Uzzle v. State

832 A.2d 869, 152 Md. App. 548, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 2, 2003
Docket2722, Sept. Term, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 832 A.2d 869 (Uzzle 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
Uzzle v. State, 832 A.2d 869, 152 Md. App. 548, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 118 (Md. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

CHARLES E. MOYLAN, JR., Judge,

Retired, Specially Assigned.

The appellant, D’Quinta A. Uzzle, was convicted by a Prince George’s County jury, presided over by Judge William B. Spellbring, Jr., of two counts of first degree murder and one count of using a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence. On this appeal, he raises five contentions:

*552 1. that Judge Spellbring abused his discretion in refusing to ask prospective jurors if they had such strong feelings about guns or gun owners that they might be unable to render a fair and impartial verdict;
2. that Judge Spellbring erroneously failed to suppress the appellant’s involuntary statement;
3. that Judge Spellbring erroneously failed to give relief for a discovery violation when the State failed to supply the results of a voice stress analysis of a State’s witness;
4. that Judge Spellbring erroneously failed to afford adequate relief after a witness referred to a lie detector test; and
5. that Judge Spellbring erroneously ordered the merger of a non-existent conviction.

Because the appellant has not challenged the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdicts, it is unnecessary for us to recount the circumstances of the crime, except to the limited extent to which the circumstances have some bearing on one or more of the contentions.

The Voir-Dire Examination

The only fact about the crimes that has any possible bearing on the appellant’s first contention is that he was convicted of two murders, the modality of which was the shooting of the victims by the appellant with a handgun. Accordingly, the appellant was interested in the attitudes of the jurors about guns.

At the conclusion of the voir dire questioning by the court, Judge Spellbring asked defense counsel if he had any “exception to either what I did give or what I did not give.” Counsel replied:

On page [13-14] of the voir dire, what I proposed there is a series of questions on guns and weapons. I would ask the Court to ask the jurors if they have any strong feelings regarding people who own guns and if they have any strong feelings either for or against gun control, if they have any specific fear of guns that might affect their judgment in a *553 case where the evidence showed that the decedent died of gunshot wound.

That exchange had reference to appellant’s proposed voir dire question # 8. To be sure, defense counsel then followed his express objection to the court’s failure to give question # 8 with an apparent but halting and ambiguous reference to question # 9, and Judge Spellbring expressly stated, “I’ll decline to ask the questions cited by the defense in their voir dire, subtitled eight and nine.” Both the appellant’s subtitling of his first contention and all of his argument in support of it, however, has reference only to proposed voir dire question # 8, and we shall confine our analysis exclusively to it. Proposed question # 8, entitled “Guns/Weapons,” was actually the following set of questions:

A. Does any juror have any strong feelings regarding people who own guns?
If so, what are they?
B. Does any juror believe that it is a good idea to keep a gun for self-protection?
C. Does any juror have any strong feelings about people who keep handguns and ammunition in their homes? If so, describe.
D. Does any juror have any strong feelings about people who carry handguns?
If so, describe.
E. Is there any juror having strong feelings either for or against gun control? If so describe those feelings.
F. Do you have any specific fear of guns that might affect your judgment in a case where the evidence showed that the deceased died of a gun shot wound?
G. Has any juror, or his or her family or household member, received any training in the use of a handgun?

A. Dingle’s Non-Retroactivity Is immaterial

The appellant relies almost exclusively on Dingle v. State, 861 Md. 1, 759 A.2d 819 (2000), for his argument that Judge *554 Spellbring committed error in declining to ask the set of questions requested in proposed voir dire # 8. At oral argument, we became distracted by the issue of whether Dingle v. State, filed on September 15, 2000, announced “new law,” and, if it did so, whether it should be applied retroactively to this case, which became “final” on December 19, 1998, thirty days after the appellant’s sentences were imposed with no appeal to this Court having been filed. Maryland Rule 8-202(a) and (f). 1 The Dingle filing, therefore, did not come until almost two years after this case had become final.

On taking a second look at Dingle v. State, however, we are persuaded that it does not even speak to the voir dire issue in front of us, quite aside from any question of its non-retroactivity. Although our tentative opinion is that Dingle would not apply retroactively to this case, which was final long before Dingle was filed, we are relieved of any necessity of making a close analysis of the issue because of our further and considered conclusion that Dingle could not help the appellant on the merits of this contention even if it did apply.

B. Dingle’s Concern With the Modality of the Questioning

The Dingle opinion did not devote any analysis to or even discuss the substantive merits of the voir dire questions before it. Assuming the questions to have been a proper subject for voir dire inquiry, its exclusive concern was with the two-part nature of the questions and the attendant instruction that the prospective jurors should only respond if their answers were in the affirmative to both parts of the questions. At the very outset of the opinion, the Court of Appeals set forth the “issue this case presents”:

*555 In his Petition for Writ of Certiorari, the petitioner asked this Court to address the following question:

“Did the lower court err in approving, over defense objection, a method of voir dire (a two-part question, respond only if your answer to both parts is in the affirmative) which made the jurors, rather than the trial judge, the final arbiter of impartiality and prevented defense counsel from exercise of his challenges for cause?”

361 Md. at 3 n. 1, 759 A.2d 819 (emphasis supplied).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
832 A.2d 869, 152 Md. App. 548, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uzzle-v-state-mdctspecapp-2003.