Case Title: Kumar v. State

Citation: 

Docket Number: 119053002

State: maryland

Court: Maryland Supreme Court

Date: 2021-12-20T00:00:00Z

Document:
Amit Kumar v. State of Maryland, No. 21, September Term, 2021 
 
VOIR DIRE – APPLICABILITY OF HOLDING TO PENDING CASES – 
PRESERVATION FOR APPELLATE REVIEW – Court of Appeals held that holding 
in Kazadi v. State, 467 Md. 1, 9, 47, 223 A.3d 554, 559, 581 (2020)—that, on request, 
during voir dire, trial court must ask whether prospective jurors are unwilling or unable to 
comply with jury instructions on certain fundamental principles and that Kazadi applied to 
any other cases pending on direct appeal when opinion was filed where relevant question 
was preserved for appellate review—applies to any case pending in trial or appellate court 
that had not become final on direct appeal when Court issued opinion in Kazadi and in 
which Kazadi issue was preserved for appellate review.  In other words, holding in Kazadi 
applies to cases in which there had not yet been final disposition, regardless of whether 
notice of appeal had been filed at time opinion in Kazadi was issued, where issue had been 
preserved for appellate review.  Court concluded that Petitioner was entitled to benefit of 
holding in Kazadi because there had not yet been final disposition in Petitioner’s case when 
Court issued opinion in Kazadi and claim was preserved for appellate review. 
 
 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 21 
 
September Term, 2021 
______________________________________ 
 
AMIT KUMAR 
 
v. 
 
STATE OF MARYLAND 
______________________________________ 
 
Getty, C.J. 
McDonald 
Watts 
Hotten 
Booth 
Biran 
Murphy, Joseph F., Jr. (Senior 
Judge, Specially Assigned), 
 
JJ. 
______________________________________ 
 
Opinion by Watts, J. 
McDonald and Biran, JJ., concur. 
______________________________________ 
 
Filed: December 20, 2021 
 
Circuit Court for Baltimore City 
Case No. 119053002 
Argued: November 9, 2021  
 
 
In Kazadi v. State, 467 Md. 1, 9, 223 A.3d 554, 559 (2020), we held “that, on 
request, during voir dire, a trial court must ask whether any prospective jurors are unwilling 
or unable to comply with the jury instructions on the fundamental principles of presumption 
of innocence, the State’s burden of proof, and the defendant’s right not to testify.”  In so 
holding, we overruled Twining v. State, 234 Md. 97, 100, 198 A.2d 291, 293 (1964), in 
which this Court had previously held that a trial court was not required to ask such voir 
dire questions.  In Kazadi, we initially stated that our holding would apply to Kazadi and 
to other cases prospectively as of the date on which the opinion was issued.  Subsequently, 
we replaced the language in Kazadi concerning its applicability to indicate that the holding 
would apply to the case and “any other cases that [were] pending on direct appeal when 
[the] opinion [was] filed, where the relevant question ha[d] been preserved for appellate 
review.”  Kazadi, 467 Md. at 47, 223 A.3d at 581 (citations omitted). 
In this case, we must determine whether our holding in Kazadi applies to cases in 
which a defendant had not yet noted an appeal when the opinion was issued in Kazadi but 
had preserved a Kazadi issue at trial.  We hold that Kazadi applies to such cases.  In 
addition, we conclude that in this case the Kazadi issue was preserved for appellate review. 
BACKGROUND 
Charges and Verdict 
The State, Respondent, charged Amit Kumar, Petitioner, with first- and second-
degree murder of his wife, Ankita Verma, and openly carrying a dangerous weapon (a 
knife) with the intent to injure.  In the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, a jury found Kumar 
guilty of first-degree murder and the weapon offense.  Because the facts of the case are not 
- 2 - 
 
material to the issue before us, we will not provide a summary of the evidence.  It suffices 
to say that after a trial by jury, Kumar was convicted of first-degree murder and openly 
carrying a dangerous weapon with the intent to injure after his wife had been found stabbed 
to death in their apartment.  The issue in this case concerns the jury selection process. 
Voir Dire 
On November 4, 2019, the circuit court conducted jury selection.  Before voir dire, 
Kumar submitted to the circuit court in writing a list of seventeen proposed voir dire 
questions, which included the following Kazadi-type questions: 
15. 
You must presume the defendant innocent of the charges now and 
throughout this trial unless and until, after you have seen and heard all 
of the evidence, the State convinces you of the defendant’s guilt 
beyond a reasonable doubt.  If you do not consider the defendant 
innocent now, or if you are not sure that you will require the State to 
convince you of the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, 
please stand. 
 
16. 
In a criminal case, like this one, each side may present arguments 
about the evidence, but the State has the only burden of proof.  The 
defendant need not testify in his/her own behalf or present any 
evidence at all. 
 
a. Would you tend to believe or disbelieve the testimony of a 
witness called by the defense more than the testimony of a 
prosecution witness? 
 
b. Would you hold it against a defendant if [he/she/they] 
chooses not to testify or chose not to present any evidence? 
 
 
(Brackets in original) (citation omitted). 
While reviewing the parties’ proposed voir dire questions, the circuit court asked: 
“Is there anything that is not included in the State’s voir dire that the defendant specifically 
- 3 - 
 
requests?”  Kumar’s counsel responded by requesting that the circuit court ask several voir 
dire questions that he had proposed, including questions 15 and 16.  The circuit court 
denied Kumar’s counsel’s request to ask proposed voir dire questions 15 and 16, which 
were the Kazadi questions.  The following discussion occurred concerning voir dire 
questions 15 and 16, the Kazadi case (which was pending before us at the time), and 
Twining, 234 Md. 97, 198 A.2d 291 (which we overruled in Kazadi): 
[KUMAR’S COUNSEL]: I would ask that the Court propound . . . defense 
request for voir dire question number 15.  There is currently a case, I think 
it’s in the Court of Special Appeals[1] right now -- 
 
THE COURT: Yeah, it’s sitting there.  Until they make a decision, the old 
law from about 50 years ago resumes.  I’m with you, [defense counsel], but 
until the Court of Special Appeals makes that determination I’ll have to deny 
your request as to presumption of innocence.  And if I’m thinking ahead of 
you as to number -- well, part of number 16. 
 
[KUMAR’S COUNSEL]: And I would also ask that the Court include 
question 16 as well. 
 
THE COURT: I’ll note the request. 
 
[KUMAR’S COUNSEL]: And, Judge, we would take exception -- 
 
THE COURT: The exception is noted as to the Court’s denial of the 
defendant’s requested 15. 
 
[KUMAR’S COUNSEL]: And 16 as well. 
 
THE COURT: And exception is noted with regard to -- I haven’t denied it 
yet.  I’ll deny the request as number 16.  I will note again this issue is before 
the Court of Special Appeals, . . . but . . . that question at this moment is still 
improper, so I’ll deny 16 also.  I’ll note your exception in that regard. 
 
1Kumar’s counsel mistakenly referred to the “Court of Special Appeals” and the 
circuit court repeated the reference twice during the discussion above.  At the time that 
Kumar’s trial began, oral argument had occurred in this Court in Kazadi and the case was 
awaiting the issuance of an opinion.  
- 4 - 
 
 
(Paragraph breaks omitted). 
During the circuit court’s review of the proposed voir dire questions, there were 
three instances in which Kumar’s counsel excepted to the circuit court’s refusal to ask a 
proposed voir dire question.  In the first two instances, Kumar’s counsel excepted to the 
circuit court’s refusal to ask voir dire question 15 and to the circuit court’s refusal to ask 
voir dire question 16—i.e., the Kazadi-type voir dire questions.  In the third instance, 
Kumar’s counsel excepted to the circuit court’s decision to ask an edited version of a 
proposed supplemental voir dire question—question B—which concerned whether jurors 
or their family members were trained or employed in the medical field.  
In all other instances, Kumar’s counsel did not except to the circuit court’s refusal 
to ask proposed voir dire questions.  Kumar’s counsel did not except to the circuit court’s 
refusal to ask proposed voir dire questions 10 (which pertained to whether jurors had law 
enforcement connections) and 17 (which was a catchall question).  Similarly, Kumar’s 
counsel did not except to the circuit court’s decision to ask an edited version of proposed 
voir dire questions 9 (which pertained to whether jurors may have had biases against 
certain groups of people) and 12 (which pertained to whether the jurors had connections to 
certain advocacy organizations).  In another instance, although the circuit court stated that 
it would note Kumar’s counsel’s exception to the court’s refusal to ask a supplemental voir 
- 5 - 
 
dire question—question A (which pertained to alcohol and drug use)—Kumar’s counsel 
did not actually state that he excepted to the circuit court’s refusal to ask the question.2 
After the exchange above in which the circuit court declined to ask voir dire 
questions 15 and 16 (the Kazadi questions) and indicated that Kumar’s counsel’s 
exceptions to the court’s failure to ask the questions had been noted, the court asked the 
voir dire questions of the jury panel as a group.  Upon completion of the group questions, 
before the court individually questioned prospective jurors who had responded 
affirmatively, the following exchange occurred: 
THE COURT: Anything further from the defense? 
 
[KUMAR’S COUNSEL]: I’ll just ask the Court to note my continuing 
exception to the Court’s refusal -- 
 
THE COURT: Does your client want to be here?  
 
The circuit court did not ask Kumar’s counsel to elaborate concerning the “continuing 
exception to the Court’s refusal[.]” 
 
2The record reflects that Kumar’s counsel submitted a request for two supplemental 
voir dire questions—questions A and B.  The circuit court declined to ask supplemental 
question A concerning marijuana and alcohol use and after declining to ask the question, 
the court stated, without prompting by Kumar’s counsel, that it would note Kumar’s 
exception to its refusal to ask the question.  Kumar’s counsel did not advise the circuit court 
that an exception would be taken to the court’s refusal to ask the question. 
  
The record also reflects that the circuit court agreed, after rephrasing the question, 
to ask supplemental voir dire question B concerning whether jurors or their family 
members had been trained or employed in the medical field but stated: “I’m going to deny 
the request specifically as to your request to B, 1, 2 and 3, whoever comes up at sidebar 
voir dire, you can delve into that if you wish to, if they respond to your question B.”  As 
explained above, Kumar’s counsel advised that he would take an exception and the circuit 
court noted the exception. 
- 6 - 
 
Motion for a New Trial and Notice of Appeal 
On November 18, 2019, in the circuit court, Kumar filed a motion for a new trial, 
contending, among other things, that the circuit court erred in declining to ask proposed 
voir dire questions 15 and 16.  In the motion for a new trial, Kumar’s counsel raised various 
allegations of error but the only allegation raised concerning the circuit court’s failure to 
ask proposed voir dire questions pertained to the court’s failure to ask the Kazadi questions.  
On January 24, 2020, prior to the date of Kumar’s sentencing, we issued our opinion in 
Kazadi and addressed the applicability of our holding as follows: 
Additionally, consistent with this Court’s case law, although we provide 
Kazadi “with the benefit of the holding[] in this case, we determine that our 
holding[] shall apply prospectively as of the date on which this opinion is 
filed.”  Pearson, 437 Md. at 370, 86 A.3d at 1243.  In other words, our 
holding exclusively applies to this case and future trials, and this opinion 
should not be construed as giving rise to any grounds for relief in cases in 
which voir dire occurred before today—i.e., cases in which trial courts 
operated under the assumption that Twining, 234 Md. at 100, 198 A.2d at 
293, remained good law.  
 
(Alterations in original). 
On February 21, 2020, the circuit court conducted the sentencing proceeding in 
Kumar’s case at which it heard argument on and denied the motion for a new trial.  The 
circuit court sentenced Kumar to life imprisonment for first-degree murder and a 
consecutive sentence of three years’ imprisonment for the weapons offense.  On March 2, 
2020, we issued an Order replacing the language in Kazadi on the applicability of our 
holding with the following: 
Additionally, consistent with this Court’s case law, we provide Kazadi with 
the benefit of the holding in this case, and we determine that our holding 
applies to this case and any other cases that are pending on direct appeal 
- 7 - 
 
when this opinion is filed, where the relevant question has been preserved 
for appellate review.  See Hackney v. State, 459 Md. 108, 119, 184 A.3d 414, 
421 (2018); State v. Daughtry, 419 Md. 35, 77 n.26, 18 A.3d 60, 85 n.26 
(2011). 
 
Kazadi, 467 Md. at 54, 223 A.3d at 586. 
On March 20, 2020, in the circuit court, Kumar filed a notice of appeal. 
Opinion of the Court of Special Appeals 
On April 13, 2021, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed Kumar’s conviction for 
first-degree murder and reversed for lack of sufficient evidence the conviction for openly 
carrying a dangerous weapon with the intent to injure.  See Amit Kumar v. State, No. 300, 
Sept. Term, 2020, 2021 WL 1392142, at *7-8 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. Apr. 13, 2021).3  The 
Court of Special Appeals held that the circuit court did not err or abuse its discretion in 
declining to ask proposed voir dire questions 15 and 16.  See Kumar, 2021 WL 1392142, 
at *4.  The Court of Special Appeals acknowledged that the State conceded that proposed 
voir dire questions 15 and 16 were Kazadi-type voir dire questions—i.e., voir dire 
questions that must be asked on request under Kazadi.  See Kumar, 2021 WL 1392142, at 
*3.  The Court of Special Appeals noted, however, that it was not bound by concessions of 
law.  See id. at *4.  The Court of Special Appeals reasoned that because the revised opinion 
in Kazadi stated that its holding applied to “any [] cases that [were] pending on direct 
appeal” when the opinion was filed and Kumar had not filed a notice of appeal until after 
 
3The Court of Special Appeals also held that the circuit court did not err in declining 
to instruct the jury on self-defense and did not abuse its discretion denying a motion to 
postpone sentencing.  See Kumar, 2021 WL 1392142, at *6-7.  Those issues, as well as the 
question of whether the evidence was sufficient to support Kumar’s conviction for openly 
carrying a dangerous weapon with the intent to injure, are not before us. 
- 8 - 
 
the Kazadi opinion was issued, Kumar was not entitled to relief.  Kumar, 2021 WL 
1392142, at *4.  The Court of Special Appeals determined that Twining, not Kazadi, 
applied and that, as such, it need not address the State’s contention that Kumar’s Kazadi 
claim was waived or unpreserved for appellate review.  See Kumar, 2021 WL 1392142, at 
*4. 
Petition for a Writ of Certiorari 
On May 14, 2021, Kumar petitioned for a writ of certiorari, raising the following 
two issues: 
1. Does the holding of Kazadi [] apply to all litigants who preserved 
the issue and whose cases were not yet final when the Kazadi opinion was 
issued, regardless of whether they had filed a notice of appeal by that date? 
 
2. Did the Court of Special Appeals violate [Kumar]’s constitutional 
right to equal protection by applying different law to [Kumar]’s case as 
compared to other similarly situated litigants?  
 
On July 9, 2021, we granted the petition.  See Kumar v. State, 475 Md. 3, 256 A.3d 270 
(2021). 
DISCUSSION 
The State agrees with Kumar that this Court’s conclusion in Kazadi that its holding 
would apply “to this case and any other cases that [were] pending on direct appeal when 
[the] opinion [was] filed, where the relevant question has been preserved for appellate 
review[,]” Kazadi, 467 Md. at 47, 223 A.3d at 581 (citations omitted), includes “cases that 
were pending in the trial court when Kazadi was decided and had not yet become final on 
direct appeal.”  (Footnote omitted).  Kumar points out that, because we indicated that the 
applicability of the holding in Kazadi was consistent with case law such as Hackney and 
- 9 - 
 
Daughtry, the holding applies to any case in which there had not yet been a final 
disposition4 when the opinion in Kazadi was issued, regardless of whether the defendant 
had filed a notice of appeal at the time.  In agreement, the State adds that our opinion in 
Kazadi and other case law indicate that, consistent with the United States Supreme Court’s 
decision in Griffith v. Kentucky, 479 U.S. 314 (1987), Kazadi applies to all cases that were 
pending on direct review or not yet final where the issue is preserved for appellate review.  
The parties are correct.  In light of case law from the United States Supreme Court 
and this Court and considerations of fairness, our holding in Kazadi applies to any case that 
was pending in a trial or appellate court that had not become final on direct appeal when 
this Court issued the opinion in Kazadi and in which the Kazadi issue had been preserved 
for appellate review.  In other words, our holding in Kazadi applies to cases in which there 
had not yet been a final disposition, regardless of whether a notice of appeal had been filed 
 
4At various times, the parties use the term “final judgment” in discussing cases in 
which appellate proceedings have not concluded.  Citing Franklin v. State, 470 Md. 154, 
186, 235 A.3d 1, 19 (2020), Kumar states that the term “final judgment” refers to “when 
the judgment of conviction has been rendered, all appeals have been exhausted, and the 
time for a petition for certiorari has elapsed.”  In Franklin, id. at 186, 235 A.3d at 19, 
however, we stated that the term “‘[f]inal disposition of the case’ means the point where 
the judgment of conviction was rendered, the availability of (final) appeal exhausted, and 
the time for petition for certiorari had elapsed.”  (Cleaned up).  In other words, the term 
“final disposition” means the point at which a defendant has exhausted the right to a direct 
appeal.  On the other hand, “[a] final judgment is one that either determines and concludes 
the rights of the parties involved or denies a party the means to prosecute or defend his or 
her rights and interests in the subject matter of the proceeding”—i.e., a “final judgment is 
one that puts a party out of court[.]”  Brown v. State, 470 Md. 503, 549, 236 A.3d 488, 514 
(2020) (cleaned up).  For example, generally, “there is a final judgment for purposes of 
appeal in a criminal case when the sentence is announced or imposed.”  Id. at 550, 236 
A.3d at 515 (citation omitted).  In this case, to avoid confusion, when referring to the point 
at which the right to a direct appeal has been exhausted, we use the term “final disposition” 
instead of the term “final judgment.” 
- 10 - 
 
at the time the opinion in Kazadi was issued, and in which the issue had been preserved for 
appellate review. 
Because the Soule case, a case that involved a similar issue, provided the backdrop 
for our revised opinion in Kazadi, we will briefly discuss the history of the case in this 
Court.  On March 20, 2019, Soule filed a petition for a writ of certiorari in which one of 
the questions presented was whether case law in which this Court had concluded that it was 
inappropriate for a trial court to ask voir dire questions concerning the presumption of 
innocence should be revisited.  We placed Soule’s petition on hold pending the disposition 
of Kazadi.5  
On January 31, 2020, after the issuance of our opinion in Kazadi, Soule filed a 
supplement to his petition for a writ of certiorari, contending that Kazadi applied to all 
pending cases—i.e., cases in which the right to direct appeal had not yet been exhausted at 
the time the Kazadi opinion was issued—where the issue is preserved for appellate review.  
Soule requested that we revise the opinion in Kazadi to indicate that the holding applied to 
cases in which the right to appeal had not been exhausted.6  On March 2, 2020, citing 
Daughtry and Hackney, we issued the Order revising Kazadi to indicate that the holding 
applied to all cases “pending on direct appeal” at the time the opinion was issued and where 
 
5On May 14, 2019, we had granted a petition for writ of certiorari filed by Kazadi 
through counsel.  See Kazadi v. State, 463 Md. 637, 207 A.3d 1215 (2019). 
6On February 3, 2020, although Soule was not a party to the case, Soule filed a line 
in Kazadi attaching the supplement.  On February 5, 2020, Kazadi filed a motion to strike 
the line and the attachment, contending that Soule essentially sought reconsideration in 
Kazadi, which he lacked standing to do because he was not a party to the case.  Ultimately, 
after replacing language in Kazadi concerning the applicability of the holding, we denied 
Kazadi’s motion to strike as moot. 
- 11 - 
 
the issue was preserved for appellate review.  Kazadi, 467 Md. at 54, 223 A.3d at 586.7  As 
such, our revision of the language in Kazadi concerning the applicability of its holding 
occurred as a result of the supplement to the petition for a writ of certiorari filed in Soule.  
In the supplement, Soule requested that we revise Kazadi because under Griffith, 
479 U.S. 314, and our existing case law, Kazadi would apply to pending cases—i.e., cases 
in which the right to direct appeal had not yet been exhausted—where the issue is preserved 
for appellate review.  In Griffith, 479 U.S. at 322, the Supreme Court held that the “failure 
to apply a newly declared constitutional rule to criminal cases pending on direct review 
violates basic norms of constitutional adjudication.”  Quoting Williams v. United States, 
401 U.S. 667, 679 (1971) (Harlan, J., concurring), the Supreme Court explained that the 
nature of judicial review “precludes us from ‘[s]imply fishing one case from the stream of 
appellate review, using it as a vehicle for pronouncing new constitutional standards, and 
then permitting a stream of similar cases subsequently to flow by unaffected by that new 
rule.’”  Griffith, 479 U.S. at 323 (alteration in original).  In various instances in Griffith, 
the Supreme Court used the terms “not yet final” and “pending on direct review” 
interchangeably in referring to the cases to which the new rule should apply.8  Griffith, 479 
 
7On the same date, we granted the petition in Soule and issued a per curiam order 
vacating the Court of Special Appeals’s judgment and remanding the case to that Court 
with instructions to determine whether Kazadi applied.  See Soule v. State, 467 Md. 689, 
226 A.3d 234 (2020); Soule v. State, 467 Md. 432, 225 A.3d 415 (2020). 
8In addition, citing United States v. Johnson, 457 U.S. 537 (1982), in Griffith, the 
Supreme Court observed that the Fourth Amendment ruling in Payton v. New York, 445 
U.S. 573 (1980), barring police from making a warrantless, nonconsensual entry into a 
person’s home to make a routine felony arrest, “applied retroactively to a case pending on 
direct appeal.”  Griffith, 479 U.S. at 321 n.7. 
- 12 - 
 
U.S. at 316, 323, 328.  This language indicates that, where the term “pending on direct 
appeal” is used in Kazadi, the term indeed refers to cases that were not yet final—i.e., cases 
in which there had not yet been final dispositions.  That the replacement of the language in 
Kazadi was made in light of the Supreme Court’s holding in Griffith demonstrates that our 
holding in Kazadi applies to all cases pending appeal or pending direct review, i.e., cases 
in which there had not yet been a final disposition as opposed to only cases in which a 
notice of appeal had already been filed.9 
In addition, in the order revising the applicability of the holding in Kazadi, we cited 
Hackney and Daughtry, stating that, “consistent with this Court’s case law, . . . we 
determine that our holding applies to this case and any other cases that are pending on 
direct appeal when this opinion is filed[.]”  Kazadi, 467 Md. at 54, 223 A.3d at 586.  The 
use of the two cases indicates that the holding in Kazadi should have the same retroactive 
effect as the retroactive application discussed in Hackney and Daughtry.  In Hackney, 459 
Md. at 119, 132, 184 A.3d at 421, 429, we adopted the prison mailbox rule and because 
our holding was a new application of “constitutional provisions, statutes, or rules,” we 
determined that Hackney was entitled to the benefit of the rule and “so too should any other 
 
9In addition, after the order revising the holding in Kazadi was issued, the discussion 
of the Kazadi case in a recent dissenting opinion indicated that its holding involved an 
application of Griffith.  See Rochkind v. Stevenson, 471 Md. 1, 67 n.6, 236 A.3d 630, 669 
n.6 (2020) (Watts, J., dissenting); see also Abruquah v. State, 471 Md. 249, 253, 240 A.3d 
1205, 1207 (2020) (Watts, J., dissenting) (quoting Rochkind, 471 Md. at 67 n.6, 236 A.3d 
at 669 n.6 (Watts, J., dissenting)).  The observation in the dissent in Rochkind that Kazadi 
implemented the principle expressed in Griffith that newly announced constitutional rules 
apply to cases pending on direct appeal indicates that, consistent with Griffith, Kazadi 
applies to cases in which there had not yet been a final disposition when the opinion was 
issued, where the issue is preserved for appellate review. 
- 13 - 
 
similarly situated prisoner whose case is pending receive the benefit of the rule we adopt 
here.”  In reaching this conclusion, among other cases, we cited Griffith.  See Hackney, 
459 Md. at 119, 184 A.3d at 421.  Similarly, in Daughtry, 419 Md. at 77 n.26, 18 A.3d at 
85 n.26, we indicated that application of a new rule would apply to “all other pending cases 
where the relevant question has been preserved for appellate review.”  (Cleaned up).  
Consistent with Hackney and Daughtry, our holding in Kazadi applies (assuming that the 
issue is preserved for appellate review) to pending cases—i.e., cases in which there had not 
yet been a final disposition when we issued the opinion in Kazadi. 
Griffith, Hackney, and Daughtry are not the only cases that reinforce this principle.  
In Polakoff v. Turner, 385 Md. 467, 487-88, 869 A.2d 837, 850 (2005), we observed that 
“a new interpretation of a constitutional provision, statute, or rule has included the case 
before us and all other pending cases where the relevant question has been preserved for 
appellate review.”  (Cleaned up).  By contrast, “[g]enerally, judicially-initiated changes to 
the common law apply prospectively, that is, they apply in the case before us and all similar 
cases moving forward.”  State v. Jones, 466 Md. 142, 164, 216 A.3d 907, 920 (2019) 
(citations omitted).  Our holding in Kazadi is subject to the principle set forth in Polakoff 
because the holding was based on a constitutional provision and fundamental principles, 
not the common law.10  Because Kazadi involved an interpretation of a constitutional 
 
10As we observed in Kazadi, 467 Md. at 45, 223 A.3d at 580, the right not to testify 
emanates directly from a constitutional provision—namely, “[t]he Fifth Amendment to the 
Constitution of the United States, which was ratified in 1791[ and] expressly enshrines the 
right not to testify” in a criminal case.  In Kazadi, the only instance in which we referred 
to the common law was when we pointed out that, “[a]lthough the Constitution does not 
 
- 14 - 
 
provision and fundamental principles, under Polakoff, its holding applies to “all other 
pending cases where the relevant question has been preserved for appellate review.”  
Polakoff, 385 Md. at 487-88, 869 A.2d at 850 (cleaned up). 
Further, considerations of fairness warrant our present holding.  We agree with the 
State that concluding otherwise would “create[] a strange ‘doughnut hole’ in Kazadi’s 
application” in that the holding in Kazadi would apply to future cases and cases where 
appeals were actually pending when we issued the opinion in Kazadi, but not to cases 
falling between those two categories—i.e., ones in which defendants had been tried but not 
yet noted appeals when Kazadi was issued.  We do not see any principled reason to deny 
relief under Kazadi to defendants simply because they noted appeals after the opinion was 
issued. 
Having resolved the issue of the applicability of Kazadi, we turn to the outcome of 
this case.  Kumar requests that we reverse and remand the case to the circuit court for a 
new trial.  The State asks that we vacate the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals and 
remand the case to that Court for it to address the issue of preservation for appellate review 
as well as the “merits” of Kumar’s Kazadi claim.  
We decline the State’s request.  As we see it, the merits of Kumar’s claim are the 
same as the issue that we have already considered concerning the applicability of the 
 
explicitly refer to the burden of proof or the presumption of innocence, both of those 
principles existed under the common law at least since around the time of the country’s 
founding.”  Id. at 45, 223 A.3d at 580 (citations omitted).  As such, in Kazadi, the common 
law was mentioned only to explain that these fundamental principles arose from it centuries 
ago at the time of our country’s founding. 
- 15 - 
 
holding in Kazadi.  Although the question before us was phrased in terms of whether this 
is a case to which the holding in Kazadi would apply, it is the same question that forms the 
merits of Kumar’s Kazadi claim.  We have resolved the matter in accord with the position 
taken by both parties and concluded that the holding in Kazadi applies to all cases in which 
there was no final disposition at the time the Kazadi opinion was issued and in which the 
issue is preserved for appellate review—regardless of whether a notice of appeal had been 
filed in the case.  The State has already acknowledged in the Court of Special Appeals that 
proposed voir dire questions 15 and 16 are Kazadi-type voir dire questions—i.e., voir dire 
questions that must be asked on request under Kazadi.  See Kumar, 2021 WL 1392142, at 
*3.  So, if the issue is preserved, there is nothing left to decide with regard to the merits of 
Kumar’s Kazadi claim.11 
Although the Court of Special Appeals declined to address the issue of preservation, 
under Maryland Rule 8-131(b)(1), we have the discretion to consider an issue that was not 
decided by the Court of Special Appeals and not raised in a petition or cross-petition for a 
writ of certiorari.12  In this case, based on the record of the jury selection process and to 
 
11To the extent that the State asserts that the merits of Kumar’s Kazadi claim are not 
before us because the first question presented in the petition for a writ of certiorari 
concerned only the applicability of Kazadi in general, not whether Kumar is entitled to 
relief under Kazadi, the State, in reality, does not contend that the merits of Kumar’s claim 
are any different than the issue that we have already decided.  
12We disagree with Kumar’s contention that the State waived the issue of 
preservation by not filing a cross-petition for a writ of certiorari.  Given that the Court of 
Special Appeals did not reach the issue, there was no determination on which the State 
could base a cross-petition. 
That said, although Kumar argued on brief that the State waived the preservation 
issue by not filing a cross-petition, at oral argument, on rebuttal, in response to questions 
 
- 16 - 
 
avoid future unnecessary appellate proceedings, we believe it prudent to exercise our 
discretion to reach the preservation issue.  To be sure, it may be a general practice where 
we reverse on an issue to remand a case to the Court of Special Appeals for it to address 
issues not previously decided if the undecided issues that were before that Court are not 
moot.  While this may be a general practice, it is not an absolute requirement.  We are not 
required to remand to the Court of Special Appeals for further proceedings in every single 
case in which an issue was not addressed.  
 We have the discretion to decide such an appellate issue and have exercised our 
discretion to do so in other cases, including Matthews v. Amberwood Assocs. Ltd. P’ship, 
Inc., 351 Md. 544, 581, 719 A.2d 119, 137 (1998), in which we observed that, “on 
occasions, where . . . the issue can be disposed of quickly, we have, in the interests of 
judicial economy and expedition, deemed it appropriate to decide such an issue rather than 
remand the matter to the Court of Special Appeals for decision.”  (Cleaned up).  In 
Matthews, id. at 580-81, 719 A.2d at 136-37, we addressed an issue concerning 
contributory negligence and assumption of risk that the Court of Special Appeals had not 
decided because it was “one of those occasions in which the issue [could] be disposed of 
quickly and easily” and because there was “no good reason to prolong appellate 
proceedings[.]”  Likewise, in Lizzi v. Wash. Metro. Area Transit Auth., 384 Md. 199, 206, 
862 A.2d 1017, 1022 (2004), we addressed an issue concerning res judicata that the Court 
 
raised by the Court during the State’s presentation, Kumar’s counsel agreed that the Court 
had the discretion to decide the issue, that the record contained everything the Court needed 
to understand the issue, and that the Court could address the issue and hold that Kumar’s 
trial counsel’s objection was preserved. 
- 17 - 
 
of Special Appeals had not decided “to avoid the expense and delay of another appeal”—
i.e., to refrain from remanding “to the Court of Special Appeals for it to determine the issue 
when it would, in all probability, end up back here.”  (Cleaned up).  When addressing issues 
that the Court of Special Appeals had not decided, we have cited judicial economy or the 
desire to avoid a remand to that Court.  See, e.g., Suburban Hosp., Inc. v. Kirson, 362 Md. 
140, 177, 763 A.2d 185, 205 (2000); Bundy v. State, 334 Md. 131, 148, 638 A.2d 84, 93 
(1994); Sergeant Co. v. Pickett, 285 Md. 186, 193, 401 A.2d 651, 655 (1979). 
In this case, considerations of judicial economy and the desire to avoid unnecessary 
appellate litigation persuade us to address the issue of preservation, given that it is an issue 
that can be decided quickly and easily and that in all likelihood would wind up back in this 
Court after a determination on remand.  In other words, we are cognizant that, if we were 
to remand to the Court of Special Appeals to address the issue, the non-prevailing party 
would likely file a petition for a writ of certiorari, resulting in even more appellate 
proceedings.  We see no need to cause further appellate litigation in the case. 
We have everything that we need to determine whether Kumar’s Kazadi claim is 
preserved for appellate review.  We have the parties’ briefs in the Court of Special Appeals, 
in which the parties addressed the preservation issue; and we have the transcript of the 
entire jury selection process.  We need only determine whether Kumar’s exceptions were 
sufficient to preserve the Kazadi claim for appellate review.  As the State acknowledged at 
oral argument in this Court, our holding in State v. Ablonczy, 474 Md. 149, ___, 253 A.3d 
598, 600 (2021) disposed of the State’s contention in the Court of Special Appeals that 
Kumar waived his Kazadi claim by accepting the jury as empaneled.  As such, we need 
- 18 - 
 
only address the issue of preservation for appellate review, not waiver. 
This case is distinguishable from State v. Miller, 475 Md. 263, ___, 256 A.3d 920, 
944 (2021), a case cited by the State at oral argument, in which this Court remanded a case 
to the Court of Special Appeals for determination of an issue not decided by that Court.  In 
Miller, our holding concerned the admissibility of evidence at a criminal trial, and we 
remanded the case to the Court of Special Appeals so that it could address an issue 
pertaining to sentencing.  Here, the issue we decided concerns the applicability of our 
holding in Kazadi and we have already determined that Kazadi applies.  The State asks us 
to remand the case to the Court of Special Appeals for it to address whether the Kazadi 
claim is preserved for appellate review.  Because the two issues are interrelated and there 
is not a non-Kazadi-related issue for the Court of Special Appeals to address, the remand 
that the State requests would not be comparable to the one in Miller. 
In addition, it is not necessary to remand the case to the Court of Special Appeals 
for that Court to consider the preservation issue in light of the disposition of Brigido Lopez-
Villa v. State of Maryland, No. 22, Sept. Term, 2021 (Md.), in which we heard oral 
argument on December 2, 2021.  Our disposition of the preservation issue in this case does 
not depend on the disposition of Lopez-Villa because the circumstances of the cases are 
very different.  In Lopez-Villa, in the petition for a writ of certiorari, the question raised 
concerning the jury selection process is: 
Where Petitioner submitted a written request for said voir dire questions and 
the trial court “reviewed” the questions and ruled that it was “not inclined to 
ask” them “because the Court will instruct on those areas of law,” did the 
Court of Special Appeals err in holding that Petitioner “failed to preserve his 
objection to the court’s refusal to read his proposed voir dire questions,” 
- 19 - 
 
because he “failed to ask or tell the court that he objected to the failure to ask 
those specific questions,” and because when, at the end of voir dire, the trial 
court inquired, “[d]id I miss any questions . . . what you previously objected 
to, which I will preserve for the record,” counsel responded “no”?  
 
(Alteration and ellipsis in original).  The question presented in Lopez-Villa is a very fact-
specific question.  The question includes the circumstance that, when the trial court initially 
reviewed requested voir dire questions with counsel, trial counsel did not object when the 
court stated that it was not inclined to ask the Kazadi-type voir dire questions.  The question 
also includes the circumstance that, after the trial court asked the group voir dire questions, 
counsel responded “no” to an inquiry from the court concerning whether any questions had 
been missed.  The circumstances of this case are nothing like those of Lopez-Villa.  Here, 
during the circuit court’s review of the proposed voir dire questions, Kumar’s counsel 
expressly excepted to the court’s refusal to ask both of the Kazadi questions.  Further, after 
the circuit court asked the voir dire questions of the jury panel, when the court asked 
whether there was anything further, Kumar’s counsel asked the court to note a continuing 
exception.  This case does not involve considering whether submitting a written request for 
Kazadi-type voir dire questions is sufficient to preserve the issue for appellate review 
where there is an alleged failure to object at all to a trial court not asking the questions.  
Rather, the case involves the limited question of the sufficiency of Kumar’s counsel noting 
a continuing exception after the group voir dire questions.  There is no need for us to return 
this case to the Court of Special Appeals to await the outcome of Lopez-Villa and decide 
the preservation issue.  
Having decided to exercise our discretion to address the issue of preservation, we 
- 20 - 
 
conclude that Kumar preserved the Kazadi claim for appellate review.  At oral argument 
in this Court and on brief in the Court of Special Appeals, the State contended that the issue 
was not preserved because, when excepting after the group voir dire questions, Kumar’s 
counsel did not identify the specific unasked proposed voir dire questions to which he 
excepted.  “Maryland Rule 4-323(c) delineates the method of objecting to the adverse 
ruling of a trial court on a proposed voir dire question[.]”  Ablonczy, 474 Md. at ___, 253 
A.3d at 603.  Under Maryland Rule 4-323(c), for purposes of review of a ruling or order 
of a trial court other than one admitting evidence, “it is sufficient that a party, at the time 
the ruling or order is made or sought, makes known to the court the action that the party 
desires the court to take or the objection to the action of the court.” 
In this case, Kumar preserved the Kazadi claim for appellate review in accordance 
with Maryland Rule 4-323(c) by making known his objection to the circuit court’s failure 
to ask the Kazadi-type voir dire questions.  Kumar requested the unasked Kazadi voir dire 
questions at issue at least twice before the jury panel was questioned as a group—first in 
writing and then orally during the process in which the circuit court reviewed with counsel 
the voir dire questions that would be asked.  Prior to the circuit court asking the proposed 
voir dire questions, Kumar’s counsel specifically advised the court that he took exception 
to the court’s refusal to ask questions 15 and 16—the Kazadi-type voir dire questions—
and the circuit court explicitly stated that each exception was noted.   
When given the opportunity to do so after the group voir dire questions were asked, 
Kumar excepted to the circuit court’s refusal to ask proposed voir dire questions.  
Specifically, after asking voir dire questions of the jury panel but before individually 
- 21 - 
 
questioning prospective jurors, the circuit court asked whether there was “[a]nything 
further from the defense[,]” and Kumar’s counsel responded: “I’ll just ask the Court to note 
my continuing exception to the Court’s refusal --”  The next line of the transcript indicates 
that the circuit court asked Kumar’s counsel whether Kumar wanted to be present.  The 
State observed at oral argument that it is unclear whether Kumar’s counsel’s voice trailed 
off after saying the word “refusal” or whether the circuit court interrupted him at the time. 
What is clear is that when Kumar’s counsel asked the circuit court to note his 
“continuing exception to its refusal” he was referring to the court’s refusal to ask proposed 
voir dire questions that he had requested.  Before this Court, at oral argument, the State 
acknowledged that Kumar’s counsel’s continuing exception referred to the circuit court’s 
refusal to ask voir dire questions but contended that the exception was insufficient to 
preserve the Kazadi issue because Kumar’s counsel did not identify the particular voir dire 
question or questions to which he was referring.  By using the term “continuing 
exception[,]” however, Kumar’s counsel indicated that he was re-raising a matter that he 
had already raised.  Throughout voir dire, the only instances in which Kumar’s counsel 
specifically excepted to the circuit court’s failure to ask voir dire questions were the court’s 
failure to ask voir dire questions 15 and 16—the Kazadi questions—and later the court’s 
refusal to ask in its entirety supplemental question B pertaining to prospective jurors’ and 
their family’s potential training or employment in the medical profession. 
Under the circumstances of this case, the only reasonable interpretation of Kumar’s 
counsel’s reference to his “continuing exception to the Court’s refusal” is that he was 
referring to the circuit court’s refusal to ask the proposed Kazadi voir dire questions—voir 
- 22 - 
 
dire questions 15 and 16.  During the discussion between the circuit court and Kumar’s 
counsel at the time that the court declined to ask voir dire questions 15 and 16, both the 
circuit court and Kumar’s counsel acknowledged that there was a case pending on appeal 
that could potentially change the law concerning whether the questions should be asked. 
Given Kumar’s counsel’s discussion with the circuit court concerning the case pending in 
the “Court of Special Appeals” and the circuit court’s observation that, until the Court 
made a decision, the “old law from about 50 years ago” would apply, it is difficult to 
conceive that Kumar’s counsel’s noting of a continuing exception could have been 
understood as anything other than applying to the circuit court’s refusal to ask the Kazadi-
type voir dire questions.   
Without deciding the issue of whether to preserve a Kazadi claim it is required that 
an exception be made or renewed after voir dire questions are asked of a jury panel but 
before individual questioning of prospective jurors,13 we conclude that Kumar’s counsel’s 
continuing exception to the circuit court’s refusal to ask the proposed voir dire questions 
complied with Maryland Rule 4-323(c) because it made “known to the court the action that 
the party desire[d] the court to take or the objection to the action of the court.”  To agree 
with the State that Kumar’s Kazadi claim was unpreserved for appellate review, we would 
need to determine that Kumar’s counsel’s noting of a continuing exception after the group 
questioning was entirely meaningless because it was not specific as to any particular 
 
13We do not decide the issue concerning the potential effect of an alleged failure to 
make or renew an objection after a trial court conducts group voir dire of a jury panel 
because that issue involves a different set of circumstances and is not before the Court in 
this case. 
- 23 - 
 
unasked proposed voir dire question—even though he had excepted in only three instances 
to the circuit court’s refusal to ask voir dire questions and two of the exceptions involved 
the Kazadi-type questions.  Or, we would need to conclude that, in noting a continuing 
exception, Kumar’s counsel was referring only to the circuit court’s refusal to ask in its 
entirety supplemental question B concerning whether jurors or their family members had 
any connection to the field of medicine or to some other unasked voir dire question to 
which he had not previously expressly excepted, and not to the circuit court’s refusal to ask 
proposed voir dire questions 15 and 16 which concerned fundamental rights and involved 
an issue that both the circuit court and Kumar’s counsel had discussed as pending in a case 
on appeal.14  
This case is different from cases in which the Court of Special Appeals has held that 
defendants failed to preserve for appellate review issues as to unasked proposed voir dire 
questions where, after asking voir dire questions, trial courts either asked whether there 
was anything to add or asked whether there were any comments or objections, and the 
defendants’ counsel either said nothing or responded in the negative.  See, e.g., Brice v. 
State, 225 Md. App. 666, 679, 126 A.3d 246, 254 (2015), cert. denied, 447 Md. 298, 135 
A.3d 416 (2016); Gilmer v. State, 161 Md. App. 21, 32-33, 866 A.2d 918, 925, vacated in 
 
14In addition to preserving an issue for appellate review, one of the purposes of 
noting an exception or making an objection is to give a trial court the opportunity to correct 
an alleged mistake.  See Taylor v. State, 473 Md. 205, 227, 249 A.3d 810, 823 
(2021).  Given the discussion between the circuit court and Kumar’s counsel when the 
court reviewed voir dire questions 15 and 16, it is difficult to conceive that the circuit  court 
would not have understood Kumar’s counsel’s noting of a continuing exception to apply 
to the court’s refusal to ask the Kazadi-type voir dire questions. 
- 24 - 
 
part on other grounds, 389 Md. 656, 887 A.2d 549 (2005).  By contrast, here, when given 
the opportunity, Kumar’s counsel noted a continuing exception to the circuit court’s refusal 
to ask proposed voir dire questions.  This is not a case in which a defendant allegedly 
abandoned a request for an unasked proposed voir dire question by failing, when given the 
opportunity, to make or renew an objection to the trial court’s failure to ask the question. 
In this case, in addition to excepting to the circuit court’s refusal to include the 
Kazadi questions in the group voir dire questions and noting a continuing exception after 
the group voir dire occurred, in the motion for a new trial, Kumar asserted that the circuit 
court erred in refusing to ask the Kazadi-type voir dire questions.  At the sentencing 
proceeding, the circuit court heard argument on the motion, and neither the State nor the 
court contended, or even mentioned the notion, that Kumar’s Kazadi claim was 
unpreserved.  To the contrary, the arguments made by the parties and the circuit court’s 
ruling as to the Kazadi issue addressed the merits of the claim—namely, whether the 
opinion in Kazadi should be retroactively applied to the case.  The State maintained that, 
as far as it was aware, Kazadi did not apply retroactively to convictions that occurred before 
the opinion was issued.  Kumar’s counsel responded that Kazadi should be applied 
retroactively and that the nature of the case made it especially important for prospective 
jurors to be asked about the presumption of innocence and the burden of proof.  The circuit 
court denied the motion for a new trial on the ground that Kazadi did not apply retroactively 
and was not the law of Maryland at the time of the trial.  Given that the circuit court ruled 
on the merits of the Kazadi claim, it is clear that the court believed the issue to be 
- 25 - 
 
preserved.  Apparently, at that time, so did the State, for that matter, as the State did not 
raise an issue as to preservation in response to the motion.   
The multiple steps that Kumar’s counsel took—requesting both in writing and orally 
before the group voir dire that the Kazadi-type questions be asked, making before the group 
voir dire began an individual exception to the circuit court’s refusal to ask each question, 
noting a continuing exception to the court’s refusal to ask voir dire questions when given 
the opportunity after the group voir dire, and re-raising the issue of the circuit court’s 
refusal to ask the Kazadi voir dire questions in a motion for new trial—were certainly 
sufficient to preserve the Kazadi claim for appellate review.   
For the reasons herein, we conclude that Kazadi applies to any case pending in a 
trial or appellate court that had not become final on direct appeal when the opinion was 
issued, i.e., cases in which there had not yet been a final disposition at the time that the 
opinion was issued, and in which the issue was preserved for appellate review.  In this case, 
both circumstances are satisfied.15  We reverse the judgment of the Court of Special 
Appeals and remand the case to the circuit court for a new trial on the first-degree murder 
charge.16  
 
 
15Given our determination that the holding in Kazadi applies to cases in which there 
had not yet been a final disposition when the opinion was issued, we need not reach 
Kumar’s alternative argument that not applying Kazadi here would violate the Equal 
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Article 24 of the Maryland 
Declaration of Rights. 
16At oral argument, the parties agreed that, because the Court of Special Appeals 
reversed Kumar’s conviction for openly carrying a dangerous weapon with the intent to 
injure on the ground of insufficient evidence, if there were a remand to the circuit court, 
the new trial would be on the first-degree murder charge only. 
- 26 - 
 
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL 
APPEALS REVERSED AS TO CONVICTION 
FOR 
FIRST-DEGREE 
MURDER. 
 
CASE 
REMANDED TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR 
BALTIMORE CITY WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO 
VACATE CONVICTION AND SENTENCE AND 
FOR NEW TRIAL ON FIRST-DEGREE MURDER 
CHARGE.  RESPONDENT TO PAY COSTS. 
 
 
 
 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 21 
 
September Term, 2021 
______________________________________ 
 
AMIT KUMAR 
 
v. 
 
STATE OF MARYLAND 
______________________________________ 
 
Getty, C.J. 
McDonald 
Watts 
Hotten 
Booth 
Biran 
Murphy, Joseph F., Jr. (Senior 
Judge, Specially Assigned), 
 
JJ. 
______________________________________ 
 
Concurring Opinion by Biran, J., 
which McDonald, J., joins. 
______________________________________ 
 
Filed: December 20, 2021 
 
Circuit Court for Baltimore City 
Case No. 119053002 
Argued: November 9, 2021 
 
I fully agree with the Court’s holding that Kazadi v. State, 467 Md. 1, 9 (2020), 
“applies to cases in which there had not yet been a final disposition, regardless of whether 
a notice of appeal had been filed at the time the opinion in Kazadi was issued, and in which 
the issue had been preserved for appellate review.” Slip Op. at 9-10. I concur somewhat 
more hesitantly in the determination that this Court should exercise its discretion to decide 
whether Petitioner, Amit Kumar, preserved a Kazadi claim for appellate review, rather than 
remand the case to the Court of Special Appeals to allow that Court to rule on preservation.  
The Opinion for the Court, of course, is correct in stating that we have discretion to 
decide whether Kumar preserved the Kazadi issue. See Md. Rule 8-131(b)(1) (providing 
that, in a case decided by an intermediate appellate court, “the Court of Appeals ordinarily 
will consider only an issue that has been raised in the petition for certiorari or any cross-
petition and that has been preserved for review by the Court of Appeals”) (emphasis 
added). In my view, several factors should inform this Court’s decision whether to decide 
a question that, like the preservation issue here, was not decided by the intermediate 
appellate court and has not been raised in a petition or cross-petition for certiorari. Among 
those factors are: (1) whether the parties have asked the Court to exercise its discretion to 
decide such a question, or whether the Court would be acting on its own initiative in doing 
so; (2) whether the parties have had a fair opportunity to brief and argue their positions on 
the question in both the intermediate appellate court and this Court, or whether they would 
be prejudiced if this Court were to decide the question; and (3) whether there are any 
unusual circumstances that warrant deviation from this Court’s normal practice to remand 
the case to the intermediate appellate court for that court to decide the matter. 
- 2 - 
Here, neither party has asked us to exercise our discretion to decide the preservation 
issue. Although the State argued in the Court of Special Appeals that Kumar failed to 
preserve an objection to the trial court’s failure to ask his proposed voir dire questions 
number 15 and 16, the Court of Special Appeals expressly declined to “address the State’s 
… failure-to-preserve argument[]” because it rejected Kumar’s claim of error on the 
ground that Kazadi did not apply at all. Thus, because the Court of Special Appeals 
exercised its discretion not to decide the preservation question, there was no decision from 
the Court of Special Appeals on that point from which the parties could appeal. For that 
reason, the State did not file a conditional cross-petition for certiorari raising the 
preservation issue. Nor has the State asked us to exercise our discretion to decide the 
preservation question. Rather, the State argued on brief and at oral argument that the 
preservation issue is not properly before this Court, and that this Court therefore should 
remand the case to the Court of Special Appeals to rule on preservation. 
Kumar also did not ask us in his briefs or at oral argument to exercise our discretion 
to decide the preservation question. Rather, Kumar claimed that the State waived any 
argument concerning preservation by failing to file a conditional cross-petition for 
certiorari on that point. The Court correctly rejects that contention. Slip Op. at 15 n.12.  
Thus, the Court is acting on its own initiative in deciding the preservation issue. 
That distinguishes this case from several of the cases the Court cites in explaining the 
decision to address the preservation issue. For example, in Matthews v. Amberwood 
Associates Ltd. P’ship, Inc., 351 Md. 544 (1998), in their cross-petition for a writ of 
certiorari, the defendants-respondents requested that the Court review a question that the 
- 3 - 
Court of Special Appeals had not decided concerning the defendants’ application to amend 
their Answer to allege contributory negligence. This Court granted the plaintiffs’ petition 
for certiorari and denied the cross-petition. Id. at 580-81. Nevertheless, in their brief to 
this Court, the defendants argued that “[t]he trial court erred ... in refusing to instruct the 
jury on the issue of contributory negligence.” Id. at 581. After resolving the substantive 
issues in favor of the plaintiffs, the Court opted also to decide the question about 
contributory negligence that the Court had initially declined to review. See id.  
In Lizzi v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth., 384 Md. 199 (2004), the trial 
court dismissed Lizzi’s claims on the ground of res judicata. The Court of Special Appeals 
affirmed, but not on the ground of res judicata. After Lizzi filed a certiorari petition, the 
respondent (WMATA) did not raise res judicata in its response to Lizzi’s petition, nor did 
WMATA file a conditional cross-petition raising the issue. Id. at 205. However, WMATA 
addressed the res judicata issue in its brief to this Court. The Court decided to reach the 
res judicata question, rather than remanding the case to the Court of Special Appeals for 
the intermediate appellate court to consider whether res judicata barred Lizzi’s claims. 
Significant to the Court’s decision to exercise its discretion was the fact that res judicata 
was “extensively briefed in WMATA’s brief before the Court of Special Appeals, as well 
as in WMATA’s brief to this Court. Therefore, WMATA’s res judicata defense cannot be 
said to have appeared out of thin air. It is not a surprise to petitioner. Additionally, 
petitioner responded to the issue in this Court by referring the Court to his briefing of this 
issue in the Court of Special Appeals.” Id. at 206 n.6; see also Suburban Hosp. Inc. v. 
Kirson, 362 Md. 140, 177 (2000) (deciding to reach question concerning respondent’s 
- 4 - 
alternate defense, despite the fact that respondent did not raise the issue in a cross-petition 
for certiorari, “inasmuch as the issue has been briefed and argued here”).  
Although this case differs from Matthews, Lizzi, and Kirson given the Court’s sua 
sponte exercise of discretion, importantly the party against whom we decide the 
preservation question has not been prejudiced. At oral argument, in response to questioning 
from the Court, the State addressed whether Kumar preserved the Kazadi claim for 
appellate review. The State did not say that it was surprised by the Court’s inquiry 
concerning the preservation question, or that it was unprepared to provide its position on 
preservation. Nor did the State ask for an opportunity to submit supplemental briefing on 
the question of preservation.1 Rather, the State presented an argument concerning 
preservation that was consistent with its briefing in the Court of Special Appeals. In 
addition, the State said that the Court had the record of voir dire in the Circuit Court, as 
well the briefs of the parties in the Court of Special Appeals and their filings at the 
certiorari stage, which “illuminate” the issue of preservation.  
In essence, the State at oral argument conceded the Court’s point that “[w]e have 
everything that we need to determine whether Kumar’s Kazadi claim is preserved for 
appellate review.” Slip Op. at 17. Thus, the State effectively has acknowledged that it has 
had a fair opportunity to argue its position concerning preservation in both the Court of 
Special Appeals and this Court, and therefore, that it has not been prejudiced by the Court’s 
 
1 Notably, the State did offer at oral argument to submit a letter to the Court 
providing citations to cases in which this Court has remanded to the Court of Special 
Appeals to decide questions that the intermediate appellate court declined to address when 
the cases were initially before it. 
- 5 - 
decision to address the preservation issue. Had the State instead represented at oral 
argument, in response to the Court’s raising the topic of preservation, that it had more to 
say on the preservation issue than it had included in its Court of Special Appeals brief and 
its response to Kumar’s petition for certiorari, we likely would not have concluded that 
“[w]e have everything that we need to determine whether Kumar’s Kazadi claim is 
preserved for appellate review.” In that event, we would have been well advised either to 
invite the parties to submit supplemental briefs on the question of preservation, or to 
remand the case to the Court of Special Appeals and allow the non-prevailing party there 
to decide whether to seek further review of the preservation question in this Court. 
Given the State’s position at oral argument, I agree with the Court’s determination 
that we should decide whether Kumar preserved his Kazadi claim for appellate review.2 I 
also agree that Kumar preserved his claim of error based on Kazadi.  
 
2 In reaching this conclusion, I do not rely on the circumstance that the substantive 
Kazadi-related question we have decided in this case and the preservation question are 
“interrelated and [that] there is not a non-Kazadi-related issue for the Court of Special 
Appeals to address.” Slip Op. at 18. This Court previously has remanded cases to the Court 
of Special Appeals, despite the interrelationship between an issue that was properly before 
the Court and a question that was not decided by the intermediate appellate court. See, e.g., 
State v. Evans, 352 Md. 496, 509 n.10, 530 (1999), overruled on other grounds, Belote v. 
State, 411 Md. 104 (2009) (where the Court of Special Appeals declined to decide whether 
there was probable cause to arrest a defendant at the time he was detained, remanding to 
the Court of Special Appeals to decide the probable cause issue after holding that the initial 
detention constituted an arrest and that a search performed at the time of the detention was 
a valid search incident to arrest). Conversely, in appropriate circumstances, this Court has 
decided questions that were not interrelated with the questions contained in the parties’ 
certiorari petitions. See, e.g., Lizzi, 384 Md. at 202-03. At least as a general matter, I do 
not perceive the salience of the interrelatedness of issues in assessing whether this Court 
should exercise its discretion to address an issue that the Court of Special Appeals opted 
not to decide, despite its interrelatedness with an issue that the intermediate appellate court 
did decide.   
- 6 - 
The fact that deciding the preservation issue now furthers the goal of judicial 
economy, and moots the possibility of the non-prevailing party in the Court of Special 
Appeals filing a petition for certiorari, is not a compelling reason by itself to depart from 
our normal practice to allow the Court of Special Appeals to decide a question that it did 
not address when the case was previously before it. To at least some extent, the interests 
of judicial economy and obtaining finality more quickly militate in favor of deciding all 
remaining questions in every case. Yet we generally remand to the Court of Special 
Appeals to decide a question that it previously did not decide and that was not raised in a 
petition or cross-petition for certiorari. In my view, a consideration of intra-judicial comity 
underlies our normal practice to remand to the Court of Special Appeals in such cases. 
Where the Court of Special Appeals has exercised its discretion not to decide a question in 
a case, we generally should respect that exercise of discretion and allow the Court of 
Special Appeals the opportunity to decide the question if it becomes necessary to do so 
after this Court has decided another question in the same case.  
That being the case, I believe we generally should refrain from deciding an issue 
that the Court of Special Appeals elected not to decide and that was not raised by the parties 
in their petitions for certiorari, in the absence of a request by one or both parties that we 
do so, or in the absence of unusual circumstances that warrant deviation from this Court’s 
normal practice.3 Nevertheless, if we are satisfied that neither party will be prejudiced by 
our exercising discretion to reach the issue, it may be appropriate for us to do so.  
 
3 An example of such unusual circumstances can be found in Sergeant Co. v. Pickett, 
 
- 7 - 
As discussed above, neither party in this case has asked us to exercise our discretion 
to decide the preservation issue. In addition, there are no unusual circumstances here that 
warrant a departure from our normal practice to remand to the Court of Special Appeals to 
allow that Court to rule on the remaining issue. But for the State’s effective concession that 
it is not prejudiced by this Court’s sua sponte exercise of discretion to decide the 
preservation issue, I would remand to the Court of Special Appeals to rule on preservation 
in the first instance. Given the State’s concession, I concur in the Court’s exercise of 
discretion to decide the preservation question. 
Judge McDonald has authorized me to state that he joins in this opinion. 
 
285 Md. 186 (1979). In that case, this Court opted to decide an issue instead of remanding 
to the Court of Special Appeals, where there already had been a prior remand and the Court 
of Special Appeals on that remand had not “proceed[ed] according to the tenor and 
directions of [this Court’s] mandate[.]” Id. at 193. This Court explained: “In the usual 
course of events, we would remand the case a second time to the Court of Special Appeals 
and again direct that it determine the substantive issue as it should have done when the 
appeal was before it in the first instance. But, considering the circumstances and the 
tortuous history of what began as a simple appeal, fundamental fairness to the litigants and 
the interest of judicial administration and economy dictate that the matter be resolved 
without further ado.” Id. 
The correction notice(s) for this opinion(s) can be found here: 
 
https://mdcourts.gov/sites/default/files/import/appellate/correctionnotices/coa/21a21cn.pdf