Pitts v. State ( 2021 )


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  • Rodney Pitts v. State of Maryland, No. 0552 of the September, 2020 Term, Opinion by
    Moylan, J.
    HEADNOTE:
    MARYLAND RULE 4-345(A) AND INCONSISTENT JURY VERDICTS – A
    LONG, LONG TRAIL A-WINDING – TWO CONTENTIONS – WHAT IS AN
    INHERENTLY ILLEGAL SENTENCE? – VARIETIES OF INCONSISTENT
    VERDICTS – LEGAL INCONSISTENCY VERSUS FACTUAL INCONSISTENCY
    – A STICKY WICKET: VERDICT INCONSISTENCIES AND INHERENT
    ILLEGALITIES – PRICE V. STATE: A 180° CHANGE OF COURSE – HEINZE V.
    STATE: A FALSE LIGHT ON THE SHORE – THE CASELAW PRE-PRICE:
    INCONSISTENT VERDICTS BY A JURY WERE TOLERATED – THE CASELAW
    POST-PRICE: PRICE CHANGED THE LAW – TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE – AN
    ALTERNATIVE HOLDING: THE ROAD TO GIVENS – THE PRICE-GIVENS
    SINGULARITY – A FORLORN CONTENTION – THE LACK OF SUBSTANTIVE
    MERIT – THE LACK OF PRESERVATION – THE LACK OF ANY PERSUASIVE
    REASON FOR NOTICING “PLAIN ERROR” – THE LACK OF ANY INHERENT
    ILLEGALITY IN THE SENTENCE
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 196026023-24
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 0552
    September Term, 2020
    RODNEY PITTS
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Fader, C.J.,
    Ripken,
    Moylan, Charles E., Jr.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Moylan, J.
    Filed: April 29, 2021
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2021-05-04
    12:58-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    The fields of law involved in this appeal are two-fold, each highly complicated in
    its own right, and intricately interwoven in the case before us. One of them is Maryland
    Rule of Procedure 4-345(a), which provides, “The court may correct an illegal sentence at
    any time.” The other is the curious phenomenon of inconsistent jury verdicts. Involved is
    the interwoven and subtly nuanced issue of which, if any, of the many varieties of verdict
    inconsistency might produce an “illegal sentence” within the strict contemplation of Rule
    4-345(a).
    A Long, Long Trail A-Winding
    The appellant, Rodney Pitts, was charged with the cold-blooded murders of two
    sisters, G’Angela Johnson and Trina Johnson, that occurred on December 21, 1995 in
    Baltimore City. Following a trial that ran from September 23 through October 3, 1997, the
    jury, presided over by Judge Joseph McCurdy, rendered its verdicts. With respect to each
    of his two victims the appellant had been charged with the Intent-to-Kill variety of murder.
    The three other varieties or kinds of murder, 1) Intent-to-Inflict Grievous Bodily Harm
    Murder, 2) Felony Murder, and 3) Depraved Heart Murder, are not at all involved in this
    case. With respect to each victim, the appellant was charged with 1) Premeditated Intent-
    to-Kill Murder in the first degree and 2) Simple Intent-to-Kill Murder in the second
    degree.1 The second-degree murder count was, inter alia, a lesser included offense within
    1
    It is tempting to call second-degree murder of this type “unpremeditated murder,”
    but that would not be literally correct. Non-premeditation is not an affirmative element of
    the second-degree crime. What is involved in proving the lesser-degree of murder is not
    proof of non-premeditation but only the non-proof of premeditation. There is a big
    difference between the two.
    the first-degree murder count, indistinguishable from the greater inclusive offense except
    that it lacked the aggravating element of premeditation.
    As it rendered its verdicts, victim by victim and count by count, the jury found the
    appellant guilty of murder in the first degree with respect to both G’Angela and Trina. It
    also found the appellant guilty of murder in the second degree as to Trina, but, bizarrely,
    not guilty of murder in the second degree as to G’Angela.2 This inexplicable incongruity
    now looms before us 24 years later.3
    Judge McCurdy sentenced the appellant to a term of life imprisonment without the
    possibility of parole for the first-degree murder of G’Angela Johnson. The appellant does
    not now challenge his conviction or sentence for the first-degree murder of Trina Johnson.
    In the immediate wake of the sentences, the appellant appealed both convictions to this
    Court. We affirmed in an unreported opinion filed on December 7, 1998, simply vacating
    2
    There is no conceivable, let alone logical, explanation for this weird and aberrant
    not guilty verdict other than the overwhelming probability that the jury foreperson
    inadvertently misspoke or that the clerk inadvertently misheard or misrecorded what was
    said. As was noted by Alexander M. Bickel, Comment, “Judge and Jury – Inconsistent
    Verdicts in the Federal Courts,” 63 Harv. L. Rev. 649, 653 (1950):
    The possibility of inconsistent verdicts increases in direct ratio to the number of
    counts.
    3
    One of the recent benefits of Givens v. State, 
    449 Md. 433
    , 
    144 A.3d 717
     (2016) is
    that such incongruities may not lie unnoticed at the time but then loom up, as here, decades
    later. For an apparently inconsistent verdict to be worthy of later appellate notice, defense
    counsel must bring it to the attention of the trial judge before the jury has been discharged.
    This provides the opportunity for the court to send the jury back to clarify an apparent
    inconsistency.
    2
    one of two redundant convictions for openly carrying a dangerous weapon. The Court of
    Appeals denied the appellant’s request for a writ of certiorari on March 12, 1999.
    The appellant’s Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence was filed in the Circuit Court
    for Baltimore City 19 years later on November 4, 2018. A telephonic hearing was held
    before Judge Pamela J. White on July 2, 2020. In a Memorandum Opinion and Order filed
    on July 7, 2020, Judge White denied the motion and this appeal followed.
    Two Contentions
    On this appeal, the appellant raises two contentions. In the appellant’s express terms,
    they are:
    1. MR. PITTS’ SENTENCE IS INHERENTLY ILLEGAL BECAUSE IT
    ARISES FROM A LEGALLY INCONSISTENT VERDICT, AND
    2. THE COURT’S FAILURE TO INSTRUCT THE JURY THAT SECOND-
    DEGREE MURDER IS A LESSER-INCLUDED OFFENSE OF FIRST-
    DEGREE MURDER IS REVERSIBLE ERROR.
    What Is An Inherently Illegal Sentence?
    The appellant claimed that his sentence for the first-degree murder conviction of
    G’Angela Johnson was an “illegal sentence.” The appreciation of what is an “illegal
    sentence” within the strictly limited coverage of Rule 4-345(a) is an appropriate place to
    begin our analysis. In Carlini v. State, 
    215 Md. App. 415
    , 419-20, 
    81 A.3d 560
     (2013), this
    Court examined that nuanced definition:
    What is an illegal sentence? That all depends upon what one means by “an illegal
    sentence.” There are countless illegal sentences in the simple sense. They are
    sentences that may readily be reversed, vacated, corrected or modified on direct
    appeal, or even on limited post-conviction review, for a wide variety of procedural
    glitches and missteps in the sentencing process. Challenges to such venial
    illegalities, however, are vulnerable to such common pleading infirmities as non-
    3
    preservation and limitations. There is a point, after all, beyond which we decline to
    revisit modest infractions. There are, by contrast, illegal sentences in the pluperfect
    sense. Such illegal sentences are subject to open-ended collateral review. Although
    both phenomena may casually be referred to as illegal sentences, there is a critically
    dispositive difference between a procedurally illegal sentencing process and an
    inherently illegal sentence itself. It is only the latter that is grist for the mill of
    Maryland Rule 4-345(a).
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    Rule 4-345(a) focuses narrowly on the sentence itself. It is not a broadscale review
    of the antecedent trial procedure culminating in the sentence. The evolving caselaw has
    drawn a dispositive distinction between illegal sentences in the sense that the antecedent
    procedure was somehow legally flawed, which are not cognizable under Rule 4-345(a),
    and illegal sentences in the more limited cases where the illegality is inherent in the
    sentence itself, which are cognizable. The Court of Appeals, in Tshiwala v. State, 
    424 Md. 612
    , 619, 
    37 A.3d 308
     (2012), was emphatic that some illegal sentences are not covered
    by Rule 4-345(a):
    Where the sentence imposed is not inherently illegal, and where the matter
    complained of is a procedural error, the complaint does not concern an illegal
    sentence for purposes of Rule 4-345(a). A sentence does not become an illegal
    sentence because of some arguable procedural flaw in the sentencing procedure.
    (Emphasis supplied.) See also Johnson v. State, 
    427 Md. 356
    , 367, 
    47 A.3d 1002
     (2012)
    (“The scope of this privilege…is narrow. To constitute an illegal sentence under Rule 4-
    345(a), the illegality must inhere in the sentence itself, rather than stem from trial court
    error during the sentencing proceeding. Accordingly, we have denied relief pursuant to
    Rule 4-345(a) because the sentences imposed were not inherently illegal, despite some
    form of error or alleged injustice.”).
    4
    This Court examined the same distinction in Matthews v. State, 
    197 Md. App. 365
    ,
    375, 
    13 A.3d 834
     (2011), rev’d on other grounds, 
    424 Md. 503
    , 
    36 A.3d 499
     (2012):
    Emerging from a survey of a quarter of a century of Maryland caselaw is the
    overarching principle that the values of finality and closure still abide, Rule 4-345(a)
    has been consistently interpreted to be a narrow window that permits a trial judge
    to correct at any time a sentence that is obviously and facially illegal in the sense
    that it is a sentence that the court had never been statutorily authorized to impose. It
    is not, on the other hand, some unlimited “Reopen, Sesame,” licensing the court to
    revisit and to relitigate issues that have long since become faits accompli.
    (Emphasis supplied.) See also Ray v. State, 
    230 Md. App. 157
    , 162-63, 
    146 A.3d 1157
    (2016).
    As this Court warned in Ray v. State, 230 Md. App. at 167, “To recite that for Rule
    4-345(a) applicability, the illegality must inhere in the sentence itself is one thing.
    Instinctively to be able to identify such a phenomenon is something else again.” An obvious
    example of an inherently illegal sentence is a sentence that exceeds the sentencing cap. (An
    11-year sentence for a crime carrying a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years). A recent
    prolific expansion of this type of inherent illegality are sentences exceeding a sentencing
    cap imposed not by statute but by a negotiated plea bargain. Cuffley v. State, 
    416 Md. 568
    ,
    
    7 A.3d 557
     (2010). Another type of inherently illegal sentence is one where the sanction
    imposed is one that has not been authorized by statute, such as restitution, Walczak v. State,
    
    302 Md. 422
    , 
    488 A.2d 949
     (1985) or home detention, Holmes v. State, 
    362 Md. 190
    , 
    763 A.2d 737
     (2000).
    Another type of inherent illegality and the one pertinent to the case before us is a
    sentence that is illegal because it was imposed in a case where no sentence should have
    5
    been imposed in the first place. Alston v. State, 
    425 Md. 326
    , 339, 
    40 A.3d 1028
     (2012),
    spoke of this type of inherently illegal sentence:
    There is one type of illegal sentence which this Court has consistently held should
    be corrected under Rule 4-345(a). Where the trial court imposes a sentence or other
    sanction upon a criminal defendant, and where no sentence or sanction should have
    been imposed, the criminal defendant is entitled to relief under Rule 4-345(a).
    (Emphasis supplied.) See also Ridgeway v. State, 
    369 Md. 165
    , 
    797 A.2d 1287
     (2002) (“A
    court cannot punish a defendant for a crime for which he or she has been acquitted.”);
    Johnson v. State, 
    427 Md. 356
    , 
    47 A.3d 1002
     (2012) (A sentence for assault with intent to
    murder should never have been imposed where the defendant had never been charged with
    assault with intent to murder.); State v. Garnett, 
    172 Md. App. 558
    , 559, 
    916 A.2d 393
    (2007) (“A sentence of restitution cannot be imposed on a defendant who has been found
    not criminally responsible by reason of insanity.”).
    The concept was well summed up by Judge Wilner in Chaney v. State, 
    397 Md. 460
    ,
    466, 
    918 A.2d 506
     (2007):
    We have consistently defined this category of “illegal sentence” as limited to those
    situations in which the illegality inheres in the sentence itself; i.e., there either has
    been no conviction warranting any sentence for the particular offense or the
    sentence is not a permitted one for the conviction upon which it was imposed and,
    for either reason, is intrinsically and substantively unlawful.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    With this preliminary reconnoitering of inherently illegal sentencing behind us, let
    us now proceed to search the present case to see if there was, indeed, an inherently illegal
    sentence within the special contemplation of Rule 4-345(a). What was the nature of the
    allegedly illegal sentence that the appellant claims needed correcting in this case?
    6
    Varieties Of Inconsistent Verdicts
    “[I]nconsistency between verdicts is by no means a simple or one-dimensional
    problem. It is a collection of very different problems.” Travis v. State, 218 Md. App. at
    436. As our analysis proceeds, it is as important to take careful notice of what this case is
    not about as it is to note what it is about. Inconsistency in verdicts is a vast subject, most
    of which is not remotely pertinent to the appeal before us. 4 There is a critical difference
    between how the law handles inconsistent verdicts in a civil case and in a criminal case.
    Our concern here is only with an inconsistency in verdicts in a criminal case. There is also
    a critical difference between inconsistent verdicts in a bench trial and in a jury trial. Our
    concern here is exclusively with inconsistent verdicts in a jury trial and not with
    inconsistent verdicts by a judge alone in a bench trial.5 There is also a critical difference,
    even in criminal jury trials, between two inconsistent convictions and between a conviction
    and an inconsistent acquittal. Our only concern in this case is between a conviction and an
    inconsistent acquittal. There is finally, even in jury trials in criminal cases, a critical
    4
    See Eric L. Muller, “The Hobgoblin of Little Minds? Our Foolish law of
    Inconsistent Verdicts,” 111 Harv. L. Rev., 771 (1998); Steven T. Wax, “Inconsistent and
    Repugnant Verdicts In Criminal Trials,” 24 N. Y. L. Sch. Rev. 713 (1979); Ashlee Smith,
    Comment, “Vice-A-Verdict: Legally Inconsistent Jury Verdicts Should Not Stand In
    Maryland,” 35 U. Balt. L. Rev. 395 (2003).
    5
    There is also occasionally an interesting hybrid trial in which a verdict as to one
    issue in the trial is rendered by the judge and in which a verdict as to some other aspect of
    the trial is rendered by the jury. The law as to inconsistency may be of some attenuated
    pertinence. It should, in any event be handled with extreme sensitivity. See Galloway v.
    State, 
    371 Md. 379
    , 809 A.2d. 653 (2002).
    7
    difference between actual legal inconsistencies and less virulent inconsistencies that are
    only factual or logical. Our concern in this case is only with actual legal inconsistencies.6
    Our focus in this case is narrowly and scrupulously on the inconsistency between a
    conviction and an acquittal rendered by a jury in a criminal case that is an actual legal
    inconsistency and not merely a factual or logical inconsistency. Similar factual situations
    or beguiling verbal phrases cherry-picked by counsel out of the other categories of
    inconsistency cases are simply snares and false lures to be meticulously avoided.7
    Legal Inconsistency Versus Factual Inconsistency
    This case is a textbook example of how intricate a question the difference between
    a factual inconsistency and a legal inconsistency can be. It is sometimes a very easy
    question but at other times a very difficult one. The gap between the two types of
    inconsistency is sometimes self-evidently obvious “from way down the canyon.”
    Sometimes, however, the gap is so infinitesimal as to suggest identity between the
    inconsistencies. The intent-to-kill, highly pertinent in this case as the mens rea of murder,
    is of a dual nature and can be a factor in either type of inconsistency. The presence of an
    6
    In Travis v. State, 218 Md. App. at 450, this Court continued:
    The difficulty is that although the respective heartlands can be clearly distinguished
    from each other, the borderline between legal inconsistency and factual
    inconsistency is often a blurred boundary.
    7
    In Travis v. State, 218 Md. App. at 464, this Court continued:
    Our analysis would be a lot cleaner, therefore, if we could carefully differentiate
    between the different types of inconsistency and refrain from trying to squeeze
    dissimilar problems under a single umbrella. Too many cases are cited that are not
    pertinent, and we spend too much time distinguishing.
    8
    intent to kill may be a finding of fact, contributing importantly to the jury’s decision-
    making process. The intent to kill, on the other hand, may also be a constituent legal
    element of a crime, its presence or absence arising out of the jury’s decision.
    Whether on a given occasion the intent to kill is a vitally important piece of evidence
    contributing to the jury’s verdict, on the one hand, or is a legal element of the crime
    determined by the jury’s verdict, on the other hand, will determine which type of verdict
    inconsistency is involved. Is the intent to kill evidence going into the jury or an element of
    the crime whose presence or absence is being announced coming out of the jury? In this
    case, the intent to kill was an element of the crime of murder, an element in this case found
    not to have existed by the jury’s verdict of not guilty of second-degree murder. In this case,
    therefore, the variety of verdict inconsistency was legal inconsistency rather than factual
    inconsistency. All attendant procedures having been satisfied (see Givens v. State infra),
    the trial judge should not have received the guilty verdict. Absent that verdict, there would
    have been nothing on which the appellant should have been sentenced and any sentence
    for a non-existent conviction, therefore, would have been quintessentially illegal per se.
    The sentence now before us, therefore, would have been inherently illegal within the
    contemplation of Rule 4-345(a).
    A Sticky Wicket:
    Verdict Inconsistencies And Inherent Illegalities
    Thus far, the inconsistency in the verdicts before us in this case would qualify for
    further examination pursuant to Rule 4-345(a) as possibly being of the type of illegal
    sentence that may be corrected by the court at any time. The verdicts were rendered in a
    9
    criminal case, not in a civil case. They were rendered in a jury trial, not a bench trial. The
    inconsistency was between a conviction and an acquittal, not between two convictions. The
    inconsistency, moreover, was a legal inconsistency, and not merely an evidentiary or
    logical inconsistency.
    This last qualification for justiciability was satisfied because the inconsistency was
    not with respect to the evidence or the facts of the case, but was an inconsistency with
    respect to an actual legal element of the crime of murder, to wit, the murderous mens rea
    of an intent to kill. Of the four possible types or varieties of murder (depending on the
    particular mens rea involved), the type of murder before us in this case is “intent-to-kill”
    murder. Glenn v. State, 
    68 Md. App. 379
    , 384-85, 
    511 A.2d 1110
    , cert. denied, 
    307 Md. 599
    , 
    516 A.2d 569
     (1986); Oates v. State, 
    97 Md. App. 180
    , 185-86, 
    627 A.2d 555
     (1993).
    The mens rea of an intent to kill is per se the common law malice that raises an act of
    homicide to the felony of murder. In this case, the crime of first-degree murder contained
    as an indispensable legal element the mens rea of an intent to kill. The fact that it was
    premeditated was simply the aggravating factor that raised the degree of the crime from
    the second degree up to the first degree. The charge of second-degree murder also included,
    as one of two alternative mentes reae, the mens rea of an intent to kill. The alternative mens
    rea of an intent to inflict grievous bodily harm, which alternatively could have supported a
    conviction for second-degree murder, is irrelevant for present purposes. The jury said that
    neither mens rea existed.
    The legal inconsistency in this case, therefore, was with respect to a legal element
    of the crime of murder itself. The verdict of guilty of first-degree murder asserted that the
    10
    appellant had the mens rea of an intent to kill. The verdict of not guilty of second-degree
    murder asserted that the appellant did not have the intent to kill (he didn’t have the
    alternative mens rea either but that is irrelevant). He could not simultaneously have had the
    intent to kill but not have had the intent to kill. That legal inconsistency, absent waiver
    problems, would have meant that the verdict of guilty should not have been received.
    Without a verdict of guilty, there would have been nothing on which to pass sentence. Such
    a sentence, therefore, would have been illegal per se. As a legal inconsistency rather than
    a factual inconsistency, therefore, the claim is thus far at least ripe for further consideration.
    To wit, it is justiciable.
    Price v. State:
    A 180° Change of Course
    The vintage of this principle that inconsistent jury verdicts are not permitted in
    Maryland is, however, a matter of dispositive sensitivity in and of its own right. In this
    Rule 4-345(a) case, the very heart of the appellant’s claim is that his sentence to life
    imprisonment without the possibility of parole for the first-degree murder of G’Angela
    Johnson was illegal and that that illegality is inherent in the very sentence itself, thus calling
    for correction by the court even decades after it was originally imposed.
    The syllogism around which the appellant constructs his argument in that regard
    may collapse, however, with the very statement of its major premise. That major premise
    is that any sentence on a conviction after the trial judge has erroneously accepted
    inconsistent jury verdicts with respect to that charge is ipso facto illegal within the
    contemplation of Rule 4-345(a). If, however, that major premise should prove to be untrue,
    11
    the remainder of the syllogism cannot validly follow. Our job on this appeal, inter alia, will
    be to assess the truth of that major premise. If that major premise be untrue, the syllogism
    implodes. The truth of this major premise, moreover, is not only a question of What?, but
    also a question of When?
    What then is the basis for the appellant’s claim that the inconsistency between the
    jury’s conviction of him for first-degree murder and its acquittal of him for second-degree
    murder was somehow illegal under the law of Maryland? No act of the General Assembly
    ever made it so. Nor did it arrive at St. Clements’s Island as part of the unseen cargo of the
    Ark and the Dove, the English common law. Whence then this core proposition of the case
    before us? Not only Whence? but When?
    The appellant expends but scant attention to this question of his core contention’s
    origins. He does, in little more than a passing comment, cite Price v. State, 
    405 Md. 10
    , 18,
    
    949 A.2d 619
     (2008) for the proposition that “legally inconsistent verdicts are
    impermissible in criminal cases.” Otherwise the appellant, in his primary appellate brief,
    says absolutely nothing about the origins of that proposition on which his entire thesis
    completely depends.
    Heinze v. State:
    “A False Light On The Shore”
    In reply brief, the appellant seems to realize for the first time that he may have a
    problem with a parvenu precedential lineage for his core argument that traces back only to
    2008, if it, indeed, depends on Price v. State for its age. Without so much as mentioning
    Price, the appellant then boldly proclaims in a subheading, “Legally inconsistent verdicts
    12
    have been illegal for at least 75 years.” His reply brief is nothing less than his appropriation
    of H.G. Wells’ Time Machine, and he has set the dial for 1945:
    In Heinze v. State, 
    184 Md. 613
     (1945), the Court of Appeals both acknowledged
    that legally inconsistent verdicts are illegal and that the court has an affirmative duty
    to correct them, stating: “It is a generally accepted rule that if the jury should return
    a verdict which is defective in form or substance, it should not be accepted by the
    trial judge.” 
    Id. at 617
    .
    (Emphasis supplied.) That is a classic example of cherry-picking an unquestionably
    beguiling sentence completely out of context. The reply brief then sought to bring Heinze
    v. State more up to date:
    Not only has Heinze remained good law, it was cited by the Court of Special
    Appeals in Givens v. State, 
    449 Md. 433
     (2016), as an example of the well-settled
    legal precedent that legally inconsistent verdicts in criminal proceedings are
    unlawful. See 
    id. at 448
    .
    As we have explained at some length in cataloguing the varieties of verdict
    inconsistencies, one may not misapply the law controlling one variety of inconsistent
    verdicts to a case involving another distinct variety or cherry-pick language from one
    variety and apply it to another. As this Court warned in Travis v. State, 
    218 Md. App. 410
    ,
    439, 
    98 A.3d 281
     (2014), “Caution should be employed, therefore, not to draw glib or inept
    analogies between phenomena that are not analogous.” As we had earlier pointed out in
    Tate v. State, 
    176 Md. App. 365
    , 384-85, 
    933 A.2d 447
     (2007) (“Tate I”):
    Statements made in the context of inconsistent conviction cases may have no
    applicability at all in the very different world of an inconsistency between a jury’s
    conviction and a jury’s acquittal. Pronouncements quite correctly made in the first
    context can be treacherous if uncritically misapplied in the second. Such a doctrinal
    transplant does not always take.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    13
    The Heinze v. State opinion, and the language quoted by the appellant, involved an
    inconsistency between two verdicts of guilty. (One could not at that time, e.g., be guilty of
    both larceny and the receiving of stolen goods.) Ours, on the other hand, is a case involving
    an inconsistency between a conviction and an acquittal.8 Heinze v. State, therefore, is
    simply one of Longfellow’s “false lights on the shore,”9 which should be vigilantly
    avoided. In a word, we are unbeguiled.
    The Caselaw Pre-Price:
    Inconsistent Verdicts By A Jury Were Tolerated
    If not Heinze v. State in 1945, what then is the starting point for the non-toleration
    principle on which the appellant’s thesis completely depends? The age of this principle is
    pivotal in this case. Because, in oral argument, the appellant adamantly maintained that the
    birth of the principle goes back before the filing of Price v. State in 2008, it behooves us to
    examine every scrap of pertinent caselaw – pre-Price, Price, and post-Price – with granular
    meticulosity.
    The general toleration of inconsistent jury verdicts in criminal cases, as opposed to
    our present non-toleration, traces back at least to 1925. In Travis v. State, 
    218 Md. App. 410
    , 443, 
    98 A.3d 281
     (2014) we summarized that early history:
    The entire subject of inconsistent verdicts first achieved national prominence in
    1925 as federal courts, soon followed by state courts, carved out a massive exception
    to the former prohibition for an inconsistency between a conviction and an acquittal
    8
    This Court analyzed Heinze v. State at significant length in Travis v. State, 
    218 Md. App. 410
    , 438-40, 
    98 A.3d 281
     (2014).
    9
    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, “O Ship of State.”
    14
    both rendered by a jury. Instead of being strictly forbidden, inconsistency at the
    hands of a jury became almost universally tolerated.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    The pioneering opinion for the toleration of inconsistent verdicts had been that of
    Judge Learned Hand10 for the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in
    Steckler v. United State, 
    7 F.2d 59
     (2d. Cir. 1925). The Supreme Court followed the lead
    of Judge Hand with the opinion of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes in Dunn v. United States,
    
    284 U.S. 390
    , 
    52 S.Ct. 189
    , 
    76 L.Ed. 356
     (1932). Lest any wonder whether Dunn v. United
    States has now somehow been supplanted, the 1984 opinion for a unanimous Supreme
    Court by Chief Justice Rehnquist in United States v. Powell, 
    469 U.S. 57
    , 
    105 S.Ct. 471
    ,
    
    83 L.Ed.2d 461
     reassures us that it has not. See also the widely acclaimed opinion of Judge
    Henry Friendly in United States v. Maybury, 
    274 F.2d 899
     (2d. Cir. 1960). Maryland
    became a part of this national tide at least as early as 1953, joining 37 other states in
    tolerating inconsistent verdicts.
    What then are the Maryland origins of the legal proposition around which the
    appellant’s case revolves? Those origins are incontrovertibly rooted in June of 2008. They
    are rooted in Price v. State. Price expressly and affirmatively changed the law in Maryland.
    At the outset of the opinion, 
    405 Md. at 18,
     Price pointed out that the Maryland law with
    respect to inconsistent verdicts is governed by neither statute nor rules of court. The
    Maryland law with respect to the various forms of verdict inconsistency is exclusively a
    product of Maryland’s interpretation of the common law:
    10
    Referred to by many judges and legal scholars in those days as the “tenth justice.”
    15
    In Maryland, the principles concerning inconsistent verdicts have judicially
    developed over time as part of this State’s common law. Unlike several other
    jurisdictions, there are no Maryland statutes or promulgated procedural rules which
    relate to inconsistent verdicts generally or relate to specific types of inconsistent
    verdicts.11
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    Judge Eldridge’s opinion in Price squarely acknowledged that for at least 55 years,
    numerous opinions of the Court of Appeals had consistently held that in jury trials in
    criminal cases, an inconsistency between an acquittal on one charge and a conviction on
    another would not be interfered with by the courts and would not mandate the reversal of
    the conviction. The appellant’s present argument would have had no footing then.
    In Leet v. State, 
    203 Md. 285
    , 293, 
    100 A.2d 289
     (1953), Chief Judge Sobeloff
    quoted with approval from both Dunn v. United States and Steckler v. United States in
    holding for the Court of Appeals:
    While it is true that a finding of guilt on two inconsistent counts will be declared
    invalid in Maryland, Heinze v. State, it does not follow that a conviction on one
    count may not stand because of an inconsistent acquittal on another count.
    (Emphasis supplied.) See also Williams v. State, 
    204 Md. 55
    , 64, 
    102 A.2d 714
     (1954)
    (“[A] conviction on one count may stand even in the face of an inconsistent acquittal on
    another count.”); Ledbetter v. State, 
    224 Md. 271
    , 273-74, 
    167 A.2d 596
     (1961); Johnson
    v. State, 
    238 Md. 528
    , 540-46, 
    209 A.2d 765
     (1965); Ford v. State, 
    274 Md. 546
    , 552-53,
    
    337 A.2d 81
     (1975) (“Therefore, based on this near unanimous authority, it is clear that the
    11
    Judge Eldridge’s opinion, 
    405 Md. at 23,
     set out the lawful authority of the Court
    of Appeals to change, if change seemed called for, the common law of Maryland. The
    sole purpose of this analysis, indeed its expressed purpose, was to justify the change in
    inconsistent verdict law that Price was therein announcing.
    16
    mere assertion that the petitioner’s conviction should be reversed because of the jury’s
    verdicts, pertaining to this multicount indictment, of guilty on one count and not guilty on
    the other counts, were inconsistent, cannot be embraced by this Court as sufficient reason
    to vitiate Ford’s conviction.”); Mack v. State, 
    300 Md. 583
    , 601, 
    479 A.2d 1344
     (1984)
    (Trial court’s denial of relief “was consistent with this Court’s…holdings that inconsistent
    verdicts can stand.”); Shell v. State, 
    307 Md. 46
    , 54, 
    512 A.2d 358
     (1986) (“[C]onvictions
    based on inconsistent jury verdicts are tolerated.”); Wright v. State, 
    307 Md. 552
    , 576, 
    515 A.2d 1157
     (1986) (“[I]nconsistent verdicts by a jury are normally tolerated.”); State v.
    Williams, 
    397 Md. 172
    , 189, 
    916 A.2d 294
     (2007) (“It has been the position of this Court
    that inconsistent verdicts in jury trials are permissible in criminal cases.”). The Court of
    Special Appeals was in full accord. See also Stuckey v. State, 
    141 Md. App. 143
    , 157, 
    784 A.2d 652
     (2001), cert. denied, 
    368 Md. 241
    , 
    392 A.2d 1178
     (2002); Hudson v. State, 
    152 Md. App. 488
    , 515, 
    832 A.2d 834
     (2003) (“Consistency has never been a requisite attribute
    of a jury verdict. Continuing the common law tradition, inconsistent verdicts in a jury trial
    are generally tolerated under Maryland law.”); Price v. State, 
    172 Md. App. 363
    , 388-90,
    
    915 A.2d 432
     (2007) (“[I]nconsistent verdicts in a jury trial are generally tolerated under
    Maryland law.”).12
    The Caselaw Post-Price:
    Price Changed The Law
    12
    Most of the cases cited above were cited by Price, 
    405 Md. at 18-19,
     as reflective
    of the state of the law on inconsistent jury verdicts prevailing prior to the change that
    Price was in the act of making.
    17
    Although the appellant adamantly denies the pivotal role played by Price, the post-
    Price caselaw has consistently attributed a 180° turn in the Maryland common law on
    inconsistent jury verdicts to the Price decision in 2008. In the immediate wake of Price,
    this Court in Tate v. State, 
    182 Md. App. 114
    , 117, 
    957 A.2d 640
     (2008) (Tate II),
    unequivocally noted the diametric change that Price had effected:
    In Price v. State, the Court of Appeals expressly changed the common law of
    Maryland, which had in numerous cases over the course of 55 years held that, in
    jury trials in criminal cases, an apparent logical inconsistency between an acquittal
    on one charge and a conviction on another will not be interfered with by the courts
    and will not mandate the reversal of the conviction.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    In Teixeira v. State, 
    213 Md. App. 664
    , 673, 
    75 A.3d 371
     (2013), Judge Thieme
    wrote for the Court:
    The Court in Price rewrote Maryland law on inconsistent verdicts, turning the
    tolerance afforded by Maryland courts for such jury choices on its head.
    (Emphasis supplied.) And see Travis v. State, 
    218 Md. App. 410
    , 447, 
    98 A.3d 281
     (2014)
    (“For Marylanders, a sea change occurred in 2008.”).
    In Savage v. State, 
    226 Md. App. 166
    , 172, 
    127 A.3d 576
     (2015), Judge Raker, in
    passing, acknowledged the change made by Price:
    Maryland has long held that legally inconsistent verdicts of guilt cannot stand. In
    Price v. State, 
    405 Md. 10
    , 
    949 A.2d 619
     (2008), the Court of Appeals stated as
    follows…
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    Judge Graeff wrote to a similar effect in Ndunguru v. State, 
    233 Md. App. 630
    , 639,
    
    168 A.3d 1003
     (2017):
    18
    Until relatively recently, inconsistent verdicts of conviction and acquittal by a jury
    in a criminal case were permitted because the inconsistency could be the result of
    lenity. In 2008, however, the Court of Appeals held that inconsistent verdicts would
    no longer be permitted in Maryland.
    The Court of Appeals has consistently followed suit. In McNeal v. State, 
    426 Md. 455
    , 458, 
    44 A.3d 982
     (2012), Judge Harrell (whose concurring opinion in Price has
    become our new prevailing law) spoke of the change:
    This case beckons us to examine our opinion in Price v. State, 
    405 Md. 10
    , 
    949 A.2d 619
     (2008), in which we broke with the majority of jurisdictions nationwide and our
    own jurisprudence to conclude clearly that legally inconsistent jury verdicts in
    criminal cases were prohibited henceforth in Maryland.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    Judge Watts spoke for the Court of Appeals in Givens v. State, 
    449 Md. 433
    , 436,
    
    144 A.3d 717
     (2016):
    Factually and legally inconsistent verdicts have vexed litigants and been the subject
    of Maryland appellate opinions in both civil cases and criminal cases for decades.
    One such case of significant impact is Price v. State, 
    405 Md. 10
    , 29, 
    949 A.2d 619
    ,
    630 (2008), in which this Court held that guilty verdicts cannot be legally
    inconsistent with not-guilty verdicts in the case of a trial by jury.
    Notwithstanding, then, the insistence of defense counsel at oral argument that the
    variety of error on which the defense has built its case traces back not merely to Price in
    2008 but all the way to Heinze v. State in 1945, the unrelenting drumbeat of caselaw has
    indisputably announced that this variety of error first became a part of the law of Maryland
    with the decision of the Court of Appeals in Price v. State, filed on June 9, 2008. Maryland
    joined Alaska and Florida in a distinct minority position on this issue. Notwithstanding the
    appellant’s protestations to the contrary, it is indisputable that with respect to inconsistent
    19
    jury verdicts in a criminal case, a seismic shift occurred on June 9, 2008. Before that day,
    inconsistent jury verdicts were tolerated. After that day, they were not.
    Time Is Of The Essence
    If what became error the day after would not have been error the day before, where
    exactly did the day of the appellant’s sentencing fall on such a dispositive calendar? The
    obvious question now becomes that of whether the appellant here enjoys the benefit of the
    change in the law wrought by Price. A look at the calendar reveals that he most assuredly
    does not. As we have noted, the Price opinion was filed on June 9, 2008. It expressly
    applied, at least where the issue was preserved, to all others whose cases were still on direct
    appeal as of that date. Beyond that, Price applied only prospectively, not retroactively.
    Judge Eldridge’s opinion expressly announced:
    Accordingly, with regard to the instant case, similarly situated cases on direct appeal
    where the issue was preserved, and verdicts in criminal trials rendered after the date
    of our opinion in this case, inconsistent verdicts shall no longer be allowed.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    In her Memorandum Opinion and Order of July 20, 2020, denying the Rule 4-345(a)
    Motion, Judge White ruled:
    Legally inconsistent jury verdicts have been impermissible in Maryland since the
    Price case was decided in 2008 and signaled a sea change in the law. It had long
    been the position of the Court of Appeals of Maryland that “inconsistent verdicts in
    jury trials are permissible in criminal cases. Price, 
    405 Md. at 18
     (citing State v.
    Williams, 
    397 Md. 172
    , 189 (2007); Wright v. State, 
    307 Md. 552
    , 576 (1986); Shell
    v. State, 
    307 Md. 46
    , 54 (1986)). Indeed, because Petitioner’s trial occurred eleven
    years before Price was decided, Judge McCurdy addressed the permissibility of the
    inconsistent verdicts…Judge McCurdy’s explanation and decision in 1997 to accept
    the jury’s legally inconsistent verdicts was correct, and this Court will not disturb
    that decision. The Court in Price only intended that its ruling be applied
    prospectively.
    20
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    In her footnote 10, Judge White also noted, “Nevertheless, the inconsistency does
    not entitle Petitioner to relief under Md. Rule 4-345(a) because 1) the Price decision does
    not apply retroactively.” (Emphasis supplied.)
    We hereby affirm Judge White’s ruling as to non-retroactivity. Self-evidently, the
    appellant here did not enjoy the change in Maryland law announced on June 9, 2008. The
    ostensibly inconsistent jury verdicts rendered in the appellant’s case were delivered,
    following a nine-day trial, on October 3, 1997. The appellant was sentenced by Judge
    Joseph McCurdy on February 5, 1998. The appellant appealed to this Court and our
    unpublished decision, affirming his conviction, was filed on December 7, 1998. The
    appellant’s request for a Writ of Certiorari was denied by the Court of Appeals on March
    12, 1999. The appellant’s case was already ancient history when Price v. State was filed.
    With respect to the appellant’s first contention, therefore, the appellant’s sentence
    was not retroactively covered by the Price holding on which it totally depends. Without
    erroneous inconsistent verdicts in 1997, there was, in turn, no inherently illegal sentence
    on February 5, 1998, now subject to correction by Rule 4-345(a).
    An Alternative Holding:
    The Road To Givens
    Even if, purely arguendo, we were to assume that the applicability of Price were to
    be extended back ten years before its date of birth so as to embrace the appellant’s 1998
    sentence, the appellant could still not prevail even under the rule of Price. An allegedly
    illegal sentence within the contemplation of Rule 4-345(a) cannot be established on the
    21
    basis of the majority opinion in Price in and of itself. It would have to be established not
    only on the basis of Price itself but on the significantly fuller exposition of Givens v. State,
    
    449 Md. 433
    , 
    144 A.3d, 712
     (2016). To understand this, we must revisit Price and the
    immediate sequelae of Price.
    In Price, Judge Harrell filed a concurring opinion. It was joined by Judge Battaglia
    and, in critical part, by Judge Wilner. Judge Harrell, 
    405 Md. at 40,
     explained the need for
    some clarifying guidelines:
    Because of the “sea change” announced by the Majority’s opinion, some
    prospective direction is necessary and desirable to highlight the procedure required
    in order for a defendant to preserve for appellate review a challenge to a legally
    inconsistent verdict.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    The concurrence explained that frequently it is the defendant who is the beneficiary
    of the jury’s inconsistent verdicts and that the defendant should be allowed to enjoy the
    option of accepting the jury’s boon. What the defendant may not do, however, is to have
    his cake and eat it too. The concurrence explained:
    The jury may render a legally inconsistent verdict to show lenity to the defendant.
    The defendant should not be foreclosed from accepting the jury’s lenity as a result
    of the holding of the Majority opinion. Nevertheless, we should not permit the
    defendant to accept the jury’s lenity in the trial court, only to seek a windfall reversal
    on appeal by arguing that the jury’s verdicts are inconsistent. Accordingly, a
    defendant must note his or her objection to allegedly inconsistent verdicts prior to
    the verdicts becoming final and the discharge of the jury. Otherwise, the claim is
    waived. If a defendant claims that a verdict is inconsistent to the point of being self-
    destructive, he must present that claim to the circuit court before the jury is
    discharged; if he does not, he waives the claim.
    
    405 Md. at 40
    . (Emphasis supplied.)
    22
    In the Supreme Court case of United States v. Powell, 
    469 U.S. 57
    , 
    105 S.Ct. 471
    ,
    
    83 L.Ed.2d 461
     (1984), a decision that was completely in line with Judge Harrell’s
    concurring opinion in Price, Chief Justice Rehnquist had pointed out that the jury’s
    inconsistent verdicts frequently present the court with the quandary of “Whose ox has been
    gored?”
    Inconsistent verdicts therefore present a situation where “error,” in the sense that
    the jury has not followed the court’s instructions, most certainly has occurred, but
    it is unclear whose ox has been gored. Given this uncertainty, and the fact that the
    Government is precluded from challenging the acquittal, it is hardly satisfactory to
    allow the defendant to receive a new trial on the conviction as a matter of course.
    
    469 U.S. at 65
    . (Emphasis supplied.)13
    13
    Why would a jury ever convict a defendant of a crime while, in effect,
    simultaneously acquitting him of a lesser version of the same crime? Actually, it would not
    do so, although strong surface appearances might make it appear that it had. To help place
    the elusive phenomenon of inconsistent jury verdicts in a more understandable perspective,
    this Court in Travis v. State, 
    218 Md. App. 410
    , 436, 
    98 A.3d 281
     (2014), explained some
    of the well-meaning and innocuous reasons why a jury might appear to have rendered an
    inconsistent verdict when, in truth, it had no intention of doing so:
    When the State unexpectedly loses a hard earned victory at the eleventh hour, the
    most wasteful and the most unnecessary cause is that of inconsistency between the
    verdicts. In the flush of apparent success at the end of a trial, it is all too easy to
    allow impatience and untidiness to compromise the mopping up operation.
    Although lesser charges may seem to be little more than superfluous clutter, every
    “i” must carefully be dotted and every “t” must carefully be crossed before the
    victory celebration is permitted to begin. Following a conviction for a greater
    inclusive offense, e.g., not guilty verdicts should never be rendered on lesser
    included offenses simply to clear the deck. If, as Emerson tells us, “a foolish
    consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds,” a careless inconsistency is the
    hobgoblin of impatient minds.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    23
    The obvious cure for inconsistent verdicts would be to send the jury back to clarify
    the verdicts, but that might not be the wish of the defendant. In Tate II, 
    182 Md. App. at 134,
     this Court explained:
    Given a set of inconsistent verdicts, the defendant is at a distinct tactical advantage.
    The obvious cure for an inconsistency in verdicts would be to send the jury back to
    resolve the inconsistency: “Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, you can’t have it both
    ways. Give us two acquittals or give us two convictions.” The problem, of course,
    is that few defendants, enjoying the quite unexpected boon of an inconsistent
    acquittal, are willing to “roll the dice, double or nothing.” Consistency for its own
    sake does not mean that much to them. They are prone to complain about the lack
    of consistency after it is no longer available, but are far from enthusiastic about
    pursuing consistency while it is still available.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    In his concurrence, Judge Harrell had explained why a defendant might, indeed,
    prefer an inconsistent verdict to a clarification:
    A defendant may be wise to accept the inconsistent conviction and accompanying
    sentence, rather than look a gift horse in the mouth. If the defendant objects to the
    inconsistent verdicts, the jury, given a second chance, may choose to remedy the
    error in a manner not in the defendant’s favor.
    
    405 Md. at 40, n. 9
    . (Emphasis supplied.)
    Judge Harrell’s concurrence concluded that before the jury had been dismissed from
    the trial, the defendant might object to the receipt of the inconsistent verdicts and ask that
    the jury be advised to resolve the inconsistency. That option, however, belongs to the
    defendant alone and is not available to either the prosecution or to the trial judge sua sponte.
    At the end of a complicated trial, the ostensibly inconsistent verdict is frequently
    nothing more than a misbegotten effort on the part of the jury to help tidy up some of the
    clutter. It is more prudent, however, to leave the clutter alone.
    24
    In Tate v. State (Tate II), 
    182 Md. App. at 135,
     this Court described the limited procedural
    option:
    When inconsistent verdicts are rendered, the judge may not, sua sponte, send the
    jury back to resolve the inconsistency, because it is the defendant who is entitled,
    should he so wish, to accept the benefit of the inconsistent acquittal. By the same
    token, the prosecutor may not ask to have the jury sent back to resolve the
    inconsistency, because it is the defendant, once again, who is entitled, should he so
    wish, to accept the benefit of the inconsistent acquittal.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    In the wake of Price v. State and with a major persuasive push by Tate v. State (Tate
    II) (2008); Travis v. State, 218 Md. App. at 448 (“In short order, it became clear that the
    major significance of the Price decision lay in the concurring opinion of Judge Harrell.”);
    and McNeal v. State, 
    426 Md. 455
    , 
    44 A.3d 982
     (2012)14, the concurrence of Judge Harrell
    was declared to be the binding law of Maryland in Givens v. State, 
    449 Md. 433
    , 
    144 A.3d 717
     (2016). Givens, 449 Md. at 486, was emphatically clear:
    In sum, we now join the Court of Special Appeals, adopt Part C of Judge Harrell’s
    concurring opinion in Price, and hold that, to preserve for review any issue as to
    allegedly inconsistent verdicts, a defendant in a criminal trial by jury must object to
    14
    Because the case was decided on other grounds, McNeal’s discussion of the
    concurring opinion in Price was only dicta. At 
    426 Md. 466
    , that dicta nonetheless
    recommended:
    Only a defendant, not the State, may object to an inconsistent verdict. The objection
    must be made prior to verdict finality and discharge of the jury (as McNeal did in
    the present case), thus preventing the defendant from accepting the inconsistent
    verdict and seeking thereafter a windfall reversal on appeal. Upon proper and timely
    objection by the defendant, the trial court must instruct the jury to resume
    deliberations and resolve the inconsistency either by returning verdict in the
    defendant’s favor, convicting on the implicated counts, or deadlocking on a charge
    so that no inconsistent finding result.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    25
    the allegedly inconsistent verdicts before the verdicts are final and the trial court
    discharges the jury.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    The Price-Givens Singularity
    In terms of mandatory procedure, the Price-Givens combination is now an
    indivisible monolith. Even the apparent eight-year gap between the filing of Price in 2008
    and the filing of Givens in 2016 did not provide much of a window for Price to spread its
    wings. On the very day that Price was filed, Judge Harrell’s simultaneously filed
    concurring opinion precisely foreshadowed what would become the holding of Givens. In
    Tate v. State (Tate II), filed less than four months after Price was filed, the Court of Special
    Appeals committed itself to following, as binding law, Judge Harrell’s concurring opinion.
    Subsequent caselaw presaging Givens was relentless. McNeal v. State, 
    200 Md. App. 510
    (2011); McNeal v. State, 
    426 Md. 455
     (2012); Teixeira v. State, 
    213 Md. App. 664
    (2013); Travis v. State, 
    218 Md. App. 410
     (2014). Givens in 2016 gave official sanction to
    this quasi-official embrace of Judge Harrell’s concurring opinion in Price.
    In retrospect, Price v. State has not been the boon for criminal defendants initially
    foreboded. The antidote is Givens v. State. With Givens tightly limiting the substantive
    coverage of Price and with Givens sternly restricting the procedural application of Price,
    the net impact of the Price majority opinion on criminal practice has been minimal. Today,
    moreover, a citation to Price without a simultaneous citation to Givens would be
    deceptively misleading. In essence, the net effect of the Price change in 2008 has been to
    make inconsistent verdicts in criminal cases at least justiciable, even if the proponent
    26
    seldom, if ever, ultimately prevails. That is essentially all that it does. For the State, Price
    has turned out to be more of a speed bump than a road block.
    Even if, under our arguendo assumption that the appellant could somehow avail
    himself of the change in substantive law effected by Price in 2008, the appellant would still
    have failed to satisfy the mandatory procedural requirements of the Price-Givens
    combination. Immediately after the verdicts were rendered in this case on October 3, 1997,
    the total discussion that followed was:
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I don’t understand.
    [PROSECUTION]: It is very understandable.
    THE COURT: What’s the problem?
    [PROSECUTION]: Counsel says he doesn’t understand the verdict.
    THE COURT: If there is any question to the fact that the jury found the – I assume
    what counsel is referring to is the fact that the jury found the –
    [PROSECUTION]: Murder 2nd
    THE COURT: Found the defendant not guilty of murder in the second degree of
    G’Angela Johnson and that’s a very common thing, Mr. Ross. Sometimes the jurors
    understand that murder in the second degree is a lesser included offense, sometimes
    they don’t and having found the state has proven all the elements of murder in the
    first degree, they automatically find the defendant guilty of murder in the second
    degree.
    I think there is abundant case law to the effect this is a proper verdict.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I never had one like this before.
    27
    THE COURT: Again, it is unusual. In the few cases I have had, I have had both
    results come back. And counsel are equally confused when they find the defendant
    guilty of murder both first degree and second degree than when they find the
    defendant guilty of first degree and not guilty of the second degree.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    The appellant never objected to the receiving of the verdict by Judge McCurdy. The
    words, “I have never had one like this before,” do not constitute a cognizable objection.
    The appellant never requested that the jury be sent back to clarify its verdicts. Should the
    appellant protest that Judge McCurdy should, sua sponte, have sent the jury back to clarify
    its verdict, the answer is that Ndunguru v. State, 
    233 Md. App. 630
    , 642, 
    168 A.3d 1003
    (2017) expressly forbade it:
    [A] trial court may not, in the absence of a request from the defendant, advise a jury
    that its verdicts are inconsistent and send the jury back to resolve the inconsistency.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    Just as the appellant’s first contention could not prevail substantively because his
    case was not covered by Price v. State, neither, therefore, could the arguendo alternative
    argument prevail because he never complied with the procedural requirements of Givens
    v. State. Without any error arising out of inconsistent verdicts, therefore, there was no
    inherently illegal sentence calling for correction by Rule 4-345(a). Substantively, the
    appellant’s case was not covered by the change in the law effected by Price v. State in
    2008. Even if, arguendo, it had been covered, however, the appellant failed to satisfy the
    procedural requirements of Givens v. State. Under either alternative, the first contention
    fails.
    A Forlorn Contention
    28
    The appellant’s second contention will not detain us long. He contends that back on
    October 3, 1997, Judge McCurdy committed plain error when he failed, sua sponte, to
    instruct the jurors that second-degree murder is a lesser included offense of first-degree
    murder and to alert them that if they truly find that the lesser offense was not committed,
    they may not convict a defendant for the greater offense. The appellant argues:
    The court’s instructions to the jury unduly prejudiced Mr. Pitts for two reasons.
    First, they did not inform the jury that second-degree murder of the specific intent
    to kill variety is a lesser-included offense of premeditated first-degree murder.
    Second, the instructions did not explain to the jury that they must find Mr. Pitts not
    guilty of the greater-inclu[sive] offense of first-degree premeditated murder if they
    find him not guilty of the lesser-included offense of second-degree murder of the
    specific intent to kill variety.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    The claim is that the absence of this unrequested instruction failed to alert the jury
    to avoid inconsistent verdicts and thereby contributed to the error in this case. How do we
    reject this contention? Like Elizabeth Barrett Browning, “Let [us] count the ways.”15
    1. The Lack Of Substantive Merit
    The contention lacks substantive merit. It suffers from being entrapped in the same
    time warp that doomed the appellant’s first contention. The appellant argues that telling
    the jurors that if they acquitted on a lesser included offense they could not inconsistently
    convict on a greater included offense might have avoided the error that was eventually
    committed. In this case, however, no such error was eventually committed. The
    contention’s fatal flaw is that 1997 was not yet 2008. Just as the sentence here was imposed
    15
    Elizabeth Barrett Browning, “How do I Love Thee?”, Sonnets From The
    Portuguese 43.
    29
    11 years before Price was decided, the jury instructions here were delivered 11 years before
    Price was decided. The effect of the instruction would have been to alert the jury not to
    commit non-error. The appellant cites no authority for such a requirement.
    This contention challenges us with an intriguing anachronism. The jury instruction
    now under the microscope of this contention was delivered on October 3, 1997. In fairness
    to it, it deserves to be judged as a product of its own time and by the legal standards
    prevailing at such time. The appellant, however, would have us dissect and examine it as
    if the instruction had been delivered yesterday. “The time is out of joint.”16 He would, in
    effect, have us evaluate a 1997 jury instruction by a standard that did not even exist until
    2008. To do so, of course, would be rankly anachronistic. A more intellectually appropriate
    proposal would have been to ask this appellate panel to transport itself back to October 4,
    1997, there and then to assess, by the prevailing standards of that time, the jury instruction
    that had been given the day before at the close of the appellant’s trial. Our holding, in such
    a hypothetical case, would have been that that jury instruction at that time and in that place
    would have been perfectly proper. Accordingly, our holding in 2021 shall simply reaffirm
    what our holding would have been, if we had been called upon to make it, back in 1997.
    2. The Lack Of Preservation
    The contention lacks preservation for appellate review. Even if, arguendo, such a
    substantive instruction has been mandatory, the appellant would utterly have failed to
    preserve the issue for appellate review. To begin with, he never requested such an
    16
    Shakespeare, “Hamlet,” Act 1, Scene 5.
    30
    instruction. By way of follow up, he never objected that no such instruction had been given.
    Rule 4-325(e) states clearly:
    No party may assign as error the giving or the failure to give an instruction unless
    the party objects on the record promptly after the court instructs the jury, stating
    distinctly the matter to which the party objects and the grounds of the objection.
    (Emphasis supplied.) See Watts v. State, 
    457 Md. 419
    , 428, 
    179 A.3d 929
     (2018). This
    contention was even less preserved than was the first contention and, with specific
    reference to this contention, the appellant does not so much as suggest otherwise.
    3. The Lack Of Any Persuasive Reason For Noticing “Plain Error”
    The contention lacks any extraordinary feature that might make an appellate court
    wish to extend to the appellant gratuitous (“undue”) process. See Jeffries v. State, 
    113 Md. App. 322
    , 325-26, 
    688 A.2d 16
     (1997). In casually alluding to “plain error” as an available
    antidote for his non-preservation problem, the appellant ignores the extreme rarity of the
    notice of “plain error,” which is the phenomenon’s dominant characteristic. As this Court
    noted in Morris v. State, 
    153 Md. App. 480
    , 507, 
    837 A.2d 248
     (2003), cert. denied 
    380 Md. 618
    , 
    846 A.2d 402
     (2004):
    [A]ppellate invocation of the “plain error doctrine” 1) always has been, 2) still is,
    and 3) will continue to be a rare, rare phenomenon.
    We made the same point metaphorically in Garner v. State, 
    183 Md. App. 122
    , 152, 
    960 A.2d 649
     (2008), aff’d. 
    414 Md. 372
    , 
    995 A.2d 694
     (2010):
    [A] consideration of plain error is like a trip to Angkor Wat or Easter Island. It is
    not a casual stroll down the block to the drugstore or the 7-11.
    The appellant fails to suggest any extraordinary characteristic of the alleged error in
    this case that might make it a likely candidate for attracting such rare, rare notice. The
    31
    United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit referred to one such eye-catching
    characteristic in United States v. Moran, 
    393 F.3d 1
    , 13 (1st. Cir. 2004):
    [P]lain error review tends to afford relief to appellants only for “blockbuster”
    errors.
    (Emphasis supplied.)
    The appellant here nominates for “plain error” notice, however, not the primary
    contention of this appeal but only a very secondary contention. It concerns, moreover, only
    the failure of a judge sua sponte to give an instruction that was never requested, which
    failure was never objected to. The appellant fails to persuade us how such a lackluster
    alleged error, even if error it be, would ever qualify as a “blockbuster” error.
    Another reason for taking such rare, rare notice might be where the appellate court
    is persuaded that a true injustice has been suffered by a possibly innocent defendant. In this
    case, of course, the appellant continues to serve a completely unchallenged sentence for
    the cold-blooded first-degree murder of yet a second victim, the sister of the victim in this
    case. This hardly qualifies as a case of “outraged innocence” crying out for discretionary
    redress. See Austin v. State, 
    90 Md. App. 254
    , 269-70, 
    600 A.2d 1142
     (1992).
    It is not for the appellant to tell us that we have the authority to notice “plain error”
    if we should wish to. That is indisputable. It is rather for the appellant to persuade us why
    we should wish to. The appellant is applying for the special preferment of having his
    request for plain error review singled out of the common herd of routine and
    undistinguished requests for such review, the overwhelming majority of which will be
    summarily denied. The appellant proffers, however, no semblance of special significance
    32
    to justify such preferment. The ordinary becomes the extraordinary only for some
    compelling reason, but the appellant offers us no compelling reason.
    4. The Lack Of Any Inherent Illegality In The Sentence
    The contention finally lacks any inherent illegality in the sentence itself. It does not
    even presume to charge any such illegality in the sentence. It may not be overlooked that
    the express focus of this contention is not even on the sentence of February 5, 1998, which,
    if inherently illegal, may of course be corrected at any time, but on the jury instruction of
    October 3, 1997, which, even if it had been notoriously improper, may not be corrected at
    any time. A Rule 4-345(a) hearing is simply not a belated appeal.
    Even if, arguendo, none of the other fatal disqualifications were present, the
    appellant could still not prevail. Even if an error in the giving of or in the failure to give a
    jury instruction were properly before us, it would be an error only in the antecedent trial
    process leading to a verdict. It would not constitute an illegality inherent in the sentence
    itself. Colvin v. State, 
    450 Md. 718
    , 725, 
    150 A.3d 850
     (2016). As we stated at the very
    outset of this opinion, this is not a direct appeal, not even a belated one. This is a Rule 4-
    345(a) case. This second contention, however, is not a Rule 4-345(a) contention.17
    17
    It is perhaps exponentially redundant to point out that the entire contention is in no
    way properly before us. We are not conducting a de novo hearing on the legality of the
    appellant’s sentence of February 5, 1998. We are not reviewing the appellant’s 1997 trial.
    We are simply reviewing the July 2, 2020 hearing conducted by Judge White on the
    appellant’s November 4, 2018 Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence. This appeal is limited
    to that.
    This present contention was never a part of that Rule 4-345(a) hearing. It was not
    raised in the appellant’s Rule 4-345(a) motion. It was not argued in the July 2, 2020 hearing
    on that motion. It was not decided by Judge White. It is, therefore, not remotely before us
    33
    JUDGMENT   AFFIRMED;
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY
    APPELLANT.
    on this appeal. We are not reviewing something that the appellant could have made, but
    did not make, part of his Rule 4-345(a) Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence.
    34
    The correction notice(s) for this opinion(s) can be found here:
    https://mdcourts.gov/sites/default/files/import/appellate/correctionnotices/cosa/0552s20cn.pdf