delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant, Price, was convicted in a trial by the court, sitting without a jury, of separate assaults on two Baltimore City police officers and was sentenced to six months’ imprisonment. He appeals.
The actual legal issues are narrow, and they are the only issues properly before this Court on this appeal. They are: first, whether the appellant was lawfully arrested or was properly resisting unlawful arrest; second, whether there were such discrepancies in the testimony of the prosecution witnesses that the defendant’s motions for directed verdicts on the assault charges should have been granted. (Such a motion was granted as to a third charge, disturbing the peace.)
We shall take up the second of these contentions first.
*31
Our review of the evidence indicates to us that the discrepancies in the testimony, such as the exact sequence of events and the precise place where they occurred, are of relatively slight importance and do not conflict in any material respects with the general statement of facts which we set out below. We therefore hold this contention of the appellant to be untenable.
Williams v. State,
We now turn to the first and principal question. The State offered evidence, which, if believed, was sufficient to show the matters set forth below in this paragraph. As a result of a complaint initiated by a tenant in a twelve-apartment residence at 714 Madison Avenue in Baltimore, police headquarters sent out an order at 2:18 A.M. to two officers in a nearby police car to investigate a report that there was a prowler at the above address. Upon receipt of this call these officers, Goetzke and Staniewski, proceeded at once to the place directed, and on arrival were joined by a third officer, Wotjek, a foot patrolman. Goetzke (in the lead) and Wotjek (following) entered a lighted vestibule at No. 714. This vestibule is about five by seven feet and has an outer and an inner door. In the vestibule they found the appellant, Price. As they approached, Price was facing the inner door, on which so called “pry marks” were visible, which Goetzke thought appeared to have been made in an effort to pry the door open. Goetzke asked Price whether he lived there, Price murmured some unintelligible reply and made an immediate rush to get away. Goetzke at once tried to grab him. A struggle ensued in which Price struck, kicked and knocked down each of these officers and succeeded in breaking loose for a moment. Price was caught almost at once by Officers Staniewski and Goetzke and was subdued by the officers with the considerable aid of their night sticks. Price was then put in a police cruising patrol vehicle and was taken to a hospital. Goetzke says that Price again attacked him en route. Goetzke received treatment at another hospital a little later for injuries which he had received.
Price’s account of events is quite different. He claims that *32 the police inquiry as to whether he lived at 714 Madison Avenue was made in an offensive manner, that he answered “No,” and that the officers forthwith started to beat him over the head with their night sticks. He also claims that the violence at the time of arrival at the hospital was entirely on the part of the police, who, he says, threw him out of the police patrol and walked on him. As to the last episode he is corroborated by the testimony of a nurse at the hospital, who, however, could scarcely have been in a position to see what preceded his being thrown out of the patrol cruiser, if he was in fact thrown out.
At the trial, but certainly not during the brief moment preceding or during the struggle at 714 Madison Avenue, Price claimed that he had entered the vestibule only to get warm preparatory to continuing on his way home on a cold and snowy night. He said that he had taken a cab somewhere on Poplar Grove Street, which is in the western part of Baltimore, to go to his home in the Mt. Winans area, which is in the southern or southwestern part of the City. The trial judge noted that 714 Madison Avenue was far off a direct route between these two points and evidently did not believe the appellant’s explanation of how he happened to be at the Madison Avenue address.
As the foregoing recital indicates, some of the facts are undisputed; as to others there is a sharp conflict of testimony. We think, as did the trial judge, that “[t]he vital question is what happened at 714 Madison Avenue.” As to the conflicts, he believed the police officers’ account of what happened there, taking note of the minor discrepancies above referred to. We find no error—much less any clear error—in his doing so; and, therefore, his findings based upon the evidence as to what occurred are not to be set aside by us. Maryland Rule 741 c;
Kicks v. State,
In determining the lawfulness of the arrest, we must do so with relation to the time when it occurred. It seems clear that
*33
there had been no arrest—merely an accosting—prior to Price’s break. See
Cornish v. State,
When the police officers found the appellant in the vestibule, they were there in response to a call about a prowler (cf.
Drouin v. State,
One question which is suggested or touched upon rather lightly in the appellant’s brief, but is not discussed by the State’s brief, is whether or not there is a right to detain for questioning a person found in such suspicious circumstances as those in which the appellant was found. Inferentially, the learned trial judge seems to have been of the opinion that the officers could detain the appellant for an explanation on the spot. Certainly, this would be less drastic than an actual arrest and, presumably, less objectionable from the appellant’s point of view. There seems, however, to be no decision of this Court with regard to a right of police officers to detain a suspect for questioning without an actual arrest (but see Kauffman’s comment in The Law of Arrest in Maryland, 5 Md. R. Rev. 125, 159 (rule 5); and we find it unnecessary here to undertake to decide such a question, for if the facts would justify an arrest, a fortiori, they would justify a detention for questioning.
On the general subject of detention for questioning without a formal arrest, see
Culombe v. Connecticut,
The only offenses charged in the indictments before us are assaults and batteries. There are no charges of burglary or of attempted burglary, or of any violation of the “rogue and vagabond” statute (Code (1957), Art. 27, Sec. 490); 1 and there is no finding that any such offense had actually been committed by the appellant or by anyone else. Nor does the State raise any contention that if the arrest were unlawful, the appellant would be nonetheless guilty of assault because of the use of excessive force to resist such an arrest.
*35
As the case is presented to us, there is no contention that the appellant was guilty of burglary, or even that the appellant was actually attempting to commit burglary, notwithstanding appearances leading the officers reasonably to believe that he was. The determinative question with regard to the lawfulness of the appellant’s arrest, in our view, is whether or not the officers’ reasonable grounds for believing that the appellant had been engaged, in their presence, in committing or in attempting to commit burglary just before they arrested him, would authorize them to arrest him without a warrant. If attempted burglary were itself a felony, the case would present no problem, for the arrest would be unquestionably proper.
Mulcahy v. State, supra,
In typical cases, such as those just cited, where the general rule has been stated as above and the arrest has been upheld, only misdemeanors have been involved. This has also been the situation in other cases which have come to our attention where the rule has been recognized, but the arrest has been held improper. See, for example:
Sugarman v. State,
Such is not the situation here. The activity in which the officers reasonably believed the appellant to have been engaged—burglary or attempted burglary—either constituted a felony or, if consummated, would do so. The reason underlying the usual rule in misdemeanor cases denying the right of a peace officer to arrest except for a misdemeanor committed in his presence was thus stated in
Scarlett v. State,
Perhaps because the matter of arrest is largely regulated by statute in other jurisdictions, (see A. L. I. Code of Criminal Procedure, pp. 231, et seq.), we find relatively few cases and texts dealing with the problem before us as a matter of common law. It would seem to us an over refinement to deny the power of a peace officer to arrest without a warrant for a felony which he reasonably believes is being committed in his presence because, at the moment when the apparently illegal activity is interrupted, the supposed offense has not been so far consummated as to show that it has been completed and
*37
not merely attempted. To deny the right of a peace officer to arrest because of such a distinction would, we think, unduly hamper the work of the police in protecting the public and preventing serious crime and the escape of offenders. Cf.
Mitchell v. Lemon, supra,
Perhaps much the same practical considerations underlie the common law rule that a peace officer may arrest without a warrant to prevent an imminent breach of the peace,
3
(Byrd v. Commonwealth,
We rest our decision upon the ground that the arrest of the appellant was lawful because the peace officers making the arrest had probable cause at that time to believe that the appellant was then engaged or had just been engaged, in their presence, in the commission of a felony (burglary) or in an attempt to commit a felony—the latter branch of the rule relating to attempts being that which we regard as applicable here. We think that our statement of the rule as to felonies and attempted felonies is supported by authority. See Wilgus,
Arrest without a Warrant,
22 Mich. L. Rev. 673, at 674; 10 Halsbury’s
Laws of England
(3rd Ed., 1955),
Criminal Law,
Sec. 634 ; 2 Hawkins,
Pleas of the Crown,
c. 12, s. 19; Glanville Williams,
Arrest for Felony at Common Law,
1954
Criminal Law Review
(London), pp. 421-422;
Rex v. Hunt,
1 Mood. 93 (attempted housebreaking in the night) ; Perkins,
Law of Arrest,
25 la. L. Rev. 201, 230; 4 Am. Jur.,
Arrest,
§ 25, p. 19;
State v. Zupan,
Moreland,
Modern Criminal Procedure
(above cited), at pp. 50-51, in discussing questioning without arrest, states as the first class of cases in which officers may wish to question a man rather than arrest him at once “cases where officers catch private persons in situations where they may be reasonably suspected of having just committed or of being in the process of committing a crime, but the officer, because of the circumstances, hesitates to make an arrest without giving them an opportunity to rebut the suspicion—if they can do so—by answering a few questions.” He then quotes these examples put by Warner in his article on The Uniform Arrest Act,
supra,
*40 “A man climbing into a window late at night maybe the householder who has forgotten his key and does not want to disturb his wife, or he may be a burglar. A man who looks around furtively, tries the door of an automobile, steps in and seems unfamiliar with its mechanism, may or may not have a right to drive the car. Under such circumstances a passing officer ought to question the suspicious behavior.”
Moreland then says: “Of course, the officer could make a valid arrest in each of these cases and take the man in * * These illustrations, as well as the illustration similar to Warner’s first case above given by Kauffman, op. cit. supra, under his rule 5, pp. 159-160, are very similar to the instant case. The need for prompt action in such situations is recognized by Kauffman and by other writers and (as we have noted) by this Court.
The recognition of the right of a peace officer to make an arrest where he has probable cause to believe that an attempt to commit a felony is being committed in his presence is, we think, an application or possibly an extension of the right of an officer to arrest without a warrant where there is reasonable cause to believe that a felony has been committed (even though none has been), rather than as an extension of the right to arrest without a warrant where no more than a misdemeanor is involved or in prospect. To such extent, if any, as anything said in
Griffin v. State, supra,
particularly in the
per curiam
on motion for reargument (
Since we hold that the appellant’s arrest was lawful, it follows that his attacks upon the officers in an attempt to escape constituted assaults and batteries upon them. We find no error in his convictions therefor.
Judgments affirmed, with costs.
Notes
. As to this section, there is no evidence that any burglar’s tools were found on the appellant, nor was any issue presented for determination of whether or not the appellant was “in or upon any dwelling house * * * with an intent to steal any goods or chattels.”
. This State adheres to the rule that only offenses which constituted felonies at common law, plus such as the General Assembly has specifically designated as such, are felonies, and that all other offenses (except treason), regardless of their gravity or of the severity of the punishment which may be imposed, are misdemeanors. See note on
Sugarman v. State,
. We think it unnecessary to decide whether there was in this case such a threat or likelihood of violence or of causing violence as to present the danger of an imminent breach of the peace. See the definition of a breach of the peace in the Restatement,
Torts,
§ 116, Comment
a,
where it is said: “The use of force, or the threat of an immediate use of force, towards the person or land or chattels of another which constitutes a crime is a breach of the peace.” See also
Wanser v. State,
. The right of a peace officer to arrest “nightwalkers” without a warrant is stated in a number of authorities, among them: 4 Blackstone,
Commentaries
(1769 Ed.),
supra,
p. 289 (Lewis Ed., 1922, p. 292); 2 Hale,
Pleas of the Crown,
89; Kauffman,
op. cit. supra,
at 155, n. 135; Hochheimer,
Criminal Law
(3nd Ed.), Sec. 67, p. 83. See also
Miles v. Weston,
