Case Title: Burnside v. State

Citation: 

Docket Number: 71/17

State: maryland

Court: Maryland Supreme Court

Date: 2018-07-11T00:00:00Z

Document:
Carl Franklin Burnside v. State of Maryland, No. 71, September Term, 2017. Opinion by 
Greene, J. 
 
CRIMINAL LAW — EVIDENCE — PRIOR CONVICTION IMPEACHMENT — 
The Court of Appeals held, consistent with Dallas v. State, 413 Md. 569, 993 A.2d 665 
(2010), that a trial court should make a preliminary ruling regarding the admission of a 
prior conviction, when the trial court has appropriate means of determining how a 
defendant might testify and it is apparent that a delayed ruling would likely cause a chilling 
effect on the defendant’s constitutional right to testify.  
 
CRIMINAL LAW — EVIDENCE — MARYLAND RULE 5-609 — The Court of 
Appeals held that the trial court failed to exercise its discretion, thereby committing an 
abuse of discretion, when it refused to conduct a Maryland Rule 5-609 balancing test prior 
to the defendant’s election to testify. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 71  
 
September Term, 2017 
 
______________________________________ 
 
CARL FRANKLIN BURNSIDE 
 
 
 
v. 
STATE OF MARYLAND 
 
 
Barbera, C.J. 
Greene, 
Adkins, 
McDonald, 
Watts, 
Hotten, 
Getty, 
 
JJ. 
______________________________________ 
 
Opinion by Greene, J. 
Watts and Getty, JJ., concur and dissent. 
___________________________________ 
 
Filed: July 11, 2018
Circuit Court for Washington County 
Case No. 21-K-16-052453 
Argued: May 2, 2018 
 
Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act  
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document 
is authentic.
Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk  
2019-01-03 
10:29-05:00
 
 
 
In this case we must decide whether it was an abuse of discretion for the trial court 
to choose to wait until after the defendant testified before ruling on the admissibility of the 
defendant’s prior conviction for purposes of impeachment.  Maryland Rule 5-609 (“Rule 
5-609” or “the Rule”) permits the admission of prior convictions for impeachment 
purposes, so long as the conviction is within the class of convictions concerning credibility, 
15 years have not elapsed since the conviction and the probative value of the conviction 
outweighs its prejudicial effect.  The Rule embodies our respect for these interests and 
serves as the starting point from which all trial judges must begin in order to strike the 
appropriate balance.  Our decision today reconciles the competing interests between a 
defendant’s constitutional right to testify and the State’s less-protected right to cross-
examine a defendant for impeachment purposes.  We are specifically called upon to 
examine whether the trial judge struck the appropriate balance in Carl Burnside’s 
(“Petitioner” or “Mr. Burnside”) trial, in which Mr. Burnside was convicted for possession 
with intent to distribute a controlled dangerous substance.     
I. 
Facts 
The facts presented at trial are as follows.  On April 4, 2016, shortly after midnight, 
Deputy Kyle Snodderly stopped a vehicle operating with only one illuminated headlight in 
Hagerstown, Washington County, Maryland.  There were two individuals in the vehicle, 
the driver, Nicholas Knight, and Petitioner, Carl Burnside, who sat in the front passenger 
seat.  Mr. Knight produced a driver’s license that authorized him to drive only to and from 
his place employment.  Deputy Snodderly testified that Petitioner produced identification 
2 
 
and informed Deputy Snodderly that he may have had outstanding traffic warrants.  The 
vehicle was registered to a Joey Jones in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  Petitioner informed 
the deputy that Mr. Jones was his cousin, and Mr. Knight informed Deputy Snodderly that 
he was helping Mr. Burnside to relocate from Philadelphia to Hagerstown, Maryland.   
With regard to the initial traffic stop, Deputy Snodderly testified that he became 
suspicious1 about the occupants in the vehicle because he did not observe any items in the 
vehicle—other than a dirty fish tank—that were consistent with Mr. Knight’s statement 
that he was helping Petitioner move.  Deputy Snodderly’s warrant check confirmed that 
Petitioner had an outstanding warrant for driving without a license.  Upon confirmation, 
Deputy Snodderly called for backup and placed Petitioner in custody and searched 
Petitioner incident to the arrest.  Shortly thereafter, Deputy Jasen Logsdon arrived on the 
scene as backup.  The search of Mr. Burnside produced $5,169.69 cash in mostly $20 bills, 
and a cell phone.  Despite Mr. Burnside’s statement that some of the cash was for his rent, 
and some of it was money he won at a casino,2 Deputy Logsdon requested a K-9 unit to 
conduct a “free air sniff” of the vehicle because of the large amount of cash recovered from 
Petitioner, which apparently is typical of “people that partake in drug sales [and] 
distribution.”  
                                                          
 
1 On cross-examination, Deputy Snodderly testified that he did not observe Petitioner or 
Mr. Knight participating in any drug transactions, and that before he obtained Mr. Knight’s 
and Petitioner’s identifications his suspicion of the out-of-state vehicle leaving a high-
crime area was “basically a hunch.” 
 
2 One of the arresting officers testified that he did not investigate the casino winnings.    
3 
 
Officer Curtis Kelley arrived on the scene with his K-9 partner, Jackie.  Jackie 
indicated a positive alert for a controlled dangerous substance near the trunk of the car.  
Mr. Knight was asked to step out of the vehicle upon Jackie’s positive alert.  Mr. Burnside 
also informed one of the officers that there was a marijuana cigarette in the ashtray of the 
vehicle.  The vehicle search recovered the partially smoked marijuana cigarette, three 
hypodermic syringes associated with heroin usage, a metal spoon with “white powdery 
residue on the bowl and black burn marks on the bottom side,” a large quantity of Ziploc 
baggies, each containing heroin or cocaine, a large quantity of empty Ziploc baggies, a 
digital scale with heroin residue on it, a duffle bag, and a shower bag containing toiletries.3   
Deputy Logsdon testified that he searched Mr. Knight twice; the first search revealed 
nothing and the second search revealed an orange syringe cap.   
Mr. Knight was called as a State witness in Mr. Burnside’s criminal proceedings.  
On direct examination, Mr. Knight testified that he was charged with intent to distribute 
heroin and crack cocaine, with possession of controlled paraphernalia, and for driving on 
a restricted license.  He testified that he entered a plea agreement with the State in which 
he pled guilty to possession of controlled paraphernalia, i.e., the syringes recovered from 
the vehicle, in exchange for “pre-trial sentencing and probation.”  He testified that he was 
addicted to drugs and that he was participating in a court-ordered drug rehabilitation 
program.  On cross-examination, he testified that his possession with intent to distribute 
                                                          
 
3 The testifying officer described the content of the baggies and the residue on the digital 
scale as a “tan powder substance”; later lab sample testing revealed that the substance 
contained heroin and cocaine.  
4 
 
charges were dropped in exchange for his testimony against Mr. Burnside and that his 
sentencing for the possession of paraphernalia was delayed until after Mr. Burnside’s trial.  
Mr. Knight explained that the delayed sentencing would allow the State to observe and 
evaluate his testimony against Mr. Burnside.  When asked on cross-examination if he had 
ever sold heroin or crack cocaine, he replied in the negative.  Finally, when defense counsel 
asked Mr. Knight if he knew Jason Marshall, William Bucklew, or Scott Dorman, Mr. 
Knight denied knowing all three individuals.  
 
The Defense presented three witnesses: Jason Marshall, William Bucklew, and 
Scott Dorman.  Each of the individuals testified to purchasing drugs from Mr. Knight.  Mr. 
Marshall testified that he purchased heroin from Mr. Knight two years before the time of 
his testimony, and that a friend of his purchased drugs from Mr. Knight.  Mr. Bucklew 
testified that he purchased heroin from Mr. Knight in February or March 2016.  Mr. 
Dorman testified that he purchased heroin and what he thought to be crack cocaine from 
Knight six to seven months before the time of his testimony.  Mr. Burnside did not testify 
in his defense.   
Mr. Burnside’s Theory of Defense 
For a trial judge to conduct an appropriate balancing test, he or she must have some 
knowledge regarding the nature of a defendant’s testimony, which is usually illuminated 
by the defendant’s theory of defense.  The State contends that Petitioner’s theory of the 
case was too ambiguous for the trial judge to conduct an informed balancing test prior to 
Petitioner’s testimony.  The record suggests that the Defense’s theory centered around the 
fact that there was another individual, Mr. Nicholas Knight, in the vehicle with Petitioner, 
5 
 
and that Mr. Knight could have been in actual or constructive possession of the drugs 
recovered from the vehicle.  During the opening statement the Defense encouraged the jury 
to 
pay attention to the details[]. . . .  because once Nicholas Knight was taken 
into custody himself, and they recovered a cell phone from him as well [as] 
[] forty-five dollars in cash. . . .  [and] three caps to the syringes that were 
found right next to him, the driver’s side and the console.  
 
Defense counsel explained to the jury that: 
 
[T]he evidence . . . will show that Mr. Knight had possession of the 
key to the car.  Mr. Knight . . . [was] the one who [was] driving the vehicle 
in violation of the law.  The evidence will also show that behind the closed 
passenger compartment is [] a black hide-away-key. . . .  [but] [t]here is no 
such thing as a driver’s side passenger compartment . . . .  [t]here is only one 
glovebox in the car.  It’s always in front of the passenger.   
 
* 
* 
* 
 
The evidence will show that Mr. Knight was charged with the exact 
same offenses . . . .  [b]ut he was able to avoid felony convictions and 
significant prison time by simply walking into the courtroom . . . [and] 
point[ing] the finger at [Mr. Burnside].  By cutting a deal . . . he gets to walk 
out that door and go home.   
 
Later, during a bench conference regarding the admission of a receipt into evidence, 
defense counsel objected to its admission partly “because obviously the[] central issue here 
for the jury to decide is [] whose drugs are they.”  To which the Court replied, “Right.”  
 
When viewed collectively, the defense attorney’s comments during opening 
statement and the bench conference, and the defendant’s three witnesses, outline the theory 
of the defense in this case.  The crux of the defense theory was to cast reasonable doubt on 
Mr. Burnside’s connection to the drugs and to suggest that Mr. Knight could have 
possessed the drugs with the intent to distribute.   
6 
 
Mr. Burnside’s Decision to Not Testify 
After Marshall, Bucklew, and Dorman testified, defense counsel advised Mr. 
Burnside, out of the hearing of the jury, of his Fifth Amendment right against self-
incrimination and informed him that because he had a prior conviction for possession with 
intent to distribute a controlled dangerous substance,4 she would ask the court to conduct a 
balancing test “to determine whether or not the State would be allowed to use [] [that] prior 
conviction against [him].”  When asked if he wished to testify in light of the potential 
impeachment, Mr. Burnside replied: 
[BURNSIDE]: I just know that if my past is going to be used against 
me, then I would not like to be testifying because it would be bias, it would 
be biased [sic] me to the charges I’m facing right now. 
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: You are saying you would be afraid you 
would be prejudiced? 
[BURNSIDE]: Yes 
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I believe he has a conviction your Honor.  
The only thing is the State has served us with mandatory minimum notice as 
well as subsequent offender notice and they have attached a certified docket 
entry for possession with intent.  It does not say what substance it is, [] but 
there is a conviction for that offense.  And I can’t recall if it was 2011 or 
2012 when it occurred.   
[BURNSIDE]: 2012. 
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay.  Okay.  And I would just ask this 
Court, if - - if the [c]ourt would conduct a balancing test.  I would agree that 
it is [] within the purview of crimes that are involving dishonesty. . . .  I would 
agree that it’s been for the past 15 years.  But part three of that test, according 
to Jackson would be whether or not it would be more prejudicial than it 
would be probative.  We would argue that [] in this instance with a man who 
is on trial for possessing with intent to distribute, my fear would be that if the 
                                                          
 
4 The record does not specify the controlled dangerous substance that Mr. Burnside was 
convicted of possessing with the intent to distribute.  There is enough similarity, however, 
between Mr. Burnside’s prior conviction for possession with intent to distribute and his 
pending charges for possession with intent to distribute heroin and cocaine to render the 
admission of the prior conviction highly prejudicial.   
 
7 
 
[c]ourt were to allow that, the State to impeach him with a prior conviction 
that the jury would base their decision solely on his previous conviction and 
not based upon the evidence presented here today. 
[THE STATE]: Your honor, I do have the case that uh (inaudible) if 
he takes the stand and he opens the door than he would be subject to 
impeachment. . . .   
[THE COURT]: That’s - - It is a balancing test but I don’t think I need 
to make the balancing decision before he testifies.  I think it’s his decision 
whether he wants to testify or doesn’t want to testify.  If he takes the stand 
and the State attempts to bring up his prior conviction then we will have a 
determination at that time, but I’m not going to preliminarily make that 
decision.   
[BURNSIDE]: I choose to exercise my Fifth Amendment right to 
remain silent and not testify due to his Honor’s previous objections for 
anything I say on our [sic] behalf.  
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: So, it is your decision not to testify. 
[BURNSIDE]: Yes, I don’t want to testify.  I won’t get no [sic] justice. 
 
 
The defense rested its case after Mr. Burnside elected not to testify.  On September 
16, 2016, after the jury heard testimony from the three arresting officers, a drug distribution 
expert, a controlled dangerous substances expert, three defense witnesses, and reviewed 
physical evidence including photos of the confiscated drugs, the jury convicted Mr. 
Burnside of possession with intent to distribute heroin and possession of cocaine.  He was 
sentenced to 15 years, with the first 10 to be served without the possibility of parole.  The 
jury acquitted him of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, and the State filed a nolle 
prosequi5 to the charge of possession of drug paraphernalia.   
 
 
                                                          
 
5 A nolle prosequi is “an official declaration by the State, announcing that it will not pursue 
the charges in a particular charging document.”  State v. Simms, 456 Md. 551, 557, 175 
A.3d 681, 685 (2017) (quoting Gilmore v. State, 389 Md. 656, 659, 887 A.2d 549, 550 n.2 
(2005)). 
8 
 
Procedural History 
Mr. Burnside noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals raising five 
issues for review with only one relevant to our holding today.  Burnside v. State, No. 2182, 
Sept. Term, 2016 (2017).  Burnside contended that the trial court failed to exercise its 
discretion when it chose not to give an advance ruling on the admissibility of his prior 
conviction.  Id.  Mr. Burnside argued that the trial court’s failure to exercise its discretion 
amounted to an abuse of discretion, given his desire to make an informed decision on 
whether he should testify.  Id.  The State contended that Mr. Burnside failed to preserve 
the issue for review because defense counsel did not object when the trial court declined to 
conduct the balancing test.  Id.  In an unreported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals 
affirmed the conviction holding, among other things, that it would have been “premature” 
for the trial court to engage in a balancing test without observing Mr. Burnside’s testimony 
first.  Id.   
In his petition for writ of certiorari, Mr. Burnside presented the following questions: 
1. Where Petitioner was on trial for a felony drug offense and his theory of 
defense was clear and consistent throughout the trial, did the trial court 
abuse its discretion, or fail to properly exercise discretion, in refusing to 
rule upon the admissibility for impeachment purposes of Petitioner’s 
prior felony drug conviction prior to Petitioner’s election of whether to 
testify? 
 
2. Did the Court of Special Appeals misapply the harmless error standard, 
as recently reiterated by this Court in Porter v. State, 455 Md. 220 (2017), 
in finding that the trial court’s errors in permitting the impeachment of a 
defense witness was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt? 
 
We granted certiorari.  Burnside v. State, 456 Md. 521, 175 A.3d 150 (2017).  For reasons 
cited herein, we hold that the trial court failed to exercise its discretion, and in doing so, 
9 
 
abused its discretion by refusing to conduct a balancing test before Mr. Burnside’s election 
to testify or remain silent.  Because we answer the first question in the affirmative, we do 
not reach the second.  Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the intermediate appellate 
court.   
II.  
A Defendant’s Right to Testify 
Maryland has long recognized the importance of preserving a defendant’s right to 
testify. This right is guaranteed both federally and in Maryland by the Fourteenth 
Amendment Due Process Clause, the Sixth Amendment Compulsory Process Clause, the 
Fifth Amendment right against compelled testimony (with the Sixth and Fifth Amendment 
being applied to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment), and in Articles 21 and 22 of the 
Maryland Declaration of Rights.  Dallas v. State, 413 Md. 569, 588–90, 993 A.2d 655, 
666–67 (2010) (C.J. Bell, dissenting); Burral v. State, 352 Md. 707, 730–31, 724 A.2d 65, 
76 (1999); Morales v. State, 325 Md. 330, 335, 600 A.2d 851, 853 (1992).  A defendant’s 
right to testify “is a significant one and must be made with a basic appreciation of what the 
choice entails.”  Morales, 325 Md. at 335, 600 A.2d at 853.  That choice entails and ensures 
a defendant’s right to “present his own version of events in his [or her] own words.”  Rock 
v. Arkansas, 483 U.S. 44, 52, 107 S. Ct. 2704, 2709, 97 L. Ed. 2d 37, 47 (1987).  “A 
defendant’s opportunity to conduct his own defense, [however] . . . is incomplete if he may 
not present himself as a witness.”  Id.  Given the constitutional nature of a defendant’s right 
to testify, the decision whether to testify must be made knowingly and voluntarily.  
10 
 
Morales, 325 Md. at 336–38, 600 A.2d at 854; Winters v. State, 434 Md. 527, 540, 76 A.3d 
986, 993 (2013).   
III. 
The Balancing Test  
A competing set of interests exists between this “fundamental constitutional right” 
to testify in one’s own defense and the State’s right to impeach a defendant by introducing 
prior criminal convictions.  Dallas, 413 Md. at 590, 993 A.2d at 667; Rock, 483 U.S. at 52, 
107 S. Ct. at 2709, L. Ed. At 46; see Maryland Rule 5-609 (a derivative of Federal Rule of 
Evidence 609).  Maryland Rule 5-609 was promulgated with the purpose of limiting the 
danger of prejudice by “impos[ing] limitations on the use of past convictions in an effort 
to discriminate between the informative use of past convictions to test credibility, and the 
pretextual use of past convictions where the convictions are not probative of credibility but 
instead merely create a negative impression of the defendant.”  Cure v. State, 195 Md. App. 
557, 575, 7 A.3d 145, 155 (2010), aff’d, 421 Md. 300, 26 A.3d 899 (2011) (quoting Jackson 
v. State, 340 Md. 705, 715–16, 668 A.2d 8, 13 (1995)).   
The rule was crafted with the understanding that, absent those limitations, a jury 
could potentially convict a defendant based on the defendant’s criminal history or simply 
“because [it] thinks the defendant is a bad person.”  Id. (quoting Jackson v. State, 340 Md. 
705, 715, 668 A.2d 8, 13 (1995)).  A defendant’s prior criminal conduct could compel a 
jury to believe that the defendant “is not entitled to a favorable verdict,” and that “if the 
defendant is wrongfully found guilty, no real harm is done.”  Hannah v. State, 420 Md. 
339, 347, 23 A.3d 192, 196 (2011) (quoting Jackson v. State, 340 Md. 705, 715, 668 A.2d 
11 
 
8, 13 (1995) (recognizing that “the defendant may be forced to choose between testifying 
in her or his own defense with the risk of being convicted by the jury’s misuse of 
impeachment evidence as propensity evidence, on one hand, and not testifying and 
foregoing a defense, on the other.”). 
 In Cure, the Court of Special Appeals explained Rule 5-609’s three-part test for 
determining the admissibility of prior convictions for impeachment purposes:6 
First, the prior conviction must be within the “eligible universe” of crimes, 
which consists of two categories: infamous crimes and other crimes relevant 
to a witness’s credibility[7] . . . .  The second step requires a determination by 
the trial court that the prior conviction is less than 15 years old, not reversed 
on appeal, or subject to a pardon or pending appeal. . . .  If the first two steps 
are satisfied, the trial court must then determine whether “the probative value 
of the prior conviction outweighs the danger of unfair prejudice to the 
witness or objecting party.”   
Cure, 195 Md. App. at 575–76, 7 A.3d at 155 (internal citations omitted).  When a trial 
judge engages in the balancing test, appellate courts “accord[] every reasonable 
presumption of correctness,” and will not “disturb that discretion unless it is clearly 
                                                          
 
6 Rule 5-609, as written, provides: 
 
For the purpose of attacking the credibility of a witness, evidence that the 
witness has been convicted of a crime shall be admitted if elicited from the 
witness or established by public record during examination of the witness, 
but only if (1) the crime was an infamous crime or other crime relevant to the 
witness’s credibility and (2) the court determines that the probative value of 
admitting this evidence outweighs the danger of unfair prejudice to the 
witness or the objecting party. 
 
7 A criminal conviction for possession with intent to distribute a dangerous substance is 
relevant to credibility and may be admissible for impeachment purposes.  See State v. 
Woodland, 337 Md. 519, 524, 654 A.2d 1314, 1316 (1995). 
 
12 
 
abused.”  Id. at 576, 7 A.3d at 156.  We have, however, held that “[t]he failure to exercise 
discretion when its exercise is called for is an abuse of discretion.”  Johnson v. State, 325 
Md. 511, 520, 601 A.2d 1093, 1097 (1992). 
Had the trial judge conducted a balancing test concerning Mr. Burnside’s prior 
conviction, the judge likely may have considered the following factors: “(1) the 
impeachment value of the prior crime; (2) the point in time of the conviction and the 
defendant’s subsequent history; (3) the similarity between the past crime and the charged 
crime; (4) the importance of the defendant’s testimony; and (5) the centrality of the 
defendant’s credibility.”  Cure, 195 Md. App. at 576, 7 A.3d at 155 (quoting Jackson v. 
State, 340 Md. 705, 717, 668 A.2d 8, 14 (1995) (explaining that “[t]hese factors ‘should 
not be considered mechanically or exclusively,’ but rather should be viewed as ‘a useful 
aid to trial courts in performing the balancing exercise mandated by the Rule.’” (citing 
Jackson v. State, 340 Md. 705, 717, 668 A.2d 8, 14 (1995)). 
This Court has further recognized the prejudicial danger in admitting evidence of 
prior convictions for the same or similar offenses to that of the current charge.  Jackson v. 
State, 340 Md. 705, 668 A.2d 8 (1995).  While it is not always an abuse of discretion, the 
Court of Appeals has acknowledged that admitting into evidence a prior conviction for the 
same or similar crime as the pending charge/s against the defendant creates a dangerous 
“potential to discourage defendants from testifying in their own behalf.”  Id. at 714, 668 
A.2d at 13 (citing Ricketts v. State, 291 Md. 701, 703, 436 A.2d 906, 908 (1981)); Hannah 
v. State, 420 Md. 339, 347, 23 A.3d 192, 196 (2011).  For this reason, the weighing of 
probative value versus prejudicial harm by the trial court “takes on added importance” in 
13 
 
such cases.  Jackson, 340 Md. at 715, 668 A.3d at 13 (quoting Ricketts v. State, 291 Md. 
701, 703–04, 436 A.2d 906, 907–08). 
 
In Dallas, a defendant was convicted of possession of cocaine with intent to 
distribute.  413 Md. at 571, 993 A.2d at 656.  At trial, the defendant sought a ruling that 
prevented the State from impeaching the defendant using his prior convictions of 
distribution and possession with intent to distribute cocaine.  Id.  The trial judge initially 
denied the defendant’s request, concluding that the convictions were relevant to credibility, 
and therefore, admissible for the purposes of impeachment.  Id. at 573, 993 A.2d at 657.  
The trial judge ultimately reversed his ruling on the basis that the defendant “hadn’t said 
anything,” and that he would “need to hear what [the defendant] ha[d] to say,” concluding 
that the “proper procedure . . . was to make a ruling after [the defendant] testified and 
before [] any cross-examination.”  Id. at 574, 993 A.2d at 657–58.  The trial judge denied 
the State’s offer to accept a proffer of Mr. Dallas’s testimony, despite the defendant’s “clear 
. . . theory of defense,” stating that the defendant’s actual testimony was necessary to render 
his ruling.  Id. at 573, 993 A.2d at 657.  The defendant chose not to testify and subsequently 
was convicted.  Id.  Dallas appealed, arguing that the “[trial] court’s deferral of its ruling 
on the admissibility of the impeachment evidence impermissibly chilled his right to make 
a free election to testify or remain silent.”  Id. at 572, 993 A.2d at 656.   
 
The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the conviction, holding that Dallas’s issue 
was not preserved because he chose not to testify.  Id. at 575, 993 A.2d at 658.  We 
affirmed, recognizing that Dallas’s “contention [was] amenable to appellate review,” and 
14 
 
held that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion by deferring his ruling on the 
admissibility of the impeachment evidence.  Id. at 584, 588, 993 A.2d at 664, 666.   
 
The Dallas Court presumed that the trial judge, in choosing to wait until Mr. Dallas 
testified, could have reasonably imagined various scenarios, some of which would have 
warranted admitting the evidence, and others that would have warranted not admitting the 
evidence.  Id. at 587, 993 A.2d at 665–66.  For example, the trial judge could have 
envisioned that, had [Dallas] taken the stand, he might not have confined his 
testimony (consistent with counsel’s opening statement) to a denial of an 
intent to distribute the drugs found in his possession; he might instead have 
testified that he had never before distributed illegal drugs.  Had [Dallas’s] 
testimony been consistent with defense counsel’s opening statement, then the 
trial court might have decided that evidence of the prior convictions carried 
a risk of unfair prejudice to [Dallas].  Had [Dallas] testified more 
expansively, then the court might have decided that the State should be 
permitted to impeach him with the prior convictions.  
Id.  We held that, “[g]iven the plausibility of either scenario, the court was not required to 
rule on the motion without first hearing [Dallas’s] direct testimony.”  Id. at 588, 993 A.2d 
at 666.  We further explained that, had Mr. Dallas noted that the court’s delayed ruling 
“chilled his right to make an election,” then the trial court “might well have opted to 
provide an in limine ruling before [Dallas] made his election.”   Id. at 588, 993 A.2d at 666.  
 
Despite our particular holding in Dallas, we reiterated that: 
Many are the times when a trial court can and, therefore, should decide a 
motion in limine involving a Rule 5–609 issue before the defendant makes 
the election.  For example, . . . the trial court certainly can recognize when 
the risk of unfair prejudice of the proposed impeachment evidence far 
outweighs its probative value, no matter how the defendant might testify.   
Moreover, the court may be satisfied that it has a sufficient basis upon which 
to make an in limine ruling without hearing the defendant’s direct testimony 
if the court has learned, through other means, how the defendant is likely to 
testify.  For example, a court may hear admissions that the defense makes 
15 
 
during the defense’s opening statement, or the court may accept a proffer of 
the defendant’s direct testimony.  In any of these circumstances, fairness to 
the defendant augurs in favor of the trial court’s ruling on the motion before 
the defendant elects whether to testify or remain silent. 
Id. at 586, 993 A.2d at 665 (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted).  
 
In Jackson, we dealt with a similar issue concerning the use of prior convictions to 
impeach a defendant who was on trial for a crime similar to his prior conviction.  340 Md. 
at 707, 668 A.2d at 9.   In Jackson the defendant, Robert M. Jackson, stood trial for theft.  
Id.  Mr. Jackson filed a pre-trial motion in limine to exclude a probation before judgment 
disposition for a 1991 theft as well as a conviction for another 1991 theft.  Id. at 709, 668 
A.2d at 10.  The trial court granted the motion in limine regarding the probation before 
judgment disposition but denied the motion regarding the theft conviction.  Id.  In his 
testimony, Mr. Jackson denied any involvement with the crime and gave an alibi which 
was corroborated by two witnesses.  Id.  at 709–10, 668 A.2d at 10.  On cross-examination, 
Mr. Jackson admitted to having a prior conviction, but stated that he did not know the name 
of the offense.  Id. at 710, 668 A.2d at 11.  The State introduced a certified copy of his theft 
conviction.  Id.  Mr. Jackson appealed, arguing “that the similarity of the prior crime to the 
charged offense rendered the prior conviction so prejudicial as to outweigh any probative 
value that it may have had.”  Id. at 711, 668 A.2d at 11.   
 
We disagreed, holding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting 
the prior conviction because “the similarity of the prior conviction to the offense charged 
does not, absent other considerations, require exclusion.”  Id. at 718, 668 A.2d at 14.  We 
adopted the view that:   
16 
 
[e]vidence of a prior conviction for a crime that is similar or identical to the 
charged crime is subject to the balancing of its probativeness against its 
potential for unfair prejudice.  Although the [balancing] guidelines include a 
factor related to the degree of similarity between the prior conviction and the 
charged offense, this is only one consideration and should not be viewed in 
isolation. 
 
Id. at 718, 668 A.2d at 14.   
Relying on Mahone, we observed that four of the five Mahone factors8 “weighed in 
favor of admitting the prior theft conviction.”  Id. at 720, 668 A.2d at 16.  We opined that 
with regard to the first factor, Mr. Jackson’s prior theft conviction weighed in favor of 
admission because “the offense of theft, because of its inherent deceitfulness, is universally 
recognized as conduct which reflects adversely on a witness’s honesty.”  Id. at 720–21, 
668 A.2d at 16.  Furthermore, Jackson’s prior conviction was less than three years old, a 
factor that also weighed in favor of admission.  Id. at 721, 668 A.2d at 16.  We did 
recognize, however, that because Mr. Jackson’s prior conviction for theft was the same 
offense for which he was on trial, this factor weighed against admission.  Id.  Next, we 
considered factors four and five, the importance of the defendant’s testimony9 and the 
                                                          
 
8 The five factors, which bear repeating, are: “(1) the impeachment value of the prior crime; 
(2) the point in time of the conviction and the defendant’s subsequent history; (3) the 
similarity between the past crime and the charged crime; (4) the importance of the 
defendant’s testimony; and (5) the centrality of the defendant’s credibility.”  Jackson v. 
State, 340 Md. 705, 717, 668 A.2d 8, 14 (1995) (quoting United States v. Mahone, 537 
F.2d 922, 929 (7th Cir. 1976), cert. denied, 429 U.S. 1025, 97 S. Ct. 646, 50 L.Ed.2d 627 
(1976)). 
 
9 The Supreme Court of Minnesota framed the importance of a defendant’s testimony as 
the contemplation of the defendant’s “constitutional right to present his [or her] version of 
events to a jury,” along with the possibility that the admission of prior convictions may 
 
17 
 
centrality of the defendant’s credibility, recognizing that they “underlie [] Rule [5-609,]: 
[by] balancing the defendant’s right to testify against the State’s right to impeach the 
witness on cross-examination.”  Id.  After balancing the competing interests inherent in 
factors four and five, we concluded that because Mr. Jackson’s credibility was “central to 
the case,” the balancing of the two factors weighed in favor of admission.  Id. at 722, 668 
A.2d at 16. 
We think it necessary to highlight the two critical differences between Jackson and 
the instant case.  Firstly, in Jackson we were called upon to determine if a trial court abused 
its discretion by admitting the prior conviction, not whether the trial court’s delay in 
conducting a balancing test constituted an abuse of discretion.  Id.  Secondly, the defendant 
in Jackson testified that he was not involved in the crime, and in the instant case Mr. 
Burnside elected not to testify.  Id. at 708, 668 A.2d at 9.   
IV. 
It remains for us to determine whether the trial court abused its discretion in 
choosing to delay an application of Rule 5-609’s balancing test.  We have declared that “a 
failure to exercise discretion when its exercise is called for is an abuse of discretion.”  
Johnson, 325 Md. 511, 520, 601 A.2d 1093, 1097 (1992).  Furthermore, “[s]o long as the 
[trial judge] applies the proper legal standards and reaches a reasonable conclusion based 
on the facts before it, an appellate court should not reverse a decision vested in the trial 
                                                          
 
“cause the defendant not to testify,” and the greater need for the “jury [to] hear the 
defendant’s version of the case than to allow him [or her] to be impeached.”  State v. 
Zornes, 831 N.W.2d 609, 628 (Minn. 2013). 
 
18 
 
court’s discretion merely because the appellate court reaches a different conclusion.”  Univ. 
of Maryland Med. Sys. Corp. v. Kerrigan, 456 Md. 393, 402, 174 A.3d 351, 356 (2017).  
With these standards guiding our review, in this case we must determine if the trial court’s 
decision to not make an advanced ruling amounted to an abuse of discretion. 
As a preliminary matter, we discuss whether the issue has been preserved for our 
review.  The State contends that the issue is not preserved because “defense counsel never 
asked the trial court to make an advance ruling.”  Mr. Burnside contends that the issue is 
preserved because “his counsel’s and his own protests put the trial court on notice that the 
defense wanted a ruling prior to making an election,” and because the issue was decided 
by the trial court.  We agree with Mr. Burnside that defense counsel sought an advanced 
ruling regarding the admissibility of the prior conviction and that the decision was decided 
by the trial court when it denied defense counsel’s request stating, “If he takes the stand 
and the State attempts to bring up his prior conviction then we will have a determination at 
that time, but I’m not going to preliminarily make that decision.”  Therefore, the issue is 
preserved for our review.  See Maryland Rule 8-131 (“Ordinarily, the appellate court will 
not decide any other issue unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or 
decided by the trial court.”).  
In Dallas, we recognized that there are circumstances where “fairness to the 
defendant augurs in favor of the trial court’s ruling on the motion before the defendant 
elects whether to testify or remain silent.”  413 Md. at 586, 993 A.2d at 665.  The facts in 
the instant case demonstrate such a circumstance.  Mr. Burnside’s theory of defense was 
clear and established at the outset of the trial, and Mr. Burnside, therefore, had presented 
19 
 
to the trial court “other means” of determining how he would likely testify.  See id.  For 
example, all three of the defense witnesses testified that they had purchased drugs from 
Mr. Knight and one of the witnesses knew of another individual who had purchased drugs 
from Mr. Knight as well.  Additionally, defense counsel made it clear to the trial judge that 
the jury’s focus was to determine “whose drugs they are,” to which the trial judge agreed. 
In its brief, the State contends that unlike the defendant in Dallas, Mr. Burnside’s 
“theory of the case was not clear.”10  This contention is completely incongruent with what 
occurred at trial.  During closing argument, the State seems to have understood the theory 
of the defense as one in which the defense “point[s] the finger . . .  [at] Mr. Knight,” and 
refers to the case as a “whodunit.”  In an attempt to distinguish this case from that of Dallas, 
the State quotes from Chief Judge Bell’s concurring and dissenting opinion in Dallas.  We 
find the quote useful, but for a different reason.  We observe that in the instant case,  
[i]t is clear that the trial court had enough information at its disposal to 
conduct the balancing test and make an informed ruling.  It had the opening 
statement of the petitioner, the express statements of the State that it intended 
to use the prior convictions to impeach the petitioner, the knowledge that the 
prior convictions were similar to, if not the same, as the charges the petitioner 
was currently facing, and the completed testimony of one of the officers. . . .  
[I]n this case the fact that the prior convictions mirrored the current drug-
                                                          
 
10 The Dissent claims that “Mr. Burnside could have testified to any number of defense 
theories,” rendering his testimony unpredictable.  The Dissent entertains these possible 
defense theories and the possible accompanying testimony just as the Dallas court 
entertained the “plausibility” of several scenarios in which the defendant in that case could 
have testified inconsistent to his theory of defense.  Dallas, 587, 993 A.2d at 666.  The 
Dissent, however, overlooks what precipitated the Dallas court to explore these plausible 
scenarios.  In Dallas, the trial judge’s on the record statement regarding the uncertainty of 
the defendant’s testimony is what served as the impetus for the Dallas court’s presumption 
“that the trial court, not unreasonably envisioned that, had Petitioner taken the stand, he 
might not have confined his testimony” to the theory of defense established in his counsel’s 
opening statement.   Id. at 587, 993 A.2d at 665.   
20 
 
related charges made the introduction of such evidence before a jury highly 
prejudicial.  
 
Id. at 600, 993 A.2d at 673 (Bell, C.J., dissenting).  Similarly, we agree that the entry of 
“the prior conviction[] [that] mirrored the current drug-related charge[] made the 
introduction of such evidence before a jury highly prejudicial.”  Id. (Bell, C.J., dissenting).  
Also, we find instructive Chief Judge Bell’s reasoning in his dissent: 
If needing to hear the testimony itself is what is required, there simply can 
never be a pre-testimonial ruling that would inform the decision to testify or 
remain silent.  There would be no opportunity, thus no ability, for the 
petitioner to make an informed decision; he could only learn whether his 
prior convictions could be used to impeach his testimony if he testified.  Such 
a hard and fast rule is productive of a choice that is the antithesis of the 
knowing and intelligent decision-making our right to testify jurisprudence 
contemplates. 
 
Id. at 598–99, 993 A.2d at 672.  Moreover, Petitioner was explicit as to his reason not to 
testify; he did not want to be judged in this case by his past conviction, because to do so 
would be prejudicial.  In other words, he did not want to risk being prejudiced by his prior 
conviction and believed that making an uninformed election to testify was a risk in and of 
itself, one that he was not willing to take.   
We pointed out in Dallas that there are situations where the trial “court need not 
hear the defendant’s testimony to know how to rule on a motion to exclude . . . proposed 
impeachment evidence.”  Id. at 586, 993 A.2d at 665.  Notably, we said that a “trial court 
. . . can recognize when the risk of unfair prejudice of the proposed impeachment evidence 
far outweighs its probative value, no matter how the defendant might testify.”  Id.  At 
bottom, we accepted the proposition that it should be a rare occurrence that the trial judge 
defers his or her ruling on the admissibility of prior convictions as impeachment evidence.   
21 
 
In the instant case, there is nothing in the record, and the State does not offer any 
support, to suggests that this was a “rare” circumstance that required the judge to delay his 
ruling.  The trial judge acknowledged that determining the admissibility of Mr. Burnside’s 
prior conviction involved a “balancing test,” but did not believe that he needed to “make 
the balancing decision before [Mr. Burnside] testified.”  The trial judge stated that Mr. 
Burnside had to make the “decision whether he want[ed] to testify or [did not] want to 
testify.  If he t[ook] the stand and the State attempt[ed] to bring up the prior conviction then 
[they would] have a determination at that time, but [he would] not . . . preliminarily make 
that decision.”   
Based upon the trial judge’s rationale for requiring the defendant to testify first, it 
appears he was not familiar with our decision in Dallas.  Apparently, the trial judge did not 
know he had the discretion to rule without hearing Mr. Burnside’s direct testimony.  See 
id.  His decision to delay his ruling was entirely inconsistent with this Court’s 
acknowledgment that “it is not realistic or necessary for a defendant to have to wait until 
he is on the stand to find out whether he will be impeached with prior crime evidence.”  Id. 
(internal quotation marks omitted) (citing State v. McClure, 692 P.2d 579, 583 (Or. 1984)).  
Given the facts developed in this record, it was an abuse of discretion to defer ruling on the 
motion until after the defendant testified.  Furthermore, the trial judge’s statement ignores 
what we acknowledged in Dallas: that a trial court “should, when feasible, make reasonable 
efforts to accommodate a defendant by ruling in advance on the admissibility of a criminal 
record so that [the defendant] can make an informed decision whether or not to testify.”  
Id. at 585, 993 A.2d at 664 (emphasis added) (quoting United States v. Oakes, 565 F.2d 
22 
 
170, 171 (1st Cir. 1977).  Surely, a trial judge ruling on the admissibility of a prior 
conviction would inform a defendant’s decision to testify or remain silent. 
Although a reviewing court cannot generally assume that an adverse ruling, or the 
lack of a ruling, is what “motivated a defendant’s decision not to testify,” that is not the 
case here.  Luce v. U.S., 469 U.S. 38, 42, 105 S. Ct. 460, 463, 83 L. Ed. 2d 443 (internal 
citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).  When asked if he elected to testify, 
Mr. Burnside stated, “I choose to exercise my Fifth Amendment right to remain silent and 
not testify due to his Honor’s previous objections for anything I say on our behalf[11] . . . .  
I won’t get no [sic] justice.”  Mr. Burnside’s statement epitomizes what this Court, in 
Dallas, referred to as the “chill[ing] [of the] right to make an election.”  Id. at 588, 993 
A.2d at 666.  The trial judge’s statement that he was not going to preliminarily make a 
decision would lead a reasonable mind to conclude, just as it led Mr. Burnside’s counsel to 
conclude, that the trial judge’s declination was final and the offering of a proffer or any 
additional information to inform a pre-election balancing test would have been futile.   
It is our view that the trial court had enough information to reasonably conduct a 
balancing test prior to Mr. Burnside’s election whether to testify.  It had adequate means 
of assessing how Mr. Burnside would likely testify, given the clear theory of the defense.  
                                                          
 
11 Although Mr. Burnside referred to the trial court’s trial decisions as objections, when 
reviewing the record, it becomes apparent that Mr. Burnside was referring to the trial 
court’s overruling of defense counsel’s objections to the State’s introduction of pending 
criminal charges during the impeachment of the Defense’s witnesses.  Given the trial 
court’s failure to comply with Maryland Rule 5-608(b)—that on which the Court of Special 
Appeals appropriately remarked as erroneous—it is not surprising that Mr. Burnside 
believed that he would not receive justice if he elected to testify. 
   
23 
 
Additionally, the trial court was aware that Mr. Burnside felt prejudiced by the delay in the 
ruling.  Cf. Dallas, 413 Md. at 588, 993 A.2d at 666 (where this Court observed that 
“Petitioner did not complain at the time that the court’s delay chilled his right to make an 
election.  Had Petitioner done so, the trial court might well have opted to provide an in 
limine ruling before Petitioner made his election.”).  
Finally, the trial court had before it three well-established principles that suggested 
that such a ruling was necessary before Mr. Burnside elected to testify or not.  The court 
was aware of, first, a defendant’s constitutional right to testify.  Second, the court had a 
clear understanding that  
[w]here the crime for which the defendant is on trial is identical or similar to 
the crime for which he has been previously convicted the danger is greater, 
as the jury may conclude that because he did it before he most likely has done 
it again.  The net effect of such evidence is often to discourage the defendant 
from taking the stand. 
Cure v. State, 421 Md. 300, 330, 26 A.3d 899, 917 (2011) (quoting Ricketts v. State, 291 
Md. 701, 703, 436 A.2d 906, 908 (1981).  Lastly, the trial court had guidance from this 
Court stating that “[m]any are the times when a trial court can and, therefore, should decide 
a motion in limine involving a Rule 5-609 issue before the defendant makes the election.”  
Dallas, 413 Md. at 586, 993 A.2d at 665 (emphasis added).12 
                                                          
 
12 If the trial judge had expounded on his reason for the delay and chose to delay his ruling 
due to a lack of clarity regarding the theory of the defense, Mr. Burnside’s defense counsel 
certainly could have offered a proffer to inform the trial judge’s balancing test.  In Dallas 
we stated that: 
[T]he best practice is for trial judges to accept a proffer of the defendant’s 
testimony and make an in limine ruling based on it. The ruling should be 
accompanied by an express caution to the defendant that, if the defendant’s 
direct testimony departs from the proffer in a way that changes the 
 
24 
 
We take no issue with our decision in Dallas and see no need to modify it given that 
our holding today remains consistent with our acknowledgment “that, although there may 
be circumstances in which the court may have reason to defer the ruling, ‘this should be a 
rare occurrence.’”  Id. at 586, 993 A.2d at 665 (emphasis added) (quoting State v. McClure, 
692 P.2d 579, 583 (Or. 1984)).  Specifically, we do not seek to expand the holding of 
Dallas to such an extent that “there may never be a set of circumstances in which a trial 
judge will feel confident in deferring a Md. Rule 5-609 balancing test until after the 
defendant has testified[,]” as the concurring and dissenting opinion suggests.  See Slip. Op. 
at 11.  Dallas anticipated many circumstances in which a trial court should decide a Rule 
5-609 motion prior to a defendant’s election to testify.  That the Dallas court enumerated 
three such scenarios when the trial court should rule on such a motion prior to the 
defendant’s testimony did not confine the realm of possible scenarios to those enumerated.  
The facts of this case present one such scenario that was not among the enumerated list in 
Dallas.  With Mr. Burnside having been previously convicted of a similar crime for which 
he stood trial and with his theory of defense clear, the trial judge did not need to wait to 
hear Mr. Burnside’s testimony before ruling on the Rule 5-609 motion.   
                                                          
 
probative/prejudice balance scrutiny required by Rule 5–609(a), then a final 
ruling on the admissibility of the impeachment evidence might well be 
different. 
413 Md. 569, 586, 993 A.2d 655, 665 n. 11.  We are in no way suggesting that trial courts 
should sua sponte request proffers; instead, we are merely highlighting that if a trial court 
expresses uncertainty as the reason for the delay, the defendant is put on notice that a 
proffer may resolve the uncertainty.  Whether the defense’s trial tactics involves the offer 
of a proffer is for the defense to decide, not for a trial judge to sua sponte request.   
 
25 
 
Our opinion today in no way quells the possibility that there are circumstances in 
which the trial judge may appropriately choose to defer conducting the balancing test until 
after the defendant testifies.  In the rare instance when a judge defers his ruling on the 
defendant’s Rule 5-609 motion, before deferring the ruling, the trial judge should first 
assess all reasonable efforts to accommodate a defendant by making an advance ruling on 
the admissibility of a defendant’s criminal record to enable the defendant to make an 
informed decision whether to testify or not.  This assessment, whether it ultimately leads 
to an advance ruling or a deferred ruling, should appear on the record.  See Jackson v. State, 
340 Md. 705, 717, 668 A.2d 8, 14 (“Although trial judges are not obliged to detail every 
step of their logic, we urge trial judges when discharging this duty to place the specific 
circumstances and factors critical to the decision on the record.”) (internal citations 
omitted).   
We hold that in light of our case law, the facts and circumstances of Mr. Burnside’s 
case, and the relevant constitutional guideposts, the trial court failed to exercise its 
discretion when it declined to conduct a Rule 5-609 balancing test prior to Mr. Burnside’s 
election to not testify.  The trial court’s failure to exercise its discretion constituted an abuse 
of discretion.  Although we give great deference to trial judges acting within their 
discretion, “[d]eference is different from unquestioning acceptance.”  Trump v. Hawaii, -- 
U.S. -- (2018) (Sotomayor, J., dissenting).  We, therefore, neither permit that discretion to 
extend beyond the limits of our case law nor do we allow that discretion to trespass into 
the domain of a defendant’s right to make an informed decision to testify or remain silent.  
26 
 
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals and direct the 
remand of this case for a new trial consistent with this Opinion.   
 
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF 
SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED; CASE 
REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH 
THE DIRECTIONS TO REMAND THE 
CASE TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR 
WASHINGTON COUNTY FOR A NEW 
TRIAL; COSTS IN THIS COURT AND 
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS 
TO 
BE 
PAID 
BY 
WASHINGTON 
COUNTY. 
 
Circuit Court for Washington County 
Case No. 21-K-16-052453 
Argued: May 2, 2018 
 
 
 
 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 71 
 
September Term, 2017 
 
 
  
CARL FRANKLIN BURNSIDE 
 
 
 
v. 
 
STATE OF MARYLAND 
 
 
Barbera, C.J. 
Greene, 
Adkins, 
McDonald, 
Watts, 
Hotten, 
Getty, 
 
JJ. 
 
 
Concurring and Dissenting Opinion by Getty, 
J., which Watts, J. joins. 
 
 
Filed: July 11, 2018 
 
 
I agree with the Majority that the issue is preserved for our review.  Specifically, 
Maryland Rule 4-323(c) requires only that a party make the court aware of the desired 
action when the ruling is one other than admitting evidence.  See Reed v. State, 353 Md. 
628, 640 (1999) (quoting Prout v. State, 311 Md. 348, 356 (1988)).   The defense counsel 
in the case sub judice clearly stated “I would just ask [] if the Court would conduct a 
balancing test . . . my fear would be that if the Court were to allow that, the State to impeach 
him with a prior conviction that the jury would base their decision solely on his previous 
conviction and not based upon the evidence presented here today.”  This undoubtedly made 
the trial court aware of the action the defendant desired: that the trial judge conduct a 
Maryland Rule 5-609 (“Md. Rule 5-609” or “Rule 5-609”) balancing test before the 
defendant elected to testify.  Therefore, I concur on this issue.   
I write separately because I respectfully disagree with the Majority’s assessment 
that the circumstances of this case required the trial judge to rule on the admissibility of 
the prior conviction impeachment evidence by conducting a Rule 5-609 balancing test 
before the defendant elected to testify.  The Majority’s holding improperly expands the 
circumstances for conducting an in limine balancing test and effectively requires a trial 
judge to sua sponte request a proffer of defendant’s testimony or to speculate about the 
substance of the defendant’s ungiven testimony based on a general theory of the case in 
order to properly exercise his or her discretion.  This Court’s holding in Dallas v. State, 
413 Md. 569 (2010) compels these conclusions. 
In Dallas, this Court directly addressed the question of whether a trial court may 
defer its ruling on a motion in limine to exclude prior convictions impeachment evidence 
 
2 
 
until after the defendant testified.  413 Md. at 585–86.  Contrary to the outcome here, this 
Court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in deferring its Md. Rule 5-609 
balancing test pursuant to the motion in limine until after the Court heard the defendant’s 
testimony.  Specifically, the petitioner in Dallas was charged with possession of cocaine 
with intent to distribute and related offenses.  Id. at 571.  The petitioner filed a motion in 
limine, seeking a ruling from the trial judge that the State could not introduce evidence of 
petitioner’s two prior drug convictions as impeachment evidence pursuant to the balancing 
test under Md. Rule 5-609.  Id.  The trial court decided to wait to rule on the admissibility 
of the similar prior convictions impeachment evidence until after the petitioner testified.  
Id. at 573.  From the beginning of the trial the petitioner highlighted his ultimate argument; 
specifically, “[p]etitioner made clear during his opening statement his theory of defense 
against the felony charge.”  Id.  Nevertheless, the trial judge ruled at the beginning of the 
petitioner’s case in chief that the evidence of the prior convictions was admissible for 
impeachment evidence because they were relevant to petitioner’s credibility.  Id.  After a 
recess, however, the trial judge rescinded his ruling, reasoning that he must consider the 
petitioner’s testimony before conducting the balancing test.  Id. at 573-74.  Although the 
State subsequently suggested that the petitioner be able to proffer his testimony, the trial 
judge rejected that proposal.  Id. at 575.   
 On appeal, the petitioner argued that the trial court abused its discretion when it 
deferred its ruling on the admissibility of the impeachment evidence in large part because 
this type of determination includes a constitutional dimension related to a defendant’s Fifth 
Amendment right to testify.  Id. at 576-84.  Initially, this Court held that “a trial court’s 
 
3 
 
decision to await a defendant’s testimony before deciding whether to allow proposed prior 
conviction impeachment evidence does not impermissibly chill the defendant’s right to 
testify.  Therefore, a decision to defer ruling does not present a question of constitutional 
dimension.”  Id. at 584.  As such, the Dallas Court distinguished its case from Luce v. 
United States, 469 U.S. 38 (1984).   
In discussing whether the trial judge failed to exercise his discretion under the 
mandates of Md. Rule 5-609 before the petitioner elected to testify, the Dallas Court 
reasoned that the rule “requires the trial court . . . to balance the probative value of prior 
conviction evidence against the danger of unfair prejudice to the defendant.  For this 
reason, the trial court may deem it necessary in a given case to defer ruling on the 
admission (or exclusion) of prior crimes impeachment evidence until after the court 
hears the defendant’s testimony.”  Id. at 585 (emphasis added).   
However, we then qualified this holding by stating:  
That said, trial courts should rule on motions in limine as early as 
practicable, which often is before the defendant elects whether to testify or 
remain silent.  
Many are the times when a trial court can and, therefore, should decide 
a motion in limine involving a Rule 5–609 issue before the defendant makes 
the election.  For example, when it is clear that a prior conviction is 
ineligible for impeachment under Rule 5–609, the court need not hear 
the defendant’s testimony to know how to rule on a motion to exclude 
that proposed impeachment evidence.  Similarly, the trial court certainly 
can recognize when the risk of unfair prejudice of the proposed 
impeachment evidence far outweighs its probative value, no matter how 
the defendant might testify.   Moreover, the court may be satisfied that 
it has a sufficient basis upon which to make an in limine ruling without 
hearing the defendant’s direct testimony if the court has learned, 
through other means, how the defendant is likely to testify.  For example, 
 
4 
 
a court may hear admissions that the defense makes during the defense’s 
opening statement, or the court may accept a proffer of the defendant’s 
direct testimony.  In any of these circumstances, fairness to the defendant 
augurs in favor of the trial court’s ruling on the motion before the 
defendant elects whether to testify or remain silent. 
 
Id. at 585–86 (emphasis added).  The Dallas Court, therefore recognized certain 
circumstances in which a trial judge should conduct a Md. Rule 5-609 balancing test before 
the defendant elects to testify.  Id.  These circumstances include: (1) when the trial court 
determines that the prior convictions are inadmissible under Md. Rule 5-609(a)(1) or (b); 
(2) when the trial judge concludes that the impeachment evidence is so prejudicial that the 
defendant’s testimony would not alter the trial judge’s ruling; (3) when a party files a 
motion in limine requesting the court to conduct the balancing test before an election to 
testify supplemented with admissions during opening statements, which provided the trial 
judge with sufficient information as to how the defendant would likely testify; or (4) when 
a party files a motion in limine requesting the court to conduct the balancing test before an 
election to testify supplemented with a proffer of the defendant’s testimony, providing the 
trial judge with sufficient information regarding the defendant’s testimony.     
The differences between this case and the circumstances identified in Dallas are 
several and significant.  First, Mr. Burnside’s prior conviction was not inadmissible under 
Maryland Rule 5-609(a)(1) or (b).  Under Maryland Rule 5-609(a)(1), to be admissible, a 
witness’s prior conviction must be for “an infamous crime or other crime relevant to the 
witness’s credibility[.]”  All felonies are infamous crimes.  See Taylor v. State, 407 Md. 
137, 154 (2009).  Here, Mr. Burnside’s prior conviction was for possession of a controlled 
 
5 
 
dangerous substance with the intent to distribute.  Although Mr. Burnside’s counsel did not 
state which controlled dangerous substance Mr. Burnside’s prior conviction was for, 
possession of any controlled dangerous substance with the intent to distribute is a felony.  
See Md. Code Ann., Crim. Law (2002, 2012 Repl. Vol.) §§ 5-607(a), 5-608(a), 5-608.1(b), 
5-609(a).  Thus, Mr. Burnside’s prior conviction was not inadmissible under Maryland 
Rule 5-609(a)(1).  Additionally, Mr. Burnside’s prior conviction occurred in 2012, and was 
thus well within the fifteen-year time limitation under Maryland Rule 5-609(b). 
The instant circumstances also do not give rise to the conclusion that the danger of 
unfair prejudice substantially outweighed the probative value of Mr. Burnside’s prior 
conviction regardless of how he testified.  Had Mr. Burnside elected to testify, his 
credibility would have been a crucial matter for the jury to determine, and evidence that he 
was a convicted felon would have been a highly probative piece of impeachment evidence.  
To be sure, evidence that Mr. Burnside had been convicted of the same type of crime for 
which he was on trial, i.e., possession of a controlled dangerous substance with the intent 
to distribute, could have caused a danger of unfair prejudice.  This case was not, however, 
a scenario in which it was immediately clear that the danger of unfair prejudice would “far 
outweigh[ the] probative value[,]” as would be the case where a defendant who is on trial 
for shoplifting has a prior conviction for rape.  Dallas, 413 Md. at 586 & n.10. 
Furthermore, the defendant in the case sub judice did not file a pre-trial motion in 
limine requesting the trial judge conduct a balancing test under Md. Rule 5-609.  See id. at 
573 (“Petitioner filed a pre-trial motion in limine . . .”).  Instead, the defense counsel for 
Mr. Burnside first asked the trial judge to exclude the prior conviction impeachment 
 
6 
 
evidence at the exact same time when counsel was qualifying his client on his fifth 
amendment right to testify.  As such, the trial judge first became aware of a possible Rule 
5-609 balancing test immediately before the defendant was deciding whether or not to take 
the stand.  Moreover, there is nothing in the record in the case sub judice that shows the 
trial court heard “admissions” during the defense’s opening statement.  See id. at 585–86 
(“For example, a court may hear admissions that the defense makes during the defense’s 
opening statement . . .”).  Counsel for Mr. Burnside also did not request the trial court 
accept a proffer of the defendant’s testimony for purposes of conducting a Md. Rule 5-609 
balancing test before Mr. Burnside elected whether or not to testify.  This departs far from 
the third and fourth circumstances identified in Dallas, which anticipated that a trial judge 
would be viewing the whole trial, including opening statement and any proffer, through 
the lens of a Md. Rule 5-609 motion in limine.  See generally id. 
But most importantly, the circuit court had no other reliable means for “learn[ing] . 
. . how [Mr. Burnside was] likely to testify.”  Id. at 586.  During Mr. Burnside’s opening 
statement, aside from mentioning that the State charged Nicholas Vincent Knight (the 
Toyota’s driver) with the same crimes as Mr. Burnside, his counsel did not state or imply 
that Mr. Knight was a drug dealer.  During Mr. Knight’s cross-examination, Mr. Burnside’s 
counsel asked him whether he had ever sold heroin or cocaine, and whether he knew Mr. 
Burnside’s three witnesses: Jason Tyler Marshall, William Joseph Bucklew, and Scott 
Dorman.  In each instance, Mr. Knight answered in the negative.  Mr. Marshall testified 
that he had bought heroin, and possibly cocaine, from Mr. Knight; Mr. Bucklew testified 
 
7 
 
that he had bought heroin from Mr. Knight; and Mr. Dorman testified that he had bought 
heroin and cocaine from Mr. Knight. 
Under these circumstances, contrary to Mr. Burnside’s contention, it was not “very 
[] easy to predict” that he would have testified that Mr. Knight was a drug dealer, and that 
the cocaine and heroin in the Toyota belonged to Mr. Knight.  It would have been entirely 
consistent with Mr. Burnside’s opening statement, as well as his witnesses’ testimony, for 
him to simply testify that he did not know who owned the cocaine and heroin, without 
testifying that Mr. Knight was a drug dealer.  Alternatively, Mr. Burnside could have 
conceded that the cocaine and heroin belonged to him, but denied that he intended to 
distribute them.  Cf. id. at 573 (During the defendant’s opening statement, his counsel 
acknowledged that he possessed cocaine and marijuana, but denied that he intended to 
distribute the cocaine.). 
In sum, regardless of whether the trial judge expressly observed as much, Mr. 
Burnside could have testified to any number of defense theories, including: (1) that Mr. 
Knight was a drug dealer who owned the cocaine and heroin; (2) that Mr. Burnside did not 
know who owned the cocaine and heroin; or (3) that Mr. Burnside owned, but did not 
intend to distribute, the cocaine and heroin.  Under any of these possible scenarios, Mr. 
Burnside could have also testified that he had never distributed illegal drugs before.  In that 
case, his prior conviction for possession of a controlled dangerous substance with the intent 
to distribute would have likely been admissible.  Cf. id. at 587 (If the defendant “testified 
that he had never before distributed illegal drugs . . . , then the [trial] court might have 
decided that the State should be permitted to impeach him with [his] prior convictions” for 
 
8 
 
distribution of cocaine and possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute.).  Just as we 
explained in Dallas, “the trial court, not unreasonably envisioned that, had Petitioner taken 
the stand, he might not have confined his testimony” to the theory of defense established 
in his counsel’s opening statement, the trial judge in this case was presented with the same 
scenario.  Id.  
Therefore, the case sub judice did not include any of the circumstances that this 
Court found in Dallas to weigh in favor of a Rule 5-609 balancing test before the defendant 
elected to testify.  See id.  The trial judge in this case used his discretion to defer ruling, 
likely recognizing that all he had heard up to the point of Mr. Burnside’s election not to 
testify was a general theory of defense.  The trial judge had no means of determining the 
parameters or the extent of the defendant’s testimony, making it impractical for the trial 
court to conduct a Md. Rule 5-609 balancing test that requires the trial judge to consider 
the “the impeachment value of the prior crime” and the “importance of the defendant’s 
testimony” as part of the five factor test identified by the Majority.  Jackson v. State, 340 
Md. 705, 717 (1995).  See also Cure v. State, 421 Md. 300, 325 (2011).  
Instead, this case is on all fours with the ultimate holding in Dallas.  Just as it was 
“plausibl[e]” that the defendant in Dallas could have testified that he had never distributed 
illegal drugs, it is equally plausible that Mr. Burnside could have done the same.  Like the 
defendant in Dallas, Mr. Burnside “did not complain at the time that the [circuit] court’s 
delay [in determining whether his prior conviction was admissible] chilled his right to make 
an election” as to whether to testify.  Dallas, 413 Md. at 587, 588.  And, as in Dallas, 
because the circuit “court could not be certain what Mr. Burnside’s testimony would be 
 
9 
 
until the circuit court heard it . . . , the circuit court was not required to” hear a proffer of 
his testimony.  Id. at 569, 587 (cleaned up). 
Although the trial judge did not explicitly detail why he determined that he needed 
to hear testimony before conducting a balancing test, the record need only show that the 
discretion was in fact exercised. See State v. Woodland, 337 Md. 519, 526 (1995) 
(“Although the trial judge did not expressly describe the considerations that led her to 
conclude that [the defendant’s] drug conviction was admissible to impeach, we find that 
she engaged in the necessary balancing before admitting the evidence. There is no 
requirement that the trial court’s exercise of discretion be detailed for the record, so long 
as the record reflects that the discretion was in fact exercised.”).  Here, the trial judge 
specifically announced, “It is a balancing test but I don’t think I need to make the balancing 
decision before he testifies . . .  I’m not going to preliminarily make that decision,” 
indicating that he was using his discretion to defer conducting a Md. Rule 5-609 balancing 
test in order to hear the defendant’s proffered testimony.   
Even if the Majority’s intention is to add to the circumstances weighing in favor of 
requiring a Md. Rule 5-609 balancing test before a defendant’s election to testify that we 
identified in Dallas, then this raises crucial concerns about the Majority’s apparent 
requirement for the trial court to act sua sponte.  At no point did Mr. Burnside’s counsel 
request that the trial judge hear a proffer of the defendant’s testimony, which would likely 
have provided the trial court with sufficient information to conduct the balancing test prior 
to Mr. Burnside’s election.  Furthermore, neither the defense counsel nor the State 
requested that the trial judge hold a hearing to consider the defendant’s request to conduct 
 
10 
 
a Rule 5-609 balancing test before Mr. Burnside took the stand in his own defense.  
Therefore, it is unclear under the Majority’s reasoning whether a defense attorney even has 
to request a pretrial ruling as to the admissibility of impeachment evidence under Md. Rule 
5-609 or whether the trial court is required to act sua sponte where it “ha[s] enough 
information to reasonably conduct a balancing test[.]”  Maj. Slip Op. at 22.  Under the 
Majority’s reasoning, there may never be a set of circumstances in which a trial judge will 
feel confident in deferring a Md. Rule 5-609 balancing test until after the defendant has 
testified.  However, this directly conflicts with this Court’s holding in Dallas: “the trial 
court may deem it necessary in a given case to defer ruling on the admission (or exclusion) 
of prior crimes impeachment evidence until after the court hears the defendant’s 
testimony.”  Id. at 585 
If any of the factual circumstances identified in Dallas had occurred in the case 
below, the Majority’s reasoning might be correct.  However, by simply holding that the 
trial judge abused his discretion by waiting to conduct the balancing test given the “facts 
and circumstances of Mr. Burnside’s case,” this Court is effectively requiring the trial judge 
to sua sponte request a proffer of the defendant’s testimony or otherwise make a 
determination as to admissibility of evidence under Md. Rule 5-609 without so much as a 
request to do so from the defendant.  Maj. Slip Op. at 23.  Maryland Courts have previously 
recognized that there must be sufficient information to trigger a trial judge’s sua sponte 
duty, especially because “[i]t is not for trial judges, sua sponte, to second-guess trial 
tactics, however ill-advised they might seem to the judge.”  Nelson v. State, 137 Md. App. 
402, 423 n. 5 (2001).  See also Gregg v. State, 377 Md. 515, 545 (2003) (holding that the 
 
11 
 
limited examples of a defendant’s erratic behavior fell short of the threshold for a judge’s 
sua sponte duty to evaluate the defendant’s competency to stand trial).  
In this case, the Majority recognizes that all the trial judge had before him was a 
general theory of defense, which was provided by way of an opening statement and three 
defense witnesses.  The trial judge was not in a position to guess what Mr. Burnside’s 
testimony might be nor was he required to act sua sponte when the defense counsel failed 
to request that the trial judge accept a proffer of the defendant’s testimony.  See Nelson, 
137 Md. App. at 423 n. 5.  The general theory of defense that the trial court had before it 
in this case was certainly insufficient to trigger a duty for the trial court to proceed.  See 
generally Gregg v. State, 377 Md. at 545.  
Guided by Dallas, I would hold that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in 
declining to determine whether Mr. Burnside’s prior conviction was admissible before he 
elected whether to testify because none of the circumstances that this Court identified in 
Dallas are present here.  The trial judge was not provided with a pre-trial motion in limine, 
defense counsel did not make a proffer of the defendant’s testimony, and the trial court had 
limited information as to the defendant’s testimony at the time the defense requested the 
balancing test.  See Dallas, 413 Md. at 585-86.  As such, nothing in the circumstances of 
this case should make this Court second-guess the trial judge’s decision that he needed to 
consider the defendant’s testimony before conducting the Rule 5-609 balancing test.   
The Majority’s holding today is not consistent with this Court’s well-reasoned 
holding in Dallas.  Although the Majority contends otherwise, the Majority also effectively 
requires trial judges to sua sponte request a proffer of the defendant’s testimony or sua 
 
12 
 
sponte hold a hearing on the balancing arguments in order to avoid being reversed by an 
appellate court.  That was not this Court’s intention in Dallas, in which we identified 
specific circumstances that weigh in favor of a trial court conducting a Rule 5-609 
balancing test before the defendant elects to testify.  413 Md. at 586.  For these reasons, I 
would hold that the trial judge properly exercised his discretion in deciding to conduct the 
Rule 5-609 balancing test after having a chance to hear and consider Mr. Burnside’s 
testimony.  Accordingly, I would affirm the sound reasoning of the Court of Special 
Appeals.   
Judge Watts has authorized me to state that she joins this concurring and dissenting 
opinion.