delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellee, James Linwood Strickland, for whatever else he may lack, suffers not for want of chutzpah. 1 Strickland set out to bribe Judge Sylvania W. Woods, a District Court Judge in Prince George’s County. The purpose of the bribe was to have Judge Woods show leniency toward a friend of Strickland who had a case pending before the judge. Contact with the State’s Attorney was promptly made by Judge Woods. Apparently, the judge was asked to play along with Strickland until the actual payment of money occurred. Strickland turned twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500) over to the judge who immediately gave it to agents of the State’s Attorney. Strickland was indicted for bribery, pled guilty and was sentenced to imprisonment for a term of four (4) years. At the time of the acceptance of the guilty plea on November 17, 1977, the State offered the money as an exhibit. 2 It was received into evidence by the Court. Strickland did not appeal the judgment of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County which was entered on March 1, 1978.
Almost three months after the criminal trial, Strickland filed a
“MOTIONFOR MODIFICATION OR REDUCTION OF SENTENCE, RETURN OF PROPERTY, AND OTHER APPROPRIATE RELIEF. ”
A hearing was held in the circuit court, and the judge, on August 10, 1978, ordered that the twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500) be returned to Strickland.
Strickland has moved to dismiss the State’s appeal on the ground that the return of the money was ordered as part of the criminal trial, and the State may not appeal in a criminal case except in certain circumstances which are inapplicable here.
State v. Stanley
There is no dispute that the motion for the “RETURN OF PROPERTY"was filed in the criminal case, after the case had been tried and the time for appeal had expired. The trial court did, however, possess the power to modify by way of reduction its original sentence, but that authority would have ceased on May 30, 1978, Md. Rule 774 b, one day after the motion was filed. A motion to modify or reduce a sentence is directed to the sound discretion of the trial court and is not appealable.
It does not follow, however, that simply because a motion is filed in a court that exercises criminal jurisdiction, that the proceeding arising from the motion must,
ipso facto,
be criminal in nature,
e.g.,
civil contempt. The motion for the return of the money was, in our view, more akin to a replevin, a civil action, rather than a criminal proceeding. The Court of Appeals, in
Novak v. State,
We think Strickland’s petition, even though filed in the criminal case, was a request that the court determine title to personal property. As such, regardless of what Strickland chooses to call it, that aspect of the case is civil, not criminal, and it matters not one whit that the money was introduced as evidence in a trial for violation of a criminal statute.
We hold that the proceeding in the circuit court to recover money that was introduced into evidence, in a bribery trial, was civil in nature, and that the State has the right to appeal an order of court directing that the money be paid over to the briber. The appellee’s motion to dismiss is denied.
Having determined that the appeal is properly before us, we shall now undertake to decide whether the trial court was correct in ordering the refund of the bribe to the briber. Md. Rule 1217 f 2, Strickland says, entitled him to the return of the money. The rule provides:
“All exhibits introduced into evidence or marked for identification during the trial of a case, and not filed as a part of or with the pleadings, shall beretained by the clerk of court or such other person as may be designated by the court. After either (i) the time for appeal has expired, or (ii) in the event of an appeal, the mandate has been received by the clerk, the clerk shall send written notice to all counsel of record advising them that if no request to withdraw such exhibits is received within ten (10) days from the date of the notice, the exhibits will be disposed of. Unless such a request is received by the clerk within ten (10) days from the date of notice, or unless the court within such period shall order otherwise, the clerk shall dispose of the exhibits in such manner, including destruction, as may be appropriate.”
Strickland argues that “[t]he record herein fails to demonstrate any compliance by the Clerk of this mandate, nor any request by Appellant [the State] to withdraw the exhibits in the procedure required.” Therefore, Strickland moved that the twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500) be turned over to him. We do not read Rule 1217 f 2 in the same manner as Strickland. We think the rule means that the clerk of the court is required to notify all counsel in the case that the evidence will be disposed of in such manner as may be appropriate unless the party who put the exhibit into evidence moves for its return within ten (10) days after the notice to counsel.
The rule is clearly framed in terms of requests to “withdraw” exhibits. The word “withdraw” means,
inter alia,
to “take back.”
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged
(1976 ed.);
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
(1970 ed.). Since only one who gives something may take it back, the plain meaning of Rule 1217 is that only the party that placed an exhibit in evidence may make a request to withdraw it. As Mr. Justice Holmes said in
United States v. Brown,
From the record it is apparent that the hearing judge believed that to permit the State to retain the twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500) that was used in the bribe constituted a violation of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, Article 27. That Article provides “[t]hat no conviction shall work corruption of blood or forfeiture of estate.” The hearing judge reasoned that for the State to keep the twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500) was a forfeiture within the meaning of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. Our view is entirely different. The constitutional proscription against forfeiture has nothing whatsoever to do with this case, as there was no forfeiture. As we see it, when Strickland paid the money over to Judge Woods, Strickland parted with all title to that money. While he testified that he never intended it to be a “gift” to the judge, he, nevertheless, freely and voluntarily relinquished both possession and title in and to the money. The possession and title then passed to Judge Woods, as agent for the State. Hence, the title was then vested in the State of Maryland. Title to the money having passed to the State through Judge Woods, Strickland had no interest in the money. If there was no interest, there was nothing to forfeit.
A basic principle of contract law is that agreements to commit a crime are illegal, void. Without question, courts will not order damages for breach of such a contract. Parties of that ilk are left where they are found, to stew in their own juice.
Certa v. Whittman,
Generally, unless a statute expressly permits the return of the bribe money, courts have denied the briber the benefit of the money used in the commission of the crime.
See State v. Gunzelman,
Over and above statutes declaring that certain things shall not be returned to the party from whom they were seized or taken, 58 Op. at 62-68, is the public policy of the State. That policy makes it unthinkable that courts of justice will aid a briber in recovering the money with which he voluntarily parted in furtherance of his unlawful venture.
United States v. Galbreath,
According to
The public expects that the courts will administer justice both fairly and impartially. Any attempt to bribe a member of the judiciary, or one of the satellites of the judiciary, is a reprehensible, odious act striking at the heart of the judicial system.
Gunzelman, supra.
For the bribe then to be repaid to the briber, on order of a court, erodes the public’s confidence in the court’s common sense and judgment. The law is firm that a murderer may not inherit from his victim.
Pannone v. McLaughlin,
We hold the law of Maryland to be that, absent a statute directing the return of monies used in a bribe, public policy forbids the return of the money to the briber whether his efforts be a success or failure.
It follows from what we have said that the order of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County is reversed.
Motion to dismiss denied.
Order reversed.
Costs to be paid by appellee.
Mandate to issue forthwith.
Notes
. Chutzpah is of Yiddish origin. It means that a person has “gall, moxie, nerve and audacity compounded with brazen assertiveness.” Morris, Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins. (1977) pg. 132. According to William and Mary Morris, “a lad with real chutzpah is one who would kill both his parents and then demand leniency of the court on the ground that he is an orphan.” Ibid.
. Had the State not placed the money in evidence, something it did not need to do, it is doubtful that this appeal would be here.
. That section provides:
“(c) In a criminal case, the State may appeal:
(1) From a final judgment granting a motion to dismiss or quashing or dismissing any indictment, information, presentment, or inquisition; and
(2) From a final judgment if the State alleges that the trial judge failed to impose the sentence specifically mandated by the Code.
4.
See
cases cited in
