Tengeres v. State ( 2021 )


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  • Toni Tengeres v. State of Maryland
    No. 42, September Term 2020
    Criminal Procedure – Appeal from District Court to Circuit Court – Absence of
    Defendant – Dismissal and Reinstatement of Appeal. A defendant who is convicted of
    criminal charges in the District Court may appeal to a circuit court for a trial de novo. If
    the defendant fails to appear for a proceeding in the circuit court and the court then
    dismisses the appeal under Maryland Rule 7-112(f) for failure to appear, the appeal may
    be reinstated for good cause if the defendant files a timely motion to reinstate. The decision
    whether to reinstate an appeal is addressed to the discretion of the circuit court, which is to
    consider the totality of the circumstances and apply the standard of good cause liberally to
    favor reinstatement of appeals.
    Criminal Procedure – Appeal from District Court to Circuit Court – Good Cause for
    Reinstatement of Appeal. A defendant who had been convicted in the District Court
    timely appealed her conviction to the circuit court for a trial de novo. That trial was
    postponed in part due to the Covid-19 pandemic. A status hearing was held to re-schedule
    her case in anticipation of the resumption of normal court operations. The defendant failed
    to appear, and the circuit court dismissed the appeal. Given the totality of the
    circumstances, there was good cause to reinstate her appeal. It was undisputed that the
    defendant wished to pursue the appeal, that she had not received actual notice of the hearing
    until the day of the hearing, and that she had no immediate options that day for care of her
    young child and for transportation to the courthouse. In addition, the sole purpose of such
    status hearings was to determine which defendants wished to proceed to trial after the
    courts re-opened; a defendant could be excused from attending such a hearing by filing a
    one-page form with the court indicating an intention to proceed to trial.
    Circuit Court for Washington County
    Case No. C-21-CR-20-000012
    Argument: February 5, 2021
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 42
    September Term, 2020
    TONI TENGERES
    V.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    _____________________________________
    Barbera, C.J.,
    McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten
    Getty
    Booth
    Biran,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by McDonald, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: June 17, 2021
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2021-06-17 12:06-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    Maryland has a two-tier trial court system for certain criminal offenses. Under that
    system, a defendant convicted in the District Court may appeal to the appropriate circuit
    court for a trial de novo. The defendant’s failure to appear for the trial or other proceeding
    in the circuit court will result in dismissal of the appeal, unless the court grants a request
    to postpone that proceeding. If an appeal is dismissed because the defendant fails to appear,
    the defendant may move to reinstate the appeal. Such a motion is to be granted if there is
    “good cause” – a standard that past cases have held should be liberally applied.
    Petitioner Toni Tengeres was convicted in the District Court in December 2019 for
    failing to send her child to school. She appealed that conviction to the Circuit Court for
    Washington County, which scheduled her case for a trial de novo. In early 2020, the Covid-
    19 pandemic forced the Circuit Court to postpone many criminal cases on its docket,
    including Ms. Tengeres’ appeal for a trial de novo.
    In an effort to re-schedule criminal cases delayed by the pandemic, the Circuit Court
    held status hearings in each case to assess which would be resolved without a trial and
    which needed to be scheduled for a bench or jury trial. Ms. Tengeres did not appear at her
    status hearing for reasons not disputed by the State – lack of actual notice until the day of
    the status hearing, when she had no immediate options for childcare or transportation to
    the courthouse.
    During the status hearing, the Circuit Court denied her counsel’s request for a brief
    postponement and, at the request of the State, dismissed her appeal. The court later denied
    her motion to reinstate her appeal and her motion to reconsider that denial, both without
    explanation.
    This appeal concerns whether the Circuit Court correctly applied the “good cause”
    standard when it denied Ms. Tengeres’ motion to reinstate her appeal. For the reasons
    discussed below, we hold that it did not, and we reverse and remand the case to the Circuit
    Court to reinstate Ms. Tengeres’ appeal.
    I
    Background
    A.     De Novo Appeals from the District Court to Circuit Court in Criminal Cases
    1.     De Novo Appeals in Criminal Cases
    Like several other states, Maryland has a two-tiered trial court system with respect
    to certain criminal offenses. See Stone v. State, 
    344 Md. 97
    , 104-06 (1996). The District
    Court has original jurisdiction of misdemeanor offenses and certain felonies. Maryland
    Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJ”), §§4-301, 4-302. Upon conviction of
    such an offense in the District Court, a defendant may appeal to the circuit court, where the
    defendant is entitled to have a trial de novo. CJ §12-401(b)(2), (f); see Oku v. State, 
    433 Md. 582
    , 589-93 (2013).
    This Court has adopted rules governing appeals from the District Court to a circuit
    court. Maryland Rules 7-100 et seq. Rule 7-112 outlines the procedures for an appeal to
    a circuit court for a trial de novo. Pertinent to this case, section (f) of that rule governs
    dismissal and reinstatement of such an appeal.
    2.     Dismissal and Reinstatement of Appeal When Appellant is Absent
    Rule 7-112(f) provides that an appellant may dismiss an appeal for a trial de novo
    at any time. Maryland Rule 7-112(f)(1). In addition, the rule states that “[t]he court shall
    2
    dismiss an appeal if the appellant fails to appear as required for trial or any other proceeding
    on the appeal.” Id.; see also Maryland Rule 7-114(b)(3) (dismissal of an appeal to be heard
    de novo is mandatory if appeal is “withdrawn” pursuant to Rule 7-1121). Nonetheless, the
    court has discretion to reinstate the appeal upon the filing of a timely motion to reinstate
    and a showing of “good cause.” Maryland Rule 7-112(f)(3).
    Cases construing the dismissal and reinstatement provisions of Rule 7-112(f) make
    clear that, although the rule appears to make dismissal mandatory whenever an appellant
    fails to appear for a proceeding, ultimately dismissal is only appropriate if the appellant’s
    absence was willful or voluntary. See Stone, 
    344 Md. at 106
    . In addition, a motion to
    reinstate an appeal under the rule for good cause is to be liberally granted. See Mobuary
    v. State, 
    435 Md. 417
     (2013).
    B.     Facts and Proceedings
    1.     Charges and Trial in the District Court
    On August 16, 2019, Ms. Tengeres was charged in the District Court of Maryland
    sitting in Washington County with failing to send her then-six-year-old child to his
    kindergarten on numerous dates during the 2018-2019 school year, in violation of
    1
    The reference to an appeal being “withdrawn” pursuant to Rule 7-112 is apparently
    a holdover cross-reference to an earlier version of Rule 7-112, which used the verb
    “withdraw” to refer to an appellant’s decision not to pursue an appeal and which stated that
    the appeal was “considered withdrawn” if the appellant failed to appear for a proceeding.
    An amendment to the rule adopted in 2007 in accordance with the 157th Report of the
    Standing Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure amended this portion of Rule 7-
    112(f) to eliminate the references to “withdrawal” of an appeal in favor of the verb
    “dismiss.” See 157th Report of the Standing Committee on Rules of Practice and
    Procedure (2006) at 62-63, available at https://perma.cc/3SNU-99SU.
    3
    Maryland Code, Education Article (“ED”), §7-301.2 At her initial appearance in the
    District Court on October 17, 2019, Ms. Tengeres asked for appointment of an attorney.
    An assistant public defender was assigned to represent Ms. Tengeres.
    On December 18, 2019, the case came to trial in the District Court. School records
    introduced by a school official revealed that Ms. Tengeres’ son had been absent or tardy
    without excuse for more than half of the 2018-2019 school year.3 Ms. Tengeres testified
    on her own behalf at the trial. Among other things, she said that she and her child had lived
    in seven or eight different places during that school year, including a homeless shelter and
    various motels. She also stated that she had encountered various transportation issues in
    getting her son to school, as her grandmother’s truck was no longer available and the school
    was unable to provide transportation for a time. She further testified that she had been
    dealing with health issues, for which she was taking medication but not otherwise receiving
    treatment.
    In rebuttal testimony, the school official testified that the school system was not
    always able to immediately provide bus transportation when the family moved to a new
    location, but that school officials would sometimes personally provide transportation and
    2
    A person with legal custody of a child between the ages of 5 and 16 who fails to
    ensure that the child attends school or otherwise receives instruction is subject, for a first
    offense, to a fine of $50 for each day the child is absent and imprisonment for up to three
    days. ED §7-301(e)(2)(i). Enhanced penalties apply for subsequent convictions.
    3
    According to the testimony of the school official, the school records showed that
    the child had attended school 79 and one-half days, had been absent without excuse 68 and
    one-half days, and had been tardy without excuse 34 days.
    4
    that there were many occasions on which Ms. Tengeres’ son missed the bus because his
    mother did not get him up in time.
    In closing argument, defense counsel conceded that he could not fault the efforts of
    school officials to assist Ms. Tengeres in ensuring that her son attended school. He argued,
    however, that Ms. Tengeres was “struggling with some really serious fundamental survival
    issues here that kept her from getting her kid to school.”
    The District Court found Ms. Tengeres guilty of the charge and sentenced her to
    three days in the Washington County Detention Center, all suspended, and placed her on
    unsupervised probation for 18 months with special conditions that, among other things, she
    ensure that her son attend school regularly.
    2.     Appeal to Circuit Court
    On January 6, 2020, Ms. Tengeres invoked her right to a trial de novo in the Circuit
    Court for Washington County by filing a timely appeal. On January 30, 2020, Ms.
    Tengeres’ counsel filed a paper in the Circuit Court entering a not guilty plea on her behalf
    and asking for a jury trial.
    Postponement of Trial De Novo
    The trial in the Circuit Court was originally scheduled for March 23, 2020, but
    defense counsel requested a postponement in early February for personal reasons, and the
    court re-scheduled the trial for June 22, 2020. In the interim, the Covid-19 pandemic
    arrived in Maryland and many court proceedings, including Ms. Tengeres’ trial, were
    suspended or delayed.
    5
    Pandemic Postponements and Phased Reopening of Courts
    The Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals issued administrative orders in early 2020
    that governed court proceedings during the pandemic emergency and its aftermath and that
    instructed the State’s courts how to manage their dockets. Those orders initially postponed
    most court proceedings and envisioned a gradual return to normal court proceedings with
    precautions as the public health permitted.
    The administrative orders described five phases and the types of court proceedings
    that would be conducted during each phase.4 Phase I, which began March 16, 2020,
    required the postponement of all but a few categories of matters. Phase II, which began on
    June 5, 2020, marked the beginning of the resumption of some court operations, but did
    not include criminal trials in the circuit courts. During Phase III, which began on July 20,
    2020, circuit courts would hold, among other proceedings, “jury prayer status hearings”
    such as the one that generated this appeal, and non-jury trials in criminal cases. During
    Phase IV, the courts would open for additional categories of proceedings not pertinent to
    this case. In Phase V, scheduled to begin on October 5, 2020, courts would commence full
    operations, including jury trials.5
    4
    A summary of the phases and their duration can be found at
    https://perma.cc/A6YD-XDYJ. The pertinent administrative order in effect at the time the
    Circuit Court scheduled the status hearing in Ms. Tengeres’ case was the Amended
    Administrative Order on the Progressive Resumption of Full Function of Judiciary
    Operations Previously Restricted Due to the Covid-19 Emergency (June 3, 2020), available
    at https://perma.cc/VY5V-7JDQ.
    5
    As a result of a surge in Covid-19 infections during the fall of 2020, the court
    system reverted back to Phase II during the period from November 16, 2020 through
    November 29, 2020, to Phase III for the period from November 30, 2020 through March
    6
    Status Hearings in the Circuit Court
    In the summer of 2020, in an effort to attend to the backlog of criminal cases
    consistently with the administrative orders, the Circuit Court planned to hold brief status
    hearings in each case in order to schedule future proceedings appropriately. (Certain court
    filings and forms also referred to these proceedings as “status conferences.”). A letter on
    the letterhead of the Circuit Court administrative judge to “Members of the Criminal Law
    Bar” outlined the plan, including the purpose and consequences of a status hearing.6 The
    letter explained that status hearings were being scheduled in all criminal cases “that are in
    a trial posture.” The evident purpose was to triage cases into three groups: (1) cases in
    which a defendant was ready to accept the State’s plea offer and enter a guilty plea or to
    accept another disposition offered by the State – a proceeding that could be held during
    Phase III; (2) cases in which the defendant desired a bench trial – also a proceeding that
    could be held during Phase III – which would be postponed to a date one week after the
    status hearing; and (3) cases in which the defendant desired a jury trial, which would be
    postponed to a date after October 5, 2020 – the beginning of Phase V, in which jury trials
    were to resume.7
    14, 2021, and to Phase IV during the period from March 15, 2021 through April 25, 2021,
    and has only recently returned to Phase V. However, those later developments do not affect
    the issues in this case, which concern events during the initial Phase III of the courts’
    reopening.
    6
    The letter is undated. Ms. Tengeres’ counsel has represented in his brief, and the
    State does not dispute, that he received the letter on July 15, 2020 attached to an email.
    7
    As indicated in the text, the process described in the Circuit Court administrative
    judge’s letter would include an inquiry into whether a defendant intended to accept a plea
    7
    The Circuit Court administrative judge’s letter explained that only counsel and the
    defendant would attend the status hearing; witnesses would not be present, except for
    victims who had a legal right to attend and who would do so by telephone. Defendants
    who had already decided, after consultation with counsel, to reject the State’s plea offer
    and to ask for a jury trial were given the option to forgo the status hearing by filing a one-
    page form “line” signed by the defendant and counsel that recited those decisions. (That
    form was attached to the administrative judge’s letter). The administrative judge’s letter
    warned that “[u]nless a completed line is filed, the Defendant’s failure to appear may result
    in the issuance of an arrest warrant.”8 The letter did not address appeals from the District
    offer from the State or to proceed to trial, presumably to ensure that cases that would be
    resolved through pleas would not delay the effort to schedule defendants desiring trials for
    as speedy a trial as feasible. While such an inquiry does not on its face involve the court
    in the negotiation of a guilty plea, we note that further inquiry into the details of a plea
    offer and the parties’ negotiations could lead a court into places it should not go. See Sharp
    v. State, 
    446 Md. 669
    , 699-701 (2016) (cautioning against trial court involvement in plea
    negotiations); see also Brown v. State, 
    470 Md. 503
    , 516 n.4 (2020) (noting that judicial
    involvement in plea bargaining raises a myriad of issues and is discouraged in many
    jurisdictions).
    8
    The relevant parts of the letter read as follows:
    As you are aware, Phase 3 of the Court’s reopening begins on Monday, July
    20. In an effort to get criminal cases that lost their trial dates due to the
    Court’s closure reset properly, the Court is setting in all criminal cases that
    are in a trial posture for a status hearing. These status hearings will be
    occurring in person at the courthouse. . . . At the status hearing, the Defendant
    may elect to enter a plea or other disposition offered by the State, the
    Defendant may elect to be tried by a jury and have his case continued to a
    date after October 5, 2020, or the Defendant may elect to proceed by way of
    a bench trial and have his case continued for a period of one week so that a
    courtroom can be made available and witnesses can brought in to testify.
    8
    Court for trials de novo separately from criminal cases that originated in the Circuit Court.
    The letter concluded with a description of protocols for entering and leaving the courthouse
    during the pandemic.
    Status Hearing in Ms. Tengeres’ Appeal
    On June 25, 2020, the Circuit Court scheduled a status hearing in Ms. Tengeres’
    appeal for July 20, 2020, at 10 a.m., during the first day of the court’s Phase III reopening.
    The notice for the status hearing indicated that any request to postpone the status hearing
    was to be addressed to the court pursuant to Rule 2-508. That rule generally provides that,
    on motion of a party or on its own initiative, a circuit court may postpone a proceeding “as
    justice may require.” Maryland Rule 2-508(a).
    Witnesses will not be present for the status hearings, except for victims of
    crimes that have a legal right to be present. The Court . . . will make every
    effort to have victims appear telephonically to promote social distancing and
    reduce the number of people in the courthouse.
    The Defendant is expected to appear in person unless, after consultation with
    counsel and careful consideration of the Defendant’s options, the Defendant
    determines that he/she wishes to be tried by a jury and intends to reject the
    State’s plea offer thereby making the status hearing unnecessary. If so, the
    Defendant and Defendant’s counsel may complete and sign the attached line
    and submit it to the Court. Once the Court is in receipt of the completed and
    signed line, the Court will cancel the status hearing, excuse the Defendant
    and counsel from appearing at the status hearing, and find good cause to
    continue the case for a jury trial to be set after October 5. Unless a completed
    line is filed, the Defendant’s failure to appear may result in the issuance of
    an arrest warrant.
    As is evident, while administrative orders issued by the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals
    generally referred to the phases of Covid-19 related measures by Roman numerals, in other,
    less formal, contexts, Arabic numerals have been used to refer to the same phases.
    9
    Ms. Tengeres’ defense counsel did not file a line with the court reiterating her
    election of a jury trial.9 At the July 20, 2020 status hearing, defense counsel was present,
    but Ms. Tengeres was not. In a colloquy with the court, defense counsel alluded to
    difficulties locating Ms. Tengeres and said he had reached her only shortly before the status
    hearing began. He said that she was unable to get to the courthouse that day, and he asked
    for a brief continuance:
    THE COURT:                   So, [defense counsel] did you get a hold of your client
    or what?
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Your Honor, I have tried without success in probably
    the past two weeks to get a hold of my client although I
    can say that I just spoke to her moments ago. We didn’t
    have a good number on record for a long time.
    The long and short of it is, Judge, she will not be able to
    get here today. She did not get notice. I did specifically
    ask her about perhaps if we could set this in a relatively
    – you know, a week [or] so, a relatively short time. I
    think I now have a good phone number for her. I now
    have a good address for her. So, if we could set it in
    again sometime in the near future, I feel confident we
    could –
    THE COURT:                   You should . . . have had her good address all along.
    Not maybe your fault, but hers.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: No, and . . . I can speak to that as well, Your Honor.
    THE COURT:                   All right.
    9
    It seems safe to assume that the jury trial request that defense counsel filed at the
    outset of the appeal did not suffice for purposes of this status conference. According to
    defense counsel’s brief, such papers are filed in “virtually every case” in which there is an
    appeal from the District Court to the Circuit Court for Washington County.
    10
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: My client . . . has been homeless for a long time. But I
    now have a place I can get a hold of her. I did attempt
    before today to do that and unfortunately it didn’t
    happen until today. So, I’m going to ask that we set this
    in (unintelligible).
    The State opposed the request for a postponement, arguing that the court lacked
    discretion to do anything other than dismiss Ms. Tengeres’ appeal. The prosecutor noted
    that, under Maryland Rules 1-321 and 1-324, notice of the status hearing was effective
    upon service on counsel10 and, apparently referring to Rule 7-112(f)(1), that the relevant
    rule stated that the court “shall dismiss” an appeal if the appellant “does not show up.”
    Without directly addressing the request for a postponement, the Circuit Court agreed
    with the State that dismissal was mandatory and dismissed Ms. Tengeres’ appeal as a result
    of her absence. However, the court advised defense counsel that Ms. Tengeres could file
    a motion to reinstate the appeal, stating that “she has 30 days to … change my mind on it.”
    The court was apparently referring to a motion under Rule 7-112(f)(3) to reinstate an
    appeal. The case docket and a paper filed under the clerk’s signature indicated that the
    appeal had been “withdrawn.”
    10
    Rule 1-324(a) provides that, when a court proceeding is scheduled (other than
    when announced on the record during a hearing or trial), the clerk is to send notice of the
    scheduled proceeding to parties entitled to receive notice under Rule 1-321. In turn, Rule
    1-321(a) provides that, in general, when a party is represented by an attorney in a case,
    service of a pleading (other than an original pleading) or paper is to be made upon the
    party’s attorney, unless otherwise ordered by the court. As the prosecutor asserted, these
    two rules in tandem made notice to Ms. Tengeres’ attorney sufficient to provide notice of
    the hearing in compliance with the Maryland Rules.
    11
    No one apparently noticed at that time that the only consequence of a defendant’s
    failure to appear that had been mentioned in the administrative judge’s letter describing the
    status hearing process was the possibility that an arrest warrant would be issued for an
    absent defendant.
    Motion to Reinstate
    As invited by the Circuit Court, on August 13, 2020, Ms. Tengeres’ counsel filed a
    Motion to Reinstate Appeal. That motion reiterated that Ms. Tengeres herself had not
    received prior notice of the status hearing and that defense counsel ultimately had reached
    her on the morning of the hearing via a family member. The motion further elaborated
    that, when she learned about the status hearing the day of the hearing, Ms. Tengeres could
    not appear immediately because she had a young child who would require a caretaker and
    because public transportation, her only means of transportation that day, would not have
    gotten her to the courthouse in time. Citing case law, the motion argued that reinstatement
    of an appeal pursuant to Rule 7-112(f)(3) should be granted liberally and would be
    particularly appropriate in Ms. Tengeres’ case as the dismissal was based on her absence
    from a status hearing during the Covid-19 pandemic. As an alternative ground, the motion
    argued that the status hearing process created by the Circuit Court, insofar as it resulted in
    dismissal of an appeal from the District Court for a trial de novo, was unconstitutional as a
    violation of a defendant’s due process rights under the State and federal constitutions. The
    State did not respond to the motion to reinstate the appeal.
    12
    On August 31, 2020, the Circuit Court denied the motion without explanation. Ms.
    Tengeres filed a Motion to Reconsider on September 4, 2020, and the court denied it
    without explanation a few days later.
    3.     Further Appeal to this Court
    Because this case involves an appeal to the Circuit Court of a final judgment in the
    District Court, any further appeal is by a petition for a writ of certiorari to this Court
    pursuant to CJ §12-305. Ms. Tengeres filed such a petition, which we granted on
    November 20, 2020.
    II
    Discussion
    Ms. Tengeres has raised two issues in this appeal:
    (1) Whether the Circuit Court abused its discretion in denying Ms. Tengeres’ motion
    to reinstate her appeal from the District Court for a trial de novo.
    (2) Whether the Circuit Court violated her due process rights when it dismissed her
    appeal for failure to appear at a status hearing.
    For the reasons set forth below, we hold that the Circuit Court abused its discretion
    when it denied the motion to reinstate Ms. Tengeres’ appeal, and we remand the case for
    the Circuit Court to reinstate that appeal. We do not reach the second question posed by
    Ms. Tengeres.
    A.     Standard of Review
    We review the denial of a motion to reinstate an appeal pursuant to Rule 7-122(f)(3)
    under an abuse of discretion standard. Mobuary, 435 Md. at 436. The abuse of discretion
    13
    standard “requires a trial judge to use his or her discretion soundly and the record must
    reflect the exercise of that discretion.” Id. (quoting Kelly v. State, 
    392 Md. 511
    , 531
    (2006)). A court abuses its discretion when it acts in an arbitrary or capricious manner or
    acts beyond the letter or reason of the law. 
    Id.
    B.     Whether Denial of the Motion to Reinstate the Appeal was an Abuse of Discretion
    1.     Was Denial of the Motion to Reinstate an Exercise of Discretion?
    As an initial matter, it is not entirely clear that the Circuit Court actually exercised
    discretion when it denied Ms. Tengeres’ motion to reinstate her appeal. As recounted
    above, the court accepted the State’s position that it had no discretion under Rule 7-
    112(f)(1) to do otherwise than dismiss her appeal because that rule states that the court
    “shall dismiss” an appeal when the appellant fails to appear for a proceeding. In advising
    defense counsel that Ms. Tengeres had 30 days to file a motion to reinstate, the court
    referred to such a motion as an opportunity for her “to change [the court’s] mind on it” – a
    comment that could have meant that she had an opportunity to change the court’s mind on
    whether it actually had any discretion not to dismiss the appeal. When the court later
    denied the motion to reinstate and the motion to reconsider denial of the motion to reinstate,
    it provided no explanation for either decision. It was quite possible – and consistent with
    the court’s statements and actions – that it mistakenly believed it was compelled, as a matter
    of law, to both dismiss the appeal and deny the motion to reinstate it, and never exercised
    any discretion in that regard.
    One potential disposition of this appeal would be to remand the case to the Circuit
    Court for it to clarify whether it exercised discretion in denying the motion to reinstate; if
    14
    so, to explain how it came to that decision; and, if not, to reconsider the motion to reinstate
    and exercise that discretion in the first instance. However, given the undisputed facts in
    the record of this case, the Circuit Court would abuse its discretion if it did not reinstate
    the appeal. In the interest of judicial economy and for the reasons stated below, we remand
    for the court to reinstate the appeal.
    2.     Was There Good Cause to Reinstate the Appeal?
    As indicated above, determination of the motion to reinstate the appeal turned on
    whether there was “good cause shown” for the Circuit Court to take that action. As a
    general rule, that standard is to be liberally applied, particularly in a criminal case in which
    a defendant/appellant’s absence is not willful or voluntary.
    Mobuary – Good Cause Standard to be Liberally Applied
    In Mobuary, the defendant was convicted of assault charges in the District Court.
    He sought a trial de novo in the circuit court but was incarcerated on the day his case was
    to be heard. The prosecutor advised the circuit court that she had heard from a corrections
    officer that the defendant had refused to be transported to court; the defense attorney
    advised that he had been told the same information, but did not otherwise express a position
    on the matter. The circuit court dismissed the appeal. After later learning from his client
    that the defendant had not refused transportation, defense counsel filed a motion to reinstate
    the appeal, and the defendant himself wrote to the court insisting that he wanted to pursue
    the appeal. The circuit court denied the motion, and this Court granted a writ of certiorari.
    In its opinion, the Court addressed the standard of “good cause” for reinstatement
    of an appeal under Rule 7-112(f)(3). The Court stated that whether an appeal for a trial de
    15
    novo had been properly dismissed under subsection (f)(1) of Rule 7-112 was a “separate
    and distinct question” from whether the circuit court had appropriately exercised its
    discretion in later denying a motion to reinstate that appeal under subsection (f)(3) of the
    rule. Id. at 435. The standard of “good cause” is to be “liberally construed,” as the history
    of that rule reflects the Court’s “intention to increase, rather than decrease, the remedy
    available under the rule.” 435 Md. at 437 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    The Court then turned to the question whether the circuit court had abused its
    discretion in denying reinstatement of the appeal in that case. Looking to the “totality of
    facts and circumstances,” including those that became known after dismissal of the appeal,
    the Court noted that there was a “weak basis” for dismissal of the appeal. 435 Md. at 437.
    At the very least, the Court stated, there was good cause for a hearing on the motion to
    reinstate, at which the defendant’s credibility about his willingness to come to court – and
    presumably that of the individuals who had provided contrary information – could be
    tested. Id. at 438. Accordingly, the Court vacated the judgment of the circuit court and
    remanded the case for a determination of whether there was good cause to reinstate the
    appeal. Id. at 442.11
    Stone – An Appellant’s Absence Must be Willful or Voluntary
    Stone also involved an appeal for a trial de novo in a criminal case by an incarcerated
    defendant/appellant – in that instance, incarcerated in another state. The defendant had
    11
    The Court also noted that the circuit court had applied the wrong standard, derived
    from a different rule, in deciding the motion to reinstate under Rule 7-112(f)(3). 435 Md.
    at 438-42.
    16
    been brought to Maryland under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers (“IAD”)12 and
    convicted in the District Court. By the time he appealed that conviction, he had been
    returned to the other state. He attempted to invoke his right under the IAD to be brought
    to Maryland for his trial de novo in the circuit court. At the appointed time for the circuit
    court trial, the defendant was absent; the State advised the court that the absence was
    attributable to the defendant’s failure to follow certain formal procedures under the IAD.13
    The circuit court treated the appeal as withdrawn and dismissed it. This Court then granted
    the defendant’s petition for a writ of certiorari.
    The Court began its analysis by referring to a criminal defendant’s right to be present
    at trial. 
    344 Md. at 106
    . The Court stated that a defendant’s “right to be present at a trial
    de novo cannot be considered waived by non-appearance, that is, withdrawn, when the trial
    court has information that the appellant’s failure to appear was neither wilful nor
    voluntary.” 
    Id.
     Conversely, if there is no information before the court explaining the
    12
    For a description of how the Interstate Agreement on Detainers operates, see
    Aleman v. State, 
    469 Md. 397
    , 403-12 (2020).
    13
    The defendant had been charged with the crime of theft in the District Court but
    was incarcerated at that time in Pennsylvania. The defendant invoked his right under the
    IAD to be brought to Maryland to resolve the charges against him. He was convicted of
    the theft charge in the District Court and, following sentencing, was returned to
    Pennsylvania’s custody to continue serving his sentence there. In the meantime, the
    defendant noted a timely appeal to the circuit court, which then scheduled a de novo jury
    trial on the charges. When the defendant sought to be returned to Maryland again under
    the IAD for purposes of the circuit court trial, Pennsylvania declined to do so, apparently
    believing that the earlier trial and sentencing in the District Court had resolved the charges.
    
    344 Md. at 100-03
    .
    17
    defendant’s absence, the court may properly presume the absence to be voluntary and
    consider the appeal withdrawn.14 
    Id.
    The Court then considered whether the defendant in that case was at fault for his
    failure to appear via the IAD. The Court concluded that he was not, as the other state –
    which believed that it had already complied with its obligations to Maryland under the IAD
    – would not have returned him to Maryland “no matter how diligently he pursued his rights
    under the [IAD].” 
    344 Md. at 113
    . Having concluded that the defendant’s absence was
    not willful or voluntary, the Court held that the circuit court erred when it dismissed his
    appeal. 
    Id. at 114
    .
    Summary
    The rules and case law suggest the following approach in an appeal in a criminal
    case from the District Court for a trial de novo in the circuit court. A circuit court
    confronted with the absence of the defendant/appellant, and no explanation for that
    absence, may assume, as indicated in Stone, that the absence is willful or voluntary and
    dismiss the appeal pursuant to Rule 7-112(f)(1). On the other hand, if the court is presented
    with information that could amount to good cause for the absence and with a request for a
    postponement, the court should ordinarily grant a continuance in order to assess the merits
    of that information. If the court is ultimately not satisfied that there is good cause for the
    14
    At the time of the decision in Stone, the rule provided that an appeal was
    “considered withdrawn” if an appellant failed to appear for a proceeding and that, upon
    such withdrawal, the circuit court was to dismiss the appeal. Maryland Rule 7-112(d)
    (1996). See footnote 1 above.
    18
    absence, the appeal may be dismissed. If the appeal is dismissed and it later becomes
    evident, in light of the “totality of the facts and circumstances,” that there was good cause
    for the defendant/appellant’s absence, the appeal should be reinstated.
    Application to this Case
    The undisputed facts in the record relevant to the motion to reinstate Ms. Tengeres’
    appeal demonstrate that her absence from the status hearing was not willful or voluntary.
    She had appeared for every other proceeding for which her presence was required in both
    the District Court and Circuit Court. She consistently sought to contest the charges against
    her and to pursue her right to appeal for a trial de novo. That trial had been originally
    scheduled for March 2020 and was initially postponed for reasons unrelated to her and then
    further postponed as a result of a global pandemic. Of all the participants in her case, she
    had the least control of any over the schedule and no reason to expect a mandatory status
    hearing at any particular time after those postponements.
    By the time that the motion to reinstate the appeal was filed, there was ample
    information in the record to explain Ms. Tengeres’ absence from the status hearing: She
    was unaware of the hearing as she had not received actual advance notice, she was charged
    with the care of a young child and would have had difficulty finding childcare on short
    notice, and she lacked ready transportation to the courthouse. Unlike the situation in
    Mobuary, none of these facts was disputed by the State.
    To be sure, Ms. Tengeres had constructive notice of the status hearing under the
    Maryland Rules when her counsel received the written notice from the court. But there
    was no indication that she was actually aware of the hearing until “moments” before it was
    19
    scheduled to start.15 And, by the time she was aware of the hearing, she was in no better
    position to attend than the incarcerated defendants/appellants in Stone and Mobuary.16
    Finally, the status hearing that Ms. Tengeres missed did not bear on any factual or
    legal issue in her case, but was simply the Circuit Court’s effort to triage all of its pending
    criminal cases appropriately – which the court was satisfied to do in many cases without
    the appearance of a defendant or counsel. Moreover, the notice of the hearing itself
    indicated that the court was willing to entertain requests for postponement of a status
    hearing under Rule 2-508 – an accommodation to be granted “as justice may require.”17
    15
    Although it was not repeated in the motion to reinstate, we also note that it was
    undisputed that Ms. Tengeres’ homelessness substantially contributed to her failure to
    appear for the status hearing. At the hearing, defense counsel explained that he had tried
    to reach Ms. Tengeres for “probably the past two weeks” but had been unsuccessful
    because “[w]e didn’t have a good number on record for a long time.” After the court
    commented that perhaps it was Ms. Tengeres’ fault that defense counsel had lacked current
    contact information for her, defense counsel replied that it was not Ms. Tengeres’ fault, as
    she had “been homeless for a long time.”
    16
    While we do not equate a parent’s need to care for a child with incarceration, we
    note that the obligation to do so is enforced not only by familial affection, but by statute.
    Maryland Code, Family Law Article (“FL”), §5-701(s) (defining “neglect” to include a
    parent “leaving a child unattended … under circumstances that indicate … that the child’s
    health or welfare is … placed at substantial risk of harm”); FL §5-801 (person charged with
    care of child less than 8 years old may not leave child confined in a building or motor
    vehicle unless there is a “reliable person” at least 13 years old with the child).
    17
    Had counsel located her in advance of the hearing and obtained her signature on
    the form line, her presence would have been excused. Given that the notice of the status
    hearing contemplated motions to postpone the hearing under Rule 2-508, it seems quite
    possible that this situation might also have been avoided had defense counsel, prior to the
    date of the status hearing, advised the court and opposing counsel of his inability to locate
    Ms. Tengeres and obtained a postponement of the status hearing until he could do so and
    file the requisite form.
    20
    In light of the “totality” of undisputed “facts and circumstances” in this case, in
    conjunction with the liberal construction to be accorded the “good cause” standard of Rule
    7-112(f)(3), it would be an abuse of discretion for the Circuit Court to decline to reinstate
    Ms. Tengeres’ appeal. Accordingly, there is no need to remand for the Circuit Court to
    make that determination. Our resolution of this issue also makes it unnecessary to address
    Ms. Tengeres’ argument that the status hearing process and the dismissal of her appeal
    violated her due process rights under the State and federal constitutions.
    III
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth above, there was good cause to grant Ms. Tengeres’ motion
    to reinstate her appeal. The Circuit Court abused its discretion when it failed to do so.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WASHINGTON COUNTY
    REVERSED. CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT FOR ENTRY OF AN
    ORDER REINSTATING PETITIONER’S APPEAL. COSTS TO BE PAID
    BY WASHINGTON COUNTY.
    21
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 42-20

Judges: McDonald

Filed Date: 6/17/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/31/2021