Schlick v. State , 238 Md. App. 681 ( 2018 )


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  • SENTENCING   AND   PUNISHMENT     –  RECONSIDERATION    AND
    MODIFICATION OF SENTENCE – TIME FOR MOTION OR APPLICATION
    When a petitioner is granted the opportunity to file a belated Motion for Modification of
    Sentence following a successful post-conviction proceeding pursuant to the Uniform
    Postconviction Procedure Act, Md. Code, Criminal Procedure Article, Title 7, the circuit
    court has the power to exercise its fundamental jurisdiction beyond the five years set out
    in Rule 4-345. The court and moving party have an obligation to ensure that the Motion
    for Modification of Sentence is entertained by the court within the spirit of Rule 4-345.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 204299006
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1376
    September Term, 2017
    JOHN SCHLICK
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Wright,
    Leahy,
    Raker, Irma S.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Raker, J.
    Filed: September 20, 2018
    2018-09-20
    09:53-04:00
    John Schlick appeals from dismissal of his Motion for Modification of Sentence by
    the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. He presents the following question for our review,
    which we have re-phrased slightly:
    Did the trial court determine correctly that it did not have
    authority under Maryland Rule 4-345 to modify appellant’s
    sentence once five years had passed from the date the original
    sentence was imposed?
    We shall hold that the trial court erred in dismissing the motion and, hence, we shall
    reverse.
    I.
    Because the sole issue in this appeal relates to the trial court’s action in dismissing
    a Motion for Modification of Sentence, we shall not recite the facts of the underlying
    criminal charges, and focus only on the facts related to the Motion for Modification of
    Sentence.
    On September 20, 2005, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City sentenced appellant to
    a term of incarceration of sixteen years, all but eighteen months suspended, five years’
    probation for one count of possession with intent to distribute cocaine. On September 15,
    2008, appellant appeared for a violation of probation of the 2005 conviction after a
    subsequent conviction in which the court imposed a term of incarceration of ten years.
    Following this probation violation hearing, the court revoked appellant’s probation and
    executed the suspended fourteen years and six months from the 2005 sentence, to run
    concurrent with the 2008 ten-year sentence.
    On August 31, 2012, appellant filed a Petition for Postconviction Relief followed
    by a November 30, 2012, Supplemental Petition for Postconviction Relief stemming from
    the 2008 sentencing proceeding for the probation violation. Recognizing that these
    petitions were untimely filed, and claiming ineffective assistance of counsel, appellant
    requested leave to file a Motion for Modification of Sentence beyond the ninety-day
    deadline set out in Maryland Rule 4-345(e)(1). The Rule, in pertinent part, reads as
    follows:
    “RULE 4-345. SENTENCING—REVISORY POWER OF
    COURT
    (e) Modification Upon Motion.
    (1) Generally. Upon a motion filed within 90 days after
    imposition of a sentence (A) in the District Court, if an appeal
    has not been perfected or has been dismissed, and (B) in a
    circuit court, whether or not an appeal has been filed, the court
    has revisory power over the sentence except that it may not
    revise the sentence after the expiration of five years from the
    date the sentence originally was imposed on the defendant and
    it may not increase the sentence.”
    Appellant established that in 2008, he had requested that his trial counsel from the
    resentencing hearing file a Motion for Modification of Sentence within the ninety-day
    deadline. His counsel failed to file that would-have-been-timely Motion for Modification
    of Sentence and, at the postconviction proceeding, counsel provided an affidavit admitting
    to that error.
    2
    On February 20, 2013, the circuit court held a hearing on the petitions. On March
    20, 2013, the court granted appellant the right to file a belated Motion for Modification of
    Sentence within ninety days of the order.1 The court stated as follows:
    “Petitioner alleges that trial counsel was ineffective for failing
    to file a motion for modification of sentence. An attorney
    appointed to represent a client from the Office of the Public
    Defender is obliged to provide representation for a motion for
    modification of sentence. See Md. Rule 4-214(b). Counsel’s
    failure to adhere to a client’s request to file a motion for
    modification of sentence, when statutory provisions and rules
    expressly extend representation to such a motion, is grounds
    for the post conviction remedy of permission to file a belated
    motion for modification of sentence. State v. Flansburg, 
    345 Md. 694
    , 705 (1997).”
    On May 24, 2013, appellant, with the assistance of counsel, filed a belated Motion
    for Modification or Reduction of Sentence. On May 30, 2013, appellant, without the
    assistance of counsel, filed a belated Motion for Modification or Reduction of Sentence
    requesting that the court hold the motion sub curia. On January 6, 2014, the court set
    February 12, 2014, as the date for the Motion for Modification of Sentence hearing. On
    January 30, 2014, appellant filed a Motion to Postpone Hearing on the sentence
    modification motion. On January 31, 2014, the court granted appellant’s Motion to
    Postpone Hearing and ordered the Motion for Modification of Sentence to be held sub
    curia. On July 24, 2014, appellant filed a Line requesting a hearing on the Motion for
    Modification.
    1
    The only timeline stipulated was that “Petitioner may file a belated Motion for
    Modification of Sentence within ninety (90) days of the date of this order.”
    3
    On December 16, 2015, the court issued an “order to show cause” why the court
    should not dismiss the Motion for Modification of Sentence because “the expiration of the
    five years from the date the sentence was originally imposed” had passed. Rule 4-345(e)(1)
    states that “the court has revisory power over the sentence except that it may not revise the
    sentence after the expiration of five years from the date the sentence originally was imposed
    on the defendant.” The five-year revisory window in the instant matter would have expired
    Monday, September 16, 2013, which was five years from the September 15, 2008,
    execution of the sentence imposition following appellant’s probation violation.
    On January 10, 2017, the court held a hearing on the Show Cause Order. On August
    8, 2017, the court dismissed the Motion for Modification, stating as follows:
    “FOUND that the date the sentence originally was imposed on
    the defendant is September 15, 2008. Five years from the date
    the sentence originally was imposed on the defendant is
    September 15, 2013; and it is further
    FOUND Defendant filed for post-conviction relief within five
    years from the date the sentence originally was imposed on the
    defendant. Defendant was granted relief and authorized to file
    a belated motion for modification within five years from the
    date the sentence originally was imposed on the defendant.
    Defendant filed a [belated] Motion for Modification or
    Reduction of Sentence within five years from the date the
    sentence originally was imposed on the defendant. Defendant
    failed to request that the Court rule on the [belated] Motion for
    Modification until almost a year after five years from the date
    the sentence originally was imposed on the defendant; and it is
    further
    FOUND that neither counsel nor the Court could find any
    authority on point for the issue presented when post-conviction
    relief grants the petitioner the right to file a belated motion for
    modification of sentence outside of the five-year statutory limit
    for sentence modifications. It would seem that in cases where
    post-conviction relief is requested after five years from the date
    the sentence originally was imposed on the defendant, the
    4
    relief requested being authorization to file a belated motion for
    modification of sentence, and such relief appropriate, to deny
    such relief based upon the Rule 4-345(a)(e)(1) limitation,
    would render the Post Conviction Procedure Act, MD. CODE
    ANN CRIM. PRO. § 7-101, et. seq. futile. It is well settled that
    ‘an otherwise unresolvable ambiguity in a criminal statute that
    allows for two possible interpretations of the statute . . . [the
    court] will opt for the construction that favors the defendant.’
    Oglesby v. State, 
    441 Md. 673
    , 681 (2015). However, that is
    not the case in the instant matter. Here, Defendant filed for
    post-conviction relief within the five years from the imposition
    of a sentence and was granted relief by being authorized to file
    a belated motion for modification. Defendant filed a belated
    motion for modification within the five years but did not ask
    for a hearing before the five year deadline expired.
    Defendant requested a hearing via a Line, filed July 24, 2014,
    which was well after the September 15, 2013, expiration date.
    Defendant’s inability to receive a sentence modification is
    through no fault or error of the Court, nor ineffective assistance
    of counsel; it is a result of Defendant failing to avail himself of
    the opportunity to request such relief within the statutory time
    limit;”
    The Uniform Postconviction Procedure Act, Md. Code, Criminal Procedure Article,
    Title 7,2 reads in pertinent part as follows:
    Ҥ 7-101. Application of title. This title applies to a person
    convicted in any court in the State who is: (1) confined under
    sentence of imprisonment; or (2) on parole or probation.
    § 7-102. Right of convicted person to begin proceeding.
    Claims required in order to begin proceeding
    (a) Subject to subsection (b) of this section, §§ 7-103 and 7-
    104 of this subtitle and Subtitle 2 of this title, a convicted
    person may begin a proceeding under this title in the circuit
    court for the county in which the conviction took place at any
    time if the person claims that:
    2
    All subsequent statutory references herein shall refer to Md. Code, Criminal Procedure
    Article.
    5
    (1) the sentence or judgment was imposed in violation
    of the Constitution of the United States or the Constitution or
    laws of the State;
    (2) the court lacked jurisdiction to impose the sentence;
    (3) the sentence exceeds the maximum allowed by law;
    or
    (4) the sentence is otherwise subject to collateral attack
    on a ground of alleged error that would otherwise be available
    under a writ of habeas corpus, writ of coram nobis, or other
    common law or statutory remedy.
    Seeking to set aside or correct judgment or sentence and error
    not finally litigated or waived
    (b) A person may begin a proceeding under this title if:
    (1) the person seeks to set aside or correct the judgment
    or sentence; and
    (2) the alleged error has not been previously and finally
    litigated or waived in the proceeding resulting in the conviction
    or in any other proceeding that the person has taken to secure
    relief from the person’s conviction.
    § 7-103. Filing of petitions
    One petition for each trial or sentence
    (a) For each trial or sentence, a person may file only one
    petition for relief under this title.
    Time of filing petition
    (b) Unless extraordinary cause is shown, a petition under this
    subtitle may not be filed more than 10 years after the sentence
    was imposed.”
    The Court denied the Motion for Modification or Reduction of Sentence. This
    timely appeal followed.
    II.
    Before this Court, appellant argues that when a belated Motion for Modification of
    Sentence is timely filed, Rule 4-345 cannot divest the court of its authority to modify the
    6
    sentence even if a modification hearing is not held within five years of the original
    sentencing date. Specifically, appellant contends that a proper belatedly-filed motion for
    modification of sentence renews the five-year limitation for ruling on the motion.
    Appellant points out that a conflict exists between the five-year limitation for
    reconsideration in Rule 4-345 and § 7-103(b), which allows certain postconviction
    proceedings to be filed within ten years after the sentence was imposed or longer if
    “extraordinary cause is shown.”
    The State argues that the trial court determined correctly that it did not have
    authority under Rule 4-345(e) to modify appellant’s sentence more than five years after the
    original sentence. Specifically, the State argues that appellant was made whole by the
    postconviction court’s grant of relief; that he was granted the right to file a belated motion
    for postconviction relief and he did so, with four months remaining under Rule 4-345(e)
    for the court’s consideration of the motion.
    III.
    We address the State’s argument that the trial court did not have jurisdictional
    authority to modify appellant’s sentence more than five years after imposition of the
    original sentence. It appears that the trial court dismissed the motion because, although the
    court granted appellant the right to file a belated motion to reconsider sentence and he filed
    the motion within the Rule’s five-year period, the court determined that it lacked the power,
    or jurisdiction, to entertain the motion outside of the five years.
    7
    We hold that the trial court retained fundamental jurisdiction to rule on the belated
    Motion for Modification of Sentence. At common law, Maryland trial courts possessed
    the inherent authority to modify judgments in both criminal and civil cases. Chertkov v.
    State, 
    335 Md. 161
    , 170 (1994). The inherent power of the court can be described as
    follows:
    “In order to accomplish the purposes for which they are
    created, courts must also possess powers. From time
    immemorial, certain powers have been conceded to courts
    because they are courts. Such powers have been conceded
    because without them they could neither maintain their dignity,
    transact their business, nor accomplish the purposes of their
    existence. These powers are called inherent powers . . . ‘The
    inherent power of the court is the power to protect itself; the
    power to administer justice . . .; the power to promulgate rules
    for its practice; and the power to provide process where none
    exists. It is true that the judicial power of this court was created
    by the Constitution, but upon coming into being under the
    Constitution, this court came into being with inherent
    powers.’”
    State v. Jones, 
    451 Md. 680
    , 691–92 (2017) (quoting State v. Cannon, 
    221 N.W. 603
    , 603–
    04 (Wis. 1928)). The common law authority to modify a judgment existed only during the
    term of court at which the judgment was entered. State v. Butler, 
    72 Md. 98
    , 100–01
    (1890). This common law principle was changed by Rule 744c, which empowered a trial
    court to modify a sentence within ninety days of either the imposition of that sentence, or
    the receipt of a mandate issued by the Court of Appeals or the Court of Special Appeals.
    Edwardsen v. State, 
    220 Md. 82
    , 88 (1959). As amended, the successor to that original
    rule is current Rule 4-345(b). Greco v. State, 
    347 Md. 423
    , 427–28 (1997).
    8
    Exercising the court’s inherent authority is not a path to circumnavigate procedural
    rules regarding sentence modification. Rather, it is a means to orderly administer those
    rules.    In the present case, appellant’s right to have effective assistance of counsel
    “extended beyond the revocation hearing and encompassed, at the least, that period after
    the hearing during which the court maintained revisory power over the case and could have
    entertained a motion for modification” under Rule 4-345. State v. Flansburg, 
    345 Md. 694
    ,
    697 (1997).
    The Uniform Postconviction Procedure Act, § 7-103(b), allows a convicted person
    to begin a proceeding claiming ineffective assistance of counsel. If the claim is based upon
    counsel’s failure to file a timely requested motion to reconsider sentence, the petition may
    effect the modification of the sentence. Section 7-103(b) provides for a 10-year filing
    period. Rule 4-345 allows only five years after sentencing for sentence modification. The
    current situation presents a potential conflict between enactments of the judicial and
    legislative branches. Thus, it appears, at least facially, that the statute adopted by the
    Legislature and the rule promulgated by the Court of Appeals are inconsistent. If they were
    actually inconsistent, we would apply the later adopted. Md. Const., Art. IV, §18(a); 66
    Op. Md. A.G. 80 (1981). If possible, however, we prefer to harmonize rather than find
    inconsistency. See Savage Manufacturing Co. v. Magne, 
    154 Md. 46
    , 54 (1927). Here, by
    properly interpreting the law and the rule, the facial inconsistency disappears and we find
    that, in the circumstances of this case, we can apply both together.
    9
    In construing a statute, our primary goal is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of
    the Legislature. Maryland-Nat’l Capital Park & Planning Comm’n v. Anderson, 
    395 Md. 172
    , 182 (2006). We have often stated that “our primary goal is always to discern the
    legislative purpose, the ends to be accomplished, or the evils to be remedied by a particular
    provision, be it statutory, constitutional or part of the Rules.” Evans v. State, 
    420 Md. 391
    ,
    400 (2011). We look first to the plain language of the statute, Phillips v. State, 
    451 Md. 180
    , 196 (2017), viewed in the “context of the statutory scheme to which it belongs.”
    Brown v. State, 
    454 Md. 546
    , 551 (2017). We presume, moreover, that the General
    Assembly “intends its enactments to operate together as a consistent and harmonious body
    of law, and, thus, we seek to reconcile and harmonize the parts of a statute, to the extent
    possible consistent with the statute’s object and scope.” State v. Bey, 
    452 Md. 255
    , 266
    (2017). We do that “by first looking to the normal, plain meaning of the language of the
    statute, reading the statute as a whole to ensure that no word, clause, sentence or phrase is
    rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless or nugatory.” Evans, 420 Md. at 400.
    When a statute’s language is “clear and unambiguous, we need not look beyond the
    statute’s provisions and our analysis ends.” Phillips, 451 Md. at 197. Yet, it is also “settled
    that the purpose of the plain meaning rule is to ascertain and carry out the real legislative
    intent.” Allen v. State, 
    402 Md. 59
    , 73 (2007).
    To assist us in interpreting Rule 4-345, we look to its federal counterpart, Federal
    Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rule 35, which permits a trial court a reasonable time beyond
    the prescribed period in which to consider a timely filed motion to modify sentence. There
    are any number of reasons it may be impossible or impractical for a judge to act promptly
    10
    upon a motion for reduction of sentence filed with the court before expiration of the five-
    year period, including a belated motion for modification being granted toward the end of
    the original period of review. In United States v. Stollings, 
    516 F.2d 1287
     (4th Cir. 1975),
    the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit explained appellant’s dilemma
    as follows:
    “In such instances, the time required for the court’s
    consideration and action upon the motion is wholly beyond the
    control of the convicted defendant. He has no means of
    predicting with any assurance whether the court’s need of time
    to reconsider and act upon his motion will be for one week, two
    weeks, four weeks, or two months, and if delay flows from the
    incapacity, the absence or the preoccupation of the judge, its
    consequences should not be visited upon the prisoner.”
    
    Id.
     at 1288–89.
    In the case before us, a strong factor is that appellant timely filed a belated motion
    for modification, but the lower court did not set an initial hearing date on the motion until
    after the expiration of five years from the imposition of the original sentence. In a perfect
    world, a court should set the hearing within the five-year period, but we know courts are
    busy, and if a court fails to do so, the consequence should not be held against the defendant.
    On the other hand, the defendant and counsel have an obligation once the motion is filed
    within the five-year period, to make best efforts to ensure the hearing is heard in a timely
    manner. All we are saying is that the court has jurisdiction over the motion, but it is within
    the discretion of the trial court to consider the totality of the circumstances and determine
    whether to hear the motion on its merits.
    11
    The conflict in the five-year rule for hearing the matter in regard to Rule 4-345 does
    not remove the court’s power to entertain the motion. The fundamental jurisdiction of a
    court is “the power residing in such court to determine judicially a given action,
    controversy, or question presented to it for decision.” Fooks’ Executors v. Ghingher, 
    172 Md. 612
    , 621 (1937). “‘Fundamental jurisdiction,’ as we now use that term, is the power
    to act with regard to a subject matter which ‘is conferred by the sovereign authority which
    organizes the court, and is to be sought for in the general nature of its powers, or in authority
    specially conferred.’” Pulley v. State, 
    287 Md. 406
    , 416 (1980) (quoting Cooper v.
    Reynolds, 
    77 U.S. 308
    , 316 (1870)).
    The circuit court concluded that the five-year limitation in Rule 4-345 was a
    jurisdictional limitation that removed the matter from the court’s power to hear the motion
    and to consider the reasons for the delay outside of the five years of review. Because the
    court had fundamental jurisdiction and discretion, which it did not exercise, we remand
    this case to that court to consider whether to entertain the Motion for Modification of
    Sentence and to consider the merits of the motion.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR BALTIMORE CITY VACATED.
    CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT
    FOR     FURTHER       PROCEEDINGS
    CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION.
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE MAYOR AND
    CITY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE.
    12