Theodore Scott v. State of Maryland, No. 91, September Term, 2016
PROHIBITION ON DOUBLE JEOPARDY – PLEA OF AUTREFOIS ACQUIT –
DOCTRINE OF COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL – FIFTH AMENDMENT –
COMMON LAW – ENHANCED SENTENCES – PRIOR CONVICTIONS FOR
CRIME OF VIOLENCE – RESENTENCING – Court of Appeals held that, where
appellate court vacates enhanced sentence due to insufficient evidence of required prior
conviction, neither plea of autrefois acquit nor doctrine of collateral estoppel bars trial
court from reimposing enhanced sentence based on same prior conviction. Court
concluded that, where appellate court vacates sentence to which another sentence is
consecutive and remands for resentencing without vacating consecutive sentence, trial
court cannot make new sentence concurrent with non-vacated consecutive sentence.
Circuit Court for Prince George’s County
Case No. CT120132A
Argued: May 5, 2017
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 91
September Term, 2016
______________________________________
THEODORE SCOTT
v.
STATE OF MARYLAND
______________________________________
Barbera, C.J.
Greene
Adkins
McDonald
Watts
Hotten
Getty,
JJ.
______________________________________
Opinion by Watts, J.
______________________________________
Filed: July 10, 2017
Both the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and the common
law of Maryland provide for a prohibition on double jeopardy. A plea of autrefois acquit
is a common-law plea in which a defendant alleges to have been previously acquitted of an
offense, and, as a result, that he or she may not be tried again. See Scriber v. State, 437
Md. 399, 403, 86 A.3d 1260, 1262 (2014).1 Under a valid plea of autrefois acquit, the
State cannot reprosecute a defendant after an acquittal. The doctrine of collateral estoppel
is a common-law doctrine that, in a criminal case, prohibits “the relitigation of an issue of
ultimate fact that has been decided in a defendant’s favor.” Scriber, 437 Md. at 403, 86
A.3d at 1262. Under the doctrine of collateral estoppel, the State cannot relitigate an issue
of fact that has been decided in a defendant’s favor.
This case requires us to determine whether a plea of autrefois acquit or the doctrine
of collateral estoppel bars a trial court from imposing at resentencing an enhanced sentence
based on a prior conviction for a crime of violence after the trial court has previously
imposed an enhanced sentence based on the same prior conviction, and an appellate court
vacated the enhanced sentence due to insufficient evidence of the prior conviction.
In the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County (“the circuit court”), a jury found
Theodore Scott (“Scott”), Petitioner, guilty of, among other crimes, attempted robbery with
a dangerous weapon, use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence, and
conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon. The State contended that Scott
“Autrefois acquit” means “previously acquitted.” See Autrefois Acquit, Black’s
1
Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).
was subject to Md. Code Ann., Crim. Law (2002, 2012 Repl. Vol.) (“CR”) § 14-101(d),
which provided for an enhanced sentence for a defendant who was convicted of a third
crime of violence after having been convicted of two crimes of violence.2 At sentencing,
the prosecutor offered certified copies of two prior convictions pertaining to Scott, a first-
degree assault in Maryland and an aggravated assault in the District of Columbia, as well
2
CR § 14-101(d) stated:
(1) Except as provided in subsection (g) of this section, on conviction for a
third time of a crime of violence, a person shall be sentenced to imprisonment
for the term allowed by law but not less than 25 years, if the person:
(i) has been convicted of a crime of violence on two prior separate
occasions:
1. in which the second or succeeding crime is committed after
there has been a charging document filed for the preceding occasion;
and
2. for which the convictions do not arise from a single incident;
and
(ii) has served at least one term of confinement in a correctional
facility as a result of a conviction of a crime of violence.
(2) The court may not suspend all or part of the mandatory 25-year sentence
required under this subsection.
(3) A person sentenced under this subsection is not eligible for parole except
in accordance with the provisions of § 4-305 [(Parole)] of the Correctional
Services Article.
In 2013, without making any substantive amendments, the General Assembly
recodified CR § 14-101(d) as Md. Code Ann., Crim. Law (2002, 2012 Repl. Vol., 2013
Supp.) § 14-101(c). See 2013 Md. Laws 2321 (Vol. III, Ch. 156, S.B. 276).
In this case, CR § 14-101(d) was effective during the original sentencing
proceeding, and the amended statute was effective during the resentencing proceeding. For
consistency, we refer only to CR § 14-101(d).
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as the statement of charges for the aggravated assault. The circuit court found that Scott
had two prior convictions for crimes of violence, and imposed an enhanced sentence of
twenty-five years of imprisonment, without the possibility of parole, for attempted robbery
with a dangerous weapon. The circuit court imposed a sentence of ten years of
imprisonment, with all but five years suspended, followed by five years of supervised
probation, for use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence, consecutive to
the sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon, and a sentence of ten years
of imprisonment, with all but five years suspended, for conspiracy to commit robbery with
a dangerous weapon, consecutive to the other two sentences.
The Court of Special Appeals vacated the twenty-five-year sentence for attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon and remanded for resentencing, concluding that the
evidence was insufficient to support the circuit court’s determination that the conviction
for aggravated assault in the District of Columbia constituted a conviction for a crime of
violence under CR § 14-101(a). The Court of Special Appeals did not vacate the sentences
for use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence and conspiracy to commit
robbery with a dangerous weapon, which the circuit court had imposed consecutively.
On remand, the State sought to have the circuit court reimpose the enhanced
sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon. Scott opposed the State’s
attempt to seek an enhanced sentence, contending that the imposition of such a sentence
would violate the prohibition on double jeopardy. At the resentencing proceeding, the
circuit court admitted into evidence a transcript of Scott’s guilty plea for aggravated assault
in the District of Columbia, and again found that Scott had two prior convictions for crimes
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of violence. The circuit court again sentenced Scott to twenty-five years of imprisonment
for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon.
Scott’s counsel requested that the circuit court make the new sentence for attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon concurrent with the two existing sentences. The circuit
court responded that it lacked the discretion to do so. As such, the circuit court reimposed
the enhanced sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon, with the sentences
for use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence and conspiracy to commit
robbery with a dangerous weapon remaining ordered to be served consecutively.
Before us, Scott contends that the circuit court violated the principles of autrefois
acquit and collateral estoppel by readjudicating the issue of whether he had the requisite
prior convictions for an enhanced sentence. Additionally, Scott argues that the circuit court
erred in concluding that it lacked the discretion to impose the new sentence for attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon to be concurrent with the two existing sentences.
An examination of the Supreme Court’s and this Court’s case law leads to the
conclusion that, where an appellate court determines that the evidence was insufficient to
establish a requisite prior conviction as a basis for an enhanced sentence and vacates the
enhanced sentence, the appellate court’s determination does not preclude a trial court from
determining at resentencing that the same prior conviction satisfies the requirement for an
enhanced sentence.
We hold that: (I) where an appellate court vacates an enhanced sentence due to
insufficient evidence of a requisite prior conviction, neither the plea of autrefois acquit nor
the doctrine of collateral estoppel bars a trial court from imposing an enhanced sentence at
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resentencing based on the same prior conviction; and (II) where an appellate court vacates
a sentence to which another sentence has been ordered to be consecutive and remands for
resentencing without vacating the consecutive sentence, the trial court may not make the
new sentence concurrent with the non-vacated consecutive sentence.
BACKGROUND
Charges and Trial
The State charged Scott with attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon,
attempted robbery, first- and second-degree assault, use of a handgun in the commission
of a crime of violence, wearing or carrying a handgun, and conspiracy to commit robbery
with a dangerous weapon.
At trial, as a witness for the State, Detective Stephen Johnson of the Prince George’s
County Police Department testified that, on December 23, 2011, at approximately 8 p.m.,
he and another detective began surveilling the 7-Eleven at 2310 Varnum Street in Mount
Rainier from an unmarked police vehicle in an adjacent parking lot. Shortly after 2 a.m.
on December 24, 2011, two men walked to the side of the 7-Eleven, spoke to each other,
and pulled ski masks over their heads. The taller of the two men pulled out a silver
handgun, and the shorter man pulled out a black handgun. The men ran to the front of the
7-Eleven and pulled on the front door handles, but the front door was locked. The men
pointed the handguns at the employees inside the 7-Eleven, but the employees did not
unlock the front door. The shorter man ran toward the back of the 7-Eleven, and the taller
man ran through the parking lot, turned onto Russell Avenue, and got into the front
passenger seat of a vehicle whose engine was running. The detectives and other law
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enforcement officers chased the vehicle until it ultimately crashed in the District of
Columbia.
Detective Johnson provided a description of the shorter man to another detective.
Later, Detective Johnson learned that a patrol unit had stopped someone who matched the
shorter man’s description at 2208 Queens Chapel Road, which is on the street that is
directly behind the 7-Eleven. At trial, Detective Johnson identified Scott as the shorter
man who had attempted to enter the 7-Eleven with a black handgun.
A jury found Scott guilty of all charges.3
Original Sentencing Proceeding
After trial, but before the sentencing proceeding, the State filed a Notice of
Enhanced Penalty (Crime of Violence), contending that Scott was subject to a mandatory
minimum sentence of twenty-five years of imprisonment, without the possibility of parole,
under CR § 14-101(d). According to the State, Scott had been convicted of two prior
crimes of violence: first-degree assault in Maryland, and aggravated assault in the District
of Columbia.4 The District of Columbia conviction resulted from a guilty plea.
3
Scott filed a Motion for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict, which the circuit
court granted as to first-degree assault.
4
DC Code § 22-404.1(a) (2017) provides that a person commits aggravated assault
if:
(1) By any means, that person knowingly or purposely causes serious bodily
injury to another person; or
(2) Under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to human life, that
person intentionally or knowingly engages in conduct which creates a grave
risk of serious bodily injury to another person, and thereby causes serious
bodily injury.
-6-
Scott filed a motion to strike the notice of enhanced penalties, contending that the
conviction for aggravated assault in the District of Columbia did not constitute a conviction
for a crime of violence under CR § 14-101(a). Specifically, Scott argued that the elements
of aggravated assault under District of Columbia law were not the same as the elements of
first-degree assault under Maryland law. Scott pointed out that, although first-degree
assault is identified as a crime of violence under CR § 14-101(a)(19), CR § 14-101(a) does
not include aggravated assault in its list of crimes of violence. Additionally, Scott
maintained that CR § 14-101(a) does not provide that a conviction in another jurisdiction
is to be considered a qualifying conviction if it is based on conduct that would have been a
crime of violence if the defendant had committed it in Maryland. Scott did not dispute that
he had been convicted of a separate first-degree assault offense in Maryland.
At the sentencing proceeding, after the State offered certified copies of Scott’s prior
convictions, the circuit court continued the sentencing proceeding to engage in additional
research. When the sentencing proceeding resumed, the prosecutor argued that, contrary
to Scott’s position, a conviction in another jurisdiction is a qualifying prior conviction
under CR § 14-101(d) if the conviction is based on conduct that would have been a crime
of violence if the defendant had committed it in Maryland. To establish that the conviction
for aggravated assault in the District of Columbia was based on conduct that would have
been first-degree assault if Scott had committed the offense in Maryland, the prosecutor
advised that the statement of charges from the District of Columbia indicated that Scott
had stomped on a person’s head until the person lost consciousness. The prosecutor argued
that, by stomping a person into unconsciousness, Scott had caused serious physical injury,
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and engaged in conduct that would have been first-degree assault if it had occurred in
Maryland.
The circuit court determined that the conviction for aggravated assault in the District
of Columbia constituted a conviction for a crime of violence under CR § 14-101(d). The
circuit court sentenced Scott to: twenty-five years of imprisonment, without the possibility
of parole, for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon; ten years of imprisonment, with
all but five years suspended, followed by five years of supervised probation, for use of a
handgun in the commission of a crime of violence, consecutive to the sentence for
attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon; and ten years of imprisonment, with all but
five years suspended, for conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon,
consecutive to the other two sentences. The circuit court merged the remaining convictions
for sentencing purposes.
First Opinion of the Court of Special Appeals
Scott noted an appeal. In an unreported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals
affirmed the convictions, but vacated the sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous
weapon and remanded for resentencing. The Court of Special Appeals held that the State
had failed to prove that the conviction for aggravated assault in the District of Columbia
constituted a conviction for a crime of violence under CR § 14-101(d). The Court of
Special Appeals concluded that the statement of charges for the aggravated assault did not
constitute proof of the conduct that was the basis for the conviction because the facts given
in support of the guilty plea may have been different from the facts in the statement of
charges. The Court of Special Appeals determined that a remand for resentencing was
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warranted, relying on Maryland Rule 8-604(d)(2), which states: “In a criminal case, if the
appellate court reverses the judgment for error in the sentence or sentencing proceeding,
the Court shall remand the case for resentencing.” The Court of Special Appeals’s mandate
stated, in pertinent part: “SENTENCE ON COUNT 1 [(ATTEMPTED ROBBERY WITH
A DANGEROUS WEAPON)] VACATED AND THE CASE IS REMANDED FOR
RESENTENCING. ALL JUDGMENTS OTHERWISE AFFIRMED.”
Resentencing Proceeding
On remand, in a letter to Scott’s counsel that was filed with the circuit court, the
prosecutor advised that the State again intended to request an enhanced sentence, and
attached the transcript of Scott’s guilty plea proceeding in the District of Columbia.5
Scott filed a Response to Notice of Enhanced Penalties, contending that the
conviction for aggravated assault in the District of Columbia did not constitute a conviction
for a crime of violence under CR § 14-101(d) because the statement of facts at Scott’s
guilty plea proceeding did not establish that Scott intentionally caused injury to the victim.
Scott also argued that the Double Jeopardy Clause and the prohibition on double jeopardy
under the common law of Maryland barred the State from seeking an enhanced sentence
on remand.
5
The transcript of Scott’s guilty plea proceeding in the District of Columbia reveals
that the prosecutor provided the following facts in support of the guilty plea. Scott picked
a victim’s jacket up off the ground, and told the victim to remove anything that he wanted
from his jacket. The victim refused to give up his jacket and a man named Calvin Mason
started punching the victim. Scott began punching the victim as well. After the victim fell
to the ground, both Scott and Mason stomped on the victim’s face and body. The victim
lost consciousness and suffered bruising, subdural bleeding, and a fracture of the left orbital
bone.
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At the resentencing proceeding, the circuit court admitted into evidence the
transcript of Scott’s guilty plea proceeding in the District of Columbia, and determined that
the conviction for aggravated assault was the equivalent of a conviction for first-degree
assault under CR § 14-101(a), i.e., a crime of violence.
As to whether the enhanced sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous
weapon would be imposed consecutive to or concurrent with the two existing sentences,
the following exchange occurred:
[PROSECUTOR]: Your Honor, just before you hear from [Scott], Counts 5
[(use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence)] and 7
[(conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon)] can’t -- those
aren’t here for re-sentencing, so those cannot be changed. I think that the
only thing that you can sentence on is the [twenty-five] mandatory without
parole[, which was for Count 1 (attempted robbery with a dangerous
weapon)].
The reason I brought the Count 5 up was because that was, in fact,
consecutive. We’re not here to change that sentence. I just wanted to make
sure that was on the record because those two counts -- those two sentences
that the Court issued remain the same, so the only thing that we’re here for
is the Count 1.
[SCOTT’S COUNSEL]: The Court is here sentencing -- the Court can make
Count 1 consecutive [to] or concurrent [with] the already existing sentences.
[PROSECUTOR]: But those sentences, Count 5 actually says --
THE COURT: The problem is, is that I didn’t make Count 1 consecutive to
the other sentences. I made the gun charge [Count 5] consecutive. And so
if I did have the discretion to make this concurrent, that would change, in
effect, the sentence on the other counts, which are not before the Court.
[SCOTT’S COUNSEL]: At the moment they’re consecutive to a sentence
that doesn’t exist. So the Court does have the power to make Count 1, which
you’re sentencing on, concurrent [with] all other sentences which already
exist in this case, and that’s what we ask the Court to do.
THE COURT: All right. Well, I disagree with you, [Scott’s counsel], but I’ll
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hear from [] Scott as to how he feels or what he wants to say at this point.
[SCOTT’S COUNSEL]: Given the Court’s rulings, the fact that the Court is
ruling it has essentially no discretion in the sentence it’s going to impose, []
Scott has nothing to add.
Following this exchange, the circuit court reimposed the original enhanced sentence
for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon—twenty-five years of imprisonment
without the possibility of parole. The circuit court noted that the other “sentence[s]
remain[ed] the same.”
Second Opinion of the Court of Special Appeals
Scott noted an appeal. The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the circuit court’s
judgment, holding that,
when a mandatory enhanced sentence for a third crime of violence is vacated
on appeal because the evidence was legally insufficient to support a finding
that one of the prior convictions was for a crime of violence, double jeopardy
[does not] bar[] the State from introducing new evidence at resentencing on
remand to show that the same prior conviction was for a crime of violence.
Scott v. State, 230 Md. App. 411, 450, 416, 148 A.3d 72, 95, 75 (2016). The Court
acknowledged that its “holding [wa]s at odds with” Bowman v. State, 314 Md. 725, 740,
552 A.2d 1303, 1310 (1989), in which this Court held that the State could not seek an
enhanced sentence on remand where an enhanced sentence was vacated due to insufficient
evidence of qualifying prior convictions. Scott, 230 Md. App. at 416, 148 A.3d at 75. The
Court of Special Appeals concluded that “Bowman was based solely on an analysis of
federal constitutional double jeopardy law that the [] Supreme Court has since rejected” in
Monge v. California, 524 U.S. 721, 734 (1998), in which the Court held “that the Double
Jeopardy Clause does not preclude retrial on a prior conviction allegation in the noncapital
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sentencing context.” Scott, 230 Md. App. at 416, 430, 148 A.3d at 75, 83.
The Court of Special Appeals explained that, in Monge, the Supreme Court
extended the holding of Almendarez-Torres v. United States, 523 U.S. 224, 226-27 (1998),
to resentencing proceedings. See Scott, 230 Md. App. at 426, 148 A.3d at 81. The Court
of Special Appeals noted that, in Almendarez-Torres, 523 U.S. at 226-27, the Supreme
Court held that the Constitution did not require the government to charge a defendant with
being subject to an enhanced sentence due to a qualifying prior conviction because the use
of a prior conviction for sentence enhancement purposes is not the same as establishing an
element of an offense. See Scott, 230 Md. App. at 425, 148 A.3d at 80-81. The Court of
Special Appeals concluded that, in light of Monge, “a failure of proof on sentencing is []
not an acquittal (or the functional equivalent of an acquittal) of the sentence that was
imposed or any greater sentence under the principle of autrefois acquit.” Scott, 230 Md.
App. at 435-36, 148 A.3d at 86-87. Before the Court of Special Appeals, Scott contended
that, in the case of Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466 (2000), the Supreme Court
indicated that it would someday overrule Almendarez-Torres and Monge. See Scott, 230
Md. App. at 428 n.4, 148 A.3d at 82 n.4. In Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 490, 489, the Supreme
Court held that, “[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the
penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury,
and proved beyond a reasonable doubt[,]” and stated that “it is arguable that Almendarez-
Torres was incorrectly decided[.]” (Footnote omitted). In response to Scott’s contention
concerning Apprendi, the Court of Special Appeals stated: “Quite apart from the fact that
we must take Supreme Court law as it is, not as it might become, we note that the Apprendi
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Court acknowledged the continued validity of Monge and Almendarez-Torres as applied
to subsequent offender sentencing statutes.” Scott, 230 Md. App. at 428 n.4, 148 A.3d at
82 n.4 (citing Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 488 n.14).
Concerning the doctrine of collateral estoppel, the Court of Special Appeals
concluded that the doctrine “applies when there has been a factual finding favorable to the
defendant that is central to his [or her] criminal liability for an offense[,]” and that “[t]he
doctrine has never been extended to apply to sentencing.” Scott, 230 Md. App. at 439, 148
A.3d at 89. The Court of Special Appeals explained that, even if the doctrine of collateral
estoppel applied to sentencing, the circuit court had not made a final adjudication, as a
matter of fact, that the aggravated assault in the District of Columbia was not a crime of
violence. See id. at 439, 148 A.3d at 89.
The Court of Special Appeals held that Scott had failed to preserve for appellate
review his contention that the circuit court erred in not making the two existing sentences
concurrent with the new sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon. See id.
at 444-46, 148 A.3d at 92-93. Specifically, the Court of Special Appeals observed that, in
the circuit court, Scott had asked that the new sentence for attempted robbery with a
dangerous weapon be imposed concurrent with the two existing sentences, as opposed to
having requested that the two existing sentences be made concurrent with the new sentence.
See id. at 444-46, 148 A.3d at 92-93. The Court of Special Appeals concluded that the
propriety of the two existing sentences having been imposed consecutively was not before
the circuit court on remand because those sentences had not been vacated. See id. at 450,
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148 A.3d at 95.6
Petition for a Writ of Certiorari
Scott petitioned for a writ of certiorari, which this Court granted, see Scott v. State,
451 Md. 579, 155 A.3d 434 (2017), raising the following four issues:
1. Where the State fails to prove the existence of a prior conviction
for purposes of imposing a mandatory sentence pursuant to [CR] § 14-101,
is the State barred from attempting to prove the prior conviction on remand
for resentencing under the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment
and/or the Maryland common law prohibition against double jeopardy?
2. If the answer to Question 1 is yes, did the Court of Special Appeals
err in holding that the State was not barred from attempting to prove the
existence of a prior conviction of [Scott] on remand for resentencing?
3. Where [Scott] was originally sentenced to a mandatory term of
twenty-five years without parole on Count 1 [(attempted robbery with a
dangerous weapon)], to ten years with all but five years suspended on Count
5 [(use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence)], consecutive
to Count 1, and to ten years with all but five years suspended on Count 7
[(conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon)], consecutive to
Count 5, and the Court of Special Appeals vacated Count 1 and remanded
for resentencing, did the [circuit] court err at resentencing in concluding that
it did not have discretion to make the sentence on Count 1 run concurrent
with the sentences on Count 5 and Count 7 (without changing the consecutive
nature of Counts 5 and 7 to each other)?
4. Did the Court of Special Appeals err in holding that the issue in
Question 3 was not preserved?
6
The Court of Special Appeals also held that the circuit court did not exceed the
scope of the remand by receiving additional evidence of the conviction for aggravated
assault in the District of Columbia, and that the additional evidence was sufficient to prove
that the aggravated assault in the District of Columbia constituted a crime of violence under
CR § 14-101(a). See Scott, 230 Md. App. at 441, 443, 148 A.3d at 90, 91. Scott does not
raise either of these issues before us.
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DISCUSSION
I. Double Jeopardy
The Parties’ Contentions
Scott contends that the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States and the prohibition on double jeopardy under the common
law of Maryland barred the State on remand from attempting to prove that his conviction
for aggravated assault in the District of Columbia constituted a crime of violence under CR
§ 14-101(a). Scott argues that the plea of autrefois acquit applies to the determination of
whether the State has established a qualifying prior conviction for purposes of an enhanced
sentence. Scott asserts that Bowman, 314 Md. at 740, 552 A.2d at 1310—in which this
Court held that the prohibition on double jeopardy barred the State from seeking an
enhanced sentence on remand after an enhanced sentence was vacated on appeal due to
insufficient evidence of qualifying prior convictions—remains good law. Scott maintains
that this Court’s holding in Bowman was based on both the Double Jeopardy Clause and
the prohibition on double jeopardy under the common law of Maryland, which this Court
may interpret to grant more protection than that given under federal law. Scott asserts that
Monge, 524 U.S. at 734—in which the Supreme Court held that, at resentencing in a
noncapital case, the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar a readjudication, for purposes of
an enhanced sentence, of the existence of a prior conviction—is no longer good law in light
of Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 490. Specifically, Scott maintains that, as a result of the Supreme
Court’s holding in Apprendi, “the holding in Monge hangs only by the thread of an
exception.”
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Scott argues that the constitutional prohibition on double jeopardy applies to the
determination of a requisite prior conviction for an enhanced sentence because the
existence of the prior conviction is essential to justifying the punishment in question. Scott
points out that, if the circuit court had found that the State failed to meet the burden of
establishing a necessary prior conviction, the State would have been unable to note an
appeal of that determination in an attempt to secure a new sentencing proceeding. Scott
asserts that the holding of the Court of Special Appeals in this case essentially gives the
State unlimited attempts to secure an enhanced sentence.
Scott maintains that the doctrine of collateral estoppel bars the State from proving
his prior conviction on remand because establishing the existence of a qualifying prior
conviction involves a factual determination. According to Scott, the Court of Special
Appeals made such a determination in his favor by concluding in the first appeal that the
evidence was insufficient to support the circuit court’s finding that he had two prior
convictions for crimes of violence.
The State responds that the constitutional prohibition on double jeopardy does not
extend to resentencing proceedings involving a sentencing enhancement under CR § 14-
101(d). The State contends that the Supreme Court’s holding in Monge, 524 U.S. at 734—
i.e., that, at resentencing in a noncapital case, the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar a
trial court from readjudicating whether a defendant has a prior conviction—unequivocally
precludes application of the prohibition against double jeopardy to resentencing, and is
dispositive here. The State points out that the prohibition against double jeopardy applies
where there has been an acquittal based on insufficient evidence, but does not apply where
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a reversal is based on an erroneous legal decision by a trial court. The State argues that
this Court’s holding in Bowman has been effectively superseded by the Supreme Court’s
holdings in Monge and Almendarez-Torres. The State asserts that, more recently, in Twigg
v. State, 447 Md. 1, 133 A.3d 1125 (2016), this Court essentially followed Monge by
holding that, where a sentence for a lesser-included crime was vacated, resentencing for a
greater-inclusive crime would not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause. The State maintains
that, even if Bowman remains good law, it is not applicable here because, in Bowman, this
Court concluded there was no evidence, either admissible or not, that was sufficient to
support the enhanced sentence—whereas, in this case, the Court of Special Appeals held
only that the statement of charges did not provide the factual basis that was used for Scott’s
guilty plea to aggravated assault in the District of Columbia.
The State contends that the plea of autrefois acquit applies to a determination as to
whether a defendant has previously been acquitted of a crime. The State argues that the
plea of autrefois acquit does not apply to the reimposition of an enhanced sentence on
remand because this is a legal determination that is made by a judge. The State asserts that
the doctrine of collateral estoppel does not apply in this case because the circuit court did
not find, as a matter of fact, that the conviction for aggravated assault in the District of
Columbia was not a conviction for a crime of violence.
Standard of Review
An appellate court reviews without deference a trial court’s conclusion as to whether
the prohibition on double jeopardy applies. See Giddins v. State, 393 Md. 1, 15, 899 A.2d
139, 147 (2006).
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The Prohibition on Double Jeopardy
The Double Jeopardy Clause states: “No person shall be . . . subject for the same
offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb[.]” U.S. Const. amend. V. Although the
Constitution of Maryland does not contain a counterpart to the Double Jeopardy Clause,
the common law of Maryland provides for a prohibition on double jeopardy. See Scriber,
437 Md. at 408, 86 A.3d at 1265. Under the prohibition on double jeopardy, a court cannot
subject a defendant to multiple trials and sentences for the same offense. See id. at 408, 86
A.3d at 1265.
The Plea of Autrefois Acquit
Generally, the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar a second prosecution for the
same offense after an appellate court reverses a conviction. See Winder v. State, 362 Md.
275, 324, 765 A.2d 97, 124 (2001). An exception to this general rule applies where the
ground for the reversal of a conviction is insufficiency of the evidence. See id. at 325, 765
A.2d at 124.
The Supreme Court created this exception in Burks v. United States, 437 U.S. 1, 18
(1978), in which the Court held that “the Double Jeopardy Clause precludes a second trial
once [a] reviewing court has found the evidence legally insufficient[.]” In Burks, id. at 3-
4, a Court of Appeals reversed a conviction on the ground that the evidence was
insufficient, and remanded to a District Court with instructions to determine whether to
issue a directed verdict of acquittal or order a new trial. The Supreme Court concluded
that the decision of the Court of Appeals functioned as an acquittal because the decision
“represented a resolution, correct or not, of some or all of the factual elements of the offense
- 18 -
charged.” Id. at 10 (brackets, citation, and internal quotation marks omitted). The Supreme
Court concluded that the Court of Appeals erred in remanding because, if the District Court
had determined that the evidence was insufficient, the District Court would have entered a
judgment of acquittal, and the defendant could not have been retried; and “it should make
no difference that the reviewing court, rather than the trial court, determined the evidence
to be insufficient[.]” Id. at 10-11 (citation and emphasis omitted). The Supreme Court
explained that its decision furthered the Double Jeopardy Clause’s purpose, which is to
deny “the [government] another opportunity to supply evidence [that] it failed to muster in
the first proceeding”—i.e., “to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an
alleged offense[.]” Id. at 11 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The Court
noted that its holding did not undermine the general rule that the Double Jeopardy Clause
does not bar a second prosecution for the same offense after a reviewing court reverses a
conviction; “reversal for trial error, as distinguished from evidentiary insufficiency, does
not constitute a decision to the effect that the government has failed to prove its case.” Id.
at 15.
In United States v. DiFrancesco, 449 U.S. 117, 139, 118-21 (1980), the Supreme
Court held that the Double Jeopardy Clause was not violated by a statute that authorized
an enhanced sentence for “dangerous special offenders” and authorized the United States
to appeal from an imposition of a sentence under certain circumstances in cases in which
the United States had sought the enhanced sentence. In DiFrancesco, id. at 122, a District
Court sentenced a defendant to concurrent terms of imprisonment as a dangerous special
offender. The defendant appealed from the convictions, and the United States appealed
- 19 -
from the sentences. See id. at 123. A Court of Appeals affirmed the convictions, but
dismissed the United States’s appeal on double jeopardy grounds. See id. The Supreme
Court reversed and remanded. See id. at 143.
The Court began its analysis by explaining: “Where a Government appeal presents
no threat of successive prosecutions, the Double Jeopardy Clause is not offended.” Id. at
132 (brackets, citation, and internal quotation marks omitted). The Court explained that
the United States’s ability to appeal from a sentence did not necessarily violate the Double
Jeopardy Clause “just because its success might deprive [a defendant] of the benefit of a
more lenient sentence.” Id. The Court concluded that a sentence lacks “constitutional
finality and conclusiveness similar to that which attaches to a jury’s verdict of acquittal[,]”
and observed that the plea of autrefois acquit was a “protection[] against retrial” rather
than resentencing. Id. at 132, 133. The Court explained that the Double Jeopardy Clause’s
purpose—to avoid “repeated attempts to convict”—has “no significant application” to the
United States’s ability to appeal from a sentence, as such an appeal “does not involve a
retrial or approximate the ordeal of a trial on the basic issue of guilt or innocence.” Id. at
136. The Court rejected the idea that an imposition of a “sentence is an ‘implied acquittal’
of any greater sentence.” Id. at 133 (citation omitted). The Court also explained that “[t]he
Double Jeopardy Clause does not provide the defendant with the right to know at any
specific moment in time what the exact limit of [the defendant’s] punishment will turn out
to be.” Id. at 137.
In Bullington v. Missouri, 451 U.S. 430, 444-45, 432 (1981), the Supreme Court
held that the Double Jeopardy Clause bars a second capital sentencing proceeding at which
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the government must prove certain elements before the death penalty may be imposed. In
Bullington, id. at 435-36, the State of Missouri sought the death penalty, but a jury
sentenced the defendant to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The
defendant moved for a new trial, which the trial court granted on the ground that the
Supreme Court had struck down Missouri’s laws allowing women to be automatically
excused from jury duty. See id. at 436. The State of Missouri filed a notice of intent to
seek the death penalty again, and the defendant moved to strike the notice on the ground
that the Double Jeopardy Clause barred the State from seeking the death penalty again
because the jury had not sentenced the defendant to death. See id. at 436. The trial court
agreed with the defendant and ruled that the State could not seek the death penalty again;
the Supreme Court of Missouri ruled that the State could seek the death penalty again; and
the Supreme Court of the United States reversed and remanded. See id. at 436-37, 446-47.
The Court began its analysis by acknowledging:
The imposition of a particular sentence usually is not regarded as an
“acquittal” of any more severe sentence that could have been imposed. The
Court generally has concluded, therefore, that the Double Jeopardy Clause
imposes no absolute prohibition against the imposition of a harsher sentence
at retrial after a defendant has succeeded in having [the defendant’s] original
conviction set aside.
Id. at 438 (citations omitted). The Court distinguished Bullington, the case at hand, from
previous cases in which it had held that the Double Jeopardy Clause did not apply to
sentencing on the ground that, in Bullington, the sentencing proceeding constituted “a trial
on the issue of punishment” because, rather than having “unbounded discretion to select
an appropriate punishment from a wide range authorized by statute[,]” the jury had two
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alternatives (death or life imprisonment without the possibility of parole); additionally, the
jury could not impose the death penalty unless the State met its burden of proving certain
facts beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. at 438. The Court explained that Bullington was
subject to Burks’s “insufficient evidence” exception to the general rule that the government
may prosecute a defendant a second time after an appellate court reverses a conviction.
See Bullington, 451 U.S. at 444-45.
In Lockhart v. Nelson, 488 U.S. 33, 34 (1988), the Supreme Court held that the
Double Jeopardy Clause did not bar a retrial where an appellate court reversed a conviction
on the ground that the trial court erred in admitting certain evidence, and determined that
the remaining evidence was insufficient. In Nelson, id. at 34-35, the State of Arkansas
sought to have a defendant sentenced under a habitual criminal statute, which provided for
an enhanced sentence upon a fifth or subsequent conviction for a felony. At a sentencing
proceeding, the prosecutor offered certified copies of the defendant’s four prior felony
convictions; unbeknownst to the prosecutor and the defendant’s counsel, the Governor had
pardoned the defendant as to one of the convictions. See id. at 36. A jury found that the
State had established four qualifying prior convictions, and imposed an enhanced sentence.
See id. The defendant petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus, contending that the enhanced
sentence was invalid because of the pardon. See id. at 37. A District Court agreed, and
vacated the enhanced sentence. See id. The State of Arkansas sought to have the defendant
resentenced under the habitual criminal statute, relying on a prior conviction that had not
been raised at the original sentencing proceeding. See id. The defendant argued that the
Double Jeopardy Clause barred such a resentencing. See id. The District Court agreed; a
- 22 -
Court of Appeals affirmed; and the Supreme Court reversed. See id. at 37, 33.
The Court explained that Burks dictated the result because
Burks was careful to point out that a reversal based solely on evidentiary
insufficiency has fundamentally different implications, for double jeopardy
purposes, than a reversal based on such ordinary “trial errors” as the
“incorrect receipt or rejection of evidence.” 437 U.S.[] at 14-16[]. While
the former is in effect a finding “that the government has failed to prove its
case” against the defendant, the latter “implies nothing with respect to the
guilt or innocence of the defendant,” but is simply “a determination that
[the defendant] has been convicted through a judicial process which is
defective in some fundamental respect.” Id. at 15[.]
Nelson, 488 U.S. at 40 (emphasis omitted).
The Court concluded that the trial court’s error in admitting evidence of the
conviction that was the subject of a pardon constituted trial error, as opposed to an issue of
insufficient evidence. See id. The Court pointed out that, although the trial court’s
admission of evidence of the conviction was error, the evidence—comprised of proof of
four prior convictions—was sufficient to support the enhanced sentence. See id. The Court
concluded that the Double Jeopardy Clause was not aimed at circumstances like the ones
in Nelson because, if the defendant had proven at the original sentencing proceeding that
one of the four prior convictions was the subject of a pardon, the trial court presumably
would have given the State of Arkansas the opportunity to offer evidence of another prior
conviction. See id. at 42.
In Bowman, 314 Md. at 740, 552 A.2d at 1310, this Court distinguished the Supreme
Court’s holding in Nelson and held that the State could not seek an enhanced sentence on
remand where this Court vacated an enhanced sentence due to insufficient evidence of
qualifying prior convictions. In Bowman, 314 Md. at 728, 552 A.2d at 1304, at a
- 23 -
sentencing proceeding, a prosecutor alleged, and the trial court found, that the defendant
had two prior convictions for robbery with a deadly weapon. The trial court imposed an
enhanced sentence under CR § 14-101(d)’s predecessor, Md. Code Ann., Art. 27 (1957,
1987 Repl. Vol.) § 643B(c), and the Court of Special Appeals affirmed. See Bowman, 314
Md. at 728-29, 552 A.2d at 1304. The defendant filed a motion for reconsideration,
pointing out that he had only one prior conviction for robbery with a deadly weapon; on a
separate date, the defendant had been convicted of robbery and assault with a deadly
weapon. See id. at 729, 552 A.2d at 1304. The Court of Special Appeals issued a new
opinion in which it affirmed again, reasoning that the prior convictions for robbery and
assault with a deadly weapon were based on conduct that constituted robbery with a deadly
weapon. See id. at 729, 731-32, 552 A.2d at 1304, 1305-06. This Court reversed the
judgment of the Court of Special Appeals insofar as it affirmed the enhanced sentence, and
remanded for resentencing. See id. at 741, 552 A.2d at 1310.
This Court determined that the evidence was insufficient to support a determination
that the defendant had two prior convictions for crimes of violence because the record
established only that the defendant had been convicted of one crime of violence (robbery
with a deadly weapon). See id. at 733, 552 A.2d at 1306. This Court observed that the
only evidence of prior convictions for crimes of violence were the records of the
defendant’s convictions for robbery with a deadly weapon, robbery, and assault with a
deadly weapon. See id. at 733, 552 A.2d at 1306. This Court concluded that the Court of
Special Appeals erred in inferring that the defendant had committed a second robbery with
a deadly weapon based on the circumstance that the defendant had been convicted of
- 24 -
robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. See id. at 733, 552 A.2d at 1306-07.
This Court ordered that, on remand, the State would be prohibited from again
seeking an enhanced sentence—whether on the theory that the convictions for robbery and
assault with a deadly weapon had been based on conduct that constituted robbery with a
deadly weapon, or on the basis of another prior conviction that had not been raised at the
original sentencing proceeding. See id. at 740, 552 A.2d at 1310. This Court distinguished
Nelson, 488 U.S. 33, on the ground that, in Nelson, the trial court erroneously admitted
evidence that was sufficient to prove that the defendant was subject to an enhanced
sentence; by contrast, in Bowman, the trial court “simply completely misinterpreted the
evidence[,]” and there was never evidence, whether erroneously admitted or not, that was
sufficient to prove that the defendant was subject to an enhanced sentence. Bowman, 314
Md. at 740, 552 A.2d at 1310. This Court concluded that “it [wa]s evident from Nelson
that the Burks’ exception to the general rule is applicable”; in other words, this Court
applied Burks’s “insufficient evidence” exception to the general rule that the government
may prosecute a defendant a second time after an appellate court reverses a conviction.
Bowman, 314 Md. at 740, 552 A.2d at 1310.
In Almendarez-Torres, 523 U.S. at 226, 235, the Supreme Court held that the
enhanced penalty provision of a statute making it a crime for a deported person to return
to the United States authorized an enhanced sentence, and, as such, did not create a separate
crime that the government was required to independently charge. The Court concluded
that neither the statute nor the Constitution required the government to specifically charge
a person with being subject to the enhanced penalty provision. See id. at 226-27. In
- 25 -
Almendarez-Torres, id. at 227, a defendant pled guilty to returning to the United States
after having been deported due to three convictions for aggravated felonies. At the
sentencing proceeding, the defendant contended that the trial court could not sentence him
to more than two years of imprisonment because the indictment had not mentioned the
convictions for aggravated felonies, which, the defendant argued, constituted elements of
a crime. See id. The District Court disagreed and sentenced the defendant to more than
two years of imprisonment; a Court of Appeals affirmed; and the Supreme Court did the
same. See id. at 227, 248.
As a matter of statutory interpretation, the Court concluded that Congress intended
for the subsection in question to be a sentencing provision, not a definition of a separate
crime; the Court noted that “prior commission of a serious crime[ ]is as typical a sentencing
factor as one might imagine.” See id. at 235, 230. Next, the Court rejected the defendant’s
contention that the doctrine of constitutional doubt required the Court to interpret the
subsection as a definition of a separate crime. See id. at 237-38. The Court explained that,
under the doctrine of constitutional doubt, if fairly possible, a court interprets a statute in a
way that avoids not only the conclusion that the statute is unconstitutional, but also doubts
about the statute’s constitutionality. See id. at 237. The Court concluded that the doctrine
of constitutional doubt did not apply in Almendarez-Torres because the canons of statutory
interpretation weighed heavily in favor of concluding that the subsection was a penalty
provision, not a definition of a separate crime; alternatively, even if the defendant’s
interpretation of the subsection were fairly possible, “the constitutional questions [that] he
raises, while requiring discussion, simply do not lead us to doubt gravely that Congress
- 26 -
may authorize courts to impose longer sentences upon recidivists who commit a particular
crime.” Id. at 238 (emphasis omitted). The Court stated that, if it adopted “a rule that any
significant increase in a statutory maximum sentence would trigger a constitutional
‘elements’ requirement[,]” the Court would “find it difficult to reconcile any such rule with
[the Court’s] precedent holding that the sentencing-related circumstances of recidivism are
not part of the definition of the offense for double jeopardy purposes.” Id. at 247 (citation
omitted).
In Monge, 524 U.S. at 734, the Supreme Court held that “the Double Jeopardy
Clause does not preclude retrial on a prior conviction allegation in the noncapital
sentencing context.” In Monge, id. at 724-25, a defendant was convicted of drug-related
crimes, and the State of California sought an enhanced sentence pursuant to a recidivist
statute under which a defendant who had been convicted of a “serious felony” for a second
time was subject to double the term of imprisonment to which the defendant would have
been subject otherwise. Under California law, an assault was a “serious felony” if the
defendant either inflicted great bodily injury or personally used a dangerous or deadly
weapon. See id. In Monge, id. at 725, at the sentencing proceeding, the only evidence of
the defendant’s criminal history was a record that the defendant had been convicted of
assault with a deadly weapon. The trial court found credible the prosecutor’s allegation
that the defendant had personally used a dangerous or deadly weapon—namely, a stick—
and imposed an enhanced sentence under the recidivist statute. See id. On appeal, the
State of California conceded that the evidence was insufficient to prove that the defendant
had personally inflicted great bodily injury or used a deadly weapon—i.e., that the
- 27 -
defendant had been convicted of a serious felony—but requested the opportunity to prove
the same on remand. See id. The California Court of Appeal agreed that the evidence was
insufficient, and concluded that the Double Jeopardy Clause barred the remand that the
State of California had requested. See id. at 725-26. The Supreme Court of California
reversed, and the Supreme Court of the United States affirmed. See id. at 726, 734.
The Court observed that Bullington, 451 U.S. at 432, 444-45, in which the Court
applied the Double Jeopardy Clause to a capital sentencing proceeding, “established a
narrow exception to the general rule that double jeopardy principles have no application in
the sentencing context.” Monge, 524 U.S. at 730 (citation and internal quotation marks
omitted). In Monge, id. at 731-32, the Court declined to extend Bullington to noncapital
sentencing proceedings because “the death penalty is unique in both its severity and its
finality,” and there is “acute need for reliability in capital sentencing proceedings.”
(Citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The Court “conclude[d] that Bullington’s
rationale is confined to the unique circumstances of capital sentencing and that the Double
Jeopardy Clause does not preclude retrial on a prior conviction allegation in the noncapital
sentencing context.” Monge, 524 U.S. at 734.
In a dissenting opinion, Justice Scalia agreed with the Court that the Double
Jeopardy Clause does not apply to noncapital sentencing proceedings, but opined that, in
Monge, the prior conviction constituted an element of a crime, not simply a sentencing
factor. See id. at 737 (Scalia, J., dissenting). Justice Scalia acknowledged that his position
was inconsistent with Almendarez-Torres—which, he opined, was erroneous, consistent
with his dissent in that case. See Monge, 524 U.S. at 741 (Scalia, J., dissenting);
- 28 -
Almendarez-Torres, 523 U.S. at 249 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
In Monge, 524 U.S. at 728-29, the Court further explained that, in Almendarez-
Torres, the Court “rejected an absolute rule that an enhancement constitutes an element of
the offense any time that it increases the maximum sentence to which a defendant is
exposed.” The Court stated:
Sentencing decisions favorable to the defendant, moreover, cannot
generally be analogized to an acquittal. We have held that where an appeals
court overturns a conviction on the ground that the prosecution proffered
insufficient evidence of guilt, that finding is comparable to an acquittal, and
the Double Jeopardy Clause precludes a second trial. See Burks [], 437 U.S.
[at] 16[]. Where a similar failure of proof occurs in a sentencing proceeding,
however, the analogy is inapt. The pronouncement of sentence simply does
not “have the qualities of constitutional finality that attend an acquittal.” []
DiFrancesco, 449 U.S. [at] 134[]; see also Bullington, [451 U.S.] at 438[]
(“The imposition of a particular sentence usually is not regarded as an
‘acquittal’ of any more severe sentence that could have been imposed”).
Monge, 524 U.S. at 729.
Subsequently, in Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 469, 490, the Supreme Court held that, under
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, “[o]ther than the fact of a prior
conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory
maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” In
Apprendi, id. at 469-70, a defendant and the State of New Jersey entered into a plea
agreement under which the defendant would plead guilty to two counts of second-degree
possession of a firearm for an unlawful purpose and one count of third-degree unlawful
possession of an antipersonnel bomb, and the State of New Jersey would nol pros the
remaining charges and would have the right to request an enhanced sentence for one of the
offenses on the ground that the defendant had acted with racial bias. Under New Jersey
- 29 -
law and pursuant to the plea agreement, if the defendant had acted with racial bias, he was
subject to up to a total of thirty years of imprisonment, with a fifteen-year period of
ineligibility for parole; otherwise, the defendant was subject to up to a total of twenty years
of imprisonment. See id. at 470. A trial court accepted the guilty plea, found that the
defendant had acted with racial bias, and imposed an enhanced sentence. See id. at 470-
71. On appeal, the defendant contended that the Due Process Clause required the State to
prove to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt the fact that he had acted with racial bias. See
id. at 471. The New Jersey appellate courts affirmed, and the Supreme Court reversed.
See id. at 471-72, 474.
The Court explained that, as to the two separate acts that New Jersey had
criminalized—i.e., unlawfully possessing a firearm and acting with racial bias—“[m]erely
using the label ‘sentence enhancement’ to describe the latter surely does not provide a
principled basis for treating them differently.” Id. at 476. The Court observed: “Any
possible distinction between an ‘element’ of a felony offense and a ‘sentencing factor’ was
unknown . . . during the years surrounding our Nation’s founding.” Id. at 478. The Court
stated that, although “it is arguable that Almendarez-Torres was incorrectly decided,” it
was not necessary to revisit Almendarez-Torres; instead, the Court deemed Almendarez-
Torres “a narrow exception to the general rule[.]” Id. at 489-90 (footnote omitted). In
other words, although, generally speaking, any fact that increases the maximum possible
sentence constitutes an element of a crime—and thus must be proven beyond a reasonable
doubt—Almendarez-Torres created an exception for the fact of a prior conviction. See
Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 488, 489-90.
- 30 -
In Twigg, 447 Md. at 21, 5, 133 A.3d at 1137, 1128, this Court held that the Double
Jeopardy Clause did not bar resentencing for child abuse on remand where a trial court
erroneously sentenced a defendant for both child abuse and second-degree rape instead of
merging the conviction for the latter with the conviction for the former for sentencing
purposes. In Twigg, id. at 8, 133 A.3d at 1130, a jury found the defendant guilty of child
abuse, second-degree rape, third-degree sexual offense, and incest, and the trial court
sentenced the defendant for all four crimes. On appeal, the defendant contended that the
trial court should have merged the convictions for second-degree rape, third-degree sexual
offense, and incest with the conviction for child abuse for sentencing purposes. See id. at
8, 133 A.3d at 1130. The Court of Special Appeals agreed, but vacated the sentences for
all four crimes—including child abuse, the sentence for which the defendant had not
challenged—and remanded with instructions to resentence the defendant for child abuse.
See id. at 9, 133 A.3d at 1130. This Court affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded
for resentencing. See id. at 30, 133 A.3d at 1143.
Notably, this Court held that the Court of Special Appeals had the authority to
remand with instructions to resentence the defendant for child abuse. See id. at 10, 133
A.3d at 1131. This Court rejected the defendant’s contention that such resentencing would
violate the Double Jeopardy Clause or be inconsistent with due process. See id. at 21, 133
A.3d at 1137. Citing DiFrancesco, 449 U.S. at 132, this Court explained: “[R]esentencing
does not offend double jeopardy principles.” Twigg, 447 Md. at 21, 133 A.3d at 1137.
The Doctrine of Collateral Estoppel
“The Supreme Court has recognized that the Double Jeopardy Clause incorporates
- 31 -
the doctrine of collateral estoppel.” Odum v. State, 412 Md. 593, 603, 989 A.2d 232, 238
(2010) (citing Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436, 444-45 (1970)). Under the doctrine of
collateral estoppel, which applies to both civil cases and criminal cases, “when an issue of
ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot
again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.” Odum, 412 Md. at 603,
989 A.2d at 238 (quoting Ashe, 397 U.S. at 443) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Unlike the plea of autrefois acquit, the doctrine of collateral estoppel “is not based
on two offenses being the same”; instead, it is based on two offenses “having a common
necessary factual component.” Apostoledes v. State, 323 Md. 456, 463, 593 A.2d 1117,
1121 (1991). If a trial court or jury finds in a defendant’s favor as to a common necessary
factual issue at a trial, then “the State may not relitigate the same factual issue” at a
subsequent trial. Id. at 464, 593 A.2d at 1121. The doctrine of collateral estoppel usually,
but not always, arises in cases in which defendants have been acquitted. See State v.
Woodson, 338 Md. 322, 331, 658 A.2d 272, 277 (1995).
Analysis
Here, we conclude that, where an appellate court vacates an enhanced sentence due
to insufficient evidence of a qualifying prior conviction, the plea of autrefois acquit and
the doctrine of collateral estoppel do not bar a trial court from reimposing an enhanced
sentence.
The plea of autrefois acquit does not apply where an appellate court vacates an
enhanced sentence and remands for resentencing because the vacation of the enhanced
sentence does not constitute an acquittal. An acquittal is “a resolution, correct or not, of
- 32 -
some or all of the factual elements of the offense charged.” Burks, 437 U.S. at 10 (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted). As the Supreme Court held in Almendarez-Torres,
523 U.S. at 226, 235, and reaffirmed in Monge, 524 U.S. at 728-29, for purposes of statutes
that authorize enhanced sentences, a qualifying prior conviction is not an element of a
crime; it is simply a sentencing factor. Where an appellate court determines that the
evidence was insufficient to establish a qualifying prior conviction, the appellate court’s
determination does not act as an acquittal or preclude a trial court from receiving additional
evidence of a qualifying prior conviction.
The Supreme Court’s holdings in Almendarez-Torres and Monge—that a qualifying
prior conviction is not an element of a crime—were not undermined by the Court’s holding
in Apprendi. Significantly, in commenting on the significance of the Supreme Court’s
holding in Apprendi, the Court of Special Appeals stated: “Quite apart from the fact that
we must take Supreme Court law as it is, not as it might become, we note that the Apprendi
Court acknowledged the continued validity of Monge and Almendarez-Torres as applied
to subsequent offender sentencing statutes.” Scott, 230 Md. App. at 428 n.4, 148 A.3d at
82 n.4 (citing Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 488 n.14).
Indeed, rather than being undercut by the Supreme Court’s holding in Apprendi, our
conclusion that the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar a trial court from reimposing an
enhanced sentence is supported by Apprendi. In Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 490, the Supreme
Court held that, “[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the
penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury,
and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” (Emphasis added). In other words, in Apprendi,
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the Court did not vitiate its holding in Almendarez-Torres, 523 U.S. at 226, and its
reaffirmance in Monge, 524 U.S. at 728-29, that a qualifying prior conviction is not an
element of a crime. Although the Court remarked in Apprendi that “it is arguable that
Almendarez-Torres was incorrectly decided,” the Court declined to revisit Almendarez-
Torres. Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 489-90 (footnote omitted). Scott is incorrect in contending
that Almendarez-Torres and Monge should not be relied upon because they are inconsistent
with Apprendi. There is no such inconsistency; to the contrary, in Apprendi, the Supreme
Court expressly acknowledged that it refrained from overruling Almendarez-Torres.7
In Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 488 n.14, the Court distinguished Monge on the ground
that Monge involved a double jeopardy issue, while Apprendi did not. Specifically, the
Court stated: “Monge was [a] recidivism case in which the question presented and the bulk
of the Court’s analysis related to the scope of double jeopardy protections in sentencing.”
Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 488 n.14. In other words, as counsel for the State in this case
remarked at oral argument, Apprendi was a Sixth Amendment case involving the right to
a jury trial, not a Fifth Amendment case involving the prohibition on double jeopardy.
Given that the two cases involved the interpretation of different constitutional provisions,
7
Similar to Apprendi, in another case on which Scott relies, Alleyne v. United States,
___ U.S. ___, 133 S. Ct. 2151, 2155, 2160 n.1 (2013), despite holding that “any fact that
increases the mandatory minimum is an ‘element’ that must be submitted to the jury[,]”
the Supreme Court expressly refrained from overruling Almendarez-Torres, stating: “In
Almendarez-Torres [], we recognized a narrow exception to this general rule for the fact of
a prior conviction. Because the parties do not contest that decision’s vitality, we do not
revisit it for purposes of our decision today.” Scott interprets this statement as an invitation
for defendants to challenge Almendarez-Torres. Regardless of whether Scott’s
interpretation is correct, the fact remains that Almendarez-Torres has not been overruled.
- 34 -
absent express direction by the Supreme Court that its holding in Apprendi was intended
to abrogate its holding in Monge—i.e., that the prohibition on double jeopardy does not
apply to resentencing proceedings in recidivist cases—Apprendi does not vitiate Monge.
Plainly, the Supreme Court’s holdings in Almendarez-Torres, Monge, and, indeed,
Apprendi are at odds with Bowman, 314 Md. at 740, 552 A.2d at 1310, in which this Court
earlier held that the prohibition on double jeopardy barred the State from seeking an
enhanced sentence on remand. This Court decided Bowman in 1989—i.e., before the
Supreme Court held in Almendarez-Torres in 1998, and reaffirmed in Monge in the same
year, that the existence of a qualifying prior conviction is strictly a sentencing factor, not
an element of a crime. Bowman also predates Apprendi, in which the Supreme Court did
not overrule its holding in Almendarez-Torres. This case presents the first opportunity for
this Court to review Bowman in light of the Supreme Court’s holdings in Almendarez-
Torres, Monge, and Apprendi.
Recognizing that Bowman is contradicted by the subsequent Supreme Court cases
of Almendarez-Torres and Monge, and that Apprendi does not abrogate either case, we
conclude that Bowman has been superseded by significant changes in double jeopardy law.
Under the doctrine of stare decisis, an appellate court may overrule a case that either was
“clearly wrong and contrary to established principles” or “has been superseded by
significant changes in the law or facts.” Meyer v. State, 445 Md. 648, 669, 128 A.3d 147,
159 (2015) (citations omitted); see also DRD Pool Serv., Inc. v. Freed, 416 Md. 46, 64, 5
A.3d 45, 55-56 (2010).
Having determined that Bowman has been superseded by significant changes in the
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Supreme Court’s jurisprudence, we must now ascertain whether there is any basis in
Maryland common law on which Bowman survives. In Bowman, this Court did not
expressly indicate whether its holding was based on the Double Jeopardy Clause or the
common law of Maryland. Tellingly, however, in Bowman, this Court made no mention
whatsoever of the common law prohibition on double jeopardy, and rather expressly
referred to the Double Jeopardy Clause in discussing Nelson, 488 U.S. 33. See Bowman,
314 Md. at 739-40, 552 A.2d at 1309-10. In Bowman, id. at 730, 735, 739, 552 A.2d at
1305, 1308, 1309, this Court relied on Maryland case law in which, in turn, this Court
referred to the prohibition on double jeopardy. Nevertheless, in all of the cases underlying
Bowman, this Court either discussed, or issued a holding that was expressly based on, the
Double Jeopardy Clause, not the prohibition on double jeopardy under the common law of
Maryland. See id. at 735, 552 A.2d at 1308 (This Court discussed Brown v. State, 311 Md.
426, 430-31, 535 A.2d 485, 487 (1988), whose holding was expressly based on the Double
Jeopardy Clause.); Bowman, 314 Md. at 730, 552 A.2d at 1305 (This Court cited Whack
v. State, 288 Md. 137, 150, 142, 416 A.2d 265, 271, 267 (1980), appeal dismissed, 450
U.S. 990 (1981), whose holding was expressly based on the Double Jeopardy Clause, and
in which this Court mentioned the prohibition on double jeopardy under the common law
of Maryland in only one sentence.); Bowman, 314 Md. at 730, 552 A.2d at 1305 (This
Court discussed Temoney v. State, 290 Md. 251, 257 & n.4, 429 A.2d 1018, 1021 & n.4
(1981), in which this Court addressed the Supreme Court’s precedent regarding the Double
Jeopardy Clause.); Bowman, 314 Md. at 739, 552 A.2d at 1309 (This Court cited Butler v.
State, 46 Md. App. 317, 324, 416 A.2d 773, 777, cert. denied, 288 Md. 743 (1980), in
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which the Court of Special Appeals discussed the Supreme Court’s case law regarding the
Double Jeopardy Clause.).
In light of this Court’s lack of reference to the common law of Maryland, and its
discussion of case law that pertained to the Double Jeopardy Clause, it is evident that this
Court’s holding in Bowman that the prohibition on double jeopardy prevented proof of a
qualifying prior conviction on remand was based on an analysis of the Double Jeopardy
Clause. This Court’s holding in Bowman has been superseded by the Supreme Court’s
interpretation of the Double Jeopardy Clause in Almendarez-Torres, Monge, and
Apprendi. Consistent with the longstanding principle of stare decisis that authorizes
overruling a case that has been superseded by significant changes in the law, we overrule
Bowman.
We decline Scott’s invitation to extend the prohibition on double jeopardy under the
common law of Maryland beyond the limits that the Supreme Court has placed on the
Double Jeopardy Clause by holding that, after an appellate court vacates an enhanced
sentence due to insufficient evidence of a qualifying prior conviction, the plea of autrefois
acquit bars a trial court from receiving additional evidence of a qualifying prior conviction
and reimposing an enhanced sentence. Instead, we adopt the Supreme Court’s sound logic
in Almendarez-Torres and Monge—specifically, the principle that that the prohibition on
double jeopardy does not apply to the fact of a qualifying prior conviction—as applicable
to the prohibition on double jeopardy under the common law of Maryland.
Our holding does not vitiate the principle that, when seeking an enhanced sentence,
the State must establish a requisite prior conviction beyond a reasonable doubt. See Bryant
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v. State, 436 Md. 653, 671, 84 A.3d 125, 136 (2014). The standard of proof by which the
State must establish a requisite prior conviction is wholly independent of the issue of
whether the prohibition on double jeopardy bars the State from attempting to establish a
qualifying prior conviction under certain circumstances.8
Applying our holding to this case’s facts, we conclude that the plea of autrefois
acquit did not bar the circuit court from receiving additional evidence of Scott’s prior
conviction for aggravated assault in the District of Columbia. At the original sentencing
proceeding, the prosecutor introduced certified copies of Scott’s prior convictions and a
statement of charges for the aggravated assault. The circuit court found that Scott had two
prior convictions for crimes of violence, and imposed an enhanced sentence under CR §
14-101(d). The Court of Special Appeals vacated the enhanced sentence, concluding that
the evidence was insufficient to support a finding that the conviction for aggravated assault
constituted a conviction for a crime of violence, and remanded for resentencing. As
explained above, a determination by an appellate court that the evidence is insufficient to
support a finding of a qualifying prior conviction does not act as an acquittal, and does not
bar the trial court from revisiting the matter of the qualifying prior conviction. It was
entirely permissible for the circuit court, on remand, to admit into evidence a transcript of
the guilty plea proceeding in the District of Columbia, and to determine that Scott was
8
And, of course, our holding has no effect on the principle that a trial court, not a
jury, determines whether a qualifying prior conviction exists. See Md. R. 4-245(e)
(“Before sentencing and after giving the defendant an opportunity to be heard, the court
shall determine whether the defendant is a subsequent offender as specified in the notice
of the State’s Attorney.”).
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subject to an enhanced sentence.
Like the plea of autrefois acquit, the doctrine of collateral estoppel does not bar a
trial court from reimposing an enhanced sentence after an appellate court vacates an
enhanced sentence due to insufficient evidence of a qualifying prior conviction. The
doctrine of collateral estoppel precludes relitigation of a factual issue where there has been
a finding in the defendant’s favor as to the factual issue. See Apostoledes, 323 Md. at 464,
593 A.2d at 1121. The doctrine of collateral estoppel does not apply here because, at the
original sentencing proceeding, the circuit court did not find in Scott’s favor as to a factual
issue. The Court of Special Appeals did not affirm a factual finding by the circuit court
that Scott lacked the requisite prior convictions to be subject to an enhanced sentence;
rather, that Court determined that the evidence was insufficient to support the circuit
court’s finding that Scott had the requisite prior convictions to be subject to an enhanced
sentence.
We are unpersuaded by Scott’s reliance on Ashe, 397 U.S. at 439, 446, in which the
Supreme Court held that, where multiple people allegedly robbed multiple victims, and a
jury acquitted a defendant of robbing one of the victims, the doctrine of collateral estoppel
barred the government from attempting to prove, in a separate prosecution as to a different
victim, that the defendant was one of the robbers. In Ashe, the acquittal rendered the
doctrine of collateral estoppel applicable because the acquittal constituted a finding of fact
in the defendant’s favor as to whether he was indeed one of the robbers. By contrast, an
appellate court’s vacation of an enhanced sentence due to insufficient evidence of a
qualifying prior conviction is not a finding of fact; as such, the doctrine of collateral
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estoppel is inapplicable. Indeed, other than Ashe, Scott offers no case law supporting his
contention that his resentencing is barred by the doctrine of collateral estoppel, and we
know of none in which the Supreme Court or this Court has applied the doctrine of
collateral estoppel in a noncapital sentencing proceeding to preclude resentencing by a trial
court after an enhanced sentence is vacated for insufficient evidence.
For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals and hold
that the circuit court was not precluded from reimposing the enhanced sentence of twenty-
five years of imprisonment without the possibility of parole for attempted robbery with a
dangerous weapon at resentencing.
II. Concurrent Sentences
The Parties’ Contentions
Scott contends that the circuit court erred in concluding that it lacked the discretion
to impose the new sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon concurrently
with the existing sentences for use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence
and conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon. Scott argues that, on remand
for resentencing, a trial court has the discretion to determine whether a new sentence will
be imposed consecutively or concurrently with existing sentences that were not affected by
the remand. Scott asserts that his argument is preserved for review because, in the circuit
court, his counsel requested that the circuit court make the new sentence for attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon concurrent with the two existing sentences. Scott
acknowledges that, in the Court of Special Appeals, he argued that the two existing
sentences should have been concurrent with the new sentence for attempted robbery—not
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the other way around, as he argues in this Court. Scott asserts, however, that his argument
in the Court of Special Appeals was consistent with his argument in the circuit court.
The State responds that Scott’s contention is not preserved for review because it
differs from the argument that he raised in the Court of Special Appeals. The State
contends that, in the circuit court, Scott argued that the new sentence for attempted robbery
with a dangerous weapon should have been concurrent with the two existing sentences;
and, in the Court of Special Appeals, Scott argued the opposite—that the two existing
sentences should have been imposed to be concurrent with the new sentence for attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon. As to the merits, the State asserts that the circuit court
was correct in refraining from resentencing Scott for the convictions other than attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon, as the Court of Special Appeals remanded solely for
resentencing for the offense of attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon.
Standard of Review
An appellate court reviews without deference the issue of whether a trial court made
a legal error in sentencing. See Bonilla v. State, 443 Md. 1, 6, 115 A.3d 98, 100-01 (2015).
Preservation
Maryland Rule 8-131(a) governs preservation for appellate review generally, in
pertinent part, as follows:
Ordinarily, the appellate court will not decide any [non-jurisdictional] issue
unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by
the trial court, but the Court may decide such an issue if necessary or
desirable to guide the trial court or to avoid the expense and delay of another
appeal.
Maryland Rule 8-131(b)(1) governs preservation for this Court’s review where there
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has been a decision by the Court of Special Appeals, in pertinent part, as follows:
Unless otherwise provided by the order granting the writ of certiorari, in
reviewing a decision rendered by the Court of Special Appeals . . . , the Court
of Appeals ordinarily will consider only an issue that has been raised in the
petition for certiorari or any cross-petition and that has been preserved for
review by the Court of Appeals.
Under Maryland Rule 8-131(b)(1), to preserve an issue for this Court’s review, a
party must raise the issue in the Court of Special Appeals if the case came before that Court.
See State v. Earp, 319 Md. 156, 168 n.4, 571 A.2d 1227, 1233 n.4 (1990) (This Court
concluded that the State failed to preserve an argument for review in this Court “by failing
to raise the argument in the Court of Special Appeals.”). For example, in Ferguson v.
Cramer, 349 Md. 760, 775 n.8, 709 A.2d 1279, 1286 n.8 (1998), this Court concluded that
an “issue [wa]s not preserved for our review because it was not advanced before the Court
of Special Appeals and was not raised in the [] petition for writ of certiorari.” By contrast,
in Thompson v. UBS Fin. Servs., Inc., 443 Md. 47, 69 n.12, 115 A.3d 125, 138 n.12 (2015),
this Court concluded that an issue was preserved for this Court’s review because it was
encompassed by “the broad issue” that was raised in the Court of Special Appeals.
Consistent with Maryland Rule 8-131(b)(1)’s use of the word “ordinarily,” this
Court has the discretion to consider an issue that was not preserved for this Court’s review
where “extraordinary circumstances” provide a reason to do so. Wynn v. State, 351 Md.
307, 323, 718 A.2d 588, 596 (1998). For example, in Montgomery Cty. v. May Dep’t
Stores Co., 352 Md. 183, 201, 721 A.2d 249, 258 (1998), we “exercise[d] our discretion
under Maryland Rule 8-131(b)(1) to consider [a] question [that was raised for the first time
in a party’s brief] because of the public importance of the issue, which [wa]s likely to recur,
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and for the guidance of the trial court on remand.” By contrast, in Wynn, 351 Md. at 323-
24, 718 A.2d at 596, this Court declined to exercise its discretion to consider an issue
regarding an “‘intent’ exception” where the issue was not raised in the trial court, in
response to the petition for a writ of certiorari, or in any cross-petition, and where the
State’s purpose in offering the relevant witness’s testimony was not to prove the
defendant’s intent, but rather to prove whether the defendant obtained stolen property.
Concerning an illegal sentence, Maryland Rule 4-345(a) states: “The court may
correct an illegal sentence at any time.” Maryland Rule 4-345(a) applies only where a
sentence is allegedly inherently illegal—i.e., where a defendant contends that there was no
underlying conviction, or that the sentence was not authorized for the underlying
conviction. See Colvin v. State, 450 Md. 718, 725, 150 A.3d 850, 854 (2016). In other
words, Maryland Rule 4-345(a) does not apply where there was allegedly a “flaw in the
sentencing procedure.” Id. at 725, 150 A.3d at 854 (citation and internal quotation marks
omitted).
Concurrent Sentences and Consecutive Sentences
“A [trial] court may make a sentence concurrent with[,] or consecutive to[,] any
other unsuspended actual sentence of confinement that then exists.” Parker v. State, 193
Md. App. 469, 486, 997 A.2d 912, 922 (2010) (citation and internal quotation marks
omitted). Conversely, a trial court may not make a sentence concurrent with, or
consecutive to, any other unsuspended actual sentence of confinement that does not then
exist. See DiPietrantonio v. State, 61 Md. App. 528, 532-33, 487 A.2d 676, 678-79, cert.
denied, 303 Md. 295, 493 A.2d 349 (1985).
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The Court of Special Appeals first applied this principle in Alston v. State, 38 Md.
App. 611, 615, 379 A.2d 754, 757 (1978), in which the Court held that a trial court erred
in making a sentence concurrent with a sentence that another trial court was expected to
impose—i.e., a sentence that did not then exist. In Alston, id. at 612, 379 A.2d at 755, a
defendant had been convicted, but had not yet been sentenced, in a Maryland trial court
and in a District of Columbia trial court. The Maryland trial court imposed a sentence that
was to be concurrent with the sentence that the District of Columbia trial court would
impose. See id. at 612, 379 A.2d at 755. Afterward, the District of Columbia trial court
imposed a sentence that was to be consecutive to the sentence that the Maryland trial court
had imposed. See id. at 612, 379 A.2d at 755. As a result, even though the Maryland trial
court purportedly imposed a concurrent sentence, the defendant began serving the
Maryland sentence without receiving any credit toward the District of Columbia sentence.
See id. at 614, 379 A.2d at 756. The Court of Special Appeals concluded that the Maryland
trial court’s sentence was improper “because it was made to run concurrently with a
sentence that had not yet been meted out to the [defendant].” Id. at 615, 379 A.2d at 757.
Accordingly, the Court vacated the Maryland trial court’s sentence and remanded for
resentencing. See id. at 615, 379 A.2d at 757.
In Stanton v. State, 290 Md. 245, 250, 428 A.2d 1224, 1227 (1981), this Court held
that a trial court did not err in making a sentence consecutive to an existing District Court
sentence that was later superseded by a circuit court sentence that resulted from a de novo
appeal. In Stanton, 290 Md. at 246, 250, 428 A.2d at 1225, 1227, a circuit court convicted
a defendant and deferred sentencing; in a second criminal case, the District Court convicted
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and sentenced the defendant, who noted a de novo appeal; before the de novo appeal’s
disposition, in the first criminal case, the circuit court imposed a sentence that was
consecutive to the District Court sentence; and, finally, in the de novo appeal in the second
criminal case, the defendant was convicted, and the circuit court imposed a new sentence
that superseded the District Court sentence. This Court concluded that it was proper for
the circuit court to make the sentence in the first criminal case consecutive to the District
Court sentence in the second criminal case, as the latter sentence existed at the time, even
though it was later superseded. See id. at 250, 428 A.2d at 1227.
In DiPietrantonio, 61 Md. App. at 535, 529-30, 487 A.2d at 679, 677, the Court of
Special Appeals held that, where a trial court imposed a sentence that included probation,
and the defendant violated the order of probation, the trial court did not err in imposing a
new sentence that was consecutive to an existing sentence in another criminal case. In
DiPietrantonio, id. at 529, 487 A.2d at 677, a trial judge imposed a sentence that included
both imprisonment and probation. After the defendant served the term of imprisonment,
during the probationary period, in a second criminal case, the defendant was convicted of,
and sentenced for, additional crimes. See id. at 530, 487 A.2d at 677. The second trial
judge did not refer to the sentence in the first criminal case. See id. at 530, 487 A.2d at
677. In the first criminal case, the first trial judge revoked the defendant’s probation and
imposed a portion of the previously suspended period of imprisonment, consecutive to the
sentence in the second criminal case. See id. at 530, 487 A.2d at 677. The Court of Special
Appeals explained that the sentence in the second criminal case could not have been
concurrent with, or consecutive to, the original sentence in the first criminal case, as the
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defendant was not serving a term of imprisonment at the time. See id. at 534, 487 A.2d at
679. The Court held that the first trial judge did not err in making the new sentence in the
first criminal case consecutive to the sentence in the second criminal case, as the defendant
was serving a term of imprisonment at the time. See id. at 535, 487 A.2d at 679.
In Stouffer v. Pearson, 390 Md. 36, 41, 887 A.2d 623, 626 (2005), this Court held
that a sentence for crimes that a defendant committed while on parole could not be
consecutive to the defendant’s term of parole because the defendant’s parole was not
revoked until after the defendant was sentenced. In Stouffer, id. at 41-42, 887 A.2d at 626,
a trial court sentenced the defendant to a term of imprisonment; the defendant was released
on parole; and, subsequently, the defendant was arrested. In a second criminal case, the
defendant was convicted of, and sentenced for, additional crimes; the trial court made one
of the sentences “‘consecutive with any sentence on violation of parole[.]’” See id. at 42,
887 A.2d at 626. Afterward, the defendant’s parole was revoked, and he was ordered to
serve the balance of his original sentence. See id. at 42, 887 A.2d at 626.
This Court held that the trial court erred in making the sentence in the second
criminal case consecutive to the defendant’s term of parole, as that constituted “a sentence
to commence in the future.” Id. at 59, 887 A.2d at 636. This Court found “persuasive” the
statement in DiPietrantonio, 61 Md. App. at 532, 487 A.2d at 678, that a trial court
may make [a] sentence concurrent with[,] or consecutive to[,] whatever other
sentence then exists, actually being served. [The trial court] may not,
however, presume to bind the future. To do so would be, ipso facto, to usurp
the sentencing prerogative of some other [trial] judge operating in a near or
distant time yet to be.
Stouffer, 390 Md. at 58, 887 A.2d at 636 (brackets omitted). This Court concluded:
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When a parolee is sentenced for a new crime before revocation of parole, a
[trial court] may not treat parole as an existing term of confinement and, as
such, a new sentence may not be served consecutive to a parole term because
a “sentence may not be consecutive with a term of confinement [that] is not
then [in existence].”
Id. at 58-59, 887 A.2d at 636 (quoting DiPietrantonio, 61 Md. App. at 533, 487 A.2d at
679) (ellipsis omitted).
Resentencing as to Sentences That the Defendant Did Not Challenge
In Twigg, 447 Md. at 21, 5, 133 A.3d at 1137, 1128, this Court held that no
Maryland law barred resentencing for child abuse on remand where a trial court
erroneously sentenced a defendant for both child abuse and second-degree rape instead of
merging the conviction for the latter with the conviction for the former for sentencing
purposes, where the defendant had not challenged the sentence for child abuse. This Court
noted that, in Jones v. State, 414 Md. 686, 690-92, 703, 997 A.2d 131, 133-34, 141 (2010),
this Court held that, where the Court of Special Appeals concluded that a trial court
erroneously sentenced a defendant for both a greater-inclusive offense and a lesser-
included offense, vacated both sentences, and remanded for resentencing on the greater-
inclusive offense, the trial court erred in refusing to allow the defendant to argue in
mitigation during the resentencing proceeding. See Twigg, 447 Md. at 20, 133 A.3d at
1137. In Twigg, id. at 20-21, 133 A.3d at 1137, this Court observed that, in Jones, 414
Md. at 707, 997 A.2d at 143, this Court “expressed no concern that the Court of Special
Appeals was without the authority to order a remand for resentencing on the greater[-
inclusive] offense”; “[t]o the contrary, we stated that the trial court’s ‘primary task’ on
remand was to conduct the ‘resentencing of the [defendant]’ on the greater[-inclusive]
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offense.” In Twigg, 447 Md. at 21, 133 A.3d at 1137, this Court explained: “[The
defendant] offers no authority for the proposition that remand for resentencing, as was done
in Jones and as the Court of Special Appeals did in the present case, is unauthorized by
Maryland statute, our rules, or our case law, and we are not aware of any.”
This Court directed that, on remand, the trial court could resentence the defendant
for child abuse to any term of imprisonment that would not cause the aggregate sentence
to be greater than it originally was. See Twigg, 447 Md. at 30, 133 A.3d at 1142-43.
Addressing the convictions for third-degree sexual offense and incest—i.e., the convictions
that, unlike second-degree rape, were not to be merged with the conviction for child abuse
for sentencing purposes—this Court observed that the State did not seek to have the
sentences for third-degree sexual offense and incest vacated because the trial court imposed
the maximum possible sentences for both crimes. See id. at 30 n.14, 133 A.3d at 1143
n.14. This Court explained:
We do not intend this opinion to be read as precluding, in the appropriate
case, vacation of all sentences originally imposed on those convictions and
sentences left undisturbed on appeal, so as to provide the court maximum
flexibility on remand to fashion a proper sentence that takes into account all
of the relevant facts and circumstances.
Id. at 30 n.14, 133 A.3d at 1143 n.14. This Court added that the only caveat was that,
generally, the new aggregate sentence could not exceed the original one. See id. at 30 n.14,
133 A.3d at 1143 n.14.
Analysis
Here, as a threshold matter, we conclude that Scott preserved for this Court’s review
his contention that the circuit court erred in not making the new sentence for attempted
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robbery with a dangerous weapon concurrent with the two existing sentences. The circuit
court sentenced Scott to twenty-five years of imprisonment, without the possibility of
parole, for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon; ten years of imprisonment, with
all but five years suspended, followed by five years of supervised probation, consecutive
to the sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon, for use of a handgun in
the commission of a crime of violence; and ten years of imprisonment, with all but five
years suspended, consecutive to the other two sentences, for conspiracy to commit robbery
with a dangerous weapon. The Court of Special Appeals vacated the sentence for
attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon and remanded for resentencing. The Court of
Special Appeals’s mandate stated in pertinent part: “SENTENCE ON COUNT 1
[(ATTEMPTED ROBBERY WITH A DANGEROUS WEAPON)] VACATED AND
THE CASE IS REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING.”
At the resentencing proceeding, the circuit court observed that the existing sentences
for use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence and conspiracy to commit
robbery with a dangerous weapon were not before it. Nonetheless, Scott’s counsel
contended that the two existing sentences were consecutive to a sentence that allegedly no
longer existed, and requested that the circuit court make the new sentence for attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon concurrent with the two existing sentences. The circuit
court responded that it lacked the discretion to do so, and added: “I’ll hear from [] Scott as
to how he feels or what he wants to say at this point.” Scott’s counsel responded: “Given
the Court’s rulings, the fact that the Court is ruling it has essentially no discretion in the
sentence it’s going to impose, [] Scott has nothing to add.” The circuit court reimposed the
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original sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon—twenty-five years of
imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The circuit court noted that the other two
“sentence[s] remain[ed] the same.”
In the Court of Special Appeals, Scott contended that the circuit court erred in not
making the two existing sentences concurrent with the new sentence for attempted robbery
with a dangerous weapon. In finding the issue not to be preserved, the Court of Special
Appeals noted that the circuit court expressly “gave [Scott] the opportunity to allocute and
present mitigating information[,]” which, through counsel, Scott declined to do. Scott, 230
Md. App. at 445, 148 A.3d at 92. Accordingly, the Court of Special Appeals concluded
that Scott had waived the argument that the circuit court had violated his right to allocution
and to present mitigating evidence. Id. at 444-45, 148 A.3d at 92.9 The Court of Special
Appeals also concluded that Scott had failed to preserve for appellate review his contention
that the circuit court erred in not making the two existing sentences concurrent with the
new sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon because, in the circuit court,
Scott had advanced a different argument—namely, that the circuit court should have
imposed the new sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon concurrently
9
We do not interpret the conclusion of the Court of Special Appeals to suggest that
allocution is a proper vehicle for preserving issues for appellate review, which it is not. In
other words, a defendant does not waive appellate review of an issue by failing to raise it
during allocution, which is simply an opportunity for a defendant “to explain in his [or her]
own words the circumstances of the crime as well as his [or her] feelings regarding his [or
her] conduct, culpability, and sentencing.” Jones, 414 Md. at 697, 997 A.2d at 137 (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted). Here, in our view, the Court of Special Appeals
determined only that Scott had waived the contention that the circuit court refused to
consider allocution and mitigating evidence, and not that Scott had forfeited appellate
review of the argument concerning concurrent sentences by failing to allocute.
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with the two existing sentences. See Scott, 230 Md. App. at 445-46, 148 A.3d at 92-93.
Although Scott’s argument in the circuit court technically differed from his
argument in the Court of Special Appeals, we find this circumstance to be a distinction
without a difference. Regardless of which sentence or set of sentences that Scott argued
should have been made concurrent with the other—i.e., whether the new sentence for
attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon allegedly should have been concurrent with
the two existing sentences, or vice-versa—Scott sought to serve the sentence for attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon and the two existing sentences at the same time; i.e.,
Scott sought concurrent sentences.
In this Court, Scott repeats the contention that he raised in the circuit court—namely,
that the circuit court erred in not making the new sentence for attempted robbery with a
dangerous weapon concurrent with the two existing sentences. As such, Scott preserved
his contention in this Court for appellate review pursuant to Maryland Rule 8-131(a). In
light of the circumstances that Scott’s contention in this Court is identical to the one that
he raised in the circuit court, and that Scott argued in favor of the same ultimate outcome
in the Court of Special Appeals, we conclude that Scott’s contention is preserved for this
Court’s review.
Turning to the merits, we conclude that, where an appellate court vacates a sentence
to which another sentence is ordered to be served consecutively and remands for
resentencing without vacating the consecutive sentence, the non-vacated consecutive
sentence remains consecutive to the newly imposed sentence—i.e., the trial court cannot
make the new sentence concurrent with the non-vacated consecutive sentence.
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In this case, the Court of Special Appeals vacated the sentence for attempted robbery
with a dangerous weapon, and remanded for resentencing without vacating the sentences
for use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence and conspiracy to commit
robbery with a dangerous weapon. Scott did not challenge the validity of the latter two
sentences. The Court of Special Appeals vacated only the first sentence—which was an
enhanced sentence—due to insufficient evidence of Scott’s prior convictions. As discussed
above in Part I, the circuit court had the authority to admit additional evidence of Scott’s
prior convictions at the resentencing proceeding, and to reimpose the enhanced sentence.
We are not persuaded by Scott’s reliance on Twigg for the proposition that the
circuit court had the authority to vacate the sentences that had not been challenged on
appeal. To be sure, under Twigg, 447 Md. at 20-21, 133 A.3d at 1137, the Court of Special
Appeals had the authority in this case to vacate all four sentences, and remand for
resentencing as to all four sentences. However, the Court of Special Appeals did not do
so. A critical difference between this case and Twigg is that, in the latter, the Court of
Special Appeals vacated all of the sentences—including the one that the defendant had not
challenged—and remanded with express instructions to resentence the defendant as to all
of the sentences. By contrast, here, the Court of Special Appeals vacated only the first
sentence, and did not grant the circuit court the authority to resentence Scott as to the other
two sentences on remand.10
10
We are unpersuaded by Scott’s contention that Twigg vests a trial court with the
discretion to resentence as to a sentence that an appellate court did not vacate. Twigg did
not involve a trial court that resentenced as to a non-vacated sentence. To the contrary, in
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Without the sentences for use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence
and conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon having been vacated and
remanded for resentencing, the circuit court could not resentence Scott as to those two
sentences on remand.11
Scott raises a red herring in contending that, when the Court of Special Appeals
vacated the sentence for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon, the other two
sentences became consecutive to a sentence that no longer existed. In this case, the circuit
court did not violate case law prohibiting the imposition of a sentence consecutively to a
sentence that does not exist. At the time of the original sentencing proceeding, the circuit
court properly imposed sentences consecutively to an existing sentence. The sentences for
use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence and conspiracy to commit
robbery with a dangerous weapon were imposed consecutively to a sentence that existed
at the time of their imposition.
Although this Court has held that a trial court may not impose a sentence that is
Twigg, 447 Md. at 9, 133 A.3d at 1130, it was the Court of Special Appeals that vacated
the sentences and ordered resentencing. Whenever this Court mentioned the trial court’s
“discretion,” this Court was referring to the trial court’s discretion to resentence as to a
vacated sentence. See id. at 5, 19 & n.11, 30, 133 A.3d at 1128, 1136 & n.11, 1142-43.
Thus, under Twigg, an appellate court, not a trial court, has the discretion to vacate a
sentence that the defendant did not challenge.
11
The circuit court’s revisory power over the two sentences was governed by
Maryland Rule 4-345 (Sentencing--Revisory Power of Court), but that Rule did not apply
here. Maryland Rule 4-345(a) allows a court to correct an inherently illegal sentence, but
there was no allegation that the two sentences were inherently illegal. Similarly, Maryland
Rule 4-345(b) grants a court “revisory power over a sentence in case of fraud, mistake, or
irregularity[,]” but there was no allegation of any such circumstance.
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concurrent with, or consecutive to, a sentence that does not exist, see Stouffer, 390 Md. at
59, 887 A.2d at 636, this Court has never held that an appellate court cannot vacate a
sentence to which another sentence is consecutive and remand for resentencing with the
non-vacated sentence remaining imposed consecutively.12 Such a rule would prevent an
appellate court from vacating only a sentence that was not imposed properly where other
sentences were imposed to be consecutive, and would necessarily require that the appellate
court vacate all sentences—even the ones that have no defects—and remand for
resentencing. Simply put, Stouffer and similar cases do not bar an appellate court from
vacating solely a sentence to which a non-vacated sentence was ordered to be consecutive.
For these reasons, the circuit court did not err in declining to make the new sentence
12
In Twigg, 447 Md. at 30 n.14, 133 A.3d at 1143 n.14, in a footnote, we remarked:
The State does not seek to have vacated the sentences for incest and third
degree sexual offense, for both of which [the defendant] received the
maximum sentence. We do not intend this opinion to be read as precluding,
in the appropriate case, vacation of all sentences originally imposed on those
convictions and sentences left undisturbed on appeal, so as to provide the
court maximum flexibility on remand to fashion a proper sentence that takes
into account all of the relevant facts and circumstances.
Although the Court of Special Appeals vacated the sentences for child abuse, second-
degree rape, third-degree sexual offense, and incest, on review, this Court vacated the
sentence only for second-degree rape, and stated that, at the new sentencing hearing, “the
sentencing court has the discretion to resentence [the defendant] to a term of active
incarceration on the child abuse conviction[,]” the conviction with which the conviction
for second-degree rape was to merge for sentencing purposes. Id. at 5, 133 A.3d at 1128.
Our observation in the footnote in Twigg supports the conclusion that a bright-line rule
requiring an appellate court to vacate all sentences where only one sentence is found to be
deficient is not warranted. It is properly left to the discretion of the appellate court, based
on the circumstances of the case, whether to vacate the deficient sentence alone or all
sentences imposed.
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for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon concurrent with the existing sentences for
use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence and conspiracy to commit
robbery with a dangerous weapon.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL
APPEALS AFFIRMED. PETITIONER TO PAY
COSTS.
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