STATE OF MARYLAND v. LEONARD JOSEPH MATHER
No. 470, September Term, 1968
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
August 13, 1969
255 Md. 549
John J. Garrity, Assistant Attorney General, with whom were Francis B. Burch, Attorney General, Arthur A. Marshall, Jr., State‘s Attorney for Prince George‘s County, and Joseph C. Sauerwein, Assistant State‘s Attorney for Prince George‘s County, on the brief, for appellant.
Albert J. Ahern, Jr., with whom was William R. Scannell on the brief, for appellee.
MURPHY, C.J., delivered the majority opinion of the Court. ORTH, J., concurs. Concurring opinion by ORTH, J., at page 555 infra.
The question here to be decided is whether the State has the right to appeal to this court from the granting of the defendant‘s pretrial motion to suppress evidence alleged by him to have been obtained as a result of an unlawful search and seizure.
Appellee Mather was charged in Prince George‘s County with unlawfully having caused the termination of a human pregnancy in violation of Chapter 470 of the Acts of 1968, now codified as
Chapter 399 of the Acts of 1957 repealed all prior statutes regulating the right of appeal in criminal cases and enacted in lieu thereof a number of new provisions relating thereto including, under the specific subheading “Right of appeal by State,” what is now codified as
“The State may appeal to the Court of Special Appeals from a final order or judgment granting a motion to dismiss, or quashing or dismissing any indictment, information, presentment or inquisition in a criminal action, but the State shall have no right of appeal in any criminal action where the defendant has been tried and acquitted.”
Prior to the enactment of Section 14, the common law of this State, as articulated in State v. Buchanan, 5 Har. & J. 317, 324, permitted the State to seek appellate review by writ of error of a judgment in a criminal case sustaining a demurrer to or quashing an indictment. State v. Adams, 196 Md. 341, and State v. Barshack, 197 Md. 543, both decided prior to the enactment of Section 14, involved the question whether the State‘s common law right of appeal under Buchanan permitted it to appeal
The State argues that under
In the March, 1969 publication of the American Bar Association entitled “Standards Relating to Criminal Appeals,” the observation is made at page 37 that most states, while permitting prosecution appeal of pretrial decisions that formally terminate the case, do not presently allow appeals from orders suppressing evidence. But as the publication notes at pages 34-38, there has been a recent trend among the states to enact legislation permitting the State to appeal from such rulings where the practical effect of the ruling is to preclude further prosecution of the case or seriously impede its continuation. And see
Further illustrating the depths of the State‘s frustration in seeking a way to obtain appellate review of the lower court‘s order suppressing the evidence is its final contention—pursued, we think, with commendable zeal—that we issue a writ of prohibition to preclude the trial court from excluding the evidence under its order granting the motion to suppress. Such a writ was recognized at common law and has been generally defined as a process by which a superior court prevents inferior courts from usurping or exercising jurisdiction with which they have not been vested. See 73 C.J.S. Prohibition, Section 1, et seq. It is thus not the function of the writ to review proceedings, and assuming we had authority to issue such a writ, we would not under the circumstances of this case do so.
In dismissing the State‘s appeal for want of jurisdiction to decide the complex constitutional question presented by the State, we can but echo the statement of the Court of Appeals in Adams, repeated and reemphasized
Appeal dismissed.
ORTH, J., concurring:
I agree that the State does not have the right to appeal to this Court from the granting of the defendant‘s pretrial motion to suppress evidence alleged to have been obtained as a result of an unlawful search and seizure and I am in full accord with the reasons so clearly stated by Chief Judge Murphy, speaking for the Court, in arriving at this determination. But I think we should define the meaning of “inquisition in a criminal action” as used in
In Maryland today a trial for a criminal offense shall be held only on indictment.
I believe that the authority given the State by
