, in your role, not only as Kylie’s teacher, coach, and *643 what you did was obviously, completely inappropriate, and we’ll get to whether it was criminal momentarily.
With respect to the statute, 3-602, sexual abuse of a minor, ... there’s no dispute that the supervisor here was Mr. Tribbitt. The issue is whether or not, in this case, that sexual abuse is exploitation of a minor and would include sexual offense in any degree.
What is clear to me is that over this period of time, there were inappropriate acts that are criminal in nature, that involve sexual offenses which is improper touching. Clear to me, four or five occasions when in middle school, four or five occasions in high school, that there was contact, purposeful contact, where you felt Kylie’s butt, not her hip; her vaginal area, rubbed against her. There’s no question in my mind that all that occurred. So with respect to Count 1, I have absolutely no doubt that that involves sexual exploitation of Kylie by you, that that was for your own sexual gratification. So as to Count 1, child abuse of a minor, the verdict is guilty.

Tribbitt was sentenced to 25 years in prison, with all but 18 months suspended, and five years of supervised probation. The Court of Special Appeals, in Tribbitt’s direct appeal, affirmed in an unreported opinion. We granted Tribbitt’s petition for certiorari to consider a single question: “[m]ay sexual contact that does not constitute a sexual offense in any degree or otherwise violate any provision of Maryland law nonetheless provide the basis for ‘sexual abuse’ within the meaning of Section 3-602 of the Criminal Law Article?”

III.
Maryland Rule 8-131 (c) directs:
When an action has been tried without a jury, the appellate court will review the case on both the law and the evidence. It will not set aside the judgment of the trial court on the evidence unless clearly erroneous, and will give due regard *644 to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.

Thus, we refrain from engaging in de novo fact-finding and accept the trial court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous. Glover v. State, 368 Md. 211, 221-22, 792 A.2d 1160,1165-66 (2002). When we review a trial court’s determinations of legal questions or conclusions of law based on those findings of fact, however, the clearly erroneous standard does not apply. Heat & Power Corp. v. Air Prods. & Chem. Inc., 320 Md. 584, 591, 578 A.2d 1202, 1205 (1990). Instead, we review de novo the trial court’s “relation of those facts to the applicable law.” Storetrax.com, Inc. v. Gurland, 397 Md. 37, 50, 915 A.2d 991, 998 (2007); see also Schisler v. State, 394 Md. 519, 535, 907 A.2d 175, 184 (2006) (noting that when an issue “involves an interpretation and application of Maryland constitutional, statutory or case law, our Court must determine whether the trial court’s conclusions are ‘legally correct’ under a de novo standard of review”).

IV.

Tribbitt does not challenge the facts as found by the trial court. Rather, Tribbitt contends that Maryland Code (2002, 2007 Cum. Supp.), Criminal Law Article § 3-602 4 does not criminalize the acts that the trial court found that he committed on Kylie. Section 3-602 states:

Sexual abuse of a minor.
(a) Definitions.—(1) In this section the following words have the meanings indicated.
(2) “Family member” has the meaning stated in § 3-601 of this subtitle.
(3) “Household member” has the meaning stated in § 3-601 of this subtitle.
*645 (4)(i) “Sexual abuse” means an act that involves sexual molestation or exploitation of a minor, whether physical injuries are sustained or not.
(ii) “Sexual abuse” includes:
1. incest;
2.

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Bluebook (online)
943 A.2d 1260, 403 Md. 638, 2008 Md. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tribbitt-v-state-md-2008.