State v. Robertson , 463 Md. 342 ( 2019 )


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  • State of Maryland v. Harry Malik Robertson, No. 40, September Term 2018, Opinion by
    Hotten, J.
    CRIMINAL LAW – EVIDENCE – OPEN DOOR DOCTRINE – STANDARD OF
    REVIEW – The Court of Appeals held that the appropriate standard of review for the
    determination of whether a party has opened the door to otherwise inadmissible evidence
    is de novo because the open door doctrine is ultimately a question of law. The Court
    reviews the separate inquiry of whether a party’s rebuttal evidence is proportional for an
    abuse of discretion.
    CRIMINAL LAW – EVIDENCE – OPEN DOOR DOCTRINE – The Court of Appeals
    applied de novo review in its finding that defense counsel had opened the door for the State
    to introduce rebuttal evidence. Though the State was entitled to rebut the image of
    Robertson’s good character, the prosecution’s questioning exceeded the scope of the open
    door doctrine.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 116111012
    Argued: January 8, 2019                                                                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 40
    September Term, 2018
    __________________________________
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    v.
    HARRY MALIK ROBERTSON
    __________________________________
    Barbera, C.J.,
    Greene,
    McDonald,
    Watts,
    Hotten,
    Getty,
    Wilner, Alan M.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned)
    JJ.
    __________________________________
    Opinion by Hotten, J.
    McDonald and Watts, JJ., dissent.
    __________________________________
    Filed: April 2, 2019
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2019-04-02
    14:52-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    Harry Malik Robertson (“Robertson”) was involved in an altercation at a residential
    area near Morgan State University. The incident culminated in the stabbing death of one
    of its participants. A jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City found Robertson guilty
    of accessory after the fact to murder, but acquitted him of first- and second-degree murder
    and of carrying a weapon openly with intent to injure. On appeal, the Court of Special
    Appeals held that the trial court erred in permitting the State to question Robertson
    regarding his participation in a previous, unrelated incident during which a knife had been
    brandished (“previous incident”), because the door had not been opened for questioning by
    the State. The Court of Special Appeals also held that, because the introduction of the
    previous incident was not harmless error, Robertson’s conviction for accessory after the
    fact must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial. On appeal, the State presents
    the following questions for our review:
    1. What is the appropriate standard of review of a trial court’s ruling that a
    party has opened the door to otherwise inadmissible evidence?
    2. Applying the appropriate standard of review, did the [Court of Special
    Appeals] err by substituting its judgment for the trial court’s
    determination that [Robertson] had opened the door to otherwise
    inadmissible evidence?
    For reasons discussed infra, we find that application of whether particular evidence
    may be admitted based on the legal principle of “opening the door” is reviewed de novo.
    We further conclude that defense counsel opened the door, thereby enabling the State to
    question Robertson regarding the previous incident. However, despite the application of
    the open door doctrine, the State used the evidence of Robertson’s participation in the prior
    incident in a manner that exceeded the scope of the doctrine. Accordingly, we shall affirm
    the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
    BACKGROUND
    1. Factual Background
    On the evening of February 1, 2016, Robertson, then a student at Coppin State
    University, was involved in an altercation between two groups of men near the Morgan
    State University campus.      The fight concluded after one of the participants, Gerald
    Williams (“the decedent”), was stabbed and ultimately died from his wounds.
    The impetus for the fight began nearly a week earlier. Daequon Gordon, a Prince
    George’s Community College student, purchased ten dollars’ worth of marijuana from
    Brandon Parker, a Morgan State University student. Gordon purchased the marijuana with
    a counterfeit fifty-dollar bill and received the marijuana and forty dollars in return.
    When Parker learned that the fifty-dollar bill was counterfeit, he contacted Gordon
    and demanded his money back. A meeting was arranged, and both Parker and Gordon
    showed up to the meeting with friends. Among them was the decedent, who was one of
    Gordon’s friends, and Robertson, who was one of Parker’s friends. The subsequent details
    were in dispute at trial.
    Gordon, testifying for the State, contended that when the two groups met that
    evening, he told Parker, “I got your money. You’ll have to take it from me. I’m not paying
    you.” Gordon then punched Parker, provoking a larger fight among the group. As
    Robertson and others ran from the area, the decedent collapsed and Gordon, observing that
    the decedent was bleeding, called an ambulance.
    2
    Another State witness, Isaiah McClin, who fought as part of the decedent’s group,
    testified that “all hell broke loose” after the groups met, and though he did not recall who
    was fighting, he heard the decedent yell something during the fight, shortly after which the
    fight abruptly ended. Thereafter, McClin observed the decedent lying on the ground and
    “bleeding out.” Although McClin did not see the stabbing, or observe Respondent in
    possession of a weapon, he recalled Robertson and the decedent fighting at some point.
    D’ana Glenn, another witness for the State, testified that she observed the altercation
    and never saw a large group fighting with each other. Rather, Glenn testified, only
    Robertson and the decedent were fighting. She stated that she saw the decedent charge
    towards Robertson, and Robertson, in an effort to “push forward toward him,” stabbed the
    decedent. Upon further examination, Glenn conceded that her view of Robertson was not
    “that clear” and that she only saw Robertson holding a knife after “[he] and the decedent
    ‘impact[ed].’”
    Robertson denied stabbing the decedent and further denied having a knife. He
    contended that he fought two men during the fight: Mathew Agogo and McClin. Robertson
    also testified that he heard the decedent say “I’m bleeding.”
    Robertson testified that after the men dispersed, he told his cousin, Ron, who was
    also engaged in the fight, that they should leave. Robertson got into Ron’s car along with
    four of their friends. One of the friends was Abayomi Akinwold.
    During the drive, Robertson testified that Akinwold was “beating himself up” and
    had blood on his hand and jacket. At one point, the car stopped, Akinwold exited, and
    tossed a knife into a storm drain. The car subsequently stopped at a friend’s home, which
    3
    Akinwold entered. When Akinwold returned to the car moments later, his hands were
    clean. Ron drove the friends to their respective homes, leaving Robertson at his mother’s
    house.
    Following his arrest, Robertson was detained at the Baltimore Central Booking and
    Intake Center. James Alston, who was also detained at the facility on a probation violation,
    testified that Robertson admitted that he had killed someone during a fight. Alston denied
    receiving anything in exchange for his testimony, but admitted that his probation violation
    had been dropped prior to Robertson’s trial.
    2. Procedural Background
    Proceeding in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    At the beginning of the trial, Robertson faced charges of first-degree murder,
    second-degree murder, and carrying a dangerous weapon openly with intent to injure. At
    the end of Robertson’s case, at the suggestion of the court and with agreement from
    counsel, an accessory after the fact charge was added. The jury subsequently found
    Robertson guilty of accessory after the fact to murder, but acquitted him of the remaining
    charges.
    At trial, the following colloquy occurred between Robertson and his counsel during
    direct examination:
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Now did you ever get into any trouble as a juvenile?
    [ROBERTSON]: No.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Ever just stopped for some minor issue?
    4
    [THE STATE]: Again Your Honor, I’m going to object to the leading nature
    of his questions.
    THE COURT: Okay, I’m going to overrule that one. Go ahead.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Thank you. Any kind of trouble when you were a
    juvenile?
    [ROBERTSON]: No.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: How about as an adult, when you turned 18?
    [ROBERTSON]: No.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Ever even arrested for anything?
    [ROBERTSON]: Never been arrested. This is my first time being arrested.
    During cross-examination, the State inquired about Robertson’s participation in a
    previous, unrelated incident.1 Defense counsel objected, and a bench conference ensued.2
    1
    The previous incident was a fight which occurred a year before the incident at
    issue. Robertson, who was then attending Morgan State University, was punched by one
    of the university’s football players while on campus. Robertson struck back, prompting
    his friends and other football players to join. Carlos Mars, one of Robertson’s friends,
    noted that Robertson was being beaten to the ground. Mars stood over Robertson,
    brandishing a knife to keep the football players away. Mars was charged, State of
    Maryland v. Carlos Mars, Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Case No. 115103008.
    Robertson was suspended from Morgan State, but no charges were brought against him.
    Robertson claims he opted to transfer to Coppin State during the time of his suspension so
    that he could resume his studies. (“I refused to miss a year of college. So I transferred to
    Coppin State.”).
    2
    At the bench conference, defense counsel asserted that there was a Motion in
    limine for excluding Robertson’s involvement in the previous incident. The record
    contains a motion to suppress statements that Robertson may have made to law
    enforcement officials and a proffer agreement between Robertson, his counsel, and the
    State. However, the record does not contain a formal, written Motion in limine.
    The trial transcript reveals that the hearing judge acknowledged the existence of a Motion
    in limine (see exchange provided below) and also acknowledged that defense counsel and
    5
    Based on defense counsel’s questioning during Robertson’s direct examination, the trial
    judge asserted that defense counsel had opened the door to enable the State to inquire about
    the previous incident.
    Proceeding before the Court of Special Appeals
    Robertson raised two issues on appeal:
    [1.] Whether the trial court erred in permitting the State to question him
    about his participation in an earlier fight during which a knife had been
    brandished.
    [2.] Whether the evidence was sufficient to support his conviction for
    accessory after the fact to murder.
    The Court of Special Appeals held that defense counsel had not opened the door for
    the State to introduce the previous knife incident because defense counsel had limited his
    questioning to Robertson’s criminal and juvenile record. Because defense counsel’s
    questioning was limited in scope, Robertson had “opened the door, at most, to being cross-
    examined . . . as to his claim that he had never been previously involved with the justice
    the State had previously agreed that Robertson’s involvement in the previous incident
    would not be mentioned at trial.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Your Honor, this is outrageous. We have a Motion [in
    limine] that was - -
    THE COURT:         Well I know, I know. But his testimony was - -
    [THE STATE]:       He opened the door.
    THE COURT:         --yeah, he opened the door.
    [THE STATE]:       He said he had no trouble whatsoever. That’s why it
    was my first question.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes, but we talked about the knife incident that was not
    coming in at all.
    THE COURT:         I understand that. If -- you put your witness on and
    he testified. You asked him and he testified, he’s never
    been in trouble, he’s a good boy.
    6
    system, as either an adult or juvenile[.]” Robertson v. State of Maryland, No. 2731, slip
    op. at 8 (Md. App. June 6, 2018). The Court held that, because the introduction of the
    previous incident was not harmless error, Robertson’s conviction for accessory after the
    fact must be vacated and remanded for a new trial (“Given the similarity of the earlier
    incident . . . we cannot say, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the decision to permit inquiry
    about the previous incident was harmless error.”). Id. at 11.
    Regarding the second issue, the Court held that Robertson had not preserved his
    insufficiency claim and declined to review the issue for plain error.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A trial court’s ruling on the admissibility of evidence is generally reviewed for abuse
    of discretion. Hopkins v. State, 
    352 Md. 146
    , 158, 
    721 A.2d 231
    , 237 (1998). Errors of
    law and purely legal questions are reviewed de novo and this Court affords no deference to
    the decision of the court below. Schisler v. State, 
    394 Md. 519
    , 535, 
    907 A.2d 175
    , 184
    (2006).
    The discussion provided in Section III.A. below concludes that this Court should
    review the trial court’s ruling that defense counsel opened the door to otherwise
    inadmissible evidence de novo.
    DISCUSSION
    The open door doctrine is based on principles of fairness and serves to “balance any
    unfair prejudice one party may have suffered.” Little v. Schneider, 
    434 Md. 150
    , 163, 
    73 A.3d 1074
    , 1081 n.6 (2013). It authorizes parties to “‘meet fire with fire,’ as they introduce
    otherwise inadmissible evidence [henceforth, “rebuttal evidence”] in response to evidence
    7
    put forth by the opposing side.” 
    Id. at 157
    , 73 A.3d at 1078 (citing Terry v. State, 
    332 Md. 329
    , 337, 
    631 A.2d 424
    , 428 (1993)). The doctrine manifests the claim of, “[m]y opponent
    has injected an issue into the case, and I ought to be able to introduce evidence on that
    issue.” Clark v. State, 
    332 Md. 77
    , 85, 
    629 A.2d 1239
    , 1243 (1993).
    A. The issue of whether defense counsel opened the door for the State to cross-
    examine Robertson about the previous incident is a legal question that we
    review de novo.
    1. Questions of relevance, including the open door doctrine, are questions of law
    that are reviewed de novo.
    The State contends that this Court should apply a bifurcated standard of review to
    the open door doctrine that first, reviews for clear error a trial court’s decision that a party
    has opened the door as to a new issue, and second, applies an abuse of discretion standard
    as to whether an opposing party’s rebuttal evidence is proportionate to the evidence
    presented. The State conflates the question of whether the open door doctrine applies with
    whether the rebuttal evidence is proportionate. These are two separate inquiries.
    The open door doctrine “authorizes admitting evidence which otherwise would have
    been irrelevant in order to respond to . . . admissible evidence which generates an issue.”
    Clark, 332 Md. at 84, 
    629 A.2d at 1242
    . In short, the doctrine “makes relevant what was
    irrelevant[.]” Conyers v. State, 
    345 Md. 525
    , 546, 
    693 A.2d 781
    , 790 (1997). Given the
    doctrine’s ability to enlarge the universe of relevant evidence at trial, the open door doctrine
    is a “rule of expanded relevancy[.]” Clark, 
    332 Md. at 84
    , 
    629 A.2d at 1242
    .
    Relevant evidence is evidence that makes a fact in issue more or less probable. Md.
    Rule 5-401.     Evidence that is not relevant is inadmissible. Md. Rule 5-402.             The
    8
    determination of evidentiary relevance is a legal question that is reviewed de novo. Perry
    v. Asphalt & Concrete Services, Inc., 
    447 Md. 31
    , 48, 
    133 A.3d 1143
    , 1153 (2016).
    “Although trial judges have wide discretion ‘in weighing relevancy in light of unfairness
    or efficiency considerations, trial judges do not have discretion to admit irrelevant
    evidence.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Simms, 
    420 Md. 705
    , 724, 
    25 A.3d 144
    , 155 (2011)).
    Given that the open door doctrine is a matter of relevancy, which is a legal issue, this Court
    reviews the question of whether a party opened the door to introduce rebuttal evidence de
    novo.
    2. The State’s citations to cases that use bifurcated review are inapposite to the
    case at bar.
    Though this Court has not waivered on the principle that legal issues are reviewed
    de novo, the State relies on two cases in its brief to suggest that the “articulated [ ] two-part
    standard of review of certain trial court decisions . . . should likewise apply here.” The
    State points to this Court’s decisions in Kusi v. State, 
    438 Md. 362
    , 
    91 A.3d 1192
     (2014),
    and Grimm v. State, 
    458 Md. 602
    , 
    183 A.3d 167
     (2018), to support its contention that the
    bifurcated standard of review used in those cases is appropriate in the case at bar. However,
    the State neglects to consider that both Kusi and Grimm involved questions that were
    heavily reliant upon intensive fact-finding and credibility assessments—issues of fact that
    we review with deference.
    In Kusi, this Court held that the trial court did not commit clear error when it found
    that the defendant, a Ghanaian native whose native language was Ashanti, could
    comprehend English. 438 Md. at 384, 91 A.3d at 1204. Further, this Court held that the
    9
    trial court acted within its discretion when it denied an interpreter for the defendant at trial.
    Id. at 386, 91 A.3d at 1205. The State contends that Kusi established precedent for a two-
    tiered standard of review that applies “a clearly erroneous standard to the judge’s factual
    findings before reviewing a judge’s legal determination under an abuse of discretion
    standard.” Id. at 383, 91 A.3d at 1203 (internal citations omitted). However, the case at
    bar is distinct from Kusi. In Kusi, former Maryland Rule 16-819 provided express
    procedures for a trial judge’s determination of whether an interpreter was needed at trial.
    Id. at 366, 91 A.3d at 1194. The rule required the trial judge to render factual findings
    about the defendant’s ability to understand and communicate in English, as well as the
    defendant’s ability to assist in his defense.3 Id. at 366-67, 91 A.3d at 1194. After a detailed
    3
    Former Md. Rule 16-819 provided the procedures to determine whether an
    interpreter was needed. Former Rule 16-819 stated, in pertinent part:
    (c) Procedures to determine the need for interpreters.
    ***
    (2) Spoken language interpreter. (A) Examination of party or witness.
    To determine whether a spoken language interpreter is needed, the court,
    on request or on its own initiative, shall examine a party or witness on the
    record. The court shall appoint a spoken language interpreter if the court
    determines that:
    (i) the party does not understand English well enough to participate
    fully in the proceedings and to assist counsel, or
    (ii) the party or a witness does not speak English well enough to be
    understood by counsel, the court, and the jury.
    (B) Scope of examination. The court’s examination of the party or
    witness should include questions relating to:
    (i) identification;
    (ii) active vocabulary in vernacular English; and
    (iii) the court proceedings.
    Kusi, 438 Md. at 366-67, 91 A.3d at 1193.
    10
    exchange with the defendant, the trial judge concluded that Kusi could effectively
    understand and communicate in English. Id. at 378, 91 A.3d at 1200-01.
    On appeal, this Court reviewed the trial judge’s factual findings concerning the
    defendant’s ability to speak and understand English for clear error. Id. at 383, 91 A.3d at
    1203. In commenting on the application of clear error review, this Court noted that “[t]he
    trial judge had an opportunity firsthand to hear [the defendant] speak English during the
    lengthy process[.]” Id. at 384, 91 A.3d at 1204. This Court further noted that application
    of the clear error standard was appropriate because “the trial judge in this case, as required
    by Rule 16-819, first made factual findings concerning [the defendant’s] ability to use the
    English language[.]” Id. at 383, 91 A.3d at 1203.
    Given the extensive fact-finding, it was appropriate to review the trial judge’s
    determination regarding the defendant’s English capacity for clear error. As opposed to
    the trial judge in Kusi, who engaged in fact-finding pursuant to former Rule 16-819, the
    trial judge in the instant case did not need to engage in exhaustive fact-finding to determine
    whether the open door doctrine applied. In the case at bar, reviewing the trial transcript is
    sufficient for ascertaining whether the doctrine applied based on defense counsel’s
    questioning. Unlike Kusi, there was no fact-intensive inquiry that the trial judge engaged
    in that necessitates clear error review in the case at bar.
    In Kusi, this Court reviewed the trial court’s final determination, about whether an
    interpreter was needed, for an abuse of discretion. Id. at 367, 91 A.3d at 1195. In contrast
    to the open door doctrine, which is a legal issue, the trial judge’s final determination of
    whether to appoint an interpreter for Kusi was a discretionary determination based on the
    11
    fact-finding that the judge had engaged in previously. See id. at 384, 91 A.3d at 1204
    (stating that “where a trial court makes a discretionary ruling, such as the determination of
    whether or not to appoint an interpreter, we apply an abuse of discretion standard of
    review.”). Therefore, the final determination by the judge in Kusi was discretionary, as
    opposed to the legal determination that the open door doctrine necessitates in the case at
    bar.
    In Grimm v. State, this Court reviewed a trial court’s determination that probable
    cause existed based on a dog’s alert to search Grimm’s car during a traffic stop. 458 Md.
    at 635, 183 A.3d at 186-87. This Court held that the issue of the dog’s reliability was
    reviewed for clear error, but that the ultimate legal issue for determining whether probable
    cause existed was reviewed de novo. Id. at 650, 183 A.3d at 195. The Grimm Court cited
    Miller v. Fenton, 
    474 U.S. 104
     (1985), stating that “where an issue falls somewhere
    between a clear legal issue and a simple historical fact, the determination of the nature of
    the issue turns on an analysis of which judicial actor is better positioned to decide the
    question.” Id. at 609, 183 A.3d at 171. This Court determined that:
    An issue as to a drug detection dog’s reliability requires a trial court to assess
    the credibility of lay and expert witnesses; to watch, when available, a
    recording of a drug detection dog’s scan; to weigh and determine the weight
    to be given documentary evidence, such as the drug detection dog’s training
    records, field reports, and certifications; to consider the qualifications of any
    experts, and their opinions about the evidence; and to determine whether,
    under the totality of the circumstances, the drug detection dog is reliable; and
    whether the drug detection dog’s alert indicated that drugs were present. As
    such, a trial court is better positioned than an appellate court to determine a
    drug detection dog’s reliability.
    12
    Id. The nature of the fact-finding at the trial level therefore warranted clear error review
    as to the dog’s reliability. In contrast, the trial judge in the instant case was no better
    positioned to decide the question of whether the open door doctrine applied: issues of
    reliability and credibility do not need to be considered for determining whether defense
    counsel’s questioning opened the door for the State’s introduction of the previous incident.
    In Grimm, this Court utilized a second standard of review for the ultimate issue of
    whether probable cause existed. Id. at 650, 183 A.3d at 195. The Grimm Court was guided
    by the Supreme Court’s ruling that “the ultimate questions of reasonable suspicion and
    probable cause are to be reviewed de novo.” Id. at 640, 183 A.3d at 189 (citing Ornelas v.
    United States, 
    517 U.S. 690
    , 691, 
    116 S.Ct. 1657
    , 1659 (1996)). Importantly, this Court
    noted that, even when an issue involves a legal question, underlying facts may play a role.
    Id. at 651, 183 A.3d at 196 (citing Miller v. Fenton, 
    474 U.S. 104
    , 112, 
    106 S.Ct. 445
    , 450
    (1985)). Regardless, the legal question is reviewed de novo by appellate courts. Id. at 607,
    183 A.3d at 170. In the instant case, the open door doctrine is a legal issue; however, the
    factual analysis required in Kusi and Grimm is absent. Therefore, we do not apply the dual
    standard that the State advocates to review the open door doctrine.
    3. An abuse of discretion analysis is applicable to the inquiry of proportionality,
    which is a separate question from whether the open door doctrine applies.
    The State cites to a third case, Little v. Schneider, 
    434 Md. 150
    , 
    73 A.3d 1074
    (2013), to support its contention that de novo review is inapplicable to the open door
    doctrine. In Little, we held that the trial court had not abused its discretion when it allowed
    rebuttal evidence that inquired about the defendant-physician’s lack of board certification.
    13
    
    Id. at 163
    , 73 A.3d at 1081. During the malpractice trial, defense counsel represented
    defendant as a model surgeon and expressed the defendant’s qualifications and
    achievements in detail. Id. at 158, 73 A.3d at 1078-79. Despite the trial judge’s warning
    that such “unnecessary bolstering” might cause him to revisit the Motion in limine to
    exclude the doctor’s lack of board certification, defense counsel delved into the defendant’s
    accomplishments in detail during direct examination. Id. at 158-60, 73 A.3d at 1079-80.
    Due to the bolstering of the defendant’s accomplishments, the trial judge permitted
    plaintiff’s counsel to ask the defendant about board certification on redirect examination.
    The judge explained his rationale for permitting the plaintiff’s rebuttal evidence, stating
    that “there is a balance here. So if you are going to puff up, they get to puff down.” Id. at
    161, 73 A.3d at 1080.
    On review, we held that:
    The doctrine of opening the door has limitations. It allows for the
    introduction of otherwise inadmissible evidence, but only to the extent
    necessary to remove any unfair prejudice that might have ensued from the
    original evidence. In this regard, [the defendant] argues that the trial court
    abused its discretion in allowing [the plaintiff] to improperly use the lack of
    board certification as evidence of negligence.             Specifically, [the
    defendant] draws our attention to [the plaintiff’s] use of the board
    certification evidence on re-direct examination and in closing argument. We
    review both for abuse of discretion.
    Id. at 163-64, 73 A.3d at 1082 (internal citations and quotations omitted). Our
    review of the open door doctrine in Little did not contemplate whether the door had been
    opened for rebuttal evidence, but rather, we reviewed the proportionality of the rebuttal
    evidence permitted by the trial judge once the door had already been opened. This is a
    14
    separate inquiry that does not pertain to our standard of review for the preliminary question
    of whether the door has been opened for rebuttal evidence. As stated, this initial inquiry is
    a question of law that is reviewed by this Court de novo. The secondary question of
    proportionality is one in which this Court provides deference to a trial judge. In Little, we
    determined that once the door had been opened, it was not an abuse of discretion for the
    trial judge to permit the plaintiff to inquire about the defendant’s lack of board certification.
    Id. at 163, 73 A.3d at 1081.
    Given that the issue before us seeks to resolve the standard of review for the open
    door doctrine, the State’s reference to Little is inapposite. We apply de novo review to
    questions of law, and the open door doctrine is a question of law that we review without
    deference to the trial judge.
    B. In applying de novo review, we find that the door was open for the State to
    provide rebuttal evidence, but the State’s subsequent use of the evidence,
    reviewed for an abuse of discretion, exceeded the scope of the doctrine.
    At trial, the following colloquy occurred between Robertson and his counsel on
    direct examination (also produced in Section I.2, supra):
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Now did you ever get into any trouble as a juvenile?
    [ROBERTSON]: No.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Ever just stopped for some minor issue?
    [THE STATE]: Again Your Honor, I’m going to object to the leading nature
    of his questions.
    THE COURT: Okay, I’m going to overrule that one. Go ahead.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Thank you. Any kind of trouble when you were a
    juvenile?
    15
    [ROBERTSON]: No.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: How about as an adult, when you turned 18?
    [ROBERTSON]: No.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Ever even arrested for anything?
    [ROBERTSON]: Never been arrested. This is my first time being arrested.
    (emphasis added). The Court of Special Appeals observed that defense counsel’s
    questioning did not open the door, and if it did, the questioning was limited to rebuttal
    evidence pertaining to Robertson’s previous involvement with the justice system.
    Robertson, slip op. at 8. The Court of Special Appeals concluded that defense counsel’s
    questioning was narrowed by the context of Robertson’s engagement with the law. Id. at
    10. Given the narrowed scope of questioning, had the door been opened, proportional
    rebuttal evidence could solely address Robertson’s previous engagement with the criminal
    justice system. Id. Because the previous incident did not result in any criminal charges,
    but merely related to Robertson’s suspension from Morgan State University, the Court of
    Special Appeals concluded that the trial court abused its discretion regarding the
    proportionality of the State’s rebuttal evidence. Id. at 11.
    1. The general nature of defense counsel’s questioning opened the door for the
    State to rebut evidence of Robertson’s good character.
    We first analyze the issue of whether defense counsel’s questioning opened the door
    to rebuttal evidence from the State. We find that defense counsel’s questioning was not
    specific to Robertson’s previous engagement with police, but was general in nature. He
    asked whether Robertson was ever in any kind of trouble as a juvenile. Counsel’s next
    16
    question—“How about as an adult?”—carried over from the previous question, implying
    the same general questioning regarding Robertson’s character. The use of the term “any”
    expands defense counsel’s questioning beyond Robertson’s previous engagement with the
    justice system. The Court of Special Appeals’s selective quotations from counsel’s
    questioning and Robertson’s arguments about the use of legal terminology are
    unconvincing to limit the State’s rebuttal evidence to Robertson’s criminal history. The
    State, under the open door doctrine, was permitted to introduce evidence to rebut the image
    of Robertson as an upstanding individual who had never been in any trouble. See Md.
    Rule 5-404(a)(2)(A);4 see also Md. Rule 5-608(b).5 Such rebuttal evidence was within the
    ambit of the open door doctrine. We agree with the trial judge’s rationale that the door was
    4
    Md. Rule 5-404(a)(2)(A) states:
    Character of Accused. An accused may offer evidence of the accused’s
    pertinent trait of character. If the evidence is admitted, the prosecution may
    offer evidence to rebut it.
    5
    Beyond utilizing the open door doctrine to neutralize defense counsel’s image of
    Robertson’s good character, defense counsel may have also opened the door regarding
    Robertson’s credibility because he did not answer honestly when counsel inquired about
    whether he had gotten into “any trouble.” Md. Rule 5-608(b) states:
    b) Impeachment by Examination Regarding Witness’s Own Prior
    Conduct Not Resulting in Convictions. The court may permit any witness
    to be examined regarding the witness’s own prior conduct that did not result
    in a conviction but that the court finds probative of a character trait of
    untruthfulness. Upon objection, however, the court may permit the inquiry
    only if the questioner, outside the hearing of the jury, establishes a reasonable
    factual basis for asserting that the conduct of the witness occurred. The
    conduct may not be proved by extrinsic evidence.
    17
    open for the State’s rebuttal evidence. At a bench conference, the following colloquy
    occurred between the trial judge and defense counsel after defense counsel’s objection over
    the State’s questioning about the previous incident:
    THE COURT: If - - you put your witness on and he testified. You asked
    him and he testified, he’s never been in trouble, he’s a good boy.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Right.
    THE COURT: All right. Now, it seems to me that would open up testimony
    on number one, credibility, and number two, maybe he did have trouble in
    someplace [sic]. I think it’s legitimate to bring [the previous incident] in at
    this point. The door is open. . . .
    Beyond the issue of credibility, see. n.5, we agree that the general nature of defense
    counsel’s questioning generated an issue as to Robertson’s good character. Robertson
    attempted to benefit from his good character, which opened the door to the State’s
    questioning about his previous disciplinary action at Morgan State University.
    2. Though defense counsel opened the door for the State to introduce evidence
    of the previous knife incident, the State’s use of the evidence exceeded the
    scope of the open door doctrine.
    Though the State was entitled to question Robertson about the previous knife
    incident to rebut the assertion that he had never been in any trouble, the State improperly
    used the evidence throughout the trial. The State’s evidence exceeded the scope of the
    open door doctrine.     Rather than simply introducing the previous incident to rebut
    Robertson’s general good character, the State elicited details about the incident. See Khan
    v. State, 
    213 Md. App. 554
    , 575, 
    74 A.3d 844
    , 856 (2013) (holding that, under the open
    18
    door doctrine, a party can use rebuttal evidence of a prior incident, but the rebuttal evidence
    cannot seek to elicit “details” of the prior incident).
    On cross-examination, the following exchange occurred between Robertson and the
    State:
    [THE STATE]: It’s true, you got kicked out of Morgan State, isn’t it?
    [ROBERTSON]: Well, I didn’t get kicked out. I got an interim - - I don’t
    know the right complete word - - it’s interim suspension.
    ***
    [THE STATE]: Let’s talk about the incident that you had where you were
    involved in a stabbing incident the year before with a football player, is that
    correct?
    [ROBERTSON]: Yes.
    [THE STATE]: Okay. And tell us about that.
    [ROBERTSON]: I could tell you about it vividly, just saying that it was
    kind [sic] of jealous of me and my friends, basically because we had their
    girls. They was just basically hating on us, so - -
    [THE STATE]: Wasn’t it more like a football player slept with your
    girlfriend and you got upset?
    [ROBERTSON]: No.
    [THE STATE]: Okay.
    [ROBERTSON]: He didn’t sleep with my girlfriend at all.
    [THE STATE]: All right, but you pulled a knife out, is that correct? On the
    football player.
    [ROBERTSON]: I pulled—no.
    19
    [THE STATE]: Okay. Well, what exactly happened then?
    [ROBERTSON]: I was fighting a football player before. The whole
    football team came out of the building and hopped into the fight, and it was
    only my little cousin that came up there and Lose, that previously didn’t go
    there. . . . But he pulled out a knife, and to keep the football players at bay,
    from hopping into my fight [sic]. And I guess it was like the whole football
    team, so whatever happened - - I don’t know, I was on the ground. Because
    it [sic] was a video, so you could vividly see that I was getting kicked in the
    face on the ground.
    [THE STATE]: You like to fight then right? I mean you’re fighting last
    year, you’re in this fight. You and your friends like to fight.
    [ROBERTSON]: No. I don’t like to fight at all. I’d never been - - that was
    my first fight in school period.
    ***
    [THE STATE]: Well, let’s talk about Morgan State players though. I mean
    you said that this Morgan State player was coming after you and you pulled
    out a knife right? . . .
    [ROBERTSON]: No, I said my friend . . . pulled out a knife to keep the
    football players at bay from hopping into the fight, which they hopped into
    anyway.
    ***
    [ROBERTSON]: I didn’t have a knife in both situations.
    On multiple occasions throughout the exchange, Robertson clarified that he did not
    have a knife during the previous incident, nor was he the individual who pulled a knife
    during that incident. Regardless of this clarification, the State reiterated that Robertson
    wielded a knife and attempted to elicit details of the prior incident. In Khan v. State, the
    Court of Special Appeals described the appropriate rebuttal evidence permitted once the
    door had been opened to such evidence.
    20
    The testimony elicited from [the witness] during the State’s redirect
    examination was narrowly tailored to respond to [the] testimony during the
    defense’s cross-examination. As soon as the State [, responding to
    character evidence introduced by the defense,] attempted to elicit
    testimony regarding the details of the prior complaint, defense counsel’s
    objections were sustained. [The witness] did not discuss the details of this
    complaint; [the] testimony was only that a complaint had been made.
    Similarly, neither [of the other witnesses] testified as to details of the prior
    complaint. [Khan’s wife] acknowledged that she was aware of the prior
    complaint against her husband, but she did not know the details of its
    substance, and that was the end of the State’s inquiry.
    213 Md. App. at 575-76, 74 A.3d at 856 (emphasis in original) (bolding added). Khan
    demonstrates the limited scope of the open door doctrine. The State was permitted to rebut
    the evidence of Robertson’s good character by citing the previous incident. However, the
    State was not permitted to elicit details about the incident.
    Abuse of Discretion Standard
    “Abuse of discretion [exists] where no reasonable person would take the view
    adopted by the [trial] court, or when the court acts without reference to [ ] guiding rules or
    principles.” Alexis v. State, 
    437 Md. 457
    , 478, 
    87 A.3d 1243
    , 1254 (2014) (citations
    omitted) (emphasis added). Khan established an important guiding principle regarding the
    scope of rebuttal evidence permitted after the door has been opened: a party’s rebuttal
    evidence cannot elicit details about a previous incident. In the case at bar, the circuit court
    acted without reference to this guiding principle when it failed to interject in the State’s
    repeated inquiries that elicited details about the prior occurrence. As defined, an abuse of
    discretion occurs “when the court acts without reference to [ ] guiding [ ] principles,” Alexis
    v. State, supra, the very thing that happened here.
    21
    Importantly, the Court of Special Appeals in Khan held that, because the State did
    not elicit details regarding the particular incident, the trial court had not abused its
    discretion. 213 Md. App. at 575, 74 A.3d at 856. The Court held that “[w]hile the
    proverbial door was opened to the disputed testimony, it remained for the trial court to
    balance its probative value against its prejudicial nature . . . and here we see no abuse of
    discretion.” Id. at 575, 74 A.3d at 856. The Khan Court deferred to the trial court’s
    judgment because the scope of rebuttal evidence was proper; here, it was not. Further
    guidance regarding the abuse of discretion standard is provided in Nash v. State, 
    439 Md. 53
    , 67, 
    94 A.3d 23
    , 31 (2014), where we wrote that:
    [A] certain commonality [exists] in all these definitions: the notion that a
    ruling reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard will not be reversed
    simply because the appellate court would not have made the same
    ruling. Rather, [a] court’s decision is an abuse of discretion when it is well
    removed from any center mark imagined by the reviewing court and
    beyond the fringe of what that court deems minimally acceptable. . . .
    that kind of distance [from the center mark] can arise in a number of
    ways.
    (emphasis added) (quotation marks, original emphasis, and internal citations omitted). In
    the case at bar, the circuit court’s “distance from the center mark” arose when it failed to
    follow guiding principles regarding rebuttal evidence.      Khan established that details
    regarding a prior incident should not be permitted in rebuttal evidence. This is not the
    reality of what occurred in the instant case. Rather, the State impermissibly expanded the
    scope of the open door doctrine and therefore, its use of rebuttal evidence was not a
    proportional response to the general good character that defense counsel painted. As such,
    the trial court abused its discretion regarding the proportionality of the response: we do
    22
    not reverse “simply because we would not have made the same ruling[,]” but rather, we
    find that the trial court’s determination regarding the proportionality of the rebuttal
    evidence was one of the “number of ways” of distancing itself from the “center mark” of
    acceptable conduct.
    3. Defense counsel sufficiently objected to the State’s use of the previous
    incident during Robertson’s cross-examination.
    The State contends that defense counsel had opportunity to object to prejudicial
    statements during trial and failed to object to any questions about the previous incident.
    However, defense counsel adequately objected to the State’s use of the previous incident
    during cross-examination.
    The State posed the following question to Robertson on cross-examination, “[n]ow
    you testified that you’ve never been in trouble before, is that correct?” Defense counsel
    did not object to this inquiry, as it was a clarification about what Robertson had already
    testified to on direct examination. The State’s inquiry did not allude to the previous
    incident and therefore, any objection by defense counsel was unwarranted at this stage of
    cross-examination.
    Further into cross-examination, the State posed the following question, “And now
    you indicated that you left Morgan State University. That’s not really correct is it? You
    got kicked out of Morgan State for an incident that happened with a knife the year before.”
    Defense counsel immediately objected and asked to approach the bench. Counsel asserted
    that there had been an agreement with the State so that “the knife incident was not coming
    in at all.” See n.2. Despite defense counsel’s potential concurrence that he had opened the
    23
    door to rebut Robertson’s good character,6 he objected to the use of the knife fight. Defense
    counsel did not need to specify the grounds for objection, but was required to make a timely
    objection to the evidence he sought to exclude. See Md. Rule 4-323(a).7 Case precedent
    reveals that a party should object to each question or assert a continuing objection to an
    entire line of questioning. Ware v. State, 170 Md.App 1, 19, 
    906 A.2d 969
    , 980 (2006)
    (citing Brown v. State, 
    90 Md. App. 220
    , 225, 
    600 A.2d 1126
     (1992)); see e.g., Fowlkes v.
    State, 
    117 Md. App. 573
    , 587, 
    701 A.2d 862
    , 869 (1997). However, we have also held that
    6
    Presumably, defense counsel agreed that he had painted an image of Robertson’s
    good character, as demonstrated by his response to the judge at the ensuing bench
    conference.
    THE COURT: If - - you put your witness on and he testified. You asked him
    and he testified, he’s never been in trouble, he’s a good boy.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Right. (emphasis added).
    7
    Md. Rule 4-323(a) states, in relevant part:
    (a) Objections to Evidence. An objection to the admission of evidence
    shall be made at the time the evidence is offered or as soon thereafter as
    the grounds for objection become apparent. Otherwise, the objection is
    waived.
    In the case at bar, defense counsel timely objected and the objection was not waived.
    The rule further states:
    The grounds for the objection need not be stated unless the court, at the
    request of a party or on its own initiative, so directs.
    In the instant case, neither the court nor the State directed or requested that defense
    counsel state the grounds for his objection.
    24
    objections need not be reasserted if those objections “would only spotlight for the jury the
    remarks of the [State].” Johnson v. State, 
    325 Md. 511
    , 515, 
    601 A.2d 1093
    , 1094 (1992).
    In Johnson, we wrote:
    The objection interrupted the [State] in midsentence, and it was perfectly
    clear what would follow if the objection were not sustained. We think that
    the objection went not only to what was said but also to what was obviously
    to come. By overruling the objection, the judge demonstrated that he was
    permitting the [State] to continue along the same line. It was apparent that
    his ruling on further objection would be unfavorable to the defense.
    Persistent objections would only spotlight for the jury the remarks of the
    [State]. In the circumstances, the absence of a further objection did not
    constitute a waiver. See Md.Rule 4-323(c).
    
    325 Md. at 514-15
    , 
    601 A.2d at 1094
    . In the case at bar, defense counsel immediately
    objected to the State’s inquiry pertaining the previous incident. When the trial judge
    overruled defense counsel’s objection, the State pursued a continuing line of questioning
    about Robertson’s participation in the previous incident. Continuing objections would
    have been futile and would likely “spotlight for the jury the remarks of the [State].” 
    Id.
    As such, defense counsel’s initial objection to the State’s continuing line of questioning
    was sufficient.
    CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the appropriate standard of review for the determination of
    whether a party has opened the door to otherwise inadmissible evidence is de novo because
    the open door doctrine is ultimately a question of law. A secondary inquiry regarding the
    proportionality of a party’s rebuttal evidence is a separate issue that we review for abuse
    of discretion.
    25
    In applying a de novo standard of review, we conclude that defense counsel opened
    the door for the State to introduce rebuttal evidence. Defense counsel’s broad questioning
    painted an image of Robertson’s good character that enabled an avenue of inquiry
    previously foreclosed to the State.     Though the State was entitled to inquire about
    Robertson’s suspension from Morgan State University, the scope of the State’s questioning
    during cross-examination exceeded the scope of the open door doctrine. As such, the trial
    court abused its discretion in permitting the State to use the rebuttal evidence in the manner
    presented at trial.
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
    SPECIAL APPEALS IS AFFIRMED.
    COSTS   TO   BE    PAID  BY
    PETITIONER.
    26
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 116111012
    Argued: January 8, 2019                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 40
    September Term, 2018
    __________________________________
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    v.
    HARRY MALIK ROBERTSON
    __________________________________
    Barbera, C.J.,
    Greene,
    McDonald,
    Watts,
    Hotten,
    Getty,
    Wilner, Alan M.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned)
    JJ.
    __________________________________
    Dissenting Opinion by McDonald, J.,
    which Watts, J., joins.
    __________________________________
    Filed: April 2, 2019
    I agree with most of the reasoning and analysis of the Majority Opinion. However,
    near the end it misapplies that reasoning to hold that the trial court abused its discretion.
    Accordingly, I dissent from that holding and the Court’s judgment.
    This appeal concerns application of the “opening the door” doctrine. Under that
    doctrine, a party “opens the door” to the admission of otherwise inadmissible evidence
    when the party injects an issue into a case and the opposing party is allowed, as a matter of
    fairness, to respond with evidence that, although previously inadmissible, has thereby
    become relevant. Little v. Schneider, 
    434 Md. 150
    , 157 (2013).
    Before us, the parties contest: (1) how an appellate court should review a trial
    court’s determination that a party has “opened the door”; (2) whether, in this case, Mr.
    Robertson’s testimony on direct examination opened the door to cross-examination about
    a prior incident; and, if so, (3) whether the trial court improperly failed to limit that cross-
    examination.
    With respect to the first issue, the Majority Opinion thoughtfully analyzes the
    standard of review and concludes that an appellate court should apply a split standard of
    review: (a) a de novo standard in assessing whether a trial court has correctly determined
    that the doctrine has been triggered and (b) an abuse-of-discretion standard in assessing the
    trial court’s decision as to what evidence to allow in as a result. Majority slip op. at 7-15.
    I agree with this reasoning.
    With respect to the second issue, the Majority Opinion conducts a de novo review
    of the record and concludes that Mr. Robertson’s testimony on direct examination that he
    was (literally) a Boy Scout and had never previously been in “any trouble” opened the door
    to cross-examination about his involvement in a knife fight a year earlier that resulted in
    his suspension from college. Majority slip op. at 15-18. Again, I agree with that analysis.
    So far, so good.
    The Majority Opinion then turns to the third question – whether the trial court
    abused its discretion in how it permitted the prosecution to respond to the testimony that
    “opened the door.” The Majority Opinion concludes that “the State improperly used the
    evidence [of the prior knife fight] throughout the trial.” Majority slip op. at 18. In fact,
    the evidence of the prior knife fight appeared late in the trial only during the cross-
    examination of Mr. Robertson, the last witness on the last day of the trial. That testimony
    occupies approximately four pages of the trial transcript.
    At the outset of that testimony, Mr. Robertson’s counsel objected to any reference
    to the prior knife fight, calling it “outrageous.” He cited what he referred to as a “motion
    in limine,” but stated no particular basis for the objection. As the Majority Opinion notes,
    no motion in limine appears in the record of this case, so the basis and scope of this defense
    objection are not clear – other than that the topic of the prior knife fight should be
    completely off limits.1 It appears from the colloquy quoted in the Majority Opinion that
    defense counsel eventually conceded – or at least accepted the trial court’s ruling – that he
    1
    Majority slip op. at 5-6 & n.2. The absence of a written motion in limine – or even
    an oral one – necessarily hampers any effort to ascertain specifically what the defense
    wished to exclude. Defense counsel referred to a discussion that “the knife incident … was
    not coming in at all.” 
    Id.
     One may speculate that the phantom motion was instead an oral
    agreement between counsel not to introduce certain topics into the case – unless, of course,
    the other side did so first.
    2
    had opened the door to the topic in his direct examination of Mr. Robertson. See Majority
    slip op. at 18. Defense counsel did not thereafter object to any of the specific questions
    posed by the State on the topic.
    In discussing this issue, the Majority Opinion lays out why it would have reached a
    different outcome than the trial court but that, of course, is not the standard for abuse of
    discretion. Nash v. State, 
    439 Md. 53
    , 67 (2014) (“a ruling reviewed under an abuse of
    discretion standard will not be reversed simply because the appellate court would not have
    made the same ruling”).
    The Majority Opinion’s treatment of the one case it relies upo in support of its
    conclusion is telling. See Khan v. State, 
    213 Md. App. 554
     (2013). In that case, a security
    guard in a cosmetics store was charged with assault and third-degree sex offenses when he
    sprayed perfume on two teenage girls in the store and then touched various parts of their
    bodies. One of the issues on appeal concerned the introduction of evidence of prior
    customer complaints of inappropriate touching by the security guard. The Court of Special
    Appeals agreed with the trial court that the door had been opened to testimony concerning
    those complaints when defense counsel elicited positive testimony from the security
    guard’s employer concerning his past work performance. When the defense objected to
    testimony concerning details of the prior complaints, the trial court excluded that evidence
    of those details.
    The Court of Special Appeals affirmed that exercise of discretion by the trial court
    in response to the defense objection, stating: “While the proverbial door was opened to the
    disputed testimony, it remained for the trial court to balance its probative value against its
    3
    prejudicial nature, and here we see no abuse of discretion.” 213 Md. App. at 575. The
    intermediate appellate court thus made clear that, in applying an abuse-of-discretion
    standard, it was deferring significantly to the trial court’s judgment in responding to the
    defense objection to evidence of the details of the prior incident. Contrary to the suggestion
    of the Majority Opinion, nothing in Khan indicates that it was declaring a one-size-fits-all
    approach for trial courts when a party opens the door to the introduction of certain evidence.
    The abuse-of-discretion standard inherently involves a case-by-case assessment.
    In making that case-by-case assessment, an appellate court cannot overlook the fact
    that in this case, unlike Khan, there was no objection registered at trial to the testimony
    concerning the details of the prior incident.2 The Majority Opinion suggests that, in not
    interrupting and limiting the cross-examination sua sponte, the trial court “failed to follow
    guiding principles.” Majority slip op. at 22. But a critical guiding principle here is that an
    objection must be made to evidence when the grounds become apparent, or the objection
    is waived. Maryland Rule 4-323(a). The purpose of that rule is “to prevent ‘sandbagging’
    and to give the trial court the opportunity to correct possible mistakes in its rulings.” Bazzle
    v. State, 
    426 Md. 541
    , 562 (2012) (internal citations omitted). In ruling on an objection to
    a question on cross-examination, “a trial court is not required to imagine all reasonable
    offshoots of the argument actually presented to it.” Peterson v. State, 
    444 Md. 105
    , 148
    (2015) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Here no objection at all was made
    2
    I do not disagree that the defense objection at the outset of that testimony preserved
    an objection to whether the door had been opened. But the trial court resolved that question
    against the defense – and, indeed, the Majority Opinion agrees with that ruling.
    4
    to testimony concerning the details of the prior incident.3 Thus, the Majority Opinion
    reverses the trial court based on an objection that was never presented to the trial court.
    It is the view of the Majority Opinion, apparently, that the trial judge abused his
    discretion when he failed to inject himself into the cross-examination. This would seem to
    establish a standard under which a trial court must act as back-up defense counsel (without
    the benefit of having defense counsel’s knowledge of where the questions will likely lead),
    and intervene sua sponte in a cross-examination or risk being found to have abused its
    discretion.
    I cannot agree that the failure of the trial court to interrupt cross-examination sua
    sponte in these circumstances was, in the oft-quoted description of the abuse-of-discretion
    standard, “well removed from any center mark … and beyond the fringe of what [is]
    minimally acceptable.”4
    Judge Watts has advised that she joins this opinion.
    3
    It may be that this was because the evidence consisted entirely of Mr. Robertson’s
    version of that incident. Indeed, in referring to the prior incident in her closing argument,
    the prosecutor largely accepted Mr. Robertson’s version of that incident – i.e., that he had
    not wielded the knife during that fight (rather, a friend had done so). Defense counsel,
    perhaps understandably, registered no objection to that argument, either while the argument
    was being made or afterwards.
    4
    North v. North, 
    102 Md. App. 1
    , 14 (1994) (Wilner, C.J.).
    5