Fоllowing his conviction on 6 February 2003 of one count of possession of marijuana, based on a guilty plea and agreed facts before the Circuit Court for St. Mary’s County, Joseph W. Medley was sentenced by the trial judge аs follows:
I hereby sentence you to fourteen days St. Mary’s County Detention Center, give you credit for fourteen days served.
In addition to that, you have to pay a fine of a thousand dollars, plus $125 court costs. Fine and costs are due today. And the Court is going to see to it in these fine cases that they are paid, because after all, the jury has to be paid.[ 1 ]
On 7 March 2003, Medley filed a motion to correct illegal sentence, to wit, the $1,000 fine. That motion was denied. The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the judgment in an unreported opinion
We granted certiorari,
Medley v. State,
I.
A sentencing judge has wide discretion in achieving the principal objectives of sentencing — punishment, deterrence, and rehabilitation.
Jackson v. State,
In reviewing the sentencing judge’s actions, we are mindful that, absent a misstatement of law or conduct inconsistent with the law, a “ ‘[tjrial [judge is] presumed to know the law and apply it properly.’ ”
State v. Chaney, 375
Md. 168, 179,
Chaney
reviewed whether a sentencing judge interpreted properly a sentencing statute (former § 413 of Article 27 of the Maryland Code) for first degree murder, after its death penalty provisions had been excised in
Bartholomey v. State,
In reversing the Court of Special Appeals and affirming the original sentence, we held thаt the sentencing judge was presumed to have acted properly because he did not misstate the law.
Id.
at 184,
It is clear, after reviewing the statutory provisions relevant to the present case, that the Circuit Court lacked the
*10
authority to levy or set a fíne premised, in whole or in part, on paying for or reimbursing jury costs that may have been incurred because Medley did not waive his jury election until the day of trial. A sentencing judge may assess court costs to a defendant in a criminal trial but, under § 4 of Article 38, those costs “shall not constitute a part of аny fine.” Although Rule 4-353 allows a sentencing judge to levy costs to the defendant, only those sentencing judges sitting in the First, Second, or Fourth Circuits may impose jury costs — St. Mary’s County lies within the Seventh Judicial Circuit. Md. Rule 2-509. Furthermore, the jury costs permitted by Rule 2-509 are permissible only in
civil
cases.
Gantt v. State,
Unlike in
Chaney,
the sentencing judge’s stаtement, “because after all, the jury has to be paid,” taken at face value, evinced an incorrect understanding of the relevant law. There is no plausible statutory authority that would allow a judge in the Circuit Court for St. Mary’s County to order a fine, or set the amount thereof, to pay wholly or in part the cost of a jury. The State maintains before us (having convinced the Court of Special Appeals) that the sentencing judgе’s comments should not be taken literally, but rather should be construed as being akin to a glib rendition of the metaphor, “the piper must be paid.” In essence, the State asks us to perceive a connotation nоt apparent from the context of this record or to attribute to the remark a legally benign motive found only in some assumed judicial consciousness shared by the trial judge and us. Typically, we will not attribute to the words оf a lower court’s opinion or order a sense beyond the plain meaning of language appearing in the record, unless the context supports a different reading.
See Pete v. State,
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED. CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH DIRECTIONS TO VACATE THE SENTENCE IMPOSED BY THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR ST. MARY’S COUNTY AND TO REMAND THE CASE TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR A NEW SENTENCING. COSTS IN THIS COURT AND IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE PAID BY ST. MARYS COUNTY.
Notes
. Prior to entering a guilty plea, Medley elected a jury trial. The judge, in querying Medley at the plea proceedings regarding the rights he would be waiving, said:
Most importantly, Mr. Medley, the Court has availаble today for you a jury. You have indicated that you wanted this case tried by a jury. I have a jury standing by in the jury assembly room. If you want a jury trial, you can have one.
. See
Rossville Vending Machine Corporation v. Comptroller,
. Sections 1, 2, and 4 of former Article 38, in effect at the time of Medley's sentencing, dealt with fines and forfeitures. Md.Code (1957, 2003 Replacement Volume). The portions of this Article relevant to this appeal were excised from Article 38, 2004 Md. Laws, Chap. 26, and re-enacted without substantial change as § 7-501 (defining "costs” and "fines”), § 7-502 (liability for costs), and § 7-504 (failure or inability to pay fine). Md.Code (1973, 2002 Repl.Vol., 2004 Supp.) of thе Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article. We shall refer throughout this opinion to the former sections of Article 38 in effect at the time of sentencing.
Section 1 stated, in relevant part:
If any person shall be adjudged guilty of any offense by any court having jurisdictiоn in the premises, he shall be sentenced to the fine or penalty prescribed by such act of Assembly or ordinance and shall be liable for the costs of his prosecution; and in default of payment of *7 the fine or penalty he may be committed to jail in accordance with § 4 of this article until thence discharged by due course of law.
Section 2 stated:
Except as provided in § 7-302 of the Courts Article of the Code, all fines, penalties and forfeitures, when recovered shall be paid to the county or city where the offense occurred or cause of action originated unless directed to be paid otherwise by law imposing them.
Section 4 stаted, in relevant part, that, “(costs shall not constitute a part of any fine)....''
. § 8-106 states, in relevant part,
§ 8-106. Compensation of jurors.
(b) Per diem. — A juror shall receive a State per diem amount of $15 for each day the juror attends court.
Md.Code (1973, 2002 Repl.Vol.) of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (emphasis added).
. Rule 2-509 provides that only the First (Dorchester, Somerset, Wicomico, and Worcester Counties), Second (Caroline, Cecil, Kent, Queen Anne’s, and Talbot Counties), and Fourth (Allegany, Garrett, and Washington Counties) Judicial Circuits mаy assess special costs “equal to the total compensation paid to the jurors who reported ... ” to a defendant if "a jury trial is removed from the assignment at the initiative of a party for any reason within the 48 hour period, not including Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays, prior to 10:00 a.m. on the date scheduled
. Rule 4-353 states that a “judgment of conviction or a disposition by probation before judgment or an accepted plea of nolo contendere shall include an assessment of court costs against the defendant unless otherwise ordered by the court. ”
. The statute in effect at the time of Chaney’s sentencing stated that ”[e]very person convicted of murder in the first degree.... shall suffer death, or undergo a confinement in the penitentiary of the State for a the [sic] period of their natural life.”
Chaney,
