Potts v. State ( 2016 )


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  •             REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 0063
    September Term, 2016
    IVAN POTTS
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Krauser, C.J.,
    Wright,
    Raker, Irma S.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Wright, J.
    Filed: December 28, 2016
    Following a jury trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Ivan Potts, appellant,
    was convicted of wearing, carrying, and transporting a firearm; possession of a firearm
    after having been convicted of a crime of violence; and possession of ammunition after
    having been prohibited from possessing a regulated firearm. He was sentenced to
    incarceration for a term of eight years, the first five without the possibility of parole, for
    the possession of a firearm offense, and concurrent terms of one year for each of the other
    crimes. This timely appeal followed.
    Questions Presented
    Potts presents the following questions for our consideration:
    I.     Did the trial court err in admitting hearsay during the testimony of
    one of the police officers?
    II.     Must the commitment record and docket entries be corrected to
    reflect accurately the sentence announced in open court for wearing
    and carrying a firearm?
    III.   Did the circuit court err in imposing separate sentences for
    possession of a firearm after having been convicted of a crime of
    violence and possession of ammunition after having been prohibited
    from possessing a regulated firearm?
    IV.    Was the evidence sufficient to sustain the convictions?
    For the reasons set forth below, we shall remand this case to the circuit court for the
    purpose of correcting Potts’s commitment record and affirm in all other respects.
    Factual Background
    On September 2, 2015, Baltimore City Police Sergeant Wayne Jenkins, Detective
    Maurice Ward, and Detective Evodio Hendrix were conducting an investigation,
    unrelated to the instant case, in the West Forest Park area of Baltimore City. The officers
    1
    were in an unmarked police vehicle equipped with lights and a siren, and were wearing
    plain clothes and black tactical vests with the word “police” written in white letters on the
    front and back. As they drove in the wrong direction on Fairview Avenue approaching
    Chelsea Terrace, they saw Potts walking toward them. When Potts was about five to
    seven townhouses away, Sergeant Jenkins and Detective Ward observed his left arm
    swinging freely and his right hand “affixed to his mid-section,” grabbing his dip area.
    Both officers testified that grabbing the dip area is an indication that a person is armed.
    Potts looked up and appeared to notice the officers. He then took a black handgun
    from his waistband, turned his back to the officers, and fled. Detectives Ward and
    Hendrix exited the police vehicle and chased Potts while Sergeant Jenkins gave chase in
    the police vehicle. When Sergeant Jenkins next saw Potts, he was running with both
    hands “open.” Shortly thereafter, Potts was apprehended by the detectives. Detective
    Hendrix testified that none of the officers used a baton or any other weapon resembling a
    baton.
    After Potts was apprehended, Sergeant Jenkins went back to the location where he
    had last observed Potts and recovered a loaded black and silver firearm with a magazine
    containing sixteen rounds. Potts was transported to Central Booking by Baltimore City
    Police Officer Richard Lyles. Central Booking refused to receive Potts, so Officer Lyles
    drove him to St. Agnes Hospital. Potts told Officer Lyles that “they fucked me up.”
    Officer Lyles observed an open wound on Potts’s thigh.
    About two hours after Potts was arrested, Sergeant Jenkins and the detectives were
    notified that Potts was at St. Agnes Hospital because he had a laceration on his thigh.
    2
    They went to the hospital where they observed Potts’s pants and saw that they were not
    cut and did not have blood on them. Sergeant Jenkins and Detective Ward testified that
    Potts had not made any complaint about an injury after he was arrested.
    Jennifer Ingbretson, an expert in firearms operability, testified that the weapon
    recovered by Sergeant Jenkins and the detectives met the definition of a handgun and a
    firearm and that it was operable. She also was given for examination a total of sixteen
    cartridges, the maximum capacity for the handgun, one of which was loaded in the gun
    and fifteen others that were in the magazine.
    The parties stipulated that, as the result of a prior conviction, Potts was prohibited
    from possessing a regulated firearm and ammunition. We shall include additional facts
    as necessary in our discussion of the questions presented.
    Discussion
    I.
    Potts first contends that the circuit court committed reversible error in admitting
    hearsay evidence during Detective Hendrix’s testimony. He directs our attention to the
    following portion of Detective Hendrix’s testimony:
    [PROSECUTOR]: So what, if anything, at that time did you do after – do
    did you – did you observe your fellow detectives begin to take official
    action?
    [DET. HENDRIX]: Yes. At that point while driving Sergeant Jenkins and
    Detective Ward alerted me that the defendant has his right arm cupped –
    cupped to his body.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: You heard something from your fellow officers.
    3
    [DET. HENDRIX]: Yes.
    THE COURT: All right. We’ll stop right there and hear the next question.
    Potts argues that Detective Hendrix’s testimony was hearsay that bolstered the
    State’s theory that Potts possessed a gun that he discarded as he ran from police. He
    maintains that although the circuit court’s statements might have prevented Detective
    Hendrix from repeating the hearsay, they did not “amount to a sustaining of the
    objection[.]” Even if the detective’s testimony was not hearsay, Potts argues that the
    danger of unfair prejudice outweighed any probative value that the testimony might have
    had and that the admission of the testimony was not harmless.
    Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at
    the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” Md.
    Rule 5-801(c). “Except as otherwise provided by [the Maryland Rules] or permitted by
    applicable constitutional provisions or statutes, hearsay is not admissible.” Md. Rule 5-
    802.
    At the outset, we agree with Potts that the testimony at issue constituted
    inadmissible hearsay. Detective Hendrix’s statement that Sergeant Jenkins and Detective
    Ward told him that Potts had his arm “cupped” to his body was made in furtherance of
    the truth of the matter asserted. The circuit court erred in not explicitly sustaining the
    4
    objection.1 Nonetheless, we decline to reverse Potts’s convictions because any error in
    the admission of Detective Hendrix’s statement was harmless.
    Error is harmless when “a reviewing court, upon its own independent review of
    the record, is able to declare a belief, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the error in no way
    influenced the verdict.” See State v. Simms, 
    420 Md. 705
    , 738 (2011) (citation omitted).
    “In considering whether an error was harmless, we also consider whether the evidence
    presented in error was cumulative evidence.” Dove v. State, 
    415 Md. 727
    , 743 (2010).
    Specifically:
    Evidence is cumulative when, beyond a reasonable doubt, we are convinced
    that there was sufficient evidence, independent of the [evidence]
    complained of, to support the appellant[’s] conviction [ ]. In other words,
    cumulative evidence tends to prove the same point as other evidence
    presented during the trial or sentencing hearing. For example, witness
    testimony is cumulative when it repeats the testimony of other witnesses
    introduced during the State’s case-in-chief. The essence of this test is the
    determination whether the cumulative effect of the properly admitted
    evidence so outweighs the prejudicial nature of the evidence erroneously
    admitted that there is no reasonable possibility that the decision of the
    finder of fact would have been different had the tainted evidence been
    excluded.
    1
    The court responded to defense counsel’s objection by having Detective Hendrix
    verify that he “heard something from [his] fellow officers” and then stating, “[w]e’ll stop
    right there and hear the next question.” Although the court prevented Detective Hendrix
    from repeating the hearsay, it did not expressly sustain the objection. In Bazzle v. State,
    
    426 Md. 541
    , 560-61 (2012), the Court of Appeals reiterated that “[a] contemporaneous
    general objection to the admission of evidence ordinarily preserves for appellate review
    all grounds which may exist for the inadmissibility of the evidence.” (Quoting Boyd v.
    State, 
    399 Md. 457
    , 476 (2007)). “[T]he only exceptions to the principle that a general
    objection is sufficient are where a rule requires the ground to be stated, where the trial
    court requests that the ground be stated, and where the objector, although not requested
    by the court, voluntarily offers specific reasons for objecting to certain evidence[.]” 
    Id.
    (quoting Boyd, 
    399 Md. at 476
    ).
    5
    Id. at 743-44 (internal citations omitted).
    In this case, the statement concerning Potts’s right hand cupping or holding his
    body was cumulative. Both Sergeant Jenkins and Detective Ward testified that they saw
    Potts with his right hand holding his dip area and, shortly thereafter, saw him pull a gun
    from his waistband. Detective Hendrix testified only that he heard his fellow officers say
    something, not that he saw Potts with a weapon.
    Potts relies on Graves v. State, 
    334 Md. 30
     (1994), to argue that Detective
    Hendrix’s testimony was so prejudicial that the decision of the finder of fact would have
    been different had the tainted evidence been excluded. His reliance on that case,
    however, is misplaced. There, Graves was charged with assault and attempted robbery.
    Graves, 
    334 Md. at 32
    . One of the victims, Derek Jones, testified that as he was waiting
    for a bus, two men approached him, one of whom pulled out a gun and said, “[d]on’t
    move.” 
    Id. at 34
    . When Jones’s father approached to ask what the problem was, Jones
    pushed the gun away and ran down the street and the two men fled. 
    Id.
     After speaking
    with Jones, police arrested Kenneth Trusty, who told police that Graves had been his
    accomplice. 
    Id.
     Jones identified Trusty as one of his assailants and, after viewing a
    photographic array, identified Graves as the gunman. 
    Id.
     At trial, the State did not call
    Trusty to testify against Graves. 
    Id. at 35
    . Instead, the State relied upon the testimony of
    a police officer with whom Trusty spoke after he was arrested. 
    Id.
     Over objection, the
    police officer testified that Trusty told him Graves had been his accomplice. 
    Id.
     The
    6
    court admitted a notebook kept by the police officer in which he wrote down what Trusty
    told him. 
    Id.
    In considering the admission of the police officer’s testimony, the Court of
    Appeals held that the probative value of the testimony about what Trusty said was
    outweighed by the risk of unfair prejudice:
    [I]f the statement was offered for the purpose of proving the truth of the
    matter asserted by Trusty, it was clearly inadmissible hearsay. On the other
    hand, if it was offered for its limited probative value to show that the
    officer acted upon it in arranging the photographic array, that probative
    value was greatly outweighed by its unfair prejudice to Graves because of
    the danger of misuse of the information by the jury.
    
    Id. at 43
    .
    Potts argues that the testimony of Detective Hendrix was unfairly prejudicial
    because “the jury would have been unable to treat testimony about how Mr. Potts
    ‘cupped’ his arm as anything other than substantive evidence.” That is not the case. In
    Graves, the Court held that the testimony was critical and prejudicial because Trusty’s
    statement “provided a bridge that synthesized and buttressed the identifications of Graves
    by [the two victims].” 
    Id.
     The statements of the eyewitnesses added “substantial, perhaps
    even critical, weight to the State’s case against Graves.” 
    Id. at 43
    . In the case at hand,
    Detective Hendrix’s statement was not critical to the case. It did not bridge a gap, as in
    Graves, but merely explained why he exited the police vehicle and pursued Potts. As we
    previously noted, it was cumulative and only reiterated the testimony of Sergeant Jenkins
    and Detective Ward, and was harmless error at best.
    7
    For these reasons, we hold that any error in the admission of the testimony was
    harmless.
    II.
    Potts next contends that his commitment record and the docket entries for this case
    should be corrected to reflect the sentence announced in open court. The State agrees and
    so do we.
    For the crime of possession of a firearm after having been convicted of a crime of
    violence, Potts was sentenced to a term of incarceration of eight years, the first five of
    which were to be served without the possibility of parole. For each of the remaining
    crimes, he was sentenced to concurrent terms of one year. Potts’s commitment record
    erroneously indicates that he was sentenced to three years for wearing, carrying, and
    transporting a firearm. “‘When there is a conflict between the transcript and the
    commitment record, unless it is shown that the transcript is in error, the transcript
    prevails.’” Lawson v. State, 
    187 Md. App. 101
    , 108 (2009) (quoting Douglas v. State,
    
    130 Md. App. 666
    , 673 (2000)). Accordingly, we shall remand this case to the circuit
    court for correction of the commitment record and docket entries to reflect the sentence
    that was announced in court.
    III.
    Potts next challenges the circuit court’s imposition of separate sentences for
    possession of a firearm after having been convicted of a crime of violence and possession
    8
    of ammunition after having been prohibited from possessing a regulated firearm.2 He
    argues that both convictions were predicated upon the possession of the same loaded
    firearm and, under either a unit-of-prosecution analysis or pursuant to traditional
    principles of merger, the sentence for possession of ammunition must be vacated.
    2
    Possession of a firearm after having been convicted of a crime of violence is
    governed by Md. Code (2011 Repl. Vol., 2015 Supp.), § 5-133(c)(1) of the Public Safety
    Article (“PS”), which provides:
    (c) Penalty for possession by person convicted of crime of violence. -- (1)
    A person may not possess a regulated firearm if the person was previously
    convicted of:
    (i) a crime of violence;
    (ii) a violation of § 5-602, § 5-603, § 5-604, § 5-605, § 5-612, § 5-
    613, or § 5-614 of the Criminal Law Article; or
    (iii) an offense under the laws of another state or the United States
    that would constitute one of the crimes listed in item (i) or (ii) of this
    paragraph if committed in this State.
    Possession of ammunition after having been prohibited from possessing a
    regulated firearm is governed by PS § 5-133.1, which provides:
    (a) “Ammunition” defined. -- In this section, “ammunition” means a
    cartridge, shell, or any other device containing explosive or incendiary
    material designed and intended for use in a firearm.
    (b) In general. -- A person may not possess ammunition if the
    person is prohibited from possessing a regulated firearm under § 5-133(b)
    or (c) of this subtitle.
    (c) Penalty. -- A person who violates this section is guilty of a
    misdemeanor and on conviction is subject to imprisonment not exceeding 1
    year or a fine not exceeding $1,000 or both.
    9
    In support of his contention that separate sentences were prohibited under a unit-of
    prosecution analysis, Potts relies upon Clark v. State, 
    218 Md. App. 230
     (2014). In that
    case, we held that separate sentences were not warranted for possession of a regulated
    firearm after having been convicted of a disqualifying crime, under PS § 5-133(b), and
    possession of a regulated firearm by an individual under the age of 21, under PS § 5-
    133(d), because they were based on the same statute and Clark had violated three
    different sections of PS § 5-133 by possessing a single regulated firearm. Clark, 218 Md.
    App. at 252-53 (citing Melton v. State, 
    379 Md. 471
     (2004) and Wimbish v. State, 
    201 Md. App. 239
     (2011) (both concluding that when a defendant possessed a single
    regulated firearm, he committed only one violation of PS § 5-133)). Potts argues that, as
    in Clark, both of the crimes at issue in the instant case involved possession of the same
    regulated firearm. As the gun was the single unit of prosecution, he maintains that he
    could be convicted of only one charge, and his conviction for possession of ammunition
    under PS § 5-133.1 must be vacated. We disagree.
    The specific statutes at issue in the case sub judice are not predicated upon
    possession of the same loaded firearm, but upon possession of a firearm under PS § 5-
    133(c)(1) and possession of ammunition under PS § 5-133.1. The enactment of PS § 5-
    133.1 as a separate statutory provision and the plain meaning of the statutory language
    reveal an intent on the part of the Legislature to punish possession of ammunition
    separately from a conviction for possession of a firearm under PS § 5-133(c)(1). This is
    also supported by the legislative history. PS § 5-133.1 was enacted three years ago as
    part of the Maryland Firearm Safety Act of 2013, for the purpose of “significantly
    10
    modif[ying] and expand[ing] the regulation of firearms, firearms dealers, and ammunition
    in the State[.]” S.B. 281 (2013 Sess.), Fiscal & Policy Note at p. 1. That statute provides
    for a separate sentence under PS § 5-133.1(c). In light of the Legislature’s plain intent to
    make possession of ammunition a separate and distinct offense, a unit-of-prosecution
    analysis does not apply so as to mandate that Potts’s sentence for possession of
    ammunition be vacated.
    Nor do the sentences merge under the required evidence test, the rule of lenity, or
    principles of fundamental fairness. The required evidence test focuses on the particular
    elements of each offense. In applying the required evidence test, “‘[w]e examine the
    elements of each offense and determine whether each provision requires proof of a fact
    which the other does not[.]’” Paige v. State, 
    222 Md. App. 190
    , 206 (2015) (quoting
    Blockburger v. United States, 
    284 U.S. 299
    , 304 (1932)). “‘[I]f 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.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v.
    Jenkins, 
    307 Md. 501
    , 517 (1986) (citations omitted)). In the case at hand, one crime
    required proof of a firearm while the other did not. Further, one crime required proof of
    ammunition, which the other did not. As a result, the convictions for possession of
    ammunition and possession of a firearm do not merge under the required evidence test.
    Nor do they merge under the rule of lenity. The rule of lenity, applicable only
    where a defendant is convicted of at least one statutory offense, requires merger when
    there is no indication that the legislature intended multiple punishments for the same act.
    Alexis v. State, 
    437 Md. 457
    , 484-85 (2014); McGrath v. State, 
    356 Md. 20
    , 25 (1999).
    11
    “[I]f we are unsure of the legislative intent in punishing offenses as a single merged
    crime or as distinct offenses, we, in effect, give the defendant the benefit of the doubt and
    hold that the crimes do merge.” Monoker v. State, 
    321 Md. 214
    , 222 (1990) (and cases
    cited therein). As we have already noted, the Legislature clearly intended to punish the
    possession of ammunition as a separate statutory offense. Accordingly, merger is not
    required under the rule of lenity.
    Lastly, Potts urges us to examine whether his convictions merge, for sentencing
    purposes, under principles of fundamental fairness. Although a defendant may attack an
    illegal sentence by way of direct appeal, the fundamental fairness test does not enjoy the
    same “procedural dispensation of [Md.] Rule 4-345(a)” that permits correction of an
    illegal sentence without a contemporaneous objection.3 Pair v. State, 
    202 Md. App. 617
    ,
    649 (2011) (noting that a “non-merged sentence” based on a “fluid test dependent upon a
    subjective evaluation of the particular evidence in a particular case is not an inherently
    ‘illegal sentence’ within the tightly limited contemplation of the rule”). Potts did not
    make a contemporaneous objection as to the lack of fundamental fairness of his
    sentences. Accordingly, this issue was not preserved for our consideration.
    Even if it had been preserved, we would not be persuaded that merger is required.
    It was clearly the Legislature’s intent to permit multiple sentences for the crimes at issue
    and the imposition of separate sentences was not fundamentally unfair.
    3
    Md. Rule 4-345(a) provides that “[t]he court may correct an illegal sentence at
    any time.”
    12
    IV.
    Finally, Potts contends that the evidence was insufficient to sustain each of his
    convictions because there was no evidence that he possessed a firearm. We disagree.
    The standard for reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence 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.”
    Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979) (citation omitted); see also Allen v. State,
    
    402 Md. 59
    , 71 (2007). The standard of review is the same “regardless of whether the
    conviction rests upon direct evidence, a mixture of direct and circumstantial, or
    circumstantial evidence alone.” Smith v. State, 
    415 Md. 174
    , 185 (2010) (citation
    omitted). We give “due regard to the [fact-finder’s] findings of facts, its resolution of
    conflicting evidence, and, significantly, its opportunity to observe and assess the
    credibility of witnesses.” Harrison v. State, 
    382 Md. 477
    , 487-88 (2004) (and cases cited
    therein). In performing its function, the jury is free to accept the evidence it believes and
    reject that which it does not believe. Muir v. State, 
    64 Md. App. 648
    , 654 (1985).
    Potts contends that there was no evidence to show that he exercised some
    dominion or control over the firearm or the ammunition. He maintains that the evidence
    presented at trial was “too conflicting for any rational jury to find guilt.” In particular, he
    points to conflicting evidence by the police officers “about when and whether they saw
    Mr. Potts throw a firearm[,]” and contends that the officers’ testimony was “purely
    speculative.”
    13
    This issue was not preserved for our consideration because Potts did not move for
    judgment of acquittal either at the close of his case or after the State’s rebuttal witness
    testified. See Haile v. State, 
    431 Md. 448
    , 464 (2013) (appellate courts are precluded
    from entertaining review of the sufficiency of the evidence in a criminal case tried by a
    jury when the defendant failed to move for judgment of acquittal at the close of all the
    evidence) (relying on Ennis v. State, 
    306 Md. 579
    , 585 (1986) (holding same)).
    Even if the issue had been preserved properly, Potts would fare no better. Any
    conflict in the evidence went to the weight, and not the sufficiency of the evidence.
    Owens v. State, 
    170 Md. App. 35
    , 103 (2006) (and cases cited therein). The testimony at
    trial established that Sergeant Jenkins and Detective Ward saw Potts with one hand on his
    midsection, or dip area, and the other swinging freely, which both testified was a
    characteristic typical of someone carrying a weapon. Sergeant Jenkins saw Potts take a
    gun from his waistband, turn from the officers, and run away. Detective Ward saw Potts
    running with a gun in his hand. Later, officers recovered a gun along the path that Potts
    took as he fled from them. Certainly, the jury was free to decide which testimony to
    accept and which to reject, and to “believe part of a particular witness’s testimony, but
    disbelieve other parts of that witness’s testimony.” Bayne v. State, 
    98 Md. App. 149
    , 155
    (1993) (citation omitted). See also Grimm v. State, 
    447 Md. 482
    , 495 (2016). The jury
    was also free to infer from the officers’ testimony that Potts threw the gun as he ran from
    14
    the police. For these reasons, we hold that the evidence was sufficient to support Potts’s
    convictions.
    JUDGMENTS OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
    BALTIMORE CITY AFFIRMED. CASE
    REMANDED FOR THE SOLE PURPOSE OF
    CORRECTING THE COMMITMENT RECORD
    AND DOCKET ENTRIES TO REFLECT THE
    CORRECT SENTENCE. COSTS TO BE PAID
    BY APPELLANT.
    15