EUEL LEE v. STATE OF MARYLAND
No. 105, October Term, 1931
Court of Appeals of Maryland
Decided December 29th, 1931
161 Md. 430
The court, in our opinion, committed no error in sustaining the demurrer to the bill, and the order appealed from will be affirmed.
Order appealed from affirmed, with costs.
Wm. Preston Lane, Jr., Attorney General, and Willis R. Jones, Deputy Attorney General, with whom was William L. Marbury, Jr., on the brief, for the State.
John H. Skeen and Reuben Oppenheimer presented a brief as amici curiae.
BOND, C. J., delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant, or plaintiff in error, indicted on charges of murder in Worcester County, exercised his constitutional right to have the cause upon his indictment removed from the circuit court for that county for trial (
In many cases it has been decided that a refusal to grant a removal when the Constitution gives an absolute right of removal, as it does in all cases on charges of capital crimes, amounts to a final judgment on the constitutional right, and is immediately open to review in this court on the record. Smith v. State, 44 Md. 530; McMillan v. State, 68 Md. 307, 12 A. 8. But only decisions on claims of such absolute constitutional rights have been held reviewable at once, and there has been a decision on the precise point that orders within the discretion of the lower courts are, on the contrary, not final orders within the meaning of the rules governing the jurisdiction of this court, and are therefore not immediately reviewable, if reviewable at all. Tidewater Portland Cement Co. v. State, 122 Md. 96, 89 A. 327. And see City of Annapolis v. Howard, 80 Md. 244, 30 A. 910. It is true that in the earlier case of Downs v. State, 111 Md. 241, 73 A. 893, the court had before it an appeal taken immediately from a discretionary order on a suggestion for removal, and, after having found the discretion not abused, affirmed the order instead of dismissing the appeal. The question of jurisdiction to entertain the appeal appears not to have been raised, and of course, as the court did not find any abuse of the lower court‘s discretion, the distinction between dismissing the appeal and affirming the order was without importance in the case. But we think it must be assumed that, if the distinction had been noticed, the court would have been in agreement with the disposition made of the later appeal, because
While this ruling disposes of the present proceeding in this court, we shall, however, follow in the course adopted in several previous cases, and express an opinion on the questions sought to be reviewed, because, if the court entertains now views which might later cause a reversal of a conviction of this prisoner and necessitate a second trial, it seems desirable that those views should be expressed while the case is before the court. It cannot be the practice to do this ordinarily, but we agree that the course may well be followed in this case.
A family of four were killed, a farmer, his wife, and two daughters, and the act has had the natural effect of arousing high popular excitement and anger in the county; and, after the petitioner had been arrested, lawless elements in the population attempted more than once to seize him and wreak vengeance upon him, and he was taken by the public authorities to the jail in Baltimore City for security, and, except for a trip back to Worcester County for arraignment, has ever
The record does not present the question argued as fully as it has been presented in argument. Counsel for the accused has referred to particular outbreaks and manifestations to show the popular state of mind, which would render a fair and impartial trial in the region unlikely, as suggested by him; but not all the particular facts cited could be regarded as having been within the knowledge of the court below or
The homicide was committed on October 11th, 1931, and the accused, a colored man, was arrested on the next day. In one of the petitions for removal, it is alleged that upon arrest he was for sixteen hours subjected to maltreatment by officials of Worcester County, and kept without food or drink; that on October 13th, a mob of citizens of Worcester County prepared to lynch the prisoner, and he was then removed to Baltimore City; that on October 19th, he was brought back to Worcester County under guard, and was arraigned, pleaded not guilty, and elected to be tried by a jury, was immediately removed to Cambridge, in Dorchester County; and that then a mob started from Worcester County to go to Cambridge and lynch the man; and that he was, upon the advice of the chief judge of the circuit, again removed to Baltimore City for safe-keeping. It was on October 19th, according to the allegations, that the prisoner agreed to employ Mr. Ades. It is represented that on October 26th, and again on November 5th, in a belief that the accused was in Snow Hill, the county seat of Worcester County, a mob surrounded the jail there, gained entrance, and searched it for the purpose of seizing and lynching him. On November 5th, the mob, it is alleged, waited in the streets until three o‘clock in the morning, and it was necessary to add ten deputy sheriffs and twenty-five members of the state police force to the ordinary force to preserve order. These manifestations are attributed, on behalf of the accused, to outbreaks of racial prejudice; and, as evidence of the extension of the popular feeling, it is recited that, on November 23rd, a mob at Chestertown, in Kent County, about a hundred miles to the north, searched the jail, and also the jails of some nearby county seats, to take one George Davis, colored, and lynch him, and that it was thought necessary to remove Davis, too, to the Baltimore City jail for security. And it is alleged, further, that since the arrest of the accused there have been popular attacks on negroes in two other towns in the circuit.
On November 6th, suggestions for removal of the cause from the Circuit Court for Worcester County were filed by both Mr. Wailes and Mr. Ades, the former suggesting that the cause be removed to some other court of the same or of the adjoining circuit, and the latter, as already stated, suggesting that it be removed from the Eastern Shore of the State altogether. And on the same day, November 6th, the order for removal to the Circuit Court for Dorchester County was signed, and the record was transmitted to the second county. The case was set for trial at Cambridge on November 19th, and from copies of official correspondence, exhibited in the briefs of counsel on appeal, it would appear that elaborate provisions were made for guarding the prisoner and his counsel with troops and state police while in the town and while going to and from the town in boats. And here again, it would appear that the fears of violence were to a large
After the determination that Mr. Ades had authority from the accused to represent him, the trial was delayed, and he transmitted several motions or petitions to the clerk of the Circuit Court for Worcester County. In a motion or petition of November 20th, he complained that he, as counsel for the accused, had not been given an opportunity by the clerk of the original court to inspect the record before its transmission upon removal of the cause, as required by the
The Circuit Court for Worcester County then set for hearing, on the afternoon of November 27th, all motions, petitions, or suggestions which might be filed on behalf of the accused before that time, and notice of the hearing was duly given to Mr. Ades. The state‘s attorney made affidavit that on the late afternoon of November 25th, in a telephone conversation, he notified Mr. Ades further, that evidence would be received at the hearing; and the fact is denied by Mr. Ades. Instead of appearing at the hearing, because, as he informed the court, he could not appear without an armed guard, he filed with the clerk, on behalf of the accused, another motion or petition for removal from the Eastern Shore counties. This was answered on the same day by the state‘s attorney, and while not denying the occurrences alleged to have taken place in Snow Hill, and the preparations deemed necessary at Cambridge, he attributed the difficulties chiefly to misconduct of Mr. Ades. The answer denied the existence of any reason for changing the order of November 6th, selecting the Circuit Court for Dorchester County for trial. And on November 30th, the second order of court, from which
Reference is made in this court to a lynching of another negro in Salisbury, in Wicomico County, about twenty-five miles from Cambridge, and in the same circuit, since the case was transferred to this court for review, but this is one of the facts which was not before the lower court, and its action could not have been adapted to a fact which had not occurred, and we have no ground for supposing that the court
As has been stated, not all the outbreaks and manifestations recited in the proceedings in this court were placed before the judges of the trial court. Many of them were, of course, known to the judges, having occurred under their eyes, but others were not known. There are some salient facts in the case, however, on which there is no dispute, and we express our opinion on these.
The meaning of discretionary power in a trial court, and the rules governing review of discretionary orders on appeal, have often been stated in vague, loose terms which furnish no exact guidance; but for the purposes of this case it seems to us sufficient to observe only that the judgment and discretion must be exercised in solving the exact problem of the law, upon all the considerations which properly enter into the problem, and form it. For instance, the discretion being for the solution of the problem arising from the circumstances of each case as it is presented, it has been held that the court could not dispose of all cases alike by a previous general rule. Union Bank v. Ridgely, 1 H. & G. 324, 407. And a decision on a motion for a new trial, the most familiar of the decisions entirely within the discretion of the trial court, is open to an appeal for correction of error in a refusal to receive evidence of facts which should be considered in the basis of the discretionary decision. Washington, B. & A. Elec. R. Co. v. Kimmey, 141 Md. 243, 250, 118 A. 648. And see Horton v. Horton, 157 Md. 127, 133, 145 A. 355. The problem before the judges, when removing this cause from the Circuit Court for Worcester County, was solely that of the selection of a new jurisdiction which, so far as could be seen, was likely to be free of the hazard of an unfair prejudiced jury. “The law seems to contemplate a condition of excitement in the immediate community, which has been the witness of an imputed crime, productive of feeling, either of prejudice or partiality, which might hazard a fair and impartial trial.” Price v. State, 8 Gill, 295, 307. “The object of these provisions, as of all laws, for the removal of causes from one
In the opinion of this court, the conditions evidenced by the occurrences recited would leave no latitude for discretion, but would demonstrate that the securing of a fair unprejudiced jury from the county selected as the place for the trial of the charges against this man, and any defenses he may make, is unlikely, and that to attain the object of the Constitution and statutes the cause must be removed for trial to some other portion of the state, on the one shore of the bay or the other, where it appears at least much more likely that the local prejudice may be avoided. That there is, in the section of the state so far selected, such prejudice as forbids attempting a trial there, seems to this court to be manifested by the recited facts of the attacks on the jail at Snow Hill, and the entrances gained, in endeavors to get the man for lynching, the conclusion of the local authorities that he must be taken away from both Worcester and Dorchester Counties
As has already been announced, however, the proceeding in this court for reversal of the order for removal at this time must be dismissed.
Proceeding dismissed.
ADKINS and SLOAN, JJ., agree that the proceeding in this court should be dismissed, but think the opinion of the court should go no further.
DIGGES, J., agreeing with so much of the opinion as reviews the exercise of the trial court‘s discretion, disagrees with the dismissal of the proceeding, and thinks the order of the trial court should be reversed.
PARKE, J., dissents on the ground that, in his opinion, neither the record nor any facts of which the court can take judicial cognizance shows an abuse of discretion by the nisi prius court.
