From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

State v. Thompson

Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
Mar 9, 1981
48 Md. App. 219 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1981)

Summary

holding that, after Thompson performed under a plea agreement by giving the prosecutor information about drug cases the police were interested in, and the State performed under the plea agreement by placing the case against Poole on the stet docket, the case could not be removed from the stet docket

Summary of this case from Y.Y. v. State

Opinion

No. 852, September Term, 1980.

Decided March 9, 1981.

CRIMINAL LAW — Plea Bargain — Entering Of A Stet In Exchange For Services Of Accused As Informant Is A Plea Bargain To Be Honored By The State As Long As Defendant Makes Good Faith Effort To Perform His Part — It Is Substance Of The Agreement, Not The Name It Is Given, To Which Court Looks In Order To Determine Whether A Pact Was Struck And Once State Has Made A Bargain, It Is Bound To Adhere To The Agreement So Long As Accused Performs His Part — A Plea Bargain Is "Entitled To Judicial Enforcement." pp. 222-223

Appeal from the Criminal Court of Baltimore (PINES, J.).

Motion by Robert Lee Thompson to enforce a plea agreement filed when State's Attorney attempted to reopen a stetted case. From an order granting the appellee's motion, the State appeals.

Order affirmed. Costs to be paid by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.

The cause was argued before GILBERT, C.J., and MORTON and MOORE, JJ.

Richard B. Rosenblatt, Assistant Attorney General, with whom were Stephen H. Sachs, Attorney General, William A. Swisher, State's Attorney for Baltimore City, and Ralph M. Murdy, Assistant State's Attorney for Baltimore City, on the brief, for appellant.

Arthur M. Frank, with whom were Nathanson Frank, P.A. on the brief for appellee.


Apparently aggrieved at appellee's acquittal by a jury in the Criminal Court of Baltimore on narcotic charges, an Assistant State's Attorney opted to reopen a stet in another case that had been entered as the result of a plea bargain. The appellee, Robert Lee Thompson, vigorously resisted the effort to reopen the stet and filed a "Motion to Enforce a Plea Agreement." The matter was heard before Judge Joseph I. Pines, and he granted the appellee's motion. The State appealed.

The single issue posited by the State is "[w]hether the trial court erred in dismissing the criminal informations against a Appellee as a result of its determination that removal of the cases from the stet docket would be unfair and inequitable."

THE FACTS

On May 15, 1979, the State called to trial two Criminal Informations charging the appellee with violations of the Controlled Dangerous Substances Act. Negotiations took place between the State and the appellee. It was agreed, according to Timothy Doory, Esq., an Assistant State's Attorney, that "the . . . [appellee, Thompson,] would make a good faith effort to provide some information to the cases that the district officers were interested in within the next 60 days, that the [State's] case [against appellee] would then be, we would stet the case that day based on his assurance of a good faith effort."

Inasmuch as the stet was to be entered in open court, and because of the possibility of jeopardizing the appellee, the reason for the stet stated in the record "was because the State was not in a position to try the case at . . . [that] time." The true reason, however, was made known to Judge Grady before the false reason was supplied in open court.

Mr. Doory further testified before Judge Pines that it was agreed that if appellee fulfilled his part of the bargain, "the stet for all intents and purposes would have remained in effect. The case would have never been recalled and would have just died its natural death."

On cross-examination Doory acknowledged that, to the best of his recollection, "there was no mention" of the effect on the agreement with respect to any subsequent offense. It was not a condition of the stet that appellee refrain from subsequent criminal conduct. We make clear that Mr. Doory was not the Assistant Prosecutor who sought to reopen the stet.

Other testimony adduced by the appellee indicated that he had made good on his part of the bargain. The effort to reopen the stet was made on January 9, 1980, approximately eight months after it had been entered and six months after the appellee's part of the bargain had been completed.

The prosecutor resisted the appellee's motion to enforce the "plea agreement" on the ground that "[w]e are dealing with a stet, not a plea bargain." The thrust of his contention to Judge Pines was that because Thompson did not plead guilty to any charge, there could be no plea bargain. In short, he advanced the turbid theory that a plea bargain "involves a plea," while a stet involves no plea by an accused. That argument is novel but unavailing.

The prosecutor in the instant case is the same one that unsuccessfully sought Thompson's conviction on subsequent narcotic charges. He argued to the trial court that "[t]he fact that the Jury found . . . [appellee] not guilty does not indicate that there was no probable cause for the charge and that is in fact brought out even further by the fact that the case went to the Jury."

Whether probable cause for the bringing of the subsequent charge existed is totally irrelevant. The "bottom line" is that the jury found appellee not guilty and acquitted him of the charges. That the prosecutor did not share that view matters not one whit.

The crystalline inference that permeates the record in this case is that the Assistant State's Attorney was piqued because of the jury's verdict, and he seized upon the stet as a way of balancing the scales. In fact, he told Judge Pines that if the jury had convicted the appellee, the instant case would have been closed.

Despite the State's unusual view of the agreement entered into between it and the appellee, we think it unmistakable that a "plea bargain" was struck. A "plea bargain" may take many forms; it is multivious in nature. For example, in exchange for information concerning criminal activity, the State may agree to nol pros a case against the informer; for other information, it may agree to confess not guilty. It is also possible that the State, in consideration of the receipt of information, may agree not to seek an indictment of the informer. Obviously then, the State may enter into an agreement with an accused to do exactly what it did in the instant case, namely stet the indictment in exchange for cooperation.

We use the term "plea bargain" in its broad sense as meaning any agreement between the prosecutor and the defendant whereby a defendant agrees to perform some act or service in exchange for more lenient treatment by the prosecutor. We do not use the term in its narrow sense as in Md. Rule 731.

A "plea bargain," by any other name, remains a plea bargain. It is the substance of the agreement, not the name it is given, to which we look in order to determine whether a pact was struck.

We think that once the State has made a bargain, it is bound to adhere to the agreement so long as the accused performs his part, and we eschew the State's attempt by semantics to renege on its covenant.

The office of State's Attorney is a public trust. The awesome power, vested by the people in the State's Attorney, should not be employed for the purpose of applying balm to a wounded ego or to the fulfillment of a personal vendetta. See generally Sinclair v. State, 278 Md. 243, 363 A.2d 468 (1976).

A plea bargain, the Court of Appeals declared in State v. Brockman, 277 Md. 687, 694, 357 A.2d 376, 381 (1976); aff'g Brockman v. State, 27 Md. App. 682, 341 A.2d 849 (1975), is "entitled to judicial enforcement," citing Santabello v. New York, 404 U.S. 257, 262, 92 S.Ct. 495, 499, 30 L.Ed.2d 427 (1971). See also Miller v. State, 272 Md. 249, 322 A.2d 527 (1974); Sturgis v. State, 25 Md. App. 628, 336 A.2d 803 (1975). Judge Pines did exactly what the appellate decisions directed him to do, and we, accordingly, affirm his order.

Order affirmed.

Costs to be paid by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.


Summaries of

State v. Thompson

Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
Mar 9, 1981
48 Md. App. 219 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1981)

holding that, after Thompson performed under a plea agreement by giving the prosecutor information about drug cases the police were interested in, and the State performed under the plea agreement by placing the case against Poole on the stet docket, the case could not be removed from the stet docket

Summary of this case from Y.Y. v. State

In Thompson, the Ninth Circuit relied, in part, on a concurring opinion accompanying the en banc rehearing of an Eleventh Circuit case, Drake v. Francis, 727 F.2d 990 (11th Cir. 1984), rev'd on different grounds en banc, Drake v. Kemp, 762 F.2d 1449 (11th Cir. 1985).

Summary of this case from E. Sifrit v. State

applying test to agreement that did not include plea

Summary of this case from Jackson v. State

In State v. Thompson, 48 Md. App. 219, 426 A.2d 14 (1981), we recognized the existence of, as well as the limitations upon, this form of extraordinary relief. At issue was an effort by the State to remove a case from the stet docket which had lain dormant for eight months pursuant to an agreement between State's Attorney and defendant that it would never be taken from the stet docket.

Summary of this case from Butler v. State
Case details for

State v. Thompson

Case Details

Full title:STATE OF MARYLAND v . ROBERT LEE THOMPSON

Court:Court of Special Appeals of Maryland

Date published: Mar 9, 1981

Citations

48 Md. App. 219 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1981)
426 A.2d 14

Citing Cases

Jackson v. State

For those reasons the defendant's motion is denied. Relying upon State v. Thompson, 48 Md. App. 219, 223 n.…

Butler v. State

Maryland is a pioneer in this developing area. In State v. Thompson, 48 Md. App. 219, 426 A.2d 14 (1981), we…