Coles v. State

Decision Date25 May 1981
Docket NumberNo. 135,135
Citation290 Md. 296,429 A.2d 1029
PartiesCharles William COLES v. STATE of Maryland.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Thomas Patrick O'Reilly, Riverdale (O'Reilly & Serio, Riverdale, on the brief), for appellant.

Richard B. Rosenblatt, Asst. Atty. Gen., Baltimore (Stephen H. Sachs, Atty. Gen. and Ray E. Stokes, Asst. Atty. Gen., Baltimore, on the brief), for appellee.

Argued before MURPHY, C. J., and SMITH, DIGGES, ELDRIDGE, COLE, DAVIDSON and RODOWSKY, JJ.

DIGGES, Judge.

The appellant, Charles William Coles, stands convicted of seven counts of welfare fraud. 1 He brings this appeal not from the initial conviction and sentence but from the subsequent revocation of his probation and reinstatement of the balance of seven concurrent ten year prison terms previously suspended at the time probation was granted.

On September 1, 1978, a jury in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County convicted appellant of seven counts of false or fraudulent statements made in applications for public assistance benefits in violation of Md.Code (1957, 1979 Repl.Vol., 1980 Cum.Supp.), Art. 88A, § 62(a). The pre-sentence investigation report indicated that the accused defrauded the Montgomery County Department of Social Services of $30,099.82. That document also noted that "the majority of the public assistance checks were deposited towards payments of the mortgage on the (appellant's) home." At the time of sentencing, Coles offered to pay back his illgotten funds at a rate of $200.00 per month and his counsel argued against the imposition of incarceration, urging instead the granting of probation conditioned upon restitution being made. Announcing that "this welfare fraud business has got to stop," the presiding judge sentenced Coles to serve ten years on each count and directed that the sentences be served concurrently. Addressing Coles, Judge Mathias noted:

You have a house which is a nice house. Only eleven years old. It has four bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, basement, recreation room. Two car garage. A brick and frame house. And it's on a twelve thousand square foot parcel of land in a nice area of Montgomery County. I'm told that the fair market today's fair market value of that house is $58,000.00. Ten years ago you paid $42,500.00. I happen to own a house and I happen to know that property values in the last ten years have skyrocketed and I firmly believe that the fair market value of that house is not $58,000.00 on today's market but is closer to eighty or ninety thousand dollars on today's market. You have a mortgage against it in the amount of roughly $24,000.00. If the property is worth $80,000.00 then your equity in the property is $56,000.00. That property, I am fairly certain, could be refinanced and you could probably borrow $56,000.00 against it. When you paid off your present loan of $24,000.00 you would still have enough money left to pay off this $30,000.00 that you owe to the Department of Social Services of Montgomery County. In other words, I think you can satisfy this indebtedness by refinancing your property.

Accordingly, the serving of all but 179 days of appellant's sentence was suspended. Following this abbreviated incarceration, the defendant was placed on probation for four and one-half years on the condition that he pay $200.00 per month for the one year ending December 1, 1979, when the entire remaining amount was to be restored to the county department of social services. "What I'm doing," declared the court, "is giving you a year, a little more than a year, to refinance your house and raise the money to pay this off." Appellant acquiesced in this determination and took no appeal from the judgment.

Coles met his $200.00 monthly obligations, but when he failed to make the $28,499.82 final restitution payment, the State filed a petition seeking revocation of his probation. At the hearing held on July 9, 1980, before Judge Mathias, appellant indicated that he was financially strapped stretching his sole income, a monthly disability check of $550.00, to cover mortgage payments of $338.00, a food bill of "six hundred something dollars" to support his wife and five children, gasoline bills of $100.00 "going back and forth to church," insurance of $50.00, a loan payment of $400.00, electrical bills of "$75.00 and up" as well as additional minor expenses. At this hearing, Coles also revealed that, although his wife was unemployed, she had purchased a Fleetwood Cadillac for cash, but that he didn't know where she got the money because he does not "go into her business." The nub of the matter, however, centered on Coles' failure to make full restitution through refinancing his house. The probationer asserted that he was unable to make the final ordered payment because the home was owned by the couple as tenants by the entireties and the spouse was unwilling to participate in the refinancing directive; 2 he did, however, volunteer to continue to make restitution at the diminished rate of $50.00 per month. Judge Mathias, plainly disbelieving the convict, declined his propoundment, explaining:

I realize of course that I could not keep (appellant) on probation long enough to pay the restitution in full at the rate of $200.00 a month, because under the law I can only place him on probation for a maximum of five years.

So, realizing that, and realizing that he was willing at that time to make restitution, and realizing that he had taken stolen money and used it to buy his home, I thought it fair and just that he put a mortgage or refinance his home in order to pay back this money he had stolen from the public.

I went and even had the Department of Assessments give me an idea of what the house was worth, and at that time in 1978, two years ago, according to the report I got, the house was determined to have a then value of $80,000. In two years I am sure that its value has increased considerably. In looking at the picture, being familiar with the location of this property, my guess is that it is worth close to $125,000 on today's skyrocketing market. He testified at the trial that the balance owed on the mortgage was $23,456.29. That was in 1978, so it has probably been reduced pretty close to $20,000. So, he's got pretty close I would say, to $100,000 in that house. Largely by reason of the fact that he stole money from the public and put it in the house, I see nothing unjust about requiring him to refinance that house to pay the money back. He says his wife won't agree to it, and her name is on the deed. Well, I think that he has enough control over his wife to get her to do that, and I think she probably has enough consideration for him to do it.

The court also scoffed at appellant's representations as to his income:

The evidence shows that he is paying $354 a month on a mortgage, and that he is supporting a wife and five children, and counsel says seven children but I only count five. Two of them are emancipated. Only three of whom are minors, but he says that he is putting two, the two older children through school, and in addition to buying food, supporting the family, and paying a $354 a month mortgage, he now makes $550 and stretches it to do all of that. I don't see how, and I don't believe it. I think he has more income than that. He certainly had more income than that in 1978 when he appeared before me.

I think his representations amount to impoverishment. If it is true, he is simply impoverishing himself so he can't pay back this money. He was supposed to have refinanced his house, and he was supposed to have made this restitution by December 1, 1979, over six months ago.

So the judge concluded:

(H)e has flouted the law and the requirements of the probation contract which he signed, and I don't believe that it is because he can't and is unable to pay. I think he is just trying to con the Court, therefore, the Court strikes the suspension of the sentence, revokes his probation, and orders that he serve the balance of his sentence in the amount of eight years and 181 days, and that is to be served under the jurisdiction of the Division of Corrections of Maryland.

The spectre of imprisonment occasioned by the order prompted this appeal. We granted certiorari before the Court of Special Appeals passed on the issues here presented.

On appeal, the challenge to the propriety of the revocation of probation is two-fold. Appellant primarily urges that the trial judge erred in the first instance when he ordered restitution because the court either had no authority to do so, or, by failing to adequately inquire into appellant's finances at the time of sentencing, abused its discretion to shape each punitive order to fit both the criminal and the crime. Alternatively, the argument goes, since "the record clearly shows that the appellant made a good faith effort to obtain the funds to repay the money owed," there was no violation that could authorize the revocation of probation and his consequential imprisonment. We see no merit to these claims.

In addressing appellant's attack on the propriety of the original sentencing order, we note that he took no appeal from the final judgment embodying that sentence. In fact, at sentencing, both appellant and his counsel urged the court to order restitution in lieu of incarceration, and it was not until the probation revocation hearing that appellant questioned the validity of his original sentence. The correctness of conditions of probation must be determined on an appeal from the final judgment of conviction and sentence, e. g., Bird v. State, 231 Md. 432, 437-38, 190 A.2d 804, 807 (1963), and not on the subsequent revocation of probation, "because to do so, would, in effect, permit a circumvention of (Md.Rule 1012) which requires an appeal to be taken within thirty days" following the entry of final judgment. Coleman v. State, 231 Md. 220, 223, 189 A.2d 616, 618 (1963); see Stone v. State, 43 Md.App. 329, 405 A.2d 345 ...

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