Mаryland Code (2002, 2010 Supp.), § 2-202(a)(3) of the Criminal Law Article (“CrL”) forbids the imposition of the death penalty without the State having first presented to the jury or court, inter alia, biological or DNA evidence linking the
Upon the court’s denial of that request, Petitioner noted an immediate appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. The State filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the appeal is an impermissible interlocutory appeal. The Court of Special Appeals denied the motion without prejudice, and docketed argument for April 2011.
Before briefing and argument in that court, we issued a writ of certiorari, on our initiative, to consider the case. We also issued a stay of further proceedings in the Circuit Court pending the outcome of the appeal. We heard argument in the case on April 8, 2011, and, on April 12, 2011, issued a per curiam order dismissing the appeal and vacating the stay. This opinion sets forth our reasons for dismissing the appeal.
I.
On May 7, 2009, the General Assembly enacted Maryland Senate Bill 279, which altered Maryland’s death penalty scheme. Of importance for our purposes, SB 279 added to CrL § 2-202(a), entitled “Requirement for imposition,” the following provision:
A defendant found guilty of murder in the first degree may be sentenced to death only if: ... (3) the State presents the court or jury with:
(i) biological evidence or DNA evidence that links the defendant to the act of murder;
(ii) a video taped, voluntary interrogation and confession of the defendant to the murder; or
(iii) a video recording that conclusively links the defendant to the murder[.] 1
On August 15, 2009, Petitioner filed a Motion to Preclude the Death Penalty on the ground that the death penalty statute as amended is unconstitutional. Petitioner later filed a Supplemental Memorandum on October 15, 2009, requesting a pre-trial “full evidentiary hearing” to determine whether, as a matter of law, there was DNA evidence linking him to the murder, thereby rendering him death penalty eligible under CrL § 2—202(a)(3)(i). 2 That motion and other unrelated issues came on for a hearing on October 19, 2009.
At that hearing, Petitioner argued that CrL § 2-202(a)(3) entitled him to a pre-trial hearing to determine whether “a jury could [ ] find in the light most favorable to the state that the DNA links [him] to the act of murder.” Petitioner maintained that a pre-trial hearing to make that determination as a matter of law is consistent with the purpose behind CrL § 2-202(a)(3); moreover, a pre-trial hearing is, in Petitioner’s words, “efficient, practical and would save time, money and effort later if the death penalty could not be applied.” The State countered that CrL § 2-202(a)(3) does nоt contemplate a pre-trial evidentiary hearing.
The Circuit Court agreed with the State and orally denied Petitioner’s request for a hearing. The court noted that “[t]here is no suggestion” in CrL § 2-202(a)(3) or “in logic” directing the court to decide “ahead of time” whether the State can present DNA evidence linking Petitioner to the crime; rather, “the sentencing authority ... has to make that decision.”
This pre-trial ruling of the Circuit Court forms the basis of this appeal.
II.
We do not reach the merits of the Circuit Court’s pre-trial ruling denying Petitioner his requested hearing because that
“In Maryland, appellate jurisdiction, except as constitutionally created, is statutorily granted.”
Schuele v. Case Handyman, LLC,
Petitioner does not contend that the present appeal is from a final judgment and indeed it is not, as the case remains active in the Circuit Court. Nеither does he contend that there is any other statutory right of appeal from this obviously interlocutory ruling. Petitioner argues, instead, that the ruling of the Circuit Court comes within what is known as the “collateral order doctrine.”
Maryland’s collateral order doctrine has its roots in the important policy underlying the final judgment rule, which is to “prevent piecemeal appeals and ... the interruption of ongoing judicial proceedings.”
Sigma Reprod. Health Ctr.,
“(1) conclusively determines the disputed question, (2) resolves an important issue, (3) resolves an issue that is, completely separate from the merits of the action, and (4) would be effectively unreviewable if the appeal had to await the entry of a final judgment.”
In re Foley,
III.
The State contends that the pre-trial ruling at issue here does not satisfy any, much less all, of the four requirements of the collateral order doctrine. It is unnecessary, though, to consider whether the court’s denial of the requested pre-trial evidentiary hearing would conclusively determine a disputed question or resolve an important issue (the first two requirements of the collateral order doctrine), because the ruling at issue does not satisfy the third and fourth requirements.
See Bunting v. State,
We begin with the third requirement of the collateral order doctrine—that the order appealed from is completely collateral to and separate from the merits of the underlying case. Petitioner sought a pre-trial determination, upon a full evidentiary hearing, of whether the State possesses DNA evidence sufficient to link him to the murder of Correctional Officer McGuinn. Far from being “completely separate from” the case that is yet to be tried, the evidence sought at the requested pre-trial hearing not only is intimately tied to whether Petitioner is guilty of the charged murder, but is particularly pertinent, if he is found guilty of the crime, to
whether he is subject to imposition of the death sentence.
3
Cf. Falik v. Hornage,
The ruling at issue here is much like a ruling denying a motion to dismiss a charging document on the ground that the prosecution violates the Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial. The Supreme Court has held that the latter ruling is not subject to an immediate appeal under the collateral order doctrine, because, inter alia, such rulings “necessitate! ] a. cаreful assessment of the particular facts of the case[ ]” and “are best considered only after the relevant facts have been developed at trial.”
United States v. MacDonald,
It is equally obvious that the Circuit Court’s pre-trial ruling does not satisfy the fourth requirement of the collateral order doctrine—that the order would be effectively unreviewable if appellate review was delayed until after final judgment.
We have explained that this requirement is met in “ ‘very few [and] extraordinary situations. Otherwise, ... there would be a proliferation of appeals under the collateral order doctrinе.’ ”
Foley,
By its plain language, CrL § 2-202(a)(3) bars the imposition of the death penalty without the State having first presented to the jury or court evidence of at least one of the death penalty eligibility criteria listed in subsection (a)(3). Petitioner’s right to insist upon compliance with the statute will not be hindered or undermined by awaiting final judgment to secure appellate review
For all the reasons we have discussed, we reject Petitioner’s attempt to draw an analogy between the right afforded by CrL § 2-202(a)(3) and the protection afforded criminal defendants under the Double Jeoрardy Clause. The right to an immediate appeal from the denial of a motion to dismiss a charging document on the ground that it was brought in violation of double jeopardy principles lies in the “serious risk of irreparable loss of the claimed right if appellate review is deferred until after final judgment.”
4
Parrott v. State,
301
Md. 411, 424-25,
We explained in Parntt why the distinction between the rights accorded under the double-jeopardy and speedy-trial clauses dictates the different outcomes in a collateral-order-doctrine analysis:
Implicit in the prohibition against double jeopardy is a right to be free from the ordeal of the second trial itself. That aspect of the right can never bе restored by reversing a conviction after the second trial on the grounds that the second trial violated double jeopardy principles. On the other hand the right to a speedy trial can be vindicated by reversal after conviction. Neither the speedy trial clause of the Sixth Amendment nor the speedy trial clause found in art. XXI of the Maryland Declaration of Rights suggests “that a defendant enjoys a ‘right not to be tried’ which must be safeguarded by interlocutory appellate review.”
Id.
at 425,
Petitioner argues that CrL § 2-202(a)(3) grants criminal defendants the guarantee against having to “run the gauntlet” of a capital trial without a pre-trial determination of whether at least one of the three death penalty eligibility criteria set forth in that subsection can be satisfied. It follows, argues Petitioner, that delay of appellate review of the denial of pre-trial consideration of such a claim until after conviction and sentencing would render the ruling effectively unreviewable, because, at that point, he would have endured the very capital trial that he believes CrL § 2-202(a)(3) is designed to prevent.
CrL § 2-202(a)(3) does not grant a defendant the right not to endure a capital trial. Rathеr, the subsection grants a
defendant the right not to have the death penalty imposed, upon a finding of guilt of
“Admittedly, there is value—to all but the most unusual litigant—in triumphing before trial, rather than after it, regardless of the substance of the winning claim. But this truism is not to be confused with the quite distinct proposition that certain claims (because of the substance of the rights entailed, rather than the advantage to a litigant in winning his claim sooner) should be resolved before trial. Double jeopardy claims are paradigmatic.”
Id.
at 425,
Only in the rarest of circumstances do we indulge а contention that an asserted right includes the right to avoid trial altogether, such that it would be effectively unreviewable on appeal from final judgment. We made the point in Bunting:
Another difficulty with the defendant’s argument is that numerous “rights” can readily be characterized as entitling a party to avoid trial under some circumstances. For example, the “right” to summary judgment might be characterized as a right nоt to stand trial unless the opposing party has created a genuine issue of material fact. Similarly, the statute of limitations might be characterized as granting a defendant a right not to be tried out of time. If all “rights” which could be characterized in this manner were treated like the right against double jeopardy, the collateral order doctrine would largely erode the final judgment rule. Consequently, it is important that we narrowly construe the notion of an entitlement not to be sued or prosecuted.
Bunting,
We have not retreated from this pronouncement in
Bunting. See, e.g., Dawkins v. Baltimore City Police Dept.,
In sum, given the nature and purpose of CrL § 2-202(a)(3), “[t]he justification for immediate appeal [is not] sufficiently strong to overcome the usual benefits of deferring appeal until litigation concludes.”
Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter,
558 U.S. -,
APPEAL DISMISSED. COSTS IN THIS COURT AND THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
Notes
. CrL § 2-202, entitled “Murder in the first degree—Sentence of deathL,]” provides in full:
(a) Requirement for imposition.—A defendant found guilty of murder in the first degree may be sentenced to death only if:
(1) at least 30 days before trial, the State gave written notice to the dеfendant of:
(1) the State's intention to seek a sentence of death; and
(ii) each aggravating circumstance on which the State intends to rely;
(2) (i) with respect to § 2-303(g) of this title, except for § 2-303(g)(l)(i) and (vii) of this title, the defendant was a principal in the first degree; or
(ii) with respect to § 2—303(g)(1)(i) of this title, a law enforcement officer, as defined in § 2-303(a) of this title, was murdered and the defendant was:
1. a principal in the first degree; or
2. a principal in the second degree who;
A. willfully, deliberately, and with premeditation intended the death of the law enforcement officer;
B. was a major participant in the murder; and
C. was actually present at the time and place of the murder;
(3) the State presents the court or jury with:
(i) biological evidence or DNA evidence that links the defendant to the act of murder;
(ii) a video taped, voluntary interrogation and confession of the defendant to the murder; or
(iii) a video recording that conclusively links the defendant to the murder; and
(4) the sentence of death is imposed in accоrdance with § 2-303 of this title.
(b) Limitations.—
(1) In this subsection, a defendant is "mentally retarded” if:
(1) the defendant had significantly below average intellectual functioning, as shown by an intelligence quotient of 70 or below on an individually administered intelligence quotient test and an impairment in adaptive behavior; and
(ii) the mental retardation was manifested before the age of 22 years.
(2) A defendant may not be sentenced to death, but shall be sentenced to imprisonment for life without the possibility of parole subject to the requirements of § 2-203(1) of this subtitle or imprisonment for life, if the defendant:
(i) was under the age of 18 years at the time of the murder; or
(ii) proves by a preponderance of the evidence that at the time of the murder the defendant was mentally retarded.
(c) Limitations—State relies solely on eyewitness evidence.—A defendant may not be sentenced to death, but shall be sentenced to imprisonment for life without the possibility of parole subject to the requirements of § 2-203(1) of this subtitle or imprisonment for life, if the State relies solely on evidence provided by eyewitnesses.
. The State's notice did not include a reference to “biological evidence” or either of the other statutory qualifications for imposition of the death penalty that аre set forth in CrL § 2—202(a)(3).
. CrL § 2-202(a) provides that "A defendant found guilty of murder in the first degree may be sentenced to death only if: ... (3) the State presents the court or jury with:
(i) biological evidence or DNA evidence that links the defendant to the act of murder;
(ii) a video taped, voluntary interrogation and confession of the defendant to the murder; or
(iii) a video recording that conclusively links the defendant to thе murderf.]
. The Supreme Court explained in
Abney v. United States,
