Williams v. State

102 A.2d 714, 204 Md. 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1982
Docket[No. 65, October Term, 1953.] [No. 82, October Term, 1953.]
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 102 A.2d 714 (Williams 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
Williams v. State, 102 A.2d 714, 204 Md. 55 (Md. 1982).

Opinion

SOBELOFF, ,C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The interest and importance that attach to the issues raised in this case are vastly disproportionate to. the small fines imposed by the Criminal Court of Baltimore City — $25 and $50 on the appellants Williams and Jones upon their conviction on one count and two counts respectively — for assault and battery on police officers and a police matron. We permitted consolidation of the appeals because the convictions were based upon facts practically identical.

Appellants contend that the charges of assault and battery cannot be sustained, since the charge of disturbing the peace, for which reason appellants say they were arrested, has been stetted in the case of Williams, and resulted in a verdict of “not guilty” in the case of Jones! The appellant Williams urges further that her conviction should be set aside because a juror's affidavit discloses that the jury was influenced by race prejudice.

Appellants are two young Negro women, native Baltimoreans, employed by the Government in Washington, D. C. They returned to Baltimore to visit their families on Christmas Day, 1952. Arriving at the Pennsylvania Railroad Station, they sought transportation to northwest Baltimore. They observed a taxicab waiting to pull out of line. It was already occupied by another passenger, a Negress desiring to go to Orleans and Wolfe Streets, in east Baltimore. Before the driver lowered the meter flag the appellants put their bags on the front seat of the cab and occupied, the rear seats.

*59 Appellants’ version can be given in Mrs. William’s words: “The driver,” she testified, “looked at us and said: ‘You hit me with that bag. I don’t have to take that.’ We looked at him. He said, T don’t have to take you where you are going.’ I said: ‘You are driving a public vehicle. You are supposed to take us where we are going.’ He insisted we get out. In the meantime, the first passenger in stepped across Miss Jones and me and got out. Then the dispatcher came up and asked us, Do you want a cab? Just then the driver had gotten out of the cab and had put our bags on the platform. I said, No, we already have a cab.” An unyielding position was maintained by the appellants despite the cab driver’s demand that they leave his cab and by the cab driver despite the original occupant’s leaving the cab to engage another.

A dynamic element was introduced into the impasse by the arrival of two police officers who had been called at the cab driver’s instance by the radio dispatcher. The story is told by appellant Jones as follows: “We stayed in the cab and within a matter of minutes, up comes this patrol wagon and two officers. Officer Cord-well opened the door and said, ‘Come here, you.’ He pulled me out of the taxi and literally threw me in the wagon. While he was pulling me out, Mrs. Williams said to him: ‘You are hurting her.’ He said: ‘You shut up because you are coming too.’ ”

Such was the appellants’ account. Omitted from the appendix of appellants’ brief is all testimony that would tend to indicate the State’s version that the appellants created a disturbance and pushed, shoved, and kicked the officers before any arrest was attempted. At the trial both police officers and a starter for the Yellow Cab Company testified that the appellants created “noise and commotion” by stomping their feet on the floor of the cab and by using loud and profane language. The officers also stated that when they approached the taxicab and before they had chance to speak to the two women, appellant Jones threw a hat box at Officer Schne *60 blein and then came out of the cab and grabbed the officer by the lapels and started to shake him. Officer Schenblein said on the witness stand, “Yes, had her hands on both lapels of my coat. I said, ‘We are here to investigate a complaint. I don’t know who is wrong. If you give me time, maybe I can help you. Relax, I will try to help you.’ She said: T don’t need help from you or no other white (profanity). Anybody who wears that uniform, I have no respect for.’ ” Miss Jones, according to the officers, was then placed under arrest but she “jumped back in the cab.” Officer Cordwell testified, “I reached in the cab and told her she was under arrest, to come out of the cab. With that, the Williams woman, sitting on the left rear, kicked at me with her left foot. She missed me. Then she swung around and hit me on the right shoulder with her hand.” It was testified that Mrs. Williams said, “Get your hands off her. You don’t know who you are locking up. You don’t know who you are fooling with.” Appellant Willimas was then also placed under arrest. The account given by the officers is supported by the cab driver.

We are asked to conclude from the evidence that the cab driver’s refusal to permit the appellants to use his cab was a manifestation of racial prejudice and we are urged to hold that all subsequent events should be viewed in the light of this alleged initial discrimination. Whatever one might think of the driver’s behavior, the suggestion that race prejudice must have motivated him is not established. He was, it appears, willing to serve his original passenger, a Negro woman desiring to go to Orleans and Wolfe Streets in east Baltimore. Why would he decline service to others of the same race on the same ride, since he was already committed to a Negro customer? It was not a case of rejecting Negro passengers to give preference to white.

Especially incomprehensible and not to be explained as racial antagonism is the cab driver’s alleged conduct, if we assume the appellants’ version that they had not yet told him their destination, and that he did not learn *61 until they were at the Police Station that their homes were in northwest Baltimore. His version was that he declined their patronage in the first instance because he was committed to a patron going in the opposite direction. If nothing had happened to offend him, justifiably or otherwise, or to cause him to refuse to carry the appellants where they wished to go, since appellants say he did not know at the time that their destination was in the opposite direction from the other passenger, and if his sole objection to them was on account of their race, one is at a loss to reconcile this with the undisputed fact that he already had accepted a Negro passenger without objection. However this may be, the issues we are called upon to decide do not turn on the racial attitude of the cab driver.

There was further testimony by State’s witnesses that at the police station appellant Jones slapped, scratched and kicked Matron Poole and bit the finger of Officer Schneblein, for which he was treated at the hospital.

Indictments charging disorderly conduct and assault and battery were returned in the usual form. The appellant Jones was tried first, in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City by the court (Cullen, J.) sitting without a jury. Her indictment charged disturbance of the peace, and assault and battery upon Police Officer Schneblein and assault and battery upon Matron Poole. Verdict was withheld by the Judge pending disposition of the Williams case which was later tried before a jury. Appellant Williams was found guilty of disturbing the peace and of assault and battery upon Police Officer Cordwell.

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Bluebook (online)
102 A.2d 714, 204 Md. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-md-1982.