Minor v. State

Decision Date01 September 1990
Docket NumberNo. 78,78
Citation583 A.2d 1102,85 Md.App. 305
PartiesNelson MINOR v. STATE of Maryland. ,
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland

John L. Kopolow, Asst. Public Defender (Stephen E. Harris, Public Defender, on the brief), Baltimore, for appellant.

Ann N. Bosse, Asst. Atty. Gen. (J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Atty. Gen., and Stuart O. Simms, State's Atty. for Baltimore City, on the brief), Baltimore, for appellee.

Argued before WILNER, C.J., and BISHOP and ALPERT, JJ.

BISHOP, Judge.

On February 14, 1990 appellant, Nelson Minor, was convicted in a non-jury trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City of reckless endangerment in violation of Md.Code Ann. art. 27, § 120. Appellant was sentenced to four years, and all but the time already served awaiting trial was suspended. Appellant was also sentenced to five years probation. The sole issue presented on appeal is whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction.

FACTS

This case proceeded on what counsel represented to be an Agreed Statement of Facts:

The police were called on December the 13th, 1989 to the house at thirty-five hundred Woodbrook Avenue at approximately 12:51 a.m.

Police officers responding there found the situation as follows: the deceased in this case, Kenneth Minor, the brother of the defendant, was seated in a chair next to a table with blood proceeding from his mouth and nose.

Found on the floor in the living room area was a pump shotgun. The shotgun when it was examined contained a spent shotgun shell in the chamber and two other shotgun shells in the magazine ready to be channeled into the chamber.

Next to the victim on the table was a can of beer and a bottle of M D Twenty/Twenty fortified wine.

Present also in the house were the defendant, Nelson Minor and another person, another resident there who apparently had no knowledge of what had happened.

Nelson Minor was interviewed and, in fact, a formal written statement was taken at police headquarters.

State would submit as State's Exhibit One the advisement of rights and in that formal written statement which I would at this time read portions of it into the record.

After being advised of his rights, Mr. Minor was basically asked what happened and he stated:

"It was about ten or fifteen minutes before I made the phone call to 911. We was sitting down at the dining room table drinking and stuff and I was saying 'you think I won't be able to pull a trigger on a gun.' And I said, 'I don't believe you'll do it.' And he said 'I'll do it.' We had just been talking about Russian roulette and I said that you can't play Russian Roulette with a shotgun because it don't have a barrel for to put one bullet in to play Russian roulette. I said once you put one in the chamber, that's it. So I handed it to him thinking that he was going to cut the safety off and give it back to me to put it away and I went to take another drink and I was reaching towards the bottle to take another drink and I was looking at the bottle. That's when he pulled the trigger and the boom sound and it had muffled. It wasn't loud so I looked up in the ceiling and I seen it wasn't nothing on the ceiling, so I got out of my chair and I looked and this when I seen blood running out of his mouth and running down his shoulder. His head was lying to the side on his shoulder. So when I realized what he had did, I went to the bedroom and told Blake what he had did."

Blake was the other resident of the home. He was questioned:

"Where did you get the shotgun from.

It was behind the bed in my bedroom.

Q. Why did you get it?

A. I got it because me and a guy on the street had been having some words and I was walking around the house with it because I thought he might be coming over to the house."

Can't make out this word. I believe it's frail.

THE DEFENDANT: Yes.

MR. DOREY: 'Frail', nickname for his brother, "was sitting at the table having a drink so I sat down with him, I was sitting at the table drinking because we had been drinking all that day.

Q. How was the shotgun loaded?

A. It had three shells in there.

Q. Was it ready to fire?

A. Yea. It was one already in the chamber.

Q. Where were the other two shells?

A. They was up in the shotgun.

Q. Was the safety on or off?

A. The safety was off.

Q. Do you mean it was ready to fire?

A. Yea, it was ready to fire.

Q. How did you get involved in the conversation about Russian roulette?

A. We had the gun sitting there beside me on the floor. Like I had said, I had words with the guy on the street.

Q. When did you talk about Russian roulette?

A. Well, the shotgun was sitting near here on the floor, (pointing down to his right side) and he was sitting here (pointing off to this left) and somehow it just came up. And I told him you can't play no Russian roulette with no shotgun like this one. So he said give it here and like I said I expected him to turn off the safety and give it back and say here, boy, you'd better stop playing around with this.

Q. Did you tell him the gun was loaded?

A. Yea, he knew it was loaded.

Q. Did you tell him the safety was off?

A. Yea, he knew everything was off. I told him the safety ain't on. He was forty-two years old and I listened to him and stuff. That why I didn't expect him to do that.

Q. Had he been drinking?

A. Yea.

Q. What did he have to drink that day?

A. We had a couple of fifths of M D Twenty-Twenty grape wine. We drank about three or four fifths that day. I was high off of the drinks, cocaine and heroin.

Q. Where did you get the money for that stuff?

A. He had gave me some money.

Q. How much money?

A. He had left--he had lent me twenty dollars and I had ten from the day before.

Q. Can you think of anything else?

A. No, all I can say is I just didn't think he would do nothing like that. We had played with it before. I used to let him shoot it and stuff."

There is a question about where he was sitting and he drew a diagram.

"Q. Did you tell him to go first to, call his bluff?

A. Yea.

Q. Did he say anything after that?

A. Yea, he said you know that I will do it. So I thought that he was bullshitting me so I gave it to him and I was reaching for the bottle when he did it.

Q. Can you think of anything else?

A. No, just that we was real close."

Then after that he signed the statement.

Your Honor, I don't have an autopsy to present but I will present this statement, a photograph of the shotgun and also a photograph of Kenneth Minor as he was found seated at the table.

MR. MARCUS: No objections, Your Honor.

MR. DOREY: The autopsy would have revealed, Your Honor, that, in fact, he--Kenneth Minor died as a result of a shotgun blast apparently through the mouth. The pellets penetrated the brain and shattered the roof of the skull but did not actually penetrate the skin so that the entire force of the charge was contained within his head and skull.

Detective Stienhist would identify defendant seated at counsel table and were we to have proceed to trial we would have submitted the shotgun and Mr. Copera from the Baltimore City Police Department would have indicated that shotgun was operational and quite capable of being fired and we would all concede as the statement indicates, you can't play Russian roulette with a pump shotgun because once you pull the trigger the gun goes off.

That is the statement of facts.

THE COURT: Any additions or corrections?

MR. MARCUS: Judge, Mr. Minor and I have discussed the matter. There would be no corrections or additions to that statement.

Although the foregoing was categorized as an "Agreed Statement of Facts" at trial, the State now contends that it was merely an agreement of the facts to which witnesses would testify if called to the stand. What might be a crucial issue, however, is contained in Appellant's signed statement in which Appellant indicated that he expected the victim, Kenneth Minor, to turn off the safety and return the gun. The State argues that the trial court was not bound to accept this portion of Appellant's post-arrest statement.

Since we find that the foregoing statement was, contrary to the State's contention, indeed an "Agreed Statement of Facts", 1 the subjective belief of the Appellant, that the victim would not pull the trigger and would return the gun, is a fact which the trial court was bound to believe based on our holding in Barnes v. State, 31 Md.App. 25, 354 A.2d 499 (1976). In Barnes we observed at 35, 354 A.2d 499 that:

There is a distinction between an agreed statement of facts and evidence offered by way of stipulation. Under an agreed statement of facts both State and the defense agree as to the ultimate facts. Then the facts are not in dispute, and there can be, by definition, no factual conflict. The trier of fact is not called upon to determine the facts as the agreement is to the truth of the ultimate facts themselves. There is no fact-finding function left to perform. To render judgment, the court simply applies the law to the facts agreed upon. If there is agreement as to the facts, there is no dispute; if there is dispute, there is no agreement.

* * * * * *

On the other hand, when evidence is offered by way of stipulation, there is no agreement as to the facts which the evidence seeks to establish. Such a stipulation only goes to the content of the testimony of a particular witness if he were to appear and testify. The agreement is to what the evidence will be, not to what the facts are. Thus, the evidence adduced by such a stipulation may well be in conflict with other evidence received. For the trier of fact to determine the ultimate facts on such conflicting evidence, there must be some basis on which to judge the credibility of the witness whose testimony is the subject of the stipulation, or to ascertain the reliability of that testimony, to the end that the evidence obtained by stipulation may be weighed against other relevant evidence adduced.

In the Barnes case, it was clear that,...

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  • Albrecht v. State
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    ...there is nothing in that definition that is at all incompatible with the Court of Appeals opinion in Minor. In our Minor v. State, 85 Md.App. 305, 315, 583 A.2d 1102 (1991), Judge Bishop recognized the persuasive authority of § 2.02(2)(c) of the Model Penal Code when he quoted it with A per......
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    ...more than $5,000 or imprisonment for not more than 5 years or both. As Judge Bishop pointed out for this Court in Minor v. State, 85 Md.App. 305, 314-15, 583 A.2d 1102 (1991), aff'd, 326 Md. 436, 605 A.2d 138 (1992), the language of the new Maryland statute employs substantially the languag......
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