We decide in this case whether an apartment that is between tenancies is a “dwelling,” as that term is used in Maryland’s fourth degree burglary statute, Maryland Code *122 (2002), § 6-205(a) of the Criminal Law Article (“CL”). For the reasons that follow, we answer “yes” to that question, and, as a consequence, affirm the fourth degree burglary conviction of Petitioner, Patrick McKenzie.
I.
Apartment 14 is located within the rental complex known as Pepper Tree Farm, in Montgomery County, Maryland. On September 4, 2007, the day in question, no tenant currently resided in that apartment. The most recent tenant had vacated the apartment two weeks earlier, and a new tenant had signed a lease and was scheduled to move into the apartment on September 5, 2007.
Petitioner was discovered in apartment 14 on September 4 by Kevin Leftwood, the service manager for the company that manages Pepper Tree Farm. Mr. Leftwood was at the time performing a routine check of the apartments that were about to be turned over to new tenants. When last he had checked apartment 14, the rooms were freshly painted, the carpet was replaced, and the appliances evidently were in working order.
Mr. Leftwood returned to the apartment on September 4 to ensure that the door keys and the lock on the mailbox worked, and the apartment was still in good condition for the new resident. As he approached the apartment, he noticed that the bottom of the front door and the door frame near the lock were bent. He entered the apartment and came upon Petitioner, who called out, “I told you all we should’ve got up.” Mr. Leftwood asked Petitioner why he was there and received no response. Mr. Leftwood left the apartment and called 911.
While speaking with the police, Mr. Leftwood spotted Petitioner and two other men leaving the building. He followed the men and was able to provide the police with an immediate description of them and their location. The police responded and in short order arrested all three men. Mr. Leftwood returned to apartment 14 and observed cigarette burns on the carpet, stains on the ceiling of the dining room, and burn marks on the dining room wall.
*123 Petitioner was charged with committing fourth degree burglary of a dwelling, fourth degree burglary of a storehouse, criminal trespass, and malicious destruction of property. He was tried before a judge of the District Court of Maryland, sitting in Montgomery County, who convicted him of fourth degree burglary of a dwelling and malicious destruction of property, and acquitted him of the remaining charges. Petitioner appealed the convictions and was tried de novo before a jury in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The jury found Petitioner guilty of burglary and acquitted him of malicious destruction of property. The court later sentenced Petitioner to three years’ incarceration, with all but one year suspended, and two years of probation.
Petitioner filed a petition for writ of certiorari, presenting two questions:
I. Is an unfurnished, vacant apartment a “dwelling” within the meaning of Maryland Code, Ann., Criminal Law Art. § 6-205(a) (2002)?
II. Was the evidence sufficient to convict Petitioner of fourth degree burglary where the evidence established that he broke and entered an unfurnished, vacant apartment, which, at the time of the breaking, was unoccupied?
We granted the petition to decide both questions.
McKenzie v. State,
II.
Fourth degree burglary of a dwelling, like the related crimes of burglary in the first, second, and third degrees, is a relatively new statutory offense in Maryland. Judge Orth, writing for the Court in
Warfield v. State,
In its first iteration as a statutory offense, burglary in the fourth degree was part of the General Assembly’s 1994 codification of what previously were common law burglary and the statutory burglary-related offenses. See 1994 Laws of Maryland, ch. 712, § 2. Re-codified without substantive change in 2002 as CL § 6-205, burglary in the fourth degree embraces four varieties of proscribed behavior. That section reads:
(a) Prohibited—Breaking and entering dwelling.—A person may not break and enter the dwelling of another.
(b) Same—Breaking and entering storehouse.—A person may not break and enter the storehouse of another.
(c) Same—Being in or on dwelling, storehouse, or envi rons.—A person, with the intent to commit theft, may not be in or on:
(1) the dwelling or storehouse of another; or
(2) a yard, garden, or other area belonging to the dwelling or storehouse of another.
(d) Same—Possession of burglar’s tool.—A person may not possess a burglar’s tool with the intent to use or allow the use of the burglar’s tool in the commission of a violation of this subtitle.
(e) Penalty.—A person who violates this section is guilty of the misdemeanor of burglary in the fourth degree and on conviction is subject to imprisonment not exceeding 3 years.
(f) Conviction of theft.—A person who is convicted of violating § 7-104 of this article may not also be convicted of violating subsection (c) of this section based on the act establishing the violation of § 7-104 of this article.
We are concerned in the case at bar only with the first variety of fourth degree burglary—breaking and entering the *125 dwelling of another—and, more particularly, with the meaning of the term “dwelling.” Plainly, “dwelling” is not defined in CL § 6-205. Neither is it given a definition in CL § 6-201, the “Definitions” section of the “Burglary and Related Crimes” subtitle. Subsection (e) of CL § 6-201 merely provides: “Dwelling.—‘Dwelling’ retains its judicially determined meaning except to the extent that its meaning is expressly or impliedly changed in this subtitle.” We therefore must look to case law to ascertain the meaning of the term.
Although we have not held in any case precisely what is meant by a “dwelling” insofar as the crime of burglary is concerned, the Court of Special Appeals has discussed the term in various opinions on the subject. We shall examine those cases later in this opinion. Preliminarily, however, we address Petitioner’s suggestion during oral argument that the meaning of “dwelling,” for purposes of fourth degree burglary, is limited to the various definitions given that term in the Court of Special Appeals’ case law predating the 1994 codification of the burglary offenses.
Even were we to assume that the Court of Special Appeals’ opinions predating the effective date of statutory burglary could establish, without comment or decision by the Court of Appeals, the universe of what constitutes “the judicially determined meaning” of the term “dwelling,” we are not precluded from further clarifying its meaning, in this opinion or others in the future. The Committee Note of the Committee to Revise Article 27, appended to the original version of the “Definitions” section, see Md.Code (1957, 1996 Repl.Vol.), Art. 27, § 28, makes that point clear. The Note begins:
The meaning of the terms “break,” “enter,” and “dwelling” have been extensively developed at common law and in Maryland case law. Therefore, the Committee believes that these terms should retain their judicially determined meanings. More specifically, the Committee believes that the terms “dwelling,” “break,” and “enter” should retain the meanings that have been ascribed to these words by the *126 judges in cases interpreting the elements of the common law crime of burglary.
The Note ends:
The Committee does not intend that this bill limit or “freeze” further development of the meaning of the terms “break,” “enter,” “dwelling” and “storehouse” in case law. Rather, the Committee expects that the meaning of these terms will continue to be clarified as appropriate in future case law.
We set forth the above excerpts from the Committee Note fully cognizant that it is “not law.”
See
1994 Laws of Maryland, ch. 712, § 4. Yet, we have not hesitated in the past to consider such notes to be strong evidence that, if a term “retains its judicially determined meaning,” it is subject to continued clarification in case law.
See Robinson v. State,
“[I]f a term such as ‘dwelling house’ is not otherwise defined by statute, the common law meaning is assumed to be intended.”
Richmond v. State,
To be a dwelling, the place must be of human habitation, LaFave, supra, at 469, that is, a “place to sleep in,” Perkins, supra, at 256. A structure does not become a dwelling until someone occupies it. Id. at 258. Once a dwelling, however, the structure does not lose its character as a dwelling simply because it is left vacant for a time. See Perkins, supra, at 258-59; see also LaFave, supra, at 469 (stating that, “[i]f the place is one of human habitation, there is no requirement that a person be present therein at the time of the offense”). The length of the vacancy, moreover, does not, of itself, disturb the character of the place as a dwelling. “Certain it is that the dweller and his entire household may be away for months, without depriving the house of its character as his dwelling.” Perkins, supra, at 259.
The common law recognizes that “[tjhere may be more than one dwelling under the same roof and this applies not only to apartment houses and similar structures but also to buildings *128 of similar types.” Id. at 257. “Each apartment in a tenement house is ‘the dwelling house of the particular occupant,’ but even a single room in a private house or a hotel may be the dwelling of the occupant if it is actually the place where such person lives.” Id. Moreover, “[i]f a house is habitually used as a place where persons sleep, it is properly to be regarded as a dwelling even if no one who lodges there has a sufficient interest therein to establish it as Ms dwelling.” Id. at 262-63 (emphasis in original). Therefore, “a hotel is a dwelling house even if all the inmates are transients, and the proprietor and his family and servants all sleep elsewhere.” 2 Id. at 263.
No case of this Court provides a test for determining what is a dwelling, for purposes of Maryland burglary law. But we have had occasion to comment on the common law meaning of the term, and we have recognized that separate apartments in a single structure are separate dwellings. In
Richmond,
The Court of Special Appeals, unlike this Court, has had numerous occasions to grapple with whether a structure or separately identified space within a structure is a “dwelling.” In
Jones v. State,
Those cases were followed by
Poff v. State,
The next year, the Court of Special Appeals decided
Arnold v. State,
The following year, the court decided
Marston v. State,
In the instant case, there must have been occupancy by someone other than the appellant or his brother, Donald Marston, before the conviction [of burglary] may be affirmed. If the occupancy is by appellant or by his codefendant, then the dwelling becomes their dwelling, and at common law one could not be guilty of burglary of his own dwelling. If the dwelling is used as the constructive dwelling of [its] owner, because she allowed her servant, Donald Marston, to sleep there, then the use as a house terminated in November, 1968, when [the owner] evicted Donald Marston and later instituted judicial process to recover the keys from him. Thus the constructive dwelling of the owner, if *131 any, had clearly terminated approximately three months before the present crime. Thus, at the time of the breaking, the owner was not living in the building herself, and specifically had not authorized anyone, including the Marstons, to sleep there. In view of these facts, the building is not a dwelling as defined in Poff v. State, supra. The fact that Donald Marston occasionally slept in this building [after he had been directed by the owner to desist from sleeping there] does not convert it into a dwelling house, since by Poff, the mere fact that one sleeps there “on rare occasions” does not convert the building into a dwelling.
Id.
The
Marston
court recognized, moreover, the distinction “between a temporarily unoccupied building that is in fact regularly used as a dwelling with a building which has been abandoned as a dwelling. The former is a proper subject of burglary; the latter is not.”
Id.
at 364,
Herbert v. State,
But for the fact that room 66 was rented that evening, the State produced no evidence at Herbert’s trial that room 76 [the room not rented that evening] was used for different purposes than room 66. Both seem to be ordinary rooms designed and used for the same purpose. It is apparent that either both rooms are “dwellings” or both are “other buildings” under the storehouse breaking statutes.
Id.
at 51,
The court concluded: “The State produced evidence from which it could be inferred that the motel complex was utilized for overnight sleeping accommodations by paying guests and
*132
thus met its burden of proving the ‘dwelling house’ element of burglary beyond a reasonable doubt[.]”
Id.
at 52,
Kanaras v. State,
More recently, in
Wallace v. State,
*133 To be sure, burglary does not require that the dwelling be occupied by its residents at the time of the breaking; however, the law distinguishes a temporarily unoccupied dwelling house from a building such as [the house at issue in Wallace] which, although at times used as a dwelling, has at the time of the breaking been abandoned by its occupants. “The former is a proper subject of burglary; the latter is not.”
Id.
at 407,
Of course, the holdings of the Court of Special Appeals in the opinions we have discussed cannot be divorced from the facts presented in those opinions. Even so, most of the opinions support the conclusion that the apartment at issue in the case at bar was a dwelling at the operative time. Much like the unrented motel room at issue in Herbert, the apartment in the present case, though unoccupied at the time, was intended by its owner to be occupied by a paying tenant. Furthermore, consistent with the holdings of Buckley, Marston, and Wallace, the apartment at issue in the present case was not abandoned, nor had its use changed from that of a place of habitation. And though we believe the Court of Special Appeals mistakenly implied in Poff that the apartment in that case was not a dwelling because it did not at the time have a tenant, we have no quarrel with the Poff court’s description of a dwelling as a place “used regularly as a place to sleep.” The holdings of the Court of Special Appeals’ cases, moreover, are generally consistent with the common law commentaries we have discussed, all of which indicate that the apartment at issue in the case at bar qualified as a dwelling, for burglary purposes.
The New Jersey Supreme Court came to that exact conclusion when faced with similar facts in
State v. Scott,
The court therefore turned to the common law definition of the term, pointing out that “New Jersey common law defines ‘dwelling’ as ‘a place where a person resides and sleeps.’ ”
Id.
at 100,
The court reasoned that “the critical inquiry regarding rental apartments is whether the unit is available and suitable for rent.”
Id.
at 102,
The decisions of other courts are to like effect.
See People v. Pearson,
We adopt the reasoning and holding of the New Jersey Supreme Court in
Scott,
which is generally in line with the Court of Special Appeals’ opinions we have discussed. We agree that rental apartments are designed and generally operated with the goal of continuous occupancy. And, though there may be times when an apartment is not rented, there is “the substantial likelihood that people will be returning to inhabit the rental unit at any given time, as in the case of a vacation home.”
Scott,
III.
Having decided that a vacant apartment, between rentals, is a dwelling for burglary purposes, it remains only for
*136
us to decide whether the evidence offered at Petitioner’s trial was legally sufficient to sustain his conviction of fourth degree burglary of a dwelling. The test is whether, after viewing the evidence “in the light most favorable to [the State],
any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia,
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
Notes
. Maryland’s statutory offense of burglary in the first degree is most akin to common law burglary, without the element of "in the nighttime.” See CL § 6-202 (providing: “A person may not break and enter the dwelling of another with the intent to commit theft or a crime of violence”). Burglary in the third degree has similar elements, but requires the intent that accompanies the breaking and entry of the dwelling of another be simply to "commit a crime.” See CL § 6-204.
. Perkins writes that a room in a larger building, say, an apartment building, tenement house, or inn, may be the dwelling of its particular occupant, while a room that houses a guest in a private home or a transient in a hotel remains a part of the dwelling of the host or innkeeper. "And for most purposes it is unimportant whether it is one or the other except as a matter of procedure,—to charge properly whose dwelling was broken into.” Perkins, supra, ch. 3 § 1 at 257. The only substantive issue concerning the identity of the "dweller” is that he or she not be the person accused of the breaking and entry. Id.
. In 1993, the year after Richmond was decided, the General Assembly adopted a statutory definition of dwelling, for purposes of arson, as a "structure, regardless of whether an individual is actually present, any portion of which has been adapted for overnight accommodation of individuals.” See Md.Code (1957, 1996 Repl.Vol.), Art. 27, § 5(b).
. The Illinois statute defines dwelling as "a house, apartment, mobile home, trailer, or other living quarters in which at the time of the alleged offense the owners or occupants actually reside or in their absence intend within a reasonable period of time to reside.” Ill.Rev. Stat.1987, ch. 38, par. 2-6(b).
