Wicks v. State

535 A.2d 459, 311 Md. 376, 1988 Md. LEXIS 1
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 7, 1988
Docket4, September Term, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 535 A.2d 459 (Wicks 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
Wicks v. State, 535 A.2d 459, 311 Md. 376, 1988 Md. LEXIS 1 (Md. 1988).

Opinions

COLE, Judge.

In this case we shall decide whether the trial judge had the discretion to exclude the defendant’s prior petit larceny conviction for impeachment purposes.

Jack Ellwood Wicks was indicted in the Circuit Court for. Anne Arundel County for sexual child abuse, assault, as[379]*379sault and battery, and third degree sexual offense. At trial, defense counsel moved in limine to exclude Wicks’s 35-year-old petit larceny conviction for impeachment purposes. The trial judge denied the motion, concluding that larceny, even petit, is an infamous crime, and that a witness’s conviction for an infamous crime is admissible without reference to its age. On cross-examination, the State asked Wicks if he had ever been convicted of larceny and Wicks answered affirmatively. The jury found Wicks guilty of sexual child abuse, third degree sexual offense, and battery. Wicks appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, but we granted certiorari prior to argument in the intermediate appellate court.

On appeal, Wicks argues that the trial court erred when it concluded that it had no choice but to allow the State to impeach Wicks’s testimony with his prior petit larceny conviction. Wicks contends that the trial court had the discretion to exclude his prior conviction because petit larceny is not an infamous crime and, even if petit larceny is an infamous crime, the trial court had the discretion to exclude the evidence because of its remoteness. The State maintains that petit larceny is an infamous crime and that infamous crimes are admissible for impeachment purposes without reference to their age. We agree with the State and explain.

In Maryland, a trial judge’s discretion to determine the admissibility of crimes that have been offered for impeachment purposes is limited by Maryland Code (1974, 1984 Repl. Yol.), § 10-905 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article. Section 10-905 provides that “[ejvidence is admissible to prove the ... fact of [a witness’s] conviction of an infamous crime.” This statute deprives the trial court of discretion to determine the admissibility of infamous crimes by making infamous crimes automatically admissible for impeachment purposes. Prout v. State, 311 Md. 348, 535 A.2d 445 (1988). Thus, under the statute, the trial court’s discretion to exclude prior convictions offered for impeachment purposes is limited to non-infamous crimes.

[380]*380We recently discussed impeachment by prior conviction in Prout. In that case we considered whether the trial judge erred in excluding the prosecuting witness’s prostitution and solicitation convictions when they were offered to impeach her testimony. We held that the trial judge had the discretion to determine the admissibility of the witness’s prior convictions because prostitution and solicitation were not “infamous” crimes within the meaning of § 10-905. In reaching this conclusion we traced the roots of the statute to 1864, where we found Maryland’s first statute on impeachment by prior conviction to be substantively identical to its modern counterpart. Prout, 535 A.2d at 450. In considering the purpose of the 1864 enactment, we discovered that its function was to ameliorate the harsh common law rule which disqualified those individuals convicted of infamous crimes from testifying in judicial proceedings. The 1864 legislation presented a more lenient rule by allowing these witnesses to testify subject only to impeachment by their prior infamous convictions. Id. 535 A.2d at 450. Thus, in Prout, we concluded that “infamous” as it is used in § 10-905 is intended to describe only a narrow class of crimes that rendered an individual incompetent to testify at common law. Id. 535 A.2d at 450. We also recognized that these crimes were treason, the common law felonies, and the crimen falsi. Id. 535 A.2d at 450-451; Garitee v. Bond, 102 Md. 379, 383, 62 A. 631, 633 (1905). Accordingly, the question we must now decide is whether petit larceny is treason, a felony, or crimen falsi, and thus an infamous crime that rendered a person incompetent to testify at common law.1 If it is, then the trial judge was correct in concluding that he had no discretion under § 10-905 to exclude Wicks’s prior petit larceny conviction.

Larceny was one of the first crimes recognized by the common law, 2 J. Turner, Russell on Crime 1000 (11th ed. 1985), and was divided into petit and grand by statute in [381]*3811275. Statute of Westminster I, 3 Edw. 1, c. 15 (1275). That division, much like the one today, was based on the value of the goods stolen. If the value of the goods was twelve pence or less, the theft was classified as petit larceny and the punishment was forfeiture of goods and whipping.2 If the value of the goods was greater than twelve pence, the offense was classified as grand larceny and was punishable by death. 3 W. Holdsworth, A History of the English Law 366 (1966); R. Perkins & R. Boyce, Criminal Law 335 (3d ed. 1982); S. Rapalje, A Treatise on the Law of Larceny § 13, at 13 (1892); 3 Wharton’s Criminal Law § 356, at 309 (C. Torcia, 14th ed. 1980); 50 AmJur. 2d Larceny § 44 (1970); 52A C.J.S. Larceny § 60(1) (1968). However, all larceny, whether petit or grand, was considered to be a felony. R. Perkins & R. Boyce, supra, at 335; Wharton’s Criminal Law, supra, § 356, at 309; 50 Am.Jur.2d Larceny, supra, § 44, at 208.3

In 1809, the legislature divided larceny into simple and petit at the amount of five dollars and assigned different punishments to each offense. Chapter 138 of the Laws of 1809. Nevertheless, each offense remained a felony. Thus, in 1864 when § 10-905’s predecessor was enacted, petit larceny was a felony and thus an infamous crime that was admissible for impeachment purposes under the statute. By Chapter 78 of the Laws of 1933, the legislature changed the amount dividing petit and grand larceny from five dollars to twenty-five dollars and made larceny under the value of twenty-five dollars a misdemeanor.

[382]*382The General' Assembly’s reclassification of petit larceny from a felony to a misdemeanor manifests its intention that a person convicted of petit larceny not be made to suffer the consequences that flow from a felony conviction.

However, this legislation did not change its status under § 10-905 which determined an infamous crime to be a conviction which rendered an individual incompetent to testify at common law. Thus, although petit larceny is now a misdemeanor, it was clearly a felony at common law and “infamous” within the meaning of § 10-905. The trial judge was therefore correct in concluding he had no discretion to exclude this prior conviction when offered for impeachment purposes.

Nonetheless, even if we were to conclude (which we do not) that the change of petit larceny to a misdemeanor prevents its use for impeachment because it was no longer a felony, the result here would be the same.

Infamous crimes at common law also included the crimen falsi. Prout, 535 A.2d at 451; Garitee v. Bond, 102 Md. 379, 383, 62 A. 631, 633 (1905). Therefore, if petit larceny is a crimen falsi it is admissible under § 10-905 without regard to whether it was, or is currently, a felony or a misdemeanor.

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Wicks v. State
535 A.2d 459 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
535 A.2d 459, 311 Md. 376, 1988 Md. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wicks-v-state-md-1988.