State of Maryland v. Purnell Shortall, No. 31, September Term, 2018. Opinion by
Rodowsky, J.
Post-Conviction – Effectiveness of counsel under Strickland standard. Client
convicted of violating environmental regulations proscribing disposal of waste. Client’s
disposal was from a building onto ground surface through a pipe. Penalty statute provided
that “[e]ach day on which a violation occurs is a separate violation[.]” Trial court, at State’s
request, instructed jury that “every day on which a violation is still present constitutes a
separate violation until the violation is corrected.” Trial counsel accepted the State’s
position and did not except. As a result client was convicted on eight charges, involving
four separate days, absent evidence of any disposal of waste on or about those days.
Convictions were based on inspections observing that client’s pipe remained uncapped.
HELD: Language of statute and regulations are so plainly contrary to State’s theory
that failure to except to instruction violated Strickland standard. Court of Special Appeals
affirmed in reversing post-conviction court.
Circuit Court for Dorchester County
Case No. 09-K-14-015217
Argued: January 4, 2019
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 31
September Term, 2018
______________________________________
STATE OF MARYLAND
v.
PURNELL SHORTALL
______________________________________
Barbera, C.J.
Greene
McDonald
Watts
Hotten
Getty
Rodowsky, Lawrence F.
(Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
JJ.
______________________________________
Opinion by Rodowsky, J.
______________________________________
Filed: April 2, 2019
Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
Materials Act
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
2019-04-02 14:43-04:00
Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
The principal issue in this certiorari review of an action under the Post-Conviction
Procedure Act, Maryland Code (2001, 2008 Repl. Vol., 2017 Supp.) §§ 7-101 through 7-
109 of the Criminal Procedure Article (CP), is whether the Respondent, Purnell Shortall,
was deprived of his constitutional right to the effective assistance of counsel when counsel
did not object to a certain, non-pattern, jury instruction in a prosecution under
environmental laws. As we explain below, we shall hold that he was so deprived under the
peculiar facts of this case.
Whether the unchallenged instruction was correct turns on the construction of the
statute and regulations underlying the criminal charges against Shortall. They are set forth
below.
Maryland Code (1982, 2014 Repl. Vol.), Title 9, “Water, Ice, and Sanitary
Facilities,” Subtitle 3, “Water Pollution Control,” § 9-343(a)(1) and (3) of the
Environmental Article (Env.), which read in relevant part:
“(a) Violating subtitle, rules, regulations, orders, or permits. — (1) A
person … who violates any provision of or fails to perform any duty imposed
by a rule, regulation, order, or permit adopted or issued under this subtitle, is
guilty of a misdemeanor[.]
…
“(3) Each day on which a violation occurs is a separate violation under
this subsection.”
Former COMAR 26.04.02.02.E, now D (Reg. D), which reads:
“D. A person may not dispose of sewage, body, or industrial wastes in
any manner which may cause pollution of the ground surface, the waters of
the State, or create a nuisance.”
And former COMAR 26.04.02.02.F, now E (Reg. E), which reads:
“E. A person may only dispose of sewage, body, or industrial wastes in
accordance with an approved on-site sewage disposal permit or other method
of disposal approved by the Approving Authority.”
The unchallenged instruction requested by the State told the jury that “[p]ursuant to
Maryland law for these specific charges every day on which a violation is still present
constitutes a separate offense until the date the violation is corrected.”
Background Facts
At all relevant times Shortall owned, either directly or through a legal entity
controlled by him, the property at or near 11523 Cordova Road in Cordova, Talbot County,
Maryland, where he conducts a building supply business. In addition to the main building
on the property, and at least 500 to 600 feet from it, on the south/southeast side of the
property is a maintenance building. Body waste disposal from the main building is directed
to an approved septic system. This case concerns body waste disposal from the
maintenance building.
On December 5, 2012, two inspectors from the Maryland Department of the
Environment were on the Shortall property for a routine inspection when they observed
some human feces and toilet paper on the ground near the open end of a PVC pipe that was
protruding from an earthen embankment about ten to fifteen feet from the maintenance
building. The inspectors traced the pipe to a toilet and sink that had been installed, sans
permit, in a restroom in the maintenance building. Inspectors, from the Maryland
Department of the Environment, from the Talbot County Health Department, or from both,
visited the site on December 6 and 7, 2012, January 24, 2013, and March 15, 2013. The
2
witnesses for the State in Shortall’s criminal prosecution testified as to what they observed
at or near the open end of the PVC pipe on the follow-up visits to the property, but that
evidence is not relevant to this certiorari review, as we explain infra. A Regulatory
Compliance Engineer for the Maryland Department of the Environment inspected the pipe
on May 3, 2013, and found the end tightly capped.
Procedural History
Although initially filed in the Circuit Court for Talbot County, the criminal charges
against Shortall were immediately removed on February 20, 2014, to the Circuit Court for
Dorchester County. The criminal information was drawn by a special prosecutor from the
Attorney General’s Office. That document consisted of twenty counts, ten of which were
dismissed by the court at the conclusion of the State’s case. Five of the remaining counts
respectively charged in the language of Reg. D that, on one of the days of the five pre-
capping inspections, Shortall had violated Reg. D “by disposing of sewage in any manner
which may cause pollution[.]” The other five remaining counts respectively charged in the
language of Reg. E that, on one of the days of the same five pre-capping inspections,
Shortall had violated Reg. E “by failing to dispose of sewage in accordance with an
approved permit[.]”
At trial, the State relied on a continuing violation theory, but we cannot determine
from the record before us when Shortall first learned of that. It is clear, however, that on
August 4, 2014, the day preceding the first day of trial, the State had distributed its
requested instructions, including No. 13, which stated that “every day on which a violation
is still present constitutes a separate offense until the date the violation is corrected.”
3
When the State rested its case on the first day of trial, August 5, 2014, Shortall
moved for judgments of acquittal on all counts. In the course of that argument the court
asked the State, “[w]hat proof do we have that there was any … human waste deposited
there after December 5th?” The prosecutor replied: “It’s a continuing violation offense by
the penalty Statute of itself until the matter is stopped, until the pipe is capped until it’s …
physically not possible to do it anymore.”
After it was determined on the second trial day, August 6, 2014, that Shortall would
not testify, the court and counsel reviewed the requested instructions in chambers. The
court included in its jury charge the State’s continuing violation instruction, verbatim.
Defense counsel had no exceptions.
In its opening summation the State told the jury that it could charge Shortall for
every day on which the water had not been turned off in the bathroom. Defense counsel
argued that the State’s “continuing offense charge” was “somewhat offensive” because the
inspectors had said that “on December 5 [Shortall] disposed of waste” but thereafter the
inspectors had talked “about the same waste, the same sewage.” Counsel submitted that
Shortall had not “committed a new crime.”
The jury found Shortall guilty on the ten remaining counts and sentence was
imposed on September 15, 2014. He did not appeal.
Shortall filed for post-conviction relief in the Circuit Court for Dorchester County
through his present appellate counsel on April 20, 2015. He alleged, inter alia, the denial
of effective assistance of counsel based on the trial counsel’s failure to object to the
continuing violation instruction. Set forth below is trial counsel’s entire response at the
4
post-conviction hearing to questioning by Shortall concerning the lack of exception to the
instruction complained of.
“[I]nititally we wanted to exclude anything that would be -- that would
reference a continuing violation. So we researched that. And coupled with
our research and the cases that [the State] had provided we did not think that
we had the legal argument. We met in chambers to go over all of the jury
instructions and it is my recollection the continuing violation matter came up
and [the trial judge] questioned [the State] about that and then accepted that
jury instruction. And [the trial judge] raised that issue.
“Q. And did you discuss your concern to that issue with [the trial
judge]?
“A. No. At that point I was resolved to I thought that the State was
correct.
“Q. And what was the scope of what you evaluated for purposes of
that instruction? In other words, you said you looked at the cases that [the
State] provided. Did you look beyond those cases for example in other States
or Federal jurisdictions?
“A. Honestly, I believe we called your office.
….
“A. Yes, and spoke with you. But outside of that we had -- no, I
can’t say that definitively we had looked at any Federal regulations or other
States. We researched Maryland law to see if we could -- what we could do
with the continuum.”
(Emphasis added).
The post-conviction court denied Shortall’s petition. With respect to the trial
counsel’s above quoted conclusion that court said:
“This is a reasonable interpretation of the law, as there is no controlling
Maryland authority as to whether the continuing violation doctrine applies in
cases involving environmental crimes, and, logically, the adverse impact of
disposing of pollutants obviously continues until the remedy is imposed. In
5
short, this is an unsettled question of law, and there are merits to both
positions.”
The Court of Special Appeals, on reconsideration of Shortall’s petition, granted him
leave to appeal the question of alleged ineffective assistance based on the unchallenged
jury instruction. That court affirmed the two verdicts of respectively violating Regs. D and
E on December 5, 2012, and remanded for a resentencing hearing on those two guilty
verdicts. Shortall v. State, 237 Md. App. 60, 183 A.3d 820 (2018). The court held that the
unchallenged instruction was not a correct statement of the law. Id. at 81, 183 A.3d at 832.
The court then held that trial counsel was ineffective under the standard of Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 80 L. Ed. 2d 674 (1984), in failing to except.
“A convicted defendant’s claim that counsel’s assistance was so
defective as to require reversal of a conviction or death sentence has two
components. First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was
deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that
counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by the
Sixth Amendment. Second, the defendant must show that the deficient
performance prejudiced the defense. This requires showing that counsel’s
errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose
result is reliable.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687, 104 S. Ct. at 2064.
The Court of Special Appeals based its statutory construction holding on the plain
language of the statute and incorporated regulations. The court correctly reasoned:
“The regulations Shortall was charged with having violated each use the
word ‘dispose,’ and impose a duty to avoid taking a specific action, with no
mention of a duty to mitigate or remediate the harm to the environment that
may have been caused by the disposal. Pursuant to this plain language, the
State was required to prove that an act of disposal had ‘occur[red]’ on ‘[e]ach
day’ the State charged as a separate violation of either [regulation].”
Shortall, 237 Md. App. at 78, 183 A.3d at 831 (footnote omitted).
6
Next, the court held that there was not sufficient evidence to find that the inspectors
observed a disposal of waste when they made any of their inspections other than that of
December 5, 2012. Id. at 79, 183 A.3d at 831.
Turning to the first prong of Strickland, the court held that trial counsel’s
representation of Shortall was deficient in that the failure to object to the continuing
violation instruction was an error “so serious that counsel was not functioning as the
‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687,
104 S. Ct. at 2064. In explanation of its conclusion, and rejecting the post-conviction
court’s analysis, the court said:
“But it does not logically follow that trial counsel provides effective
assistance of counsel by failing to object to a jury instruction that is based
upon ‘an unsettled question of law’ and deviates from the statutory language
in a material manner that is prejudicial to the defendant. If there is a
potentially meritorious argument that the instruction is erroneous, and there
is no possible strategic benefit to the defendant from having the jury receive
the arguably incorrect instruction, defense counsel renders deficient
performance by failing to preserve that point for appeal. Here, the instruction
that had been proposed by the State was not a pattern instruction that had
been approved by any Maryland appellate court or recognized authority on
Maryland jury instructions; there was no controlling Maryland case law
addressing liability for multiple violations of these regulations; the language
of the instruction was materially different from the language of the applicable
statute; and the words used in the court’s non-pattern instruction made it far
more likely that the defendant would be convicted of multiple violations than
would have been the case if the court’s instruction had more closely tracked
the words used in the statute and regulations. All of these reasons for
objecting to the instruction were—or should have been—obvious to defense
counsel, and should have prompted an objection to preserve these
arguments[.]”
Shortall, 237 Md. App. at 81-82, 183 A.3d at 832-33 (emphasis in original).
7
In order to find that there has been a deprivation of the right to the effective
assistance of counsel the petitioner must also show a reasonable possibility of prejudice as
a result of the deficiency. Walker v. State, 391 Md. 233, 245-46, 892 A.2d 547, 554 (2006);
Bowers v. State, 320 Md. 416, 424-25, 578 A.2d 734, 738 (1990). The Court of Special
Appeals found prejudice in the eight convictions that were dependent on the unchallenged
instruction. Shortall, 237 Md. App. at 82-83, 183 A.3d at 833-34.
The State petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari, presenting two questions:
“1. Did the Court of Special Appeals misapply the Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), standard when it reversed the post-
conviction court’s determination that counsel was not ineffective for failing
to object to a continuing violation jury instruction?
“2. Assuming the Court of Special Appeals correctly determined that trial
counsel was ineffective for failing to object to a continuing violation jury
instruction, did the Court of Special Appeals err by ordering the vacating of
Shortall’s convictions instead of remanding for a new trial?”
Shortall cross-petitioned, raising one question:
“Whether the [Court of Special Appeals] erred in not ordering a new[]
trial on all counts after finding the defendant had ineffective assistance of
counsel at trial.”
We granted both petitions. Shortall v. State, 460 Md. 493, 190 A.3d 1036 (2018).
It is important initially to note what the State’s petition does not seek to have
reviewed. The State does not contend that the Court of Special Appeals erred in its
construction of Env. § 9-343(a)(1) and (3), in its construction of Regs. D and E, or in its
analysis of the interplay between the provisions. Nor does the State’s petition ask us to
rule that the evidence was sufficient to support a finding of regulatory violations based on
observations made by the inspectors on days other than December 5, 2012.
8
Discussion
I. Strickland
A. Effectiveness of Counsel
The State submits that trial counsel was not ineffective when judged by the
Strickland standard. It is “an objective standard of reasonableness.” Strickland, 466 U.S.
at 688, 104 S. Ct. at 2064. The facts are to be “viewed as of the time of counsel’s conduct,”
id. at 690, 104 S. Ct. at 2066, and the scrutiny of counsel’s conduct “must be highly
deferential.” Id. at 689, 104 S. Ct. at 2065. The post-conviction court “must indulge a
strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable
professional assistance[.]” Id.
Shortall was charged with statutory violations which criminalize and penalize
regulatory violations. When trial counsel undertook the defense of those charges, it was
imperative that he analyze the statute and underlying regulations in relation to the facts.
Under Env. § 9-343(a)(3) “[e]ach day on which a violation occurs is a separate violation[.]”
The question then becomes when and how does a violation of Regs. D and E occur. Under
the plain language of the regulations, violations occur when one disposes of waste under
prohibited circumstances, (1) “in any manner which may cause pollution of the ground
surface,” or (2) without “an approved on-site … method of disposal[.]”
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary defines “dispose” to mean:
“to get rid of : throw away : DISCARD[.]”
WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 654 (1976).
9
The State’s theory of the case at the criminal trial does violence to established rules
of construction. Under the State’s theory the waste observed on December 5, 2012, was
thrown out or away each day until the pipe was capped. Words are not to be deleted from
a statute, but the State, as to eight of the ten charges, would delete “dispose” from the
regulations. Nor should words be added to a statute, but the State in its requested
instruction added that a violation continues until “the violation is corrected.” Price v.
State, 378 Md. 378, 387, 835 A.2d 1221, 1226 (2003) (“A court may neither add
nor delete language so as to reflect an intent not evidenced in the plain and unambiguous
language of the statute[.]”); Smack v. Dep’t of Health and Mental Hygiene, 378 Md. 298,
305, 835 A.2d 1175, 1179 (2003) (“Words may not be added to, or removed from, an
unambiguous statute in order to give it a meaning not reflected by the words the Legislature
chose to use[.]” (Citation omitted).). Neither Reg. D nor Reg. E imposes any duty to
remediate damage or to dismantle a system. Only waste disposal is prohibited.
The case went to the jury on eight counts based on the State’s continuing offense
theory. Counsel’s failure to except to that instruction and thereby preserve appellate review
based on the plain language of the statute and regulations fell below an objective standard
of reasonableness.
At the post-conviction hearing trial counsel explained that he thought that the
continuing violation instruction was a correct statement of the law based on the authorities
cited by the State in support of its requested instruction. Reasonably competent counsel,
however, would have had no difficulty in showing the lack of relevance of those
authorities.
10
The State cited Duncan v. State, 282 Md. 385, 384 A.2d 456 (1978). There, a police
officer was charged with misconduct in office for having received stolen goods. He raised
a one-year statute of limitations defense. The State countered that it had charged a
continuing offense. This Court held that the wrongful retaining of property was not a
continuing offense. Id. at 392-94, 384 A.2d at 461. We explained that
“[o]rdinarily, a continuing offense is marked by a continuing duty in the
defendant to do an act which he fails to do. The offense continues as long as
the duty persists, and there is a failure to perform that duty.”
Id. at 390, 384 A.2d at 459.
In the instant matter the duty was not to dispose of waste on any given day. So long
as Shortall was not disposing of waste, he was in compliance with the law on that day.
State v. Barnes, 273 Md. 195, 208, 328 A.2d 737, 745 (1974), also cited by the State,
stands for the proposition that remedial statutes should be liberally construed. Here we
deal with a criminal statute.
The State also generally referenced in support of its instruction request a comment
that “explore[d] the circumstances in which courts have applied the continuing violations
doctrine under federal environmental statutes and conclude[d] that such application should
be sensitive to the particular context in which the continuing violations issue arises.”
Application of the Continuing Violations Doctrine to Environmental Law, 23 Ecology L.Q.
723, 725 (1996). The context here is “each day on which a violation occurs.” (Emphasis
added).
When asked by post-conviction counsel whether he had researched foreign state or
federal law, trial counsel responded that he believed he had called the office of, and spoken
11
with, post-conviction counsel. That was the totality of the evidence on that consultation.
It did not describe any analysis of the specific violations charged against Shortall. Further,
the telephone conversation could not have addressed the status of the evidence at the time
when the criminal case went to the jury.
The minimal relevance of the sources consulted by trial counsel is so far outweighed
by the plain language of Env. § 9-343(a)(1) and (3) and of Regs. D and E that a competent
defense counsel could not acquiesce in the continuing offense instruction and be in
compliance with the Strickland standard.
Testerman v. State, 170 Md. App. 324, 907 A.2d 294 (2006), cert. granted, 397 Md.
396, 918 A.2d 468, and cert. dismissed, 399 Md. 340, 924 A.2d 308 (2007), demonstrates
that the representation by trial counsel in the instant matter was below the Strickland
standard. Testerman was charged, inter alia, under former § 21-904(d) of the
Transportation Article with eluding a uniformed police officer. Subsection (b) of the
statute prohibited eluding by “willfully failing to stop the driver’s vehicle.” Subsection (c)
of the statute prohibited eluding “by fleeing on foot.” Subsection (d) prohibited eluding
“by any other means.” It was undisputed that Testerman “changed seats with his front seat
passenger after complying with a request by a police officer to stop his vehicle.” Id. at
336, 907 A.2d at 301.
Trial counsel for Testerman had not preserved the statutory construction defense,
namely, that the “other means” prohibition did not embrace changing seats with a
passenger. Nevertheless, because the record was clear as to the critical facts, the Court of
Special Appeals considered whether, and concluded that, trial counsel had been ineffective
12
in failing to preserve the issue. In reaching that conclusion, the court applied the statutory
axiom ejusdem generis. Because Testerman had stopped and did not flee on foot and
because switching seats did not fall within the classes of the two specific prohibitions, there
was no subsection (d) violation. The court then held that trial counsel’s failure to move for
a judgment of acquittal on that basis “‘fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness[.]’” Id. at 343, 907 A.2d. at 305.
In the case before us the unpreserved defense is plain on the face of the statute. The
enactment need not be massaged by any rule of construction. A fortiori Shortall’s legal
representation was below the Strickland standard as to effectiveness.
B. Prejudice
The prejudice prong of Strickland was satisfied in the judgment of the Court of
Special Appeals because the reasonable probability was that the ineffectiveness of trial
counsel resulted in Shortall’s conviction on eight of the ten counts submitted to the jury
because of the erroneous instruction. The State asserts a lack of prejudice because the trial
court merged the sentencing on those eight counts into the two counts that were based on
the December 5, 2012, observations by the State inspectors. But the undeserved
convictions, in and of themselves, are prejudicial.
The State also argues that Shortall, by not having communicated to trial counsel a
request to file an appeal, waived his right to challenge the instruction through a post-
conviction claim based on deprivation of the right to effective counsel. A waiver is a
voluntary relinquishment of a known right. Smith v. State, 394 Md. 184, 201, 905 A.2d
315, 325 (2006) (“We have defined waiver as ‘the intentional relinquishment of a known
13
right.’”). See also McElroy v. State, 329 Md. 136, 140, 617 A.2d 1068, 1070 (1993) (A
knowing and intelligent waiver of fundamental constitutional rights will be found on post-
conviction only if the defendant’s knowledge of the right and personal waiver were
reflected in the record.). The record presents no basis for concluding other than that
Shortall’s trial counsel, during the period when he was advising concerning a possible
appeal, continued to labor under the mistaken belief that the continuing offense instruction
was an accurate statement of the law applicable to the facts of this case. Shortall did not
waive a known right.
Even if the continuing offense instruction had not been granted, the State argues that
the jury, nevertheless, “may well have concluded” that Shortall was guilty on all ten counts.
The argument is that the evidence could have supported finding five separate disposals of
waste. The Court of Special Appeals held that “the plain language of the regulations at
issue and Env. § 9-343(a)(3) do not support ten separate convictions for the two regulatory
violations that were established by the evidence[.]” Shortall, 237 Md. App. at 76, 183 A.3d
at 829-30. The State did not petition for, and our grant of certiorari did not embrace, a
review of the sufficiency of the evidence. We do not consider this argument. Kostelec v.
State, 348 Md. 230, 242, 703 A.2d 160, 166 (1997); State v. Broberg, 342 Md. 544, 571-
72, 677 A.2d 602, 615 (1996) (“[W]here an issue has been put forth as an alternative basis
for upholding the conviction, this Court has consistently refused to consider that issue if it
was not raised in a certiorari petition, a cross-petition, or the order of this Court granting
the petition.”); Batson v. Shiflett, 325 Md. 684, 700-01, 602 A.2d 1191, 1199 (1992);
Robeson v. State, 285 Md. 498, 502, 403 A.2d 1221, 1223 (1979) (“[T]his Court will not
14
ordinarily consider an issue which was not raised in the petition for a writ of certiorari, in
a cross-petition or in the Court’s order granting certiorari.”), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 1021,
100 S. Ct. 680, 62 L. Ed. 2d 654 (1980); Md. Rule 8-131(b)(1) (“[I]n 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[.]”).
In the case at bar the prejudice lies in Shortall’s having been convicted, mistakenly,
on eight counts. In a more typical case of mistaken conviction a crime has been committed
in fact and in law, but there was trial court error or an erroneous attribution of criminal
agency. Here, the conduct for which Shortall mistakenly was convicted was not a crime in
fact or in law. Under the facts of this case a crime existed only as a creation of the
unchallenged instruction.
II. New Trial
Both parties contend that the proper remedy, if Shortall was not effectively
represented, is a new trial. The State would have a new trial embrace all ten counts while
Shortall limits the relief sought in his cross-petition for certiorari to counts 2 and 3 alleging
violations on December 5, 2012. We reject both positions.
The State says that a complete new trial “would provide a renewed opportunity to
apply the intermediate appellate court’s explanation of the continuing violations law to the
facts of this specific case.” In other words, the State wants another bite at the apple. This
is not permitted. Denisyuk v. State, 422 Md. 462, 487 n.10, 30 A.3d 914, 928 (2011),
abrogated on other grounds by Miller v. State, 435 Md. 174, 77 A.3d 1030 (2013);
15
Southern v. State, 371 Md. 93, 107, 807 A.2d 13, 21 (2002) (“Rule 8–604(d) does not
permit such a remand for the purpose of introducing new evidence in cases where a party,
like the State here, failed to sustain its burden of proof on an issue both raised in a motion
to suppress and argued at the hearing on that motion. Because the State did not sustain this
burden, allowing the State to introduce new evidence on remand, i.e. taking a second bite
at the apple, is an improper application of Rule 8–604(d) and undermines the State’s burden
during the suppression proceedings in this case.”). Rather than try the case on eight of the
offenses on the theory alleged in the charging document, the State convinced the trial court
that the disposal of waste which was observed on December 5, 2012, legally could continue
as eight additional violations until the pipe was capped. The prosecution does not get a
second chance to prove its case by a different theory.
Shortall submits that he is entitled to a new trial on counts 2 and 3 because “the
legally improper Continuing Violation Theory instruction was inevitably used by the jury
to convict him.” The argument of the cross-petitioner seems to be that
the waste observed by the inspectors on December 5, 2012, was not originally disposed of
on that date, so that the jury used the continuing violation theory to convict on counts 2
and 3. Shortall does not dispute that the observations on December 5, 2012, sufficed to
establish that there had been a recent violation of each of Regs. D and E under a proper
construction and application of those regulations and of Env. § 9-343(a)(1) and (3). Nor
has Shortall ever contended that he was prejudiced by a variance as to the date of violation
between the probata and the allegata. The purported error is harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt.
16
For all the foregoing reasons, we shall affirm the judgment of the Court of Special
Appeals.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED. COSTS
IN THIS COURT TO BE PAID NINETY
PERCENT (90%) BY DORCHESTER
COUNTY AND TEN PERCENT (10%) BY
THE CROSS-PETITIONER, PURNELL
SHORTALL.
17