DeGrange v. State , 221 Md. App. 415 ( 2015 )


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  •               REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 2586
    September Term, 2013
    ____________________________________
    SUSAN DeGRANGE
    v.
    STATE of MARYLAND
    ____________________________________
    Zarnoch,
    Reed,
    Sharer, J. Frederick
    (Retired, Specially Assigned)
    JJ
    ____________________________________
    Opinion by Sharer, J.
    ____________________________________
    Filed: February 3, 2015
    Following a trial in the Circuit Court for Frederick County, a jury convicted appellant,
    Susan DeGrange, of failure to comply with a peace order and resisting arrest.1 The trial court
    sentenced appellant to 18 months in prison, suspending all but 30 days, on the charge of
    resisting arrest, after which she filed a timely notice of appeal.2
    Appellant presents the following question for our consideration, which we have
    rephrased slightly:
    Is the evidence sufficient to sustain the convictions for resisting arrest and
    failure to comply with a peace order?
    For the reasons set forth below, we shall affirm the judgments of the trial court.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    On June 24, 2013, Robert Wormley went to the Frederick County Sheriff’s Office to
    report that appellant was present at his residence in violation of a March 2013 peace order,
    which prohibited her from being on the property.3 Deputy Timothy Grove was dispatched
    to Wormley’s residence for the trespassing call.
    When he arrived, Grove found appellant standing outside the residence, accompanied
    by a pit bull. Grove asked appellant to secure the dog so he could arrest her for violating a
    1
    The State nolle prossed a trespassing charge prior to trial.
    2
    The court imposed no sentence on the charge of failure to comply with a peace order.
    3
    According to Wormley, appellant, an off and on resident with whom he had once
    discussed engagement, had been living in the house for at least two weeks. When asked why
    he had not called the police sooner, Wormley answered, “I don’t know that answer, but I
    didn’t.”
    peace order; instead, she took the dog into the house and locked the door behind her. She
    ignored Grove’s several requests to come outside and speak with him.
    Grove then contacted Wormley, who was still at the Sheriff’s Office, and asked him
    to return to the residence and open the door with his key. Wormley, Grove, and Sergeant
    Gary Kline, who had served the peace order on appellant in March 2013, entered the
    residence.4 The officers identified themselves and called out to appellant several times, but
    she did not respond or appear. A search of the house revealed appellant sitting on a bed in
    an upstairs bedroom, the pit bull at her feet.
    Wormley secured the dog, and Grove repeatedly asked appellant to stand, advising she
    was in violation of a peace order, and under arrest. She refused, so Grove placed his hands
    on her arms to stand her up and place her in handcuffs. She pulled her arms away to keep
    from being taken off the bed.
    Grove then pulled one of appellant’s arms behind her back, while Kline attempted to
    grab her other arm. In the process, appellant fell face forward onto the bed. She then began
    to fight and struggle with the officers, attempting to pull her arms and hands under her body.
    Grove ordered appellant to put her hands behind her back, but she refused, kicking
    and yelling. Kline, using “the least amount of force possible,” “had to wrestle her arm
    behind her back” so she could be handcuffed. She did not cause injury to either police
    4
    Kline testified that when he served the peace order on appellant, she grabbed the
    paper and tore it to pieces.
    2
    officer. Once handcuffed, appellant was removed from the residence and taken to central
    booking for further processing.
    At the close of the State’s case-in-chief, appellant moved for judgment of acquittal.
    Regarding the charge of failure to comply with a peace order, she argued that she had been
    charged conjunctively with committing or threatening to commit all of the acts specified in
    Md. Code (2013 Repl. Vol.), §3-1503(a) of the Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article
    (“CJP”) – contacting or threatening to act, attempting or threatening to attempt to contact,
    harassing or threatening to harass, and entering or threatening to enter the residence of
    Wormley – and the State had not proved every one of those offenses.5 The court, ruling that
    appellant was charged with “failure to comply with the order,” which charge “couldn’t be
    any clearer,” denied the motion on that ground.
    On the charge of resisting arrest, appellant argued that, pursuant to this Court’s
    decision in Rich v. State, 
    205 Md. App. 227
     (2009), “forceful offensive action” against the
    arresting police officers was required to sustain a charge of resisting arrest. Because both
    officers testified that neither was injured effectuating the arrest, they were not in danger from
    appellant, and she cannot be said to have made aggressive or forceful offensive actions
    5
    CJP §§3-1503.1, 13-504, and 13-505 detail the scope of an interim peace order, a
    temporary peace order, and a final peace order, respectively; each order may require the
    respondent to refrain from committing or threatening to commit an act specified in CJP §3-
    1503(a) against the petitioner, refrain from contacting, attempting to contact, or harassing the
    petitioner, refrain from entering the residence of the petitioner, and remain away from the
    petitioner’s place of employment, school, or temporary residence.
    3
    toward them. Disagreeing that Rich was apposite, the trial court also denied the motion on
    that ground.
    Appellant testified that she and Wormley began dating in 2007 and that she moved
    into his house in early 2008 while recovering from surgery. She had lived in his house off
    and on until June 2013. She denied having been served with a peace order in March 2013.
    She further denied ever having been asked by Wormley to move out of his house.
    On June 24, 2013, there had been a storm that caused a temporary power outage, so
    when the sheriff’s deputy arrived and instructed her to take the dog inside, she thought it was
    for her own safety; it was for that reason that she took the dog and went into the house. The
    “next thing you know,” she said, two officers, whom she did not know were in the house,
    grabbed her, flipped her over, and handcuffed her without telling her why she was being
    arrested. She denied making any aggressive motions toward, or pulling away from, the
    officers.
    At the close of all the evidence, appellant renewed her motion for judgment of
    acquittal, reincorporating the same arguments she had made at the close of the State’s case.
    The court again denied the motion.
    DISCUSSION
    Appellant contends that the evidence presented at trial was insufficient to establish
    that she used force to resist a lawful arrest. As to the peace order violation, she argues that,
    in order to sustain a conviction for violation of a peace order, the State was required, but
    4
    failed, to prove that she violated each of the proscribed acts. In addition, she avers that the
    State failed to establish that she was subject to a continuing peace order because Wormley
    nullified the order by permitting her continued residence in his house.6
    The State counters that appellant’s claims of insufficiency of the evidence are
    meritless, as the evidence, viewed in a light most favorable to the prosecution, permitted a
    rational jury to infer that the appellant resisted a lawful arrest and failed to comply with a
    peace order.
    This Court recently set forth the applicable standard of review in determining the
    sufficiency of the evidence on appeal:
    The test of appellate review of evidentiary sufficiency is whether, after
    viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any
    rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt. The Court's concern is not whether the verdict is
    in accord with what appears to be the weight of the evidence, but rather is only
    with whether the verdicts were supported with sufficient evidence-that is,
    evidence that either showed directly, or circumstantially, or supported a
    rational inference of facts which could fairly convince a trier of fact of the
    defendant's guilt of the offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt. We must
    give deference to all reasonable inferences [that] the fact-finder draws,
    regardless of whether [the appellate court] would have chosen a different
    reasonable inference. Further, we do not distinguish between circumstantial
    and direct evidence because [a] conviction may be sustained on the basis of a
    single strand of direct evidence or successive links of circumstantial evidence.
    6
    Although conceding that she failed to preserve this issue for appellate review by not
    setting forth this specific argument before the trial court, appellant urges this Court to invoke
    its discretion to review the matter for plain error. We decline the invitation.
    5
    Donati v. State, 
    215 Md. App. 686
    , 718, cert. denied, 
    438 Md. 143
     (2014) (Internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted).
    Resisting Arrest
    The crime of resisting arrest was a common law offense in Maryland until codified
    in 2004. Rich v. State, 
    205 Md. App. 227
    , 239 (2012). The applicable statute, Md. Code
    (2012 Repl. Vol., 2013 Supp.), §9-408(b) of the Criminal Law Article (“CL”), provides that
    “[a] person may not intentionally resist a lawful arrest.” The elements of the crime that the
    State must prove are that: (1) a law enforcement officer arrested or attempted to arrest the
    defendant; (2) the arrest was lawful, and; (3) the defendant refused to submit to the arrest and
    resisted the arrest by force.7 Rich, 205 Md. App. at 240, 250. The purpose of criminalizing
    such behavior is “ to protect police officers from the substantial risk of physical injury.” Id.
    at 255.
    We held, in Rich, that both a refusal to submit to lawful arrest and resistance by force
    or threat of force are necessary to commit the crime of resisting arrest. Id. at 250. The level
    of force required, however, is not high. Although we agreed with Rich that “mere flight”
    from an arresting officer is not active conduct and does not supply the requisite force to
    sustain a conviction for resisting arrest, we pointed out, in dicta, that, for example, “when
    a person ‘goes limp’ in response to an officer’s attempt to effectuate an arrest courts have
    7
    In her brief, appellant does not argue that she was not subject to a lawful arrest by a
    law enforcement officer. She contends only that her actions did not rise to the level of
    resisting arrest “by force.”
    6
    held that such conduct constitutes force for resistance purposes.” Id. at 253 n. 8 and case
    cited therein.
    In the matter sub judice, the arresting police officers testified that when they located
    appellant in the upstairs bedroom of Wormley’s house, they asked her to stand and place her
    hands behind her back. When she refused, Grove placed his hands on her arms to stand her
    up and place her in handcuffs, but she pulled her arms away from him. Each officer then
    attempted to grab one of appellant’s arms and place it behind her back, during which attempt
    she fell forward onto the bed, fighting and struggling with the officers and attempting to pull
    her hands and arms away from them, and under her body. Grove testified that she continued
    to refuse to submit to the arrest, kicking and yelling. Kline was then required to wrestle her
    arm behind her back to handcuff her.
    In short, there was a decided conflict in the testimony from the officers and appellant
    as to the force required to effect the arrest, which presented a quintessential jury question.
    It is “axiomatic that weighing the credibility of witnesses and resolving any conflicts in the
    evidence are tasks properly assigned to the factfinder.” Marlin v. State, 
    192 Md. App. 134
    ,
    153, cert. denied, 
    415 Md. 339
     (2010). We agree with the jury that appellant’s actions rose
    to the level of the amount of force required to sustain the conviction for resisting arrest.
    Failure to Obey a Peace Order
    Pursuant to CJP §3-1508, “[a]n individual who fails to comply with the relief granted
    in an interim peace order under §3-1503.1 of this subtitle, a temporary peace order under §3-
    7
    1504(a)(2) of this subtitle, or a final peace order under §3-1505(d)(1)(i), (ii), (iii), or (iv) of
    this subtitle is guilty of a misdemeanor[.]” The relief granted by an interim peace order, a
    temporary peace order, and a final peace order may require the respondent to: refrain from
    committing or threatening to commit an act specified in CJP §3-1503(a) against the
    petitioner; refrain from contacting, attempting to contact, or harassing the petitioner; refrain
    from entering the residence of the petitioner, and/or; remain away from the petitioner’s place
    of employment, school, or temporary residence.
    The statement of charges against appellant alleged that she
    did fail to comply with an order dated 3/15/2013, issued under the Annotated
    Code of Maryland, Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article, Sec. [3-1503/3
    1504/3-1505] that ordered Respondent to refrain from [committing or
    threatening to commit any of the acts specified in Section 3-1503(A) of said
    Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article against Robert Wormley Jr. contacting,
    attempting to contact, harassing, entering the residence of Robert Wormley Jr.
    at 4235 Araby Church Rd.
    Appellant argues before this Court, as she did below, that the charge required the State
    to prove that she committed every offense listed, i.e., contacting Wormley, attempting to
    contact Wormley, harassing Wormley, and entering Wormley’s residence. As the State
    proved only that she entered Wormley’s residence, she concludes, the evidence was
    insufficient to prove that she failed to obey a peace order. Appellant’s argument is not
    persuasive.
    As the trial court aptly pointed out, appellant was charged with “failing to comply
    with an order,” and “it’s the terms of the order which are conjunctive,” not the statement of
    8
    charges. In other words, the single charge was for violating a peace order, which, pursuant
    to CJP §3-1503.1, §3-1504(a)(2), or §3-1505(d)(1)(i), (ii), (iii), could have been
    accomplished by appellant’s failure to refrain from contacting, attempting to contact, or
    harassing Wormley or her failure to refrain from entering Wormley’s residence. In our view,
    the violation occurred if appellant committed any of those acts; the State was not required
    to prove she committed all of them. Indeed, the charging document itself specifies that
    appellant failed to comply with the peace order, which precluded her from “committing or
    threatening to commit any of the acts specified in CJP §3-1503(a).” (Emphasis added).
    The defendant in Whitehead v. State, 
    54 Md. App. 428
     (1983), made a similar
    argument, to no avail. On trial for theft, Whitehead claimed that the indictment against him
    charged him with five different offenses, because the applicable statute described five
    different circumstances under which a person may be guilty of theft. We disagreed, holding
    that conduct designated as theft “constitutes a single crime. . . .” The subsections of the
    statute “merely specify different acts or transactions through which theft can be proved.
    There is no constitutional requirement that the means by which an offense was committed
    be set forth in an indictment. . . The effect of the indictment here was to charge the crime of
    theft by any or all of the five methods.” Id. at 442. (Emphasis added)
    And, in Cardin v. State, 
    73 Md. App. 200
     (1987), we reiterated that the theft statute
    set forth “five different factual situations which, if proved, constitute the crime of theft,”
    including: (1) Obtaining or exerting unauthorized control over property of the owner; (2)
    9
    Obtaining control over property of the owner by deception; (3) Possessing stolen personal
    property knowing that it has been stolen, or knowing that it probably has been stolen; (4)
    Obtaining control over the property of another knowing that it is lost or mislaid property, and;
    (5) Obtaining the services of another by deception, or knowing that the services are provided
    without the consent of the person providing them. We held that “[c]learly, the gravamen of
    the offense of theft is the depriving of the owner of his rightful possession of his property.
    The particular method employed by the wrongdoer is not material; “an accusation of theft
    may be proved by evidence that it was committed in any manner that would be theft under
    this subheading. . . .” Id. at 211 (Emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted).
    We apply a similar analysis. The offense charged was failure to comply with a valid
    peace order, which, according to the charging document, could have been proved by evidence
    that appellant either contacted Wormley, attempted to contact Wormley, harassed Wormley,
    or entered Wormley’s residence. Because appellant concedes that the State proved she
    entered Wormley’s residence, the evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction for the
    single charge of failure to obey a peace order.
    JUDGMENTS OF THE CIRCUIT
    COURT FOR FREDERICK COUNTY
    AFFIRMED; COSTS TO BE PAID BY
    APPELLANT.
    10
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Document Info

Docket Number: 2586-13

Citation Numbers: 221 Md. App. 415, 109 A.3d 176, 2015 Md. App. LEXIS 20

Judges: Sharer

Filed Date: 2/3/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024