BRADY v. MARYLAND
No. 490
373 U.S. 83; 83 S. Ct. 1194; 1963 U.S. LEXIS 1615; 10 L. Ed.
2d 215
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Lawyers' Edition Display SUMMARY: After the petitioner had been convicted
in a Maryland state court on a charge of murder in the first degree (committed
in the course of a robbery) and had been sentenced to death, he learned of an
extrajudicial confession of his accomplice, tried separately, admitting the
actual homicide. This confession had been suppressed by the prosecution
notwithstanding a request by the petitioner's counsel to allow him to examine
the accomplice's extrajudicial statements. Upon appeal from the trial court's
dismissal of his petition for postconviction relief, the Maryland Court of
Appeals held that suppression of the evidence by the prosecution denied
petitioner due process of law, and remanded the case for a retrial of the
question of punishment only.
(226
Md 422, 174 A2d 167.) On certiorari, the United States Supreme Court
affirmed. In an opinion by Douglas, J., expressing the views of six members of
the Court, it was held that (1) the prosecution's suppression of the
accomplice's confession violated the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, but (2) neither that clause nor the equal protection clause of that
amendment was violated by restricting the new trial to the question of
punishment.
White, J., concurred in a separate opinion, expressing the
view that the Court should not have reached the due process question which it
decided. He concurred in the Court's disposition of petitioner's equal
protection argument.
Harlan, J., joined by Black, J., dissented,
expressing the view that because of uncertainty in the pertinent Maryland law
and because the Maryland Court of Appeals did not in terms address itself to the
equal protection question, the judgment below should have been vacated and the
case remanded to the Court of Appeals for further consideration.
LEXIS HEADNOTES -
Classified to U.S. Digest Lawyers' Edition:
APPEAL AND ERROR §95
finality of state court judgment. --
Headnote: [1]
A decision of the highest court of a state in which the
trial court's dismissal of a prisoner's petition for postconviction relief was
reversed on the ground that suppression of the evidence by the prosecution
denied petitioner due process of law, and by which the case was remanded for a
retrial of the question of punishment, not the question of guilt, is a "final
judgment" within the meaning of
28
USC 1257(3), under which the United States Supreme Court may review a
judgment of a state court only if it is final.
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW §840.5
due process -- prosecution's suppression of accomplice's
confession. --
Headnote: [2]
The due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment is violated by the prosecution's suppression--before and at
the accused's state trial on a charge of murder committed in the course of
robbery and after defense counsel's request to allow him examination of the
extrajudicial statements of his accomplice--of a statement of the accomplice
admitting that the latter committed the actual homicide.
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW §840
due process -- prosecution's suppression of
evidence. --
Headnote: [3]
The suppression by the prosecution
of evidence favorable to and requested by an accused violates due process where
the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the
good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.
TRIAL §45
relative functions of court and jury -- admissibility of evidence. --
Headnote: [4]
Notwithstanding the provision in the Maryland
Constitution that the jury in a criminal case are the judges of law, as well as
of fact, under Maryland law it is the court and not the jury that passes on the
admissibility of evidence pertinent to the issue of innocence or guilt of the
accused.
CRIMINAL LAW §74
postconviction proceedings --
construction of state court judgment. --
Headnote: [5]
A
statement in a state court judgment reversing the trial court's dismissal of a
prisoner's petition for postconviction relief and remanding the case for a
retrial of the question of punishment, that nothing in an accomplice's
confession suppressed by the prosecution could have reduced the accused's
offense below murder in the first degree, is a ruling on the admissibility of
the confession on the issue of innocence or guilt.
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW §500
prosecution's suppression of accomplice's
confession -- restricting new trial to question of punishment. --
Headnote: [6]
Neither the due process clause nor the equal protection
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is violated by a state court's restricting to
the question of punishment a new trial granted an accused because of the
prosecution's suppression of an accomplice's confession, where the state court
ruled that nothing in the suppressed confession could have reduced the accused's
offense below murder in the first degree, thereby ruling on the admissibility of
the confession on the issue of innocence or guilt, and under the law of the
state this issue was for the court, not the jury, to determine.
SYLLABUS: In separate trials
in a Maryland Court, where the jury is the judge of both the law and the facts
but the court passes on the admissibility of the evidence, petitioner and a
companion were convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. At his
trial, petitioner admitted participating in the crime but claimed that his
companion did the actual killing. In his summation to the jury, petitioner's
counsel conceded that petitioner was guilty of murder in the first degree and
asked only that the jury return that verdict "without capital punishment." Prior
to the trial, petitioner's counsel had requested the prosecution to allow him to
examine the companion's extrajudicial statements. Several of these were shown to
him; but one in which the companion admitted the actual killing was withheld by
the prosecution and did not come to petitioner's notice until after he had been
tried, convicted and sentenced and after his conviction had
[***2] been affirmed by the Maryland Court of Appeals. In
a post-conviction proceeding, the Maryland Court of Appeals held that
suppression of the evidence by the prosecutor denied petitioner due process of
law, and it remanded the case for a new trial of the question of punishment, but
not the question of guilt, since it was of the opinion that nothing in the
suppressed confession "could have reduced [petitioner's] offense below murder in
the first degree."
Held: Petitioner was not denied a federal
constitutional right when his new trial was restricted to the question of
punishment; and the judgment is affirmed. Pp. 84-91.
(a) Suppression by
the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused who has requested it
violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to
punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution. Pp.
86-88.
(b) When the Court of Appeals restricted petitioner's new trial
to the question of punishment, it did not deny him due process or equal
protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment, since the suppressed
evidence was admissible only on the issue of punishment. Pp. 88-91.
COUNSEL: E. Clinton Bamberger,
[***3] Jr. argued the cause for petitioner. With
him on the brief was John Martin Jones, Jr.
Thomas W. Jamison III,
Special Assistant Attorney General of Maryland, argued the cause for respondent.
With him on the brief were Thomas B. Finan, Attorney General, and Robert C.
Murphy, Deputy Attorney General.
JUDGES: Warren, Black, Douglas, Clark, Harlan,
Brennan, Stewart, White, Goldberg
OPINIONBY: DOUGLAS
OPINION: [*84]
[**1195] Opinion of the Court by MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS, announced by MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN.
Petitioner and a companion,
Boblit, were found guilty of murder in the first degree and were sentenced to
death, their convictions being affirmed by the Court of Appeals of Maryland.
220
Md. 454, 154 A. 2d 434. Their trials were separate, petitioner being tried
first. At his trial Brady took the stand and admitted his participation in the
crime, but he claimed that Boblit did the actual killing. And, in his summation
to the jury, Brady's counsel conceded that Brady was guilty of murder in the
first degree, asking only that the jury return that verdict "without capital
punishment." Prior to the trial petitioner's counsel had requested the
prosecution to allow
[***4] him to examine
Boblit's extrajudicial statements. Several of those statements were shown to
him; but one dated July 9, 1958, in which Boblit admitted the actual homicide,
was withheld by the prosecution and did not come to petitioner's notice until
after he had been tried, convicted, and sentenced, and after his conviction had
been affirmed.
Petitioner moved the trial court for a new trial based on
the newly discovered evidence that had been suppressed by the prosecution.
Petitioner's appeal from a denial of that motion was dismissed by the Court of
Appeals without prejudice to relief under the
Maryland
[*85] Post Conviction Procedure Act. 222 Md. 442, 160 A. 2d
912. The petition for post-conviction relief was
dismissed by the trial court; and on appeal the Court of Appeals held that
suppression of the evidence by the prosecution denied petitioner due process of
law and remanded the case for a retrial of the question of punishment, not the
question of guilt.
226
Md. 422, 174 A. 2d 167. The case is here on certiorari,
371
U.S. 812. n1
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[1]
n1
Neither party suggests that the decision below is not a "final judgment" within
the meaning of
28
U. S. C. § 1257 (3), and no attack on the reviewability of the lower court's
judgment could be successfully maintained. For the general rule that "Final
judgment in a criminal case means sentence. The sentence is the judgment" (
Berman
v. United States, 302 U.S. 211, 212) cannot be applied here. If in
fact the Fourteenth Amendment entitles petitioner to a new trial on the issue of
guilt as well as punishment the ruling below has seriously prejudiced him. It is
the right to a trial on the issue of guilt "that presents a serious and
unsettled question" (
Cohen
v. Beneficial Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541, 547) that "is fundamental
to the further conduct of the case" (
United
States v. General Motors Corp., 323 U.S. 373, 377). This
question is "independent of, and unaffected by" (
Radio
Station WOW v. Johnson, 326 U.S. 120, 126) what may transpire
in a trial at which petitioner can receive only a life imprisonment or death
sentence. It cannot be mooted by such a proceeding. See
Largent
v. Texas, 318 U.S. 418, 421-422. Cf.
Local
No. 438 v. Curry, 371 U.S. 542, 549. - - - - -
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[***5] The
[**1196] crime in question was murder committed in the
perpetration of a robbery. Punishment for that crime in Maryland is life
imprisonment or death, the jury being empowered to restrict the punishment to
life by addition of the words "without capital punishment." 3 Md. Ann. Code,
1957, Art. 27, § 413. In Maryland, by reason of the state constitution, the jury
in a criminal case are "the Judges of Law, as well as of fact." Art. XV, § 5.
The question presented is whether petitioner was denied a federal right when the
Court of Appeals restricted the new trial to the question of punishment.
[*86] [2]
We agree
with the Court of Appeals that suppression of this confession was a violation of
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court of Appeals relied
in the main on two decisions from the Third Circuit Court of Appeals
--
United States ex rel. Almeida v. Baldi, 195 F.2d 815, and
United
States ex rel. Thompson v. Dye, 221 F.2d 763 -- which, we
agree, state the correct constitutional rule.
This ruling is an
extension
[***6] of
Mooney
v. Holohan, 294 U.S. 103, 112, where the Court ruled on what
nondisclosure by a prosecutor violates due process:
"It
is a requirement that cannot be deemed to be satisfied by mere notice and
hearing if a State has contrived a conviction through the pretense of a trial
which in truth is but used as a means of depriving a defendant of liberty
through a deliberate deception of court and jury by the presentation of
testimony known to be perjured. Such a contrivance by a State to procure the
conviction and imprisonment of a defendant is as inconsistent with the
rudimentary demands of justice as is the obtaining of a like result by
intimidation."
In
Pyle
v. Kansas, 317 U.S. 213, 215-216, we phrased the rule in broader
terms:
"Petitioner's papers are inexpertly drawn, but
they do set forth allegations that his imprisonment resulted from perjured
testimony, knowingly used by the State authorities to obtain his conviction, and
from the deliberate suppression by those same authorities of evidence favorable
to him. These allegations sufficiently charge a deprivation of rights guaranteed
by the Federal Constitution, and, if
[***7]
proven, would entitle petitioner to release from his present custody.
Mooney
v. Holohan, 294 U.S. 103. "
[*87] The Third Circuit in the
Baldi case
construed that statement in
Pyle v.
Kansas to mean that

the
"suppression of evidence favorable" to the accused was itself sufficient to
amount to a denial of due process.
195
F.2d, at 820. In
Napue
v. Illinois, 360 U.S. 264, 269, we extended the test formulated in
Mooney v.
Holohan when we said: "The same result obtains when
the State, although not soliciting false evidence, allows it to go uncorrected
when it appears." And see
Alcorta
v. Texas, 355 U.S. 28; Wilde
v. Wyoming, 362 U.S. 607. Cf.
Durley
v. Mayo, 351 U.S. 277, 285 (dissenting opinion).
[3]
We now hold that

the
suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to
[***8] an accused upon request violates
[**1197] due process where the evidence is material
either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of
the prosecution.
The principle of
Mooney v.
Holohan is
not punishment of society for misdeeds of a prosecutor but avoidance of an
unfair trial to the accused. Society wins not only when the guilty are convicted
but when criminal trials are fair; our system of the administration of justice
suffers when any accused is treated unfairly. An inscription on the walls of the
Department of Justice states the proposition candidly for the federal domain:
"The United States wins its point whenever justice is done its citizens in the
courts." n2 A prosecution that withholds evidence on demand of an accused which,
if made available,
[*88] would tend to exculpate
him or reduce the penalty helps shape a trial that bears heavily on the
defendant. That casts the prosecutor in the role of an architect of a proceeding
that does not comport with standards of justice, even though, as in the present
case, his action is not "the result of guile," to use the words of the Court of
Appeals.
226
Md., at 427, 174 A. 2d, at 169. [***9]
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n2 Judge Simon E. Sobeloff when Solicitor General put the
idea as follows in an address before the Judicial Conference of the Fourth
Circuit on June 29, 1954:
"The Solicitor General is not a neutral, he is
an advocate; but an advocate for a client whose business is not merely to
prevail in the instant case. My client's chief business is not to achieve
victory but to establish justice. We are constantly reminded of the now classic
words penned by one of my illustrious predecessors, Frederick William Lehmann,
that the Government wins its point when justice is done in its courts."
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The question remains whether petitioner was denied a
constitutional right when the Court of Appeals restricted his new trial to the
question of punishment. In justification of that ruling the Court of Appeals
stated:
"There is considerable doubt as to how much good
Boblit's undisclosed confession would have done Brady if it had been before the
jury. It clearly implicated Brady as being the one who wanted to strangle the
victim,
[***10] Brooks. Boblit, according to
this statement, also favored killing him, but he wanted to do it by shooting. We
cannot put ourselves in the place of the jury and assume what their views would
have been as to whether it did or did not matter whether it was Brady's hands or
Boblit's hands that twisted the shirt about the victim's neck. . . . It would be
'too dogmatic' for us to say that the jury would not have attached any
significance to this evidence
in considering the punishment of the defendant
Brady.
"Not without some doubt, we conclude that the withholding of
this particular confession of Boblit's was prejudicial to the defendant Brady. .
. .
"The appellant's sole claim of prejudice goes to the punishment
imposed.
If Boblit's withheld confession had been before the jury,
nothing in it could have reduced the appellant Brady's offense below murder in
the first degree. We, therefore, see no occasion to retry that issue."
226
Md., at 429-430, 174 A. 2d, at 171. (Italics added.)
[*89] If this were a jurisdiction where the jury was not
the judge of the law, a different question would be presented. But since it is,
how can the Maryland Court of
[***11] Appeals
state that nothing in the suppressed confession could have reduced petitioner's
offense "below murder in the first degree"? If, as a matter of Maryland law,
juries in criminal cases could determine the admissibility of such evidence on
the issue of innocence or guilt, the question would seem to be foreclosed.
But Maryland's constitutional provision making the jury in criminal
[**1198] cases "the Judges of Law" does not
mean precisely what it seems to say. n3 The present status of that provision was
reviewed recently in
Giles
v. State, 229 Md. 370, 183 A. 2d 359, appeal dismissed,
372
U.S. 767, where the several exceptions, added by statute or carved out by
judicial construction, are reviewed. One of those exceptions, material here, is
that "

Trial
courts have always passed and still pass upon the admissibility of evidence the
jury may consider on the issue of the innocence or guilt of the accused."
229
Md., at 383, 183 A. 2d, at 365. The cases cited make up a long line going
back nearly a century.
Wheeler
v. State, 42 Md. 563, 570, [***12]
stated that instructions to the jury were advisory only, "except in regard to
questions as to what shall be considered as evidence." And the court "having
such right, it follows of course, that it also has the right to prevent counsel
from arguing against such an instruction."
Bell
v. State, 57 Md. 108, 120. And see
Beard
v. State, 71 Md. 275, 280, 17 A. 1044, 1045; Dick
v. State, 107 Md. 11, 21, 68 A. 286, 290. Cf.
Vogel
v. State, 163 Md. 267, 162 A. 705. - - - - - - - - -
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n3 See
Dennis, Maryland's Antique Constitutional Thorn, 92 U. of Pa. L. Rev. 34, 39,
43; Prescott, Juries as Judges of the Law: Should the Practice be Continued, 60
Md. St. Bar Assn. Rept. 246, 253-254.
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[*90] [4]
[5]
[6]
We usually
walk on treacherous
[***13] ground when we
explore state law, n4 for state courts, state agencies, and state legislatures
are its final expositors under our federal regime. But, as we read the Maryland
decisions, it is the court, not the jury, that passes on the "admissibility of
evidence" pertinent to "the issue of the innocence or guilt of the accused."
Giles
v. State, supra. In the present case a unanimous Court of Appeals
has said that nothing in the suppressed confession "could have reduced the
appellant Brady's offense below murder in the first degree." We read that
statement as a ruling on the admissibility of the confession on the issue of
innocence or guilt. A sporting theory of justice might assume that if the
suppressed confession had been used at the first trial, the judge's ruling that
it was not admissible on the issue of innocence or guilt might have been flouted
by the jury just as might have been done if the court had first admitted a
confession and then stricken it from the record. n5 But we cannot raise that
trial strategy to the dignity of a constitutional right and say that the
deprival of this defendant of that sporting chance through the use of a
[*91] bifurcated
[***14]
trial (cf.
Williams
v. New York, 337 U.S. 241) denies him due process or violates the
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
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n4
For one unhappy incident of recent vintage see
Oklahoma Packing Co. v.
Oklahoma
Gas & Electric Co., 309 U.S. 4, that replaced an earlier opinion in
the same case,
309
U.S. 703. n5 "In the matter of confessions a hybrid situation
exists. It is the duty of the Court to determine from the proof, usually taken
out of the presence of the jury, if they were freely and voluntarily made, etc.,
and admissible. If admitted, the jury is entitled to hear and consider proof of
the circumstances surrounding their obtention, the better to determine their
weight and sufficiency. The fact that the Court admits them clothes them with no
presumption for the jury's purposes that they are either true or were freely and
voluntarily made. However, after a confession has been admitted and read to the
jury the judge may change his mind and strike it out of the record. Does he
strike it out of the jury's mind?" Dennis, Maryland's Antique Constitutional
Thorn, 92 U. of Pa. L. Rev. 34, 39. See also
Bell
v. State, supra, at 120; Vogel
v. State, 163 Md., at 272, 162 A., at 706-707. - - -
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[***15] Affirmed.
Separate opinion of MR. JUSTICE WHITE.
1. The Maryland Court of
Appeals declared, "The suppression or withholding by the State of material
evidence exculpatory to an accused is a violation
[**1199] of due process" without citing the United
States Constitution or the Maryland Constitution which also has a due process
clause. * We therefore cannot be sure which Constitution was invoked by the
court below and thus whether the State, the only party aggrieved by this portion
of the judgment, could even bring the issue here if it desired to do so. See
New
York City v. Central Savings Bank, 306 U.S. 661; Minnesota
v. National Tea Co., 309 U.S. 551. But in any event, there is no
cross-petition by the State, nor has it challenged the correctness of the ruling
below that a new trial on punishment was called for by the requirements of due
process. In my view, therefore, the Court should not reach the due process
question which it decides. It certainly is not the case, as it may be suggested,
that without it we would have only a state law question, for assuming the court
below was correct in finding a violation of
[***16] petitioner's rights in the suppression of
evidence, the federal question he wants decided here still remains, namely,
whether denying him a new trial on guilt as well as punishment deprives him of
equal protection. There is thus a federal question to deal with in this Court,
cf.
Bell
v. Hood, 327 U.S. 678, [*92] wholly
aside from the due process question involving the suppression of evidence. The
majority opinion makes this unmistakably clear. Before dealing with the due
process issue it says, "The question presented is whether petitioner was denied
a federal right when the Court of Appeals restricted the new trial to the
question of punishment." After discussing at some length and disposing of the
suppression matter in federal constitutional terms it says the question still to
be decided is the same as it was before: "The question remains whether
petitioner was denied a constitutional right when the Court of Appeals
restricted his new trial to the question of punishment."
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* Md. Const., Art. 23;
Home
Utilities Co., Inc., v. Revere Copper & Brass, Inc., 209 Md.
610, 122 A. 2d 109; Raymond
v. State, 192 Md. 602, 65 A. 2d 285; County
Comm'rs of Anne Arundel County v. English, 182 Md. 514, 35 A. 2d
135; Oursler
v. Tawes, 178 Md. 471, 13 A. 2d 763. - - - - - - - -
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[***17] The result, of course, is that the due
process discussion by the Court is wholly advisory.
2. In any event the
Court's due process advice goes substantially beyond the holding below. I would
employ more confining language and would not cast in constitutional form a broad
rule of criminal discovery. Instead, I would leave this task, at least for now,
to the rulemaking or legislative process after full consideration by
legislators, bench, and bar.
3. I concur in the Court's disposition of
petitioner's equal protection argument.
DISSENTBY: HARLAN
DISSENT: MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE
BLACK joins, dissenting.
I think this case presents only a single
federal question: did the order of the Maryland Court of Appeals granting a new
trial, limited to the issue of punishment, violate petitioner's Fourteenth
Amendment right to equal protection? n1 In my opinion an affirmative answer
would
[*93] be required
if the Boblit
statement would have been admissible on the issue of guilt at petitioner's
original trial. This indeed seems to be the clear implication of this Court's
opinion.
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n1 I agree with my Brother WHITE that there is
no necessity for deciding in this case the broad due process questions with
which the Court deals at pp. 86-88 of its opinion.
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[***18] The Court, however, holds that the
Fourteenth Amendment was not infringed because it considers the Court of
Appeals' opinion, and the other Maryland cases dealing with Maryland's
constitutional provision making juries in criminal cases "the Judges of Law, as
[**1200] well as of fact," as establishing
that the Boblit statement would not have been admissible at the original trial
on the issue of petitioner's guilt.
But I cannot read the Court of
Appeals' opinion with any such assurance. That opinion can as easily, and
perhaps more easily, be read as indicating that the new trial limitation
followed from the Court of Appeals' concept of its power, under § 645G of the
Maryland Post Conviction Procedure Act, Md. Code, Art. 27 (1960 Cum. Supp.) and
Rule 870 of the Maryland Rules of Procedure, to fashion appropriate relief
meeting the peculiar circumstances of this case, n2 rather than from the view
that the Boblit statement would have been relevant at the original trial only on
the issue of punishment.
226
Md., at 430, 174 A. 2d, at 171. This interpretation is indeed fortified by
the Court of Appeals' earlier general discussion as to the admissibility of
third-party
[***19] confessions, which falls
short of saying anything that is dispositive
[*94] of the crucial issue here.
226
Md., at 427-429, 174 A. 2d, at 170. n3
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n2 Section
645G provides in part: "If the court finds in favor of the petitioner, it shall
enter an appropriate order with respect to the judgment or sentence in the
former proceedings, and any supplementary orders as to rearraignment, retrial,
custody, bail, discharge, correction of sentence, or other matters that may be
necessary and proper." Rule 870 provides that the Court of Appeals "will either
affirm or reverse the judgment from which the appeal was taken, or direct the
manner in which it shall be modified, changed or amended."
n3 It is
noteworthy that the Court of Appeals did not indicate that it was limiting in
any way the authority of
Day
v. State, 196 Md. 384, 76 A. 2d 729. In that case two defendants
were jointly tried and convicted of felony murder. Each admitted participating
in the felony but accused the other of the homicide. On appeal the defendants
attacked the trial court's denial of a severance, and the State argued that
neither defendant was harmed by the statements put in evidence at the joint
trial because admission of the felony amounted to admission of guilt of felony
murder. Nevertheless the Court of Appeals found an abuse of discretion and
ordered separate new trials on all issues.
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[***20] Nor do I find anything in any of the
other Maryland cases cited by the Court (
ante, p. 89) which bears on
the admissibility
vel non of the Boblit statement on the issue of
guilt. None of these cases suggests anything more relevant here than that a jury
may not "overrule" the trial court on questions relating to the admissibility of
evidence. Indeed they are by no means clear as to what happens if the jury in
fact undertakes to do so. In this very case, for example, the trial court
charged that "in the final analysis the jury are the judges of both the
law and the facts, and the verdict in this case is
entirely
the jury's responsibility." (Emphasis added.)
Moreover, uncertainty on
this score is compounded by the State's acknowledgment at the oral argument here
that the withheld Boblit statement
would have been admissible at the
trial on the issue of guilt. n4
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n4 In response to a
question from the Bench as to whether Boblit's statement, had it been offered at
petitioner's original trial, would have been admissible for all purposes,
counsel for the State, after some colloquy, stated: "It would have been, yes."
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[***21] In this state of
uncertainty as to the proper answer to the critical underlying issue of state
law, and in view of the fact that the Court of Appeals did not in terms
[*95] address itself to the equal protection question, I
do not see how we can properly resolve this case at this juncture. I think the
appropriate course is to vacate the judgment of the State Court of Appeals and
remand the case to that court for further consideration in light of the
governing constitutional principle stated at the outset of this opinion. Cf.
Minnesota
v. National Tea Co., 309 U.S. 551.