Twigg v. State , 219 Md. App. 259 ( 2014 )


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  •             REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1878
    September Term, 2011
    DONALD R. TWIGG
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Woodward,
    Nazarian,
    Salmon, James P.
    (Retired, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Woodward, J.
    Filed: October 1, 2014
    On August 3, 2011, a jury in the Circuit Court for Charles County found appellant,
    Donald R. Twigg, guilty of second degree rape, third degree sexual offense, incest, and
    sexual child abuse. The victim was appellant’s minor daughter, and the offenses occurred
    between the years 1974 and 1979. On October 17, 2011, the circuit court imposed a separate
    sentence on each conviction, to be served consecutively, totaling forty years of incarceration,
    followed by a fifteen-year suspended sentence for the sexual child abuse conviction, with
    five years of probation.
    On appeal to this Court, appellant presents one issue for review,1 which we have re-
    phrased as a question:
    Did the trial court err in imposing separate sentences on appellant for
    second degree rape, third degree sexual offense, and incest?
    We will answer this question in the affirmative, and vacate all of the sentences
    imposed on appellant and remand the case for the imposition of a new sentence.
    BACKGROUND
    In the underlying criminal action, appellant was indicted by a Grand Jury in Charles
    County, Maryland on October 29, 2010, on six counts: (1) sexual child abuse; (2) carnal
    knowledge; (3) second degree rape; (4) second degree sexual offense; (5) third degree sexual
    offense; and (6) incest. The victim of all of the charges was appellant’s daughter, Ms. M.,
    who was born on March 26, 1964. The offenses charged in the indictment allegedly occurred
    1
    Appellant’s issue presented, in the words of his brief, is as follows:
    Whether separate convictions and/or sentences for second degree
    rape, third degree sexual offense, and/or incest cannot [sic] stand.
    from 1974 to 1979, when Ms. M. was nine to fourteen years old. On August 2 and 3, 2011,
    appellant was tried in the circuit court before a jury on all six charges.
    At trial, Ms. M. testified that, beginning when she “was around the age of 7 years
    old,” appellant began to sexually abuse her, and the abuse continued until she was “[r]oughly
    15 and ½.” Specifically, Ms. M. stated that, while she was living at home, appellant would
    come into her room at night and put his hand under her shirt or nightgown, which later
    progressed to appellant putting “his finger inside of [her] vagina and . . . [her] hand on
    [appellant’s] penis . . . until he had an orgasm.” In addition, Ms. M. testified that, “around
    age 12, [appellant] started to penetrate [her] with his penis.” Ms. M. indicated that the
    instances of penetration ceased when she was approximately fifteen and a half years old. Ms.
    M. said that overall, the incidents of vaginal intercourse occurred “several times.” According
    to Ms. M., these incidents occurred in the basement of the family home and in appellant’s
    van in nearby parking lots.
    Ms. M. also acknowledged that she was currently involved in several lawsuits against
    appellant concerning family property and bank accounts. She testified, however, that the
    property disputes were not the reason that she had come forward with allegations of sexual
    abuse.
    Detective Corporal Kenneth Klezia, of the Charles County Sheriff’s Office’s Special
    Victims Unit, testified that, on October 9, 2010, he met with Ms. M. to conduct a recorded
    telephone call between Ms. M. and appellant. During the recorded conversation, appellant
    2
    stated that he always used condoms when having sex with Ms. M. to prevent pregnancy.
    At the close of the State’s case-in-chief, appellant moved for judgment of acquittal
    pertaining to the second degree sexual offense charge, which was granted. Appellant then
    testified in his own defense, denying all allegations of sexual abuse and claiming a
    misunderstanding regarding the recorded telephone conversation. In addition, appellant
    testified to several recent disputes between himself and Ms. M. involving jewelry, money,
    and property.
    At the close of all of the evidence, appellant moved for judgment of acquittal as to the
    carnal knowledge count, which the trial court took under advisement. The jury returned
    verdicts of guilty on the charges of: sexual child abuse (from July 1, 1974 to January 1,
    1979); carnal knowledge (from March 25, 1974 to June 30, 1976); second degree rape (from
    July 1, 1976 to March 25, 1978); third degree sexual offense (from July 1, 1976 to March 25,
    1978); and incest (from March 25, 1974 to January 1, 1979). The court then granted
    appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal as to the carnal knowledge count.
    On October 17, 2011, the circuit court sentenced appellant to consecutive sentences
    of: twenty years for second degree rape; ten years for third degree sexual offense; ten years
    for incest; and a suspended sentence of fifteen years for sexual child abuse, with five years’
    supervised probation. Appellant timely noted an appeal to this Court.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    In Khalifa v. State, the Court of Appeals explained the standard of review governing
    3
    a constitutional claim:
    “When a claim is based upon a violation of a constitutional
    right it is our obligation to make an independent constitutional
    appraisal from the entire record. But this Court is not a finder of
    facts; we do not judge the credibility of the witnesses nor do we
    initially weigh the evidence to determine the facts underlying the
    constitutional claim. It is the function of the trial court to ascertain
    the circumstances on which the constitutional claim is based. So, in
    making our independent appraisal, we accept the findings of the trial
    judge as to what are the underlying facts unless he is clearly in error.
    We then re-weigh the facts as accepted in order to determine the
    ultimate mixed question of law and fact, namely, was there a violation
    of a constitutional right as claimed.”
    
    382 Md. 400
    , 417 (2004) (quoting Harris v. State, 
    303 Md. 685
    (1985)). The Court of
    Appeals further counseled that, “although we do not engage in de novo fact-finding, our
    application of the law to the facts is de novo.” 
    Khalifa, 382 Md. at 417
    (citation omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    On appeal to this Court, appellant argues that “the application of principles of double
    jeopardy provide[] that the convictions and/or sentences for second degree rape, third degree
    sexual offense, and/or incest must merge into the conviction and/or sentence for sexual child
    abuse.” Appellant cites to Nightingale v. State, 
    312 Md. 699
    (1988), in support of the
    proposition that, “separate judgments for child abuse and underlying sexual offenses of any
    kind or degree violate the prohibition against double jeopardy.” Appellant argues that,
    “although the Legislature amended the law pertaining to child abuse in response to
    Nightingale in order to allow separate sentences for child abuse and the underlying conduct,
    there was no provision for retrospective application of the change” that would apply to
    4
    appellant’s conduct from 1974 to 1979. Any such retrospective application, according to
    appellant, would violate both federal and state constitutional prohibitions against ex post
    facto laws. Appellant concludes that, because the several sex offenses merge into the sexual
    child abuse for sentencing purposes, the “judgments on the charges of second degree rape,
    third degree sexual offense, and incest” must be vacated.
    In response, the State argues that, “[w]hen a legislature has clearly indicated that it
    intends to permit multiple punishment[s] for offenses that otherwise would be considered
    the ‘same offense’ pursuant to the test set forth in Blockburger v. United States, 
    284 U.S. 299
    (1932), double jeopardy principles do not prevent the imposition of multiple sentences
    in a single trial.” Further, the State asserts that the General Assembly has provided
    “unmistakably clear legislative intent to permit separate sentences,” and thus, appellant’s
    sentences are not violative of double jeopardy. Accordingly, the State concludes that “[t]he
    trial court properly imposed separate sentences on [appellant]’s convictions for child abuse,
    second degree rape, third degree sexual offense, and incest.” We agree with appellant and
    will explain.
    I.
    The Required Evidence Test
    “The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution, made applicable to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment, provides the
    criminally accused with protection from, inter alia, multiple punishment stemming from the
    5
    same offense.” Purnell v. State, 
    375 Md. 678
    , 691 (2003), superseded by statute on other
    grounds as recognized in Alexis v. State, 
    209 Md. App. 630
    , 677 (2013). “[D]espite the lack
    of a double jeopardy clause in its Constitution, Maryland’s common law provides protection
    from double jeopardy to the criminally accused.” 
    Purnell, 375 Md. at 691
    . “Multiple
    punishment challenges generally arise in two different sets of circumstances: those involving
    two separate statutes embracing the same criminal conduct, and those involving a single
    statute creating multiple units of prosecution for conduct occurring as a part of the same
    criminal transaction.” Richmond v. State, 
    326 Md. 257
    , 261 (1992) (citations omitted).
    When resolving whether two offenses are deemed the same for the purpose of a
    double jeopardy challenge, Maryland courts have generally applied the Blockburger
    “required evidence test” set forth by the Supreme Court in Blockburger v. United States, 
    284 U.S. 299
    (1932). See Miles v. State, 
    349 Md. 215
    , 219 (1998) (“We have often pointed out
    that, as a matter of Maryland common law, the normal standard for determining whether one
    offense merges into another is what is usually called the ‘required evidence test.’”). The
    Blockburger required evidence test “focuses upon the elements of each offense; if all of the
    elements of one offense are included in the other offense, so that only the latter offense
    contains a distinct element or distinct elements, the former merges into the latter.” State v.
    Jenkins, 
    307 Md. 501
    , 517 (1986) (citations omitted).
    In State v. Lancaster, 
    332 Md. 385
    (1993), the defendant was found guilty pursuant
    to two statutes:
    6
    Maryland Code (1957, 1992 Repl. Vol.), Art. 27, § 464C(a)(2), which
    prohibits, inter alia, engaging in fellatio “with another person who is
    14 or 15 years of age and the person performing the sexual act is four
    or more years older than the other person.” Based upon the same acts
    of fellatio, the defendant was also found guilty of committing an oral
    sex act in violation of Art. 27, § 554, which makes it unlawful, inter
    alia, for a person to take “into his or her mouth the sexual organ of
    any other person . . . .”
    
    Id. at 389-90.
    After receiving separate sentences under each statute, the defendant appealed
    to the Court of Special Appeals. 
    Id. at 390.
    The Court of Special Appeals vacated the
    sentence imposed under § 554, reasoning that, “the § 554 offense was an included offense
    which, for sentencing purposes, merged into the § 464C(a)(2) offense.” 
    Id. at 390-91.
    The Court of Appeals granted certiorari to “consider the State’s argument that the
    § 554 offense charged in this case has a distinct element not found in the § 464C(a)(2)
    offense and that, for this reason, the § 554 offense is not included within the § 464C(a)(2)
    offense and therefore does not under Maryland law merge into the § 464C(a)(2) offense.”
    
    Id. The Court
    of Appeals explained that, under Maryland law, the Blockburger required
    evidence test was to be utilized as a “threshold test,” and that “[i]t is only when there is no
    merger under the required evidence test that other criteria are considered to determine
    whether the offenses should merge.” 
    Id. at 394.
    The Court discussed the required evidence test in detail:
    We have often pointed out that under settled Maryland
    common law, the usual rule for deciding whether one criminal offense
    merges into another or whether one is a lesser included offense of the
    other, when both offenses are based on the same act or acts, is the so-
    called required evidence test.
    7
    The required evidence test focuses upon the elements of
    each offense; if all of the elements of one offense are included in
    the other offense, so that only the latter offense contains a distinct
    element or distinct elements, the former merges into the latter.
    Stated another way, the required evidence is that which is minimally
    necessary to secure a conviction for each offense. If each offense
    requires proof of a fact which the other does not, or in other words, if
    each offense contains an element which the other does not, there is no
    merger under the required evidence test even though both offenses are
    based upon the same act or acts. But, where only one offense requires
    proof of an additional fact, so that all elements of one offense are
    present in the other, and where both offenses are based on the same
    act or acts, merger follows[.]
    When there is a merger under the required evidence test,
    separate sentences are normally precluded. Instead, a sentence
    may be imposed only for the offense having the additional element
    or elements.
    When applying the required evidence test to multi-purpose
    offenses, i.e., offenses having alternative elements, a court must
    examine the alternative elements relevant to the case at issue.
    
    Id. at 391-92
    (internal alterations, quotations, ellipses, and citations omitted) (emphasis
    added).
    The Court of Appeals identified § 464C(a)(2) and § 554 as “multi-purpose” statutory
    provisions—i.e., containing alternative elements in the disjunctive—and explained that in
    analyzing a multi-purpose statute a court must apply the required evidence test to the element
    or elements before it. 
    Id. at 398-99.
    The Court proceeded, applying the required evidence
    test to the multi-purpose § 554 statute:
    The statutory element of § 554 relevant to this case is the
    defendant’s “taking into his . . . mouth the sexual organ of any other
    person . . . .” This element would appear to be fully encompassed by
    8
    the elements of the § 464C(a)(2) offense, because a forbidden “sexual
    act” under § 464C(a)(2) is statutorily defined as including fellatio and
    cunnilingus. The § 554 offense has no additional elements. A person
    cannot commit a fourth degree sexual offense under §464C, as
    charged in this case, without also violating § 554. Consequently, we
    reject the State’s argument that the § 554 offense of which the
    defendant was convicted contained an element distinct from the
    elements of the § 464C(a)(2) offense of which he was convicted. The
    State has not established any error in the Court of Special Appeals’
    holding that the § 554 offense is an included offense and, for
    sentencing purposes, merges into the § 464C(a)(2) offense.
    
    Id. at 401.
    In Nightingale v. State, 
    312 Md. 699
    (1988), the Court of Appeals considered two
    defendants who claimed that their sentences for child abuse and sexual offenses could not
    stand, because the crimes were the same under the required evidence test of Blockburger.
    
    Id. at 702.
    The first defendant, Nightingale, received two consecutive fifteen-year sentences
    for child abuse and second degree sexual offense, resulting from his conduct between 1977
    and 1982.2 
    Id. at 701.
    The second defendant, Myers, was found guilty of two counts of child
    abuse, one count of second degree sexual offense, two counts of third degree sexual offense,
    and two counts of fourth degree sexual offense, on two consolidated informations stemming
    from his conduct from 1983 through 1985. 
    Id. Myers received
    four concurrent sentences
    for the first criminal information (the longest being twenty years for second degree sexual
    2
    The crimes committed in Nightingale v. State, 
    312 Md. 699
    (1998), were during part
    of the same time period that appellant in the case sub judice committed his crimes. As will
    be discussed infra, Nightingale and White v. State, 
    318 Md. 740
    (1990), were superseded by
    statute in 1990.
    9
    offense), three concurrent sentences for the second criminal information (the longest being
    fifteen years for child abuse with ten years suspended); and the sentences for the second
    criminal information were made consecutive to those imposed in the first criminal
    information. 
    Id. at 702.
    The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the convictions and
    sentences of Nightingale and Myers in two unreported opinions. 
    Id. at 701-02.
    The Court of Appeals granted certiorari to determine whether
    separate convictions and sentences for both child abuse and second,
    third, or fourth degree sexual offense [are] improper where the State
    relies on and proves the sexual offense to sustain the child abuse
    conviction[.]
    
    Id. at 700.
    After analyzing the relevant statutes, the Court stated
    that child abuse, taken in its broadest sense, involves certain elements
    (e.g., physical harm and a particular relationship between actor and
    victim) that none of the sexual offenses do. By the same token, each
    of the sexual offenses requires some element (e.g., performance of a
    sexual act or sexual contact and sexual arousal or gratification) that
    child abuse does not. But the analysis does not end at this point.
    When a multi-purpose criminal statute is involved, we refine it by
    looking at the alternative elements relevant to the case at hand.
    
    Id. at 705.
    The Court then concluded
    that each jury could have found the defendant before it guilty of child
    abuse based solely on evidence of a sexual offense in some degree.
    If that were done, then the sexual offense became, in effect, a lesser
    included offense of sexual child abuse, and . . . the offenses are the
    same for double jeopardy purposes.
    10
    
    Id. at 708.
    The Court, however, could not merge the sexual offenses into the child abuse
    convictions under the required evidence test, because “we cannot tell whether these general
    verdicts of guilty were based on the use of sexual offenses as lesser included offenses (or
    elements) of child abuse, or whether the child abuse verdicts were based on other reasons
    (e.g., some sort of sexual molestation which the juries thought did not rise to the level of a
    sexual offense in any degree).” 
    Id. Nevertheless, the
    Court resolved the ambiguity in favor
    of the defendants and set aside the judgments on the sexual offense counts. 
    Id. Turning now
    to the matter sub judice, it is clear to this Court that, pursuant to the
    Blockburger required evidence test as set forth in Lancaster and Nightingale, appellant’s
    convictions for second degree rape, third degree sexual offense, and incest merge into the
    conviction for sexual child abuse for sentencing purposes. Nightingale specifically provides
    that, if a child abuse conviction is based solely on underlying sex offenses, the underlying
    offenses will merge into the child abuse conviction for sentencing purposes. The record
    before this Court demonstrates that the State based its argument for sexual child abuse solely
    on the underlying sexual offenses committed by appellant, i.e., second degree rape, third
    degree sexual offense, incest, and carnal knowledge from 1974 through 1979. Our analysis,
    however, is not complete, because we next must determine whether the legislative intent
    underlying the child abuse statute prevents merger from occurring in the instant case.
    11
    II.
    Legislative Intent
    The Supreme Court has carved out an exception to the application of merger when the
    required evidence test under Blockburger has been satisfied. In Albernaz v. United States,
    
    450 U.S. 333
    (1981), the Supreme Court considered whether sentences for conspiracy to
    import marijuana and conspiracy to distribute marijuana were permitted under the required
    evidence test. 
    Id. at 335.
    Petitioners received consecutive sentences under each statutory
    provision, with the total sentence exceeding the maximum that could have been imposed
    under either conspiracy to import or conspiracy to distribute. 
    Id. As an
    initial matter, the
    Court reviewed the Blockburger test, labeling it a “rule of statutory construction . . . to be
    used to determine whether Congress has in a given situation provided that two statutory
    offenses may be punished cumulatively.” 
    Id. at 337
    (internal quotations omitted). The Court
    explained:
    Thus, the question of what punishments are constitutionally
    permissible is not different from the question of what punishments the
    Legislative Branch intended to be imposed. Where Congress
    intended, as it did here, to impose multiple punishments, imposition
    of such sentences does not violate the Constitution.
    
    Id. at 344.
    The Court then proceeded to affirm the sentences of the petitioners, determining that
    the required evidence test was superceded by the fact that “Congress intended to permit the
    imposition of consecutive sentences for violations of § 846 and § 963.” 
    Id. at 343.
    12
    Less than two years later, in Missouri v. Hunter, 
    459 U.S. 359
    (1983), the Supreme
    Court granted certiorari to decide
    whether the prosecution and conviction of a criminal defendant
    in a single trial on both a charge of “armed criminal action” and a
    charge of first degree robbery—the underlying felony—violates the
    Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
    
    Id. at 360.
    The respondent was sentenced, pursuant to Missouri state law, to ten years for
    robbery and a consecutive fifteen years for armed criminal action. 
    Id. at 362.
    The Supreme
    Court expressly rejected the view of the Missouri Supreme Court, which concluded that the
    offenses were “the same offense” pursuant to Blockburger, and thus separate sentences
    violated the double jeopardy clause. 
    Id. at 364-65.
    The Court emphasized the priority of
    legislative intent over the Blockburger required evidence test, stating:
    Where, as here, a legislature specifically authorizes cumulative
    punishment under two statutes, regardless of whether those two
    statutes proscribe the “same” conduct under Blockburger, a court’s
    task of statutory construction is at an end and the prosecutor may seek
    and the trial court or jury may impose cumulative punishment under
    such statutes in a single trial.
    
    Id. at 368-69.
    Upon remanding the matter back to the state court, the Supreme Court
    concluded that, “[h]ere, the Missouri Legislature has made its intent crystal clear.
    Legislatures, not courts, prescribe the scope of punishments.”3 
    Id. at 368.
    3
    As noted by the State in its brief in the instant case, subsequent to the Supreme
    Court’s decisions in Albernaz and Hunter, Maryland case law evidences an adoption of the
    idea that legislative intent controls the Blockburger test. See, e.g., Frazier v. State, 
    318 Md. 597
    , 613-14 (1990) (noting that clear legislative intent mandating separate punishments is
    (continued...)
    13
    Shortly following the Albernaz and Hunter decisions, the Court of Appeals had
    occasion to scrutinize the legislative intent underlying the then child abuse statute, Maryland
    Code (1957, 1987 Repl. Vol), Art. 27, § 35A, the same statute under which appellant in the
    case sub judice was convicted.4 White v. State, 
    318 Md. 740
    (1990). White was convicted
    in the circuit court of first degree murder and child abuse. 
    Id. at 741.
    White received a
    sentence of life imprisonment for the first degree murder conviction and a consecutive
    fifteen-year prison term for the child abuse conviction under Art. 27, § 35A. 
    Id. The Court
    of Appeals granted certiorari to determine “whether a conviction of child
    abuse should merge into a murder conviction where both convictions are based on the same
    act or acts.” 
    Id. at 741-42.
    As to the legislative intent underlying Art. 27, § 35A, the Court
    declared that
    [t]here is nothing in the language of the Child Abuse Statute, or in its
    legislative history, indicating whether the General Assembly intended
    that a parent or one having custody should be sentenced for both child
    abuse and murder where the malicious act causing physical injury
    ultimately led to the death of the child. Clearly, in this regard the
    statute is ambiguous as to whether separate punishment is in
    order.
    
    Id. at 748
    (emphasis added). The Court concluded that, “in the absence of express statutory
    language to the contrary, a child abuse conviction merges into a homicide conviction when
    3
    (...continued)
    dispositive of the Blockburger test).
    4
    Maryland Code (1957, 1987 Repl. Vol), Art. 27, § 35 A is now codified in Criminal
    Law Article, §§ 3-601 & 3-602.
    14
    both are based on the same act or acts.” 
    Id. Although we
    indicated above that appellant’s convictions for second degree rape, third
    degree sexual offense, and incest would merge into his conviction for sexual child abuse for
    sentencing purposes pursuant to the required evidence test, Hunter, Albernaz, and subsequent
    Maryland decisions instruct that legislative intent can act to override convictions that would
    otherwise merge under Blockburger. In White, the Court of Appeals recognized that
    Albernaz allowed for the General Assembly to provide for separate punishments in the child
    abuse statute for the underlying offenses, but determined that the legislative intent of Art. 27,
    § 35A on this subject was ambiguous. 
    White, 318 Md. at 745
    , 748. In the instant matter,
    because the acts that form the basis of appellant’s convictions occurred between 1974 and
    1979, he was subject to the child abuse statute existing during that time—namely, Art. 27,
    § 35A. Because, under White, there is no clear legislative intent behind Art. 27, § 35A to
    provide separate punishment for any offense underlying the child abuse conviction, our
    determination that the Blockburger required evidence test mandates the merger of appellant’s
    sexual offense convictions into the sexual child abuse conviction for sentencing purposes
    remains undisturbed, at least for the moment. We must now consider the 1990 amendment
    by the Maryland General Assembly to the child abuse statute.
    III.
    The 1990 Amendment
    Following the Court of Appeals’ decisions in Nightingale and White, the General
    15
    Assembly amended the Maryland child abuse statute by passing House Bill 815, and its
    companion bill, Senate Bill 421. The amendment added the following language to Art. 27,
    § 35A:
    (b)(2) The sentence imposed under this section may be
    imposed separate from and consecutive to or concurrent with a
    sentence for any offense based upon the act or acts establishing the
    abuse.
    Art. 27, § 35A (eff. July 1, 1990) (underlines omitted). The purpose clause of Chapter 604
    of the Acts of 1990—the legislation that amended Art. 27, § 35A—reads as follows:
    FOR the purpose of reversing the holdings of the Maryland Court of
    Appeals in the cases of Nightingale v. State (
    312 Md. 699
    , 542
    A2d 373 (1988)) and White v. State (filed February 28, 1990)
    by providing that if a conviction is entered against an
    individual for murder, rape, sexual offense, any sex crime, or
    any crime of violence, and a conviction is also entered for
    child abuse, a court may impose a sentence for the other
    offenses separate from and consecutive to or concurrent with
    a sentence imposed for child abuse; and generally relating to
    penalties for child abuse.
    (underlines and strikeouts omitted).
    The Court of Appeals commented on the above purpose clause in Fisher v. State, 
    367 Md. 218
    (2001):
    The purpose clause of Chapter 604 of the Acts of 1990 declares
    that the Legislature intended to allow the imposition of multiple
    sentences “if a conviction is entered against an individual for murder,
    rape, sexual offense, any sex crime, or any crime of physical violence,
    and a conviction is also entered for child abuse.” The philosophy
    underlying present § 35C(b)(3)[formerly § 35A(b)(2)] is articulated
    in a letter from an Assistant Attorney General to the Chairman of the
    House Judiciary Committee urging the adoption of the bill that
    16
    enacted § 35[A(b)(2)]. In part the letter reads:
    Child abuse and the underlying crimes
    involve separate societal evils.         The
    underlying crime is one of violence against a
    member of society. Child abuse is a breach of
    custodial or familial trust. The two crimes
    should be punished separately and the
    person who violates both laws should be
    exposed to a greater possible penalty.
    
    Id. at 242-43
    (first emphasis in original; second emphasis added).
    The State recognizes that the Court of Appeals’ decision in White finds ambiguity in
    the legislative intent underlying Art. 27, § 35A, and argues that the General Assembly’s
    intent in enacting the 1990 statutory amendment to overrule Nightingale and White was “not
    because the legislature made a new judgment as to whether separate sentences were
    permissible, but to correct an existing misperception.” The State asserts that “[t]he
    amendment is not being applied retroactively to [appellant], nor is he subject to an ex post
    facto law, as he also contends.” Rather, the State argues, appellant is being subjected to the
    law as the legislature originally intended, pre-Nightingale and White. We disagree with the
    State and shall explain.
    Our review of the legislative history of the 1990 amendment to Art. 27, § 35A reveals
    no language evidencing the General Assembly’s intent to make the amendment apply
    retroactively. Nor is there anything in the record, or the legislative history, that supports the
    State’s contention that the purpose of the 1990 amendment to the child abuse statute was to
    clarify the General Assembly’s original intent rather than formulate a new intent. Indeed, the
    17
    legislative history indicates that the General Assembly believed that it had been given
    newfound authority to override the required evidence test by amending the child abuse statute
    to expressly say so.
    An official copy of the 1990 Bill Analysis for Senate Bill 421, located in the bill file
    for Senate Bill 421, which is maintained on microfilm in the state archives, clarifies that the
    legislature intended to exercise new authority following the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Hunter. The Bill Analysis includes a synopsis of Nightingale, followed by a synopsis of
    Hunter, the latter stating: “[T]he United States Supreme Court held that if a legislature
    specifically authorizes cumulative punishment under two statutes, a prosecutor may seek and
    a trial court or jury may impose cumulative punishment under such statutes in a single trial.”
    Below the summary of the Hunter decision is a handwritten note that states: “Merger No
    longer is valid!!” In our opinion, this is convincing evidence that the legislature was made
    aware of its authority to override merger under the required evidence test by “specifically
    authoriz[ing]” cumulative punishment for certain designated of offenses, and thus the
    General Assembly acted to do so prospectively by amending Art. 27, § 35A.5 Accordingly,
    we conclude that the 1990 Amendment to the child abuse statute does not override the
    5
    In light of our determination that the 1990 amendment to the child abuse statute is
    prospective only, there is no legal basis for the retroactive application of such amendment,
    and thus the issue of whether the retroactive application of the 1990 amendment violates
    Maryland or federal ex post facto laws does not arise. See Doe v. Dep’t of Pub. Safety and
    Corr. Servs., 
    430 Md. 535
    , 568-69 (2013) (holding that the Maryland sex offense registry
    statute, which is expressly made retroactive, violates the Maryland constitutional prohibition
    against ex post facto laws).
    18
    teachings of Nightingale and White in the instant case, which mandate the merger of
    appellant’s sexual offense convictions into his sexual child abuse conviction for sentencing
    purposes.
    IV
    Retroactive Application of Nightingale and White
    Finally, the State argues that appellant should “not receive the benefit of the Court of
    Appeals’ decisions in Nightingale or White . . . as his offenses were committed before those
    cases were decided.” Specifically, the State asserts that “[a]ll of the acts constituting
    [appellant’s] conviction of child abuse predated the 1988 decision in Nightingale and the
    1990 decision in White. The evidence showed that [appellant’s] abuse began in 1971,
    although the jury’s verdict was based upon his conduct during the period from 1974 to
    1979.” Again, we are not persuaded.
    “In the overwhelming majority of cases, a judicial decision sets forth and applies the
    rule of law that existed both before and after the date of the decision. . . . [I]n the ordinary
    case, no issue of a ‘prospective only’ application arises.” Am. Trucking Ass’ns Inc. v.
    Goldstein, 
    312 Md. 583
    , 591 (1988) (citations omitted). Retroactivity “is overwhelmingly
    the norm, and is in keeping with the traditional function of the courts to decide cases before
    them based upon their best current understanding of the law.” James B. Beam Distilling Co.
    v. Georgia, 
    501 U.S. 529
    , 535 (1991). Where, however, the judicial decision overrides prior
    law and declares a new principle of law, “prospective only” application arises. See Houghton
    19
    v. Cnty. Comm’rs of Kent Cnty., 
    307 Md. 216
    , 220 (1986). The Court of Appeals has
    explained that, “where a decision has applied settled precedent to new and different factual
    situations, the decision always applies retroactively, and it is only where a new rule
    constitutes a clean break with the past that the question of prospective only application
    arises.” Denisyuk v. State, 
    422 Md. 462
    , 478 (2011) (quoting United States v. Johnson, 
    457 U.S. 537
    , 549 (1982)) (internal quotations and alterations omitted).
    It is clear that in Nightingale and White the Court of Appeals “applied settled
    precedent to new and different factual situations.” See 
    Denisyuk, 422 Md. at 478
    . In
    Nightingale, the Court applied the principles of the required evidence test under Blockburger
    to sexual offenses that formed the factual basis for a conviction for sexual child 
    abuse. 312 Md. at 708
    . Indeed, the sexual offenses underlying the child abuse conviction is Nightingale
    occurred between 1977 to 1982, which overlaps the time frame when appellant’s sexual
    offenses were committed in the case sub judice: 1974 to 1979. In White, the Court used the
    principles of statutory construction to ascertain whether the legislative intent of the child
    abuse statute supported separate punishments for murder and child abuse where both
    convictions were based on the same act or 
    acts. 318 Md. at 748
    . Therefore, the Court of
    Appeals in Nightingale and White elucidated the same law, and interpretation thereof, as
    would apply to appellant’s conduct here. Accordingly, we hold that from 1974 through 1979,
    when appellant committed the sexual offenses that formed the basis for his sexual child abuse
    conviction, all of appellant’s convictions were subject to Maryland merger law as articulated
    20
    by the Court of Appeals in Nightingale and White.
    V.
    Remand
    Because in the instant case the convictions for second degree rape, third degree sexual
    offense, and incest merge into the conviction for sexual child abuse, the separate sentences
    for those convictions must be vacated. See Moore v. State, 
    198 Md. App. 655
    (2011). As a
    result, appellant is no longer subject to the trial court’s sentences totaling forty years of
    incarceration. What is left is a fifteen-year suspended sentence on the sexual child abuse
    conviction. It is clear, however, that, had the trial judge been aware that a sentence could be
    imposed on only the sexual child abuse conviction, the imposition of a fifteen-year
    suspended sentence would have been highly unlikely. The issue then is whether this Court
    can remand the case to the trial court for the purpose of imposing a new sentence on
    appellant for the sexual child abuse conviction, and if so, whether there are any limitations
    on the sentence that can be imposed by the trial judge, other than the maximum penalty
    prescribed by the statute in effect at the time of the commission of the offenses underlying
    the sexual child abuse conviction. Because the parties did not address these issues in their
    respective briefs, this Court requested supplemental memoranda on the following questions:
    1. Assuming, arguendo, that appellant’s convictions for second
    degree rape, third degree sexual offense, and incest merge into the
    child sexual abuse conviction for sentencing purposes (and thus the
    sentences for all convictions except child sexual abuse will be
    21
    vacated),[6] what authority permits or precludes this Court from
    remanding the case to the circuit court for purposes of resentencing
    appellant on the child sexual abuse conviction?
    II. Assuming that a remand is either authorized or not precluded by
    law, what, if any, limitations are placed on the trial court in
    resentencing appellant, other than the maximum penalty prescribed by
    the child abuse statute for offenses committed from July 1, 1974
    through January 1, 1979.[7]
    For the reasons that follow, we hold that (1) under the circumstances of the instant
    case, this Court has the discretionary authority to remand the case to the trial court for the
    purpose of imposing a new sentence on appellant for his sexual child abuse conviction, and
    (2) on remand, the trial court may impose any sentence it deems proper up to the maximum
    penalty prescribed by the child abuse statute for such offense committed from July 1, 1974
    through January 1, 1979.
    A.
    Authority to Remand for a New Sentence
    In general, “where merger is deemed to be appropriate, this Court merely vacates the
    sentence that should be merged without ordering a new sentencing hearing.” Carroll v. State,
    6
    As will be discussed infra, this Court has the authority, in its discretion, to vacate the
    sentence on the sexual child abuse conviction and remand the case for the imposition of a
    new sentence.
    7
    We do not believe, as appellant claims, that by addressing these issues, we will be
    rendering an “improper advisory opinion.” Under Maryland Rule 8-131(a), this Court may
    decide an issue not raised in or decided by the trial court “if necessary or desirable to guide
    the trial court or to avoid the expense and delay of an other appeal.” In light of our decision
    on the merger issue raised in the instant appeal, these issues will necessarily arise and need
    to be resolved for the guidance of the trial court.
    22
    
    202 Md. App. 487
    , 518 (2011), aff’d 
    428 Md. 679
    (2012); see also Washington v. State, 
    200 Md. App. 641
    , 664 (2011); Moore v. State, 
    198 Md. App. 655
    , 718 (2011). Under Maryland
    Rule 8-604(d), however, “[i]f the Court concludes that the substantial merits of a case will
    not be determined by affirming, reversing or modifying the judgment, or that justice will be
    served by permitting further proceedings, the Court may remand the case to a lower court.”
    (Emphasis added). In other words, in a case where the trial court fails to effect a merger as
    required by law, this Court has the authority, in its discretion, to remand the case for the
    purpose of the trial court imposing a new sentence on the conviction into which the other
    conviction or convictions merged. Such discretionary authority was implicitly recognized
    in the Court of Appeals’ opinion in Jones v. State, 
    414 Md. 686
    (2010).
    In Jones, this Court held in an unreported opinion that the appellant’s conviction for
    first degree assault should merge, for sentencing purposes, into his conviction for robbery
    with a dangerous weapon of the same victim. 
    Id. at 690.
    Instead of simply vacating the
    appellant’s sentence on the first degree assault conviction, we vacated the sentences on both
    convictions and remanded the case to the circuit court “for imposition of a new sentence in
    accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.” 
    Id. At the
    resentencing hearing, the appellant offered mitigating evidence, but the trial
    court refused to consider such evidence. 
    Id. at 690-91.
    The court stated: “I don’t believe
    there is anything to mitigate on. I think this was sent back for merger.” 
    Id. at 691.
    On
    appeal, the appellant argued that the trial court should have permitted him to offer mitigating
    23
    evidence before resentencing him, and thus erred in failing to do so. 
    Id. This Court
    disagreed with the appellant, but, on certiorari review, the Court of Appeals agreed with the
    appellant, holding that the trial court erred in “refus[ing] to allow mitigating evidence to be
    adduced prior to the resentencing.” 
    Id. at 692.
    In its analysis, the Court of Appeals began by focusing on the mandate of this Court:
    “Sentence imposed under Count 3 of indictment No.
    103149031 for first-degree assault and sentence imposed under Count
    1 of indictment No. 103149033 (robbery with a deadly weapon)
    vacated; case remanded to the Circuit Court for Baltimore City for
    imposition of a new sentence in accordance with the views expressed
    in this opinion; judgments otherwise affirmed; costs to be divided
    equally between appellant and the Mayor and City Council of
    Baltimore.”
    
    Id. at 690.
    The Court went on to explain:
    The mandate of the intermediate appellate court was clear: the
    trial court was to issue “a new sentence in accordance with the views
    expressed in [its] opinion.” The court certainly did not expressly
    foreclose the trial court from considering mitigating evidence. It is
    also significant that the “views expressed” did not include a directive
    that the trial court impose a term of years, or any particular sentence.
    The court simply held that a merger of two of the sentences was
    required. . . .
    ***
    Thus, the Court of Special Appeals only instructed the trial court to
    merge the two convictions, for sentencing purposes, without any
    additional express or implied limitations.
    
    Id. at 692.
    24
    The Court then determined that the specification of “a new sentence” in our mandate
    meant that the proceeding on remand was “a sentencing.” 
    Id. at 694.
    According to the
    Court, a trial judge has “very broad discretion in sentencing,” while at the same time must
    comply with the “the standard rules of sentencing,” namely Rule 4-342. 
    Id. at 693-95.
    Because Rule 4-342(f) requires that the trial court afford the defendant the opportunity,
    before the imposition of sentence, “to make a statement and to present information in
    mitigation of punishment,” the Court concluded that the failure of the trial court in Jones to
    comply with such requirement mandated a resentencing. 
    Id. at 703.
    In sum, the Court of Appeals relied on the language of this Court’s mandate in Jones
    in reaching its holding that the appellant was entitled to present mitigating evidence at his
    resentencing. Our mandate provided that the sentences for both the merging conviction and
    the conviction remaining after merger be vacated and that the trial court impose “a new
    sentence” on remand; our mandate also did not place any limitations on the remand
    proceedings. Therefore, we conclude that the Court of Appeals implicitly recognized our
    discretionary authority, in cases where the trial court fails to properly merge the convictions
    for sentencing purposes, to vacate the sentences on all of the convictions involved in the
    merger and to remand the case to the trial court for the imposition of a new sentence on the
    conviction remaining available for a sentence after merger has been accomplished.
    25
    B.
    Limitations on Resentencing
    Assuming that this Court exercises its discretion in the instant case to vacate the
    sentences on all of appellant’s convictions and to remand the case to the circuit court for the
    imposition of a new sentence on the sexual child abuse conviction, what limitations, if any,
    are placed on the trial judge at the resentencing? As indicated earlier, the trial judge in the
    instant case imposed consecutive sentences for second degree rape, third degree sexual
    offense, and incest, totaling forty years of incarceration, followed by a consecutive fifteen-
    year suspended sentence for sexual child abuse. The issue that will squarely face the trial
    court at resentencing is whether the court is limited to imposing only a suspended sentence
    of up to fifteen years, or is free to impose (1) a period of incarceration of up to fifteen years,
    or (2) a split sentence.
    Appellant argues that a new sentence on the sexual child abuse conviction that would
    result in any active incarceration or executed time would be an “illegal increase in the
    sentence” in violation of “Md. Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article [(“C.J.”)] § 12-
    702; Maryland Rule 4-345; Maryland’s existing merger law; North Carolina v. Pearce, 
    395 U.S. 711
    , 
    89 S. Ct. 2072
    , 
    23 L. Ed. 2d 656
    (1969); and State and federal principles of double
    jeopardy, as well as constitutional due process concerns.” Specifically, appellant claims that
    the determination of whether there is an illegal increase in the sentence is confined to a
    consideration of the sentence previously imposed on the sexual child abuse conviction,
    26
    because C.J. § 12-702(b) and Rule 4-345(b) consistently refer to the sentence in the singular,
    with “no reference to multiple sentences or offenses.”
    The State responds that appellant “fails to explain, however, how a change in his 15
    year suspended sentence would constitute an ‘increase’ from 40 years of active
    incarceration.” The State further argues that, even if the imposition of a different sentence
    would constitute an “increase” in the sentence, there is no absolute prohibition on an
    increased penalty at a resentencing. The State points to the fact that the Supreme Court
    overturned the Pearce case in Alabama v. Smith, 
    490 U.S. 794
    (1989), and that C.J. § 12-
    702(b) does provide for the imposition of “a sentence more severe than the sentence
    previously imposed for the offense” if certain conditions are met. The State concludes that
    appellant “is not entitled to the windfall of a suspended sentence.”
    As the Court of Appeals stated in Jones, “a ‘resentencing’ or a ‘new sentence’ is a
    
    ‘sentencing.’” 414 Md. at 694
    . “‘[I]n resentencing . . . the sentencing court must approach
    its task [of sentencing] as if no sentence had ever been imposed.’ The trial court is charged,
    therefore, with ‘exercising its sentencing discretion’ as if the sentence was occurring for the
    first time.” 
    Id. (quoting Bartholomey
    v. State, 
    267 Md. 175
    , 193 (1972)). The Court stated
    that the trial judge has very broad discretion in 
    sentencing. 414 Md. at 693
    . The exercise of
    that discretion includes the court’s discretion to suspend the sentence and/or order
    confinement. See Md. Code Ann., Crim. Proc. Art. § 6-219(b) (2008 Repl. Vol.). Finally,
    “[t]here is no absolute prohibition on an increased penalty at a resentencing or after a new
    27
    trial.” Parker v. State, 
    193 Md. App. 469
    , 489 (2010).
    Based upon the above principles, we conclude that, where this Court remands a case
    for the purpose of imposing a new sentence because of the trial court’s previous failure to
    properly merge a defendant’s convictions, the trial court is free to impose any sentence
    permitted by law for the conviction that remains after the merger. In the context of the facts
    of the instant case, the trial court could impose any sentence on appellant up to a maximum
    of fifteen years of incarceration, which was the maximum sentence allowable for child abuse
    committed between 1974 and 1979. See Md. Code Ann., Art. 27, § 35A(b) (1957, 1987
    Repl. Vol.).
    If the trial court should impose any period of incarceration on appellant for the sexual
    child abuse conviction, we do not view such sentence as an “increase” in his previous
    sentence. In imposing sentences for multiple convictions in a single case, a trial judge
    considers not only the sentence for each conviction, but also the total sentence for all of the
    convictions together. Indeed, the Maryland Sentencing Guidelines are structured to reflect
    such a dual consideration. Maryland Sentencing Guidelines Manual §§ 3, 9 (2014). The
    sentencing guidelines provide a guideline range for each conviction, and then an overall
    guideline for all of the convictions, viewed as a whole. 
    Id. at §
    9. Here, when appellant’s
    sentences are viewed as a whole, appellant received forty years of incarceration, followed by
    a fifteen-year suspended sentence and five years’ probation. As a result of the merger of the
    convictions, the sentences totaling forty years of incarceration must be vacated. To say that
    28
    the imposition of any incarceration, even the maximum of fifteen years, is an “increase” over
    appellant’s previous forty-year sentence is to defy common sense.
    In addition, the trial judge in the instant case could have imposed the same sentence
    by sentencing appellant to consecutive sentences of ten years’ incarceration for third degree
    sexual offense, ten years’ incarceration for incest, fifteen years’ incarceration for sexual child
    abuse, followed by twenty years’ incarceration for second degree rape, with all but five years
    suspended. In such event, appellant would have no basis to complain that a new sentence of
    up to fifteen years’ incarceration was an “increase” in his sentence. Not only is there no
    logical reason to leave appellant’s ultimate sentence to a matter of chance, such result would
    be contrary to the directive to trial judges in sentencing that they “tailor the criminal sentence
    to fit the facts and circumstances of the crime committed and the background of the
    defendant, including his or her reputation, prior offenses, health, habits, mental and moral
    propensities, and social background.” 
    Jones, 414 Md. at 693
    (citations and quotations
    omitted).
    C. Conclusion
    In the instant case, because appellant’s convictions for second degree rape, third
    degree sexual offense, and incest must merge into his sexual child abuse conviction for
    sentencing purposes, this Court has the authority, in its discretion, to vacate the sentences on
    all of appellant’s convictions and remand the case to the trial court for the purpose of
    imposing a new sentence on the sexual child abuse conviction. Such new sentence can be
    29
    any sentence permitted by law for a sexual child abuse conviction where the abuse occurred
    between 1974 and 1979. We are directed by Rule 8-604(d) to exercise that discretion if
    “justice will be served.” Here, we believe that justice will be served by the exercise of our
    discretion. It will be so ordered.
    SENTENCES IM POSED O N THE
    CONVICTIONS FOR SECOND DEGREE
    R A PE, THIRD DEG R EE SEXU A L
    OFFENSE, INCEST, AND SEXUAL CHILD
    ABUSE VACATED; ALL CONVICTIONS
    OTHERW ISE AFFIRMED; CASE
    REMANDED TO THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR IMPOSITION OF NEW SENTENCE
    ON SEXUAL CHILD ABUSE CONVICTION
    IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE VIEWS
    EXPRESSED IN THIS OPINION. COSTS TO
    BE PAID BY CHARLES COUNTY.
    30