Case Title: State v. Clements

Citation: 

Docket Number: 57/17

State: maryland

Court: Maryland Supreme Court

Date: 2018-08-29T00:00:00Z

Document:
State of Maryland v. Phillip James Clements, No. 57, September Term, 2017 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
MOTION TO CORRECT ILLEGAL SENTENCE — APPEALABILITY OF AN 
ORDER GRANTING A RULE 4-345(a) MOTION — The grant of a Rule 4-345(a) 
motion to correct an illegal sentence is not a final judgment merely upon vacation of the 
sentence, but rather only when a new sentence is imposed.  The Court of Special Appeals 
dismissed the State’s appeal of the trial court’s order granting Respondent Clements’s 
motion to correct an illegal sentence and vacating the sentence originally imposed.  The 
Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of the State’s appeal because the State lacked the 
authority to appeal under Maryland Code, Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article § 12-
302(c)(3)(ii) until such time as the circuit court imposes a new sentence. 
 
 
 
 
Circuit Court for Prince George’s County 
 
Case No. CT890459X 
Argument:  February 6, 2018 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 57 
 
September Term, 2017 
 
 
 
STATE OF MARYLAND 
 
v. 
 
PHILLIP JAMES CLEMENTS 
 
 
 
 
Barbera, C.J., 
 
Greene 
Adkins 
McDonald 
Watts 
Hotten 
Getty, 
 
 
               JJ. 
 
 
 
                 Opinion by Barbera, C.J. 
 
 
 
 
 
Filed: August 29, 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 
2019-01-07 
09:51-05:00
In 1989, Respondent Phillip James Clements was convicted of three counts of first-
degree murder, two counts of attempted first-degree murder, and other crimes arising from 
the same incident.  He was seventeen years old at the time of the murders, trial, and 
sentencing.  He was sentenced to five consecutive life sentences with the possibility of 
parole for each of the three counts of murder and the two counts of attempted murder, plus 
a total of 23 years on the lesser counts, to be served concurrently with the life sentences.  
Clements’s direct appeal and petition for post-conviction relief were unsuccessful. 
Twenty-seven years later, in 2016, Clements filed a Motion to Correct Illegal 
Sentence under Maryland Rule 4-345(a) based on recent United States Supreme Court 
precedent involving life sentences for juvenile offenders.  The Circuit Court for Prince 
George’s County granted Clements’s motion and vacated the entirety of the sentence 
originally imposed.  The court scheduled a new sentencing hearing some months ahead to 
allow the court time to review the exhibits offered at the hearing on the motion, review the 
Supreme Court cases on the subject, and receive an updated presentence investigation 
report.   
The State appealed within 30 days of the court’s ruling.  Clements filed a Motion to 
Dismiss in the Court of Special Appeals.  He argued that the mere grant of a motion to 
correct an illegal sentence, without imposition of a new sentence, is not an appealable final 
judgment from which the State has the right to appeal.  The Court of Special Appeals 
granted Clements’s motion and dismissed the State’s appeal for want of a final judgment.  
We agree and affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals. 
 
 
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I. 
Facts and Procedural History 
On the morning of January 21, 1989, then-seventeen-year-old Phillip Clements went 
to Kathryn Gatlin’s apartment intending to rob her for money to buy crack cocaine.  He 
previously lived in the home of Ms. Gatlin, who was the grandmother of Clements’s former 
girlfriend.  When Clements arrived after a night of consuming multiple drugs including 
cocaine and PCP, he found Ms. Gatlin at home.  Also present were Ms. Gatlin’s adult 
daughters, Nancy Barowski and Toni Adams; Ms. Gatlin’s developmentally disabled adult 
son, John Brian Barowski; and Nancy’s son, Donald Thomas “Tommy” Hughes, who was 
fourteen years old at the time of trial.  
Ms. Gatlin gave Clements breakfast but refused to give him money.  Clements then 
repeatedly struck each of the five family members in the head with a barbell pole.  He left 
the apartment with money taken from Ms. Gatlin’s and Ms. Adams’s purses and fled in 
Ms. Adams’s car.  Nancy and John Barowski were pronounced dead on the scene, and Ms. 
Gatlin died from her injuries one week later in the hospital.  Toni Adams and Tommy 
Hughes suffered serious injuries. 
Later on the day of the crime, Clements gave a full confession to the police.  He was 
charged as an adult in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County with three counts of 
first-degree murder, two counts of attempted first-degree murder, three counts of armed 
robbery, and three counts of openly carrying a deadly weapon, among other crimes. 
After his motion to be removed to the jurisdiction of the juvenile court was denied, 
Clements waived his right to a jury trial.  He was tried before the court in August 1989.  
 
3 
 
The court found Clements guilty on all counts and sentenced him to five life sentences with 
the possibility of parole—one for each count of murder and attempted murder—to be 
served consecutively, with additional sentences for robbery and openly carrying a deadly 
weapon to run concurrently with the life sentences.  
On direct appeal, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed the judgment of the circuit 
court, and this Court denied Clements’s petition for writ of certiorari.  A three-judge panel 
of the circuit court reviewed the sentence and left it unchanged.  Clements’s subsequent 
motion for modification of the sentence also was denied.  Clements’s post-conviction 
petition was denied in the circuit court in 1998, and his federal habeas corpus claim was 
denied on the merits in the U.S. District Court.  Clements v. Corcoran, No. CA-98-2086-
CCB (D. Md. Mar. 11, 1999). 
The Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence and the Procedural Aftermath 
In 2016, Clements filed in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County a Motion 
to Correct Illegal Sentence pursuant to Maryland Rule 4-345(a).  On December 2, 2016, 
the circuit court conducted a hearing on the motion, at which Clements argued that his 
sentence was unconstitutional under Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48 (2010), Miller v. 
Alabama, 567 U.S. 460 (2012), and Montgomery v. Louisiana, 136 S. Ct. 718 (2016).  
Counsel also referred to Tatum v. Arizona, 137 S. Ct. 11, 11 (2016), a two-sentence per 
curiam order granting Tatum’s motion “for leave to proceed in forma pauperis and the 
petition for a writ of certiorari,” vacating the judgment, and remanding the case “to the 
Court of Appeals of Arizona, Division Two for further consideration in light of 
Montgomery v. Louisiana.”  Justice Sotomayor wrote separately to explain that Tatum’s 
 
4 
 
case was one of five such cases from Arizona then pending in the Supreme Court, in none 
of which did “the sentencing judges address[] the question Miller and Montgomery require 
a sentencer to ask:  whether the petitioner was among the very ‘rarest of juvenile offenders, 
those whose crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility.’”  Id. at 12 (Sotomayor, J., 
concurring) (quoting Montgomery, 136 S. Ct. at 734).  
In support of the motion to correct the sentence, Clements contended that the five 
consecutive life sentences, in the aggregate, constitute a de facto sentence of life without 
parole in violation of Graham, Miller, and Montgomery.1  He further contended that he 
does not have a meaningful opportunity for release consistent with those Supreme Court 
cases, given the regulations and processes governing parole consideration for juvenile 
offenders serving life sentences in Maryland.  The court heard arguments of Clements’s 
counsel and the State, and then informed the parties that the court would take the motion 
“under advisement to look at all of the cases that were cited as well as the exhibits that 
have been admitted.” 
The parties returned to circuit court on January 6, 2017, at which time the court 
resumed the hearing, granted Clements’s Rule 4-345(a) motion, and explained the reasons 
for doing so.  The court stated that the sentencing judge had failed to undertake the 
particularized analysis required by Miller and Montgomery when sentencing juveniles to 
life without parole, thereby rendering illegal the five consecutive life sentences that were 
                                                          
 
1  The Division of Correction’s Commitment Unit confirmed in a November 16, 
2016 letter to Clements’s then-counsel that, as of October 31, 2016, Clements was eligible 
for parole on July 19, 2047, but this date could be shortened by earned diminution credits 
or lengthened by the revocation of credits for institutional infractions.   
 
5 
 
imposed in 1989.  Consequently, the court vacated the original sentence and scheduled a 
resentencing hearing, which later was deferred pending resolution of the State’s appeal to 
the Court of Special Appeals. 
Clements filed a motion to dismiss the appeal.  He argued that the State did not have 
the right to appeal from the circuit court’s order granting his motion to correct an illegal 
sentence and vacation of the sentence.  Without the imposition of a new sentence, Clements 
argued, the order was not yet a final judgment for purposes of Maryland Code, Courts and 
Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJP”) § 12-302(c)(3).  The intermediate appellate court 
agreed with Clements.  State v. Clements, No. 2607, Sept. Term 2016, 2017 WL 4117887, 
at *3 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. Sept. 15, 2017).  That court reasoned that the mere grant of the 
motion, whether or not accompanied by vacation of the then-extant sentence, did not fall 
within any of the provisions of CJP § 12-302(c) granting the State the right of appeal in a 
criminal case under certain limited circumstances.  The court dismissed the State’s appeal 
without reaching the merits. 
We granted the State’s petition for writ of certiorari, State v. Clements, 456 Md. 82 
(2017), to address two questions: 
1. Did the Court of Special Appeals err in dismissing the State’s appeal?  
2. Did the circuit court err in considering, and granting, Clements’s motion 
to set aside an “illegal” sentence? 
For reasons that follow, we hold that the Court of Special Appeals did not err in dismissing 
the State’s appeal.  We therefore do not reach the second question presented. 
 
 
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II. 
Standard of Review 
The question whether a circuit court’s order is appealable is a question of law that 
this Court considers de novo.  Monarch Acad. Balt. Campus, Inc. v. Balt. City Bd. of Sch. 
Comm’rs, 457 Md. 1, 40 (2017). 
III. 
The Parties’ Contentions 
The State contends that the circuit court’s order granting Clements’s Motion to 
Correct Illegal Sentence was a final, appealable order.  The State lifts from Ruby v. State, 
353 Md. 100, 107 (1999), the statement that “[a] collateral challenge, by its very nature, is 
a separate and distinct civil procedure by which a defendant may challenge his or her 
conviction, sentence, or imprisonment.”  From there, the State argues that Clements’s 
motion to correct an illegal sentence is a collateral challenge and therefore a “separate and 
distinct civil procedure” that resulted in the court’s grant of Clements’s motion and 
vacation of his sentence.  That action by the circuit court, the State further argues, was a 
“final judgment” entered in a “civil case” and therefore subject to direct appeal under CJP 
§ 12-301. 
Alternatively, the State asserts that even if the circuit court’s order were considered 
part of a criminal proceeding, CJP § 12-302(c) entitles the State to appeal the circuit court’s 
grant of Clements’s motion.  For that proposition, the State points to subsection (c)(3)(ii).  
That subsection provides that “[t]he State may appeal from a final judgment if the State 
alleges that the trial judge: . . . (ii) Imposed or modified a sentence in violation of the 
 
7 
 
Maryland Rules.”  Because the circuit court vacated Clements’s sentence, the State argues, 
the circuit court’s order purports to grant Clements the right to a new, different sentence, 
and, by that ruling alone, “modified” the sentence previously imposed.  Thus “modified,” 
the State’s argument goes, the sentence was a final judgment subject to a direct appeal. 
Clements counters that the Court of Special Appeals correctly dismissed the State’s 
appeal of the circuit court’s order granting his Motion to Correct Illegal Sentence.  
Clements first contends that a motion to correct an illegal sentence and subsequent order 
granting or denying the motion are part of the underlying criminal proceedings.  Clements 
directs us to State v. Kanaras, 357 Md. 170 (1999).  We made clear in that case that, 
“[w]hile a motion under Rule 4-345 may be made at any time, it is part of the same criminal 
proceeding and not a wholly independent action.  The Rule simply grants the trial court 
limited continuing authority in the criminal case to revise the sentence.”  Id. at 183–84.  
Clements argues that this statement from Kanaras supersedes the out-of-context and less 
precise statement from Ruby, on which the State relies, that a “collateral challenge” to a 
sentence is a civil proceeding from which a direct appeal will lie under CJP § 12-301, see 
Ruby, 353 Md. at 107.   
Because the underlying case was a criminal case, Clements continues, the State may 
appeal only as authorized by statute.  Clements argues that CJP § 12-302(c)(3)(ii) is the 
only statutory provision that could “conceivably” apply in this case, but it does not 
authorize this appeal.  As noted above, that provision allows the State to appeal from a final 
judgment if the State alleges that the trial judge imposed or modified a sentence in violation 
of the Maryland Rules. 
 
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Clements then argues that the circuit court’s grant of the Rule 4-345(a) motion was 
not itself a final judgment because the resentencing has not yet occurred.  Clements adds 
that, contrary to the State’s view of Ruby, the circuit court did not “impose[] or modif[y]” 
the sentence but, instead, merely vacated the original sentence that the motions court ruled 
was substantively illegal.  Clements reminds us that “[r]estrictions on the State’s ability to 
appeal . . . have been strictly construed against the State.”  State v. Manck, 385 Md. 581, 
597 (2005).  Strict construction and application of § 12-302(c), as Clements sees it, do not 
permit the argument the State advances. 
IV. 
Discussion 
The Nature of a Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence 
We shall address the appealability of a Rule 4-345(a) motion to correct an illegal 
sentence.  First, however, we must determine whether the circuit court’s order granting 
Clements’s Rule 4-345(a) motion and vacating the life sentences are part of the underlying 
criminal proceeding, as Clements argues, or, as the State maintains, a collateral challenge 
that is civil in nature and therefore appealable under CJP § 12-301.  We are informed by 
pertinent cases of this Court and appeal provisions of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings 
Article.  We begin with the cases. 
Ruby v. State 
As noted, the State makes much of our decision in Ruby.  The proceedings in Ruby 
are somewhat convoluted.  For our purposes, it is enough to note that our decision 
ultimately involved the question of whether the issuance of a writ of error coram nobis is 
 
9 
 
appealable as a final civil judgment.  Ruby, 353 Md. at 104.  Ruby’s decision to seek coram 
nobis relief followed several failed attempts to obtain relief in the circuit court and Court 
of Special Appeals.  One such attempt was a second motion for new trial.  The circuit court 
denied that motion, but due evidently to an error on the part of a court clerk, Ruby did not 
learn of the court’s decision until after the thirty-day deadline to appeal had lapsed.  Id. at 
103.  Ruby then filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis seeking as relief the right to 
file a belated appeal from the circuit court’s denial of his motion for a new trial.  Id. at 103–
04.  The case was docketed in circuit court as a civil matter, and the court, sitting as a civil 
court, issued the writ granting Ruby the relief of the right to file a belated appeal.  Id. at 
104.  The State did not appeal that decision by the coram nobis court.  Id. at 104. 
In due course, Ruby, exercising the remedy provided by the writ, filed an appeal in 
the underlying criminal case.  Id.  The Court of Special Appeals, upon the State’s motion, 
dismissed the appeal, holding that it did not have jurisdiction to hear the appeal because 
the circuit court had improperly issued the writ of error coram nobis.  Id. at 104.  Petitioner 
filed a petition for writ of certiorari, which we granted.  Id.  We recognized: 
A writ of error coram nobis, like a habeas corpus proceeding and a 
proceeding under the [Post Conviction Procedure] Act, still may be used to 
collaterally challenge a criminal judgment. . . .  Because collateral challenges 
are separate from the underlying judgment, the filing of such an action 
typically initiates an entirely new action in which the defendant sets forth his 
or her claims.  If the defendant prevails in the civil court where he or she 
sought collateral relief, that court then issues the writ directing the criminal 
court pursuant to the terms of the writ. 
 
Id. at 106–07.   
We held that the State was precluded from challenging in the Court of Special 
 
10 
 
Appeals the issuance of the writ of coram nobis in Ruby’s case because once the writ issued 
and the time for appellate challenge ran its course, “[t]he correctness of the trial court’s 
grant of the writ of error coram nobis was, after the time for appeal had passed, no longer 
appealable.”  Id. at 111.  The State therefore was not entitled to raise in Ruby’s belated 
appeal a challenge to the coram nobis court’s issuance of the writ.  Id. at 112.  And, because 
the State’s challenge to issuance of the writ “was not before” the Court of Special Appeals, 
that court was limited to considering only those claims Ruby raised on belated appeal of 
the underlying criminal conviction.  Id. at 112–13. 
The State in this case, seizing upon our language in Ruby concerning the civil nature 
of collateral attacks, argues that any court action on a motion to correct an illegal sentence 
is a civil proceeding that is appropriately deemed a challenge collateral to the underlying 
criminal case.  If the proceedings are civil, the State argues, the State is not restricted in its 
opportunity to appeal the trial court’s order. 
State v. Kanaras  
Several months after deciding Ruby, we issued our opinion in State v. Kanaras, 357 
Md. 170 (1999).  That case brought clarity to what had been a confusing line of cases 
addressing the nature of a Rule 4-345(a) motion to correct an illegal sentence. 
Kanaras filed a petition for relief under the Maryland Post Conviction Procedure 
Act and, separately, a motion under Rule 4-345(a).2  357 Md. at 174–75.  The circuit court 
                                                          
 
2  Kanaras also sought relief under Rule 4-345(b) (providing for a motion to revise 
a sentence in cases of fraud, mistake, or irregularity).  That provision is not relevant to the 
case before us. 
 
11 
 
denied both.  Id. at 175.  Kanaras noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals on his 
Rule 4-345(a) motion.  The State filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, arguing that Kanaras 
could not appeal the circuit court’s denial of his motion.  Id. at 176.  The intermediate 
appellate court held that the circuit court’s denial of the motion was appealable, and this 
Court agreed. 
We addressed whether the text of the Post Conviction Procedure Act, which bars 
appeals “in habeas corpus or coram nobis cases, or from other common-law or statutory 
remedies which have heretofore been available for challenging the validity of 
incarceration,” precludes an appeal from a circuit court’s ruling on a Rule 4-345(a) motion.  
Id. at 178 (quoting Art. 27, § 645A(e) (1998) (current version at Md. Code Ann., Criminal 
Procedure Article §§ 7-101 to 7-109)).  Noting our “plethora of inconsistent opinions” on 
the appealability of motions to correct an illegal sentence under Rule 4-345(a), we clarified 
that “[w]hile a motion under Rule 4-345 may be made at any time, it is part of the same 
criminal proceeding and not a wholly independent action.  The Rule simply grants the trial 
court limited continuing authority in the criminal case to revise the sentence.”  Id. at 177, 
183–84.  Central to our holding was that a motion to correct an illegal sentence is not a 
“separate common law or statutory cause[] of action” as described in the post-conviction 
statute.  Id. at 183. 
The Present Case 
The State’s argument creates an apparent tension between Ruby and Kanaras where 
none exists.  On the one hand, Ruby directs that certain collateral causes of action, such as 
writs of error coram nobis and habeas corpus, are civil proceedings separate and distinct 
 
12 
 
from the underlying criminal proceedings.  On the other, Kanaras instructs that a Rule 
4-345(a) motion is not a civil proceeding separate from the criminal case.  These two 
statements are not inconsistent with one another.  We remain doubtful, as we were in 
Kanaras, “that this Court’s rule-making authority would extend to the creation of a separate 
cause of action.”  357 Md. at 183.  Rather, we continue to recognize that “[t]here may be 
illegalities in a sentence which have nothing to do with the validity of the incarceration.”  
Id.  Such illegalities are properly addressed in a Rule 4-345(a) motion, which is decidedly 
“not a wholly independent action.”  Id. 
Ruby does not apply here.  Motions to correct an illegal sentence under Rule 
4-345(a) are part of the underlying criminal proceedings. 
Appealability 
Under Maryland law, the State’s right of appeal in a criminal case is governed by 
statute.  State v. Rice, 447 Md. 594, 617 (2016).  The State may appeal from the ruling of 
a circuit court in a criminal case only as enumerated in CJP § 12-302(c), which, relevant 
here, provides: 
(c)(1)  In a criminal case, the State may appeal as provided in this subsection. 
  
(2)  The State may appeal from a final judgment granting a motion to dismiss 
or quashing or dismissing any indictment, information, presentment, or 
inquisition.  
 
(3)  The State may appeal from a final judgment if the State alleges that the 
trial judge:  
(i)  Failed to impose the sentence specifically mandated by the Code; 
or  
(ii)  Imposed or modified a sentence in violation of the Maryland 
Rules.  
 
 
13 
 
These “[r]estrictions on the State’s ability to appeal . . . have been strictly construed against 
the State.”  Manck, 385 Md. at 597. 
 
We agree with Clements and the Court of Special Appeals that CJP § 12-302(c) 
does not authorize the State’s appeal in this case.  The only subsection that could have 
authorized this appeal, had it come to us after resentencing, would have been CJP 
§ 12-302(c)(3)(ii).  But the circuit court’s order was not a “final judgment” that “imposed 
or modified a sentence” as required for the State to appeal under that subsection.  See 
Clements, 2017 WL 4117887, at *2.  The circuit court merely granted Clements’s motion, 
vacated the original sentence, and scheduled a new sentencing hearing, which since has 
been deferred pending appeal.  The trial court’s order therefore was interlocutory: it was a 
step toward the imposition of a new sentence—it was not, however, either a final judgment 
that “imposed” a sentence or a final judgment that “modified” a sentence. 
A final judgment in a criminal case resulting in a guilty verdict necessarily requires 
the imposition of a sentence.  Hoile v. State, 404 Md. 591, 612 (2008) (“In a basic sense, 
‘a final judgment consists of a verdict [in a criminal case] and either the pronouncement of 
sentence or the suspension of its imposition or execution.’  Lewis v. State, 289 Md. 1, 4 
(1980).”).3  See also, e.g., Tweedy v. State, 380 Md. 475, 496 (2004) (asserting that “a 
                                                          
 
3  The State relies upon Hoile in arguing that the grant of the motion was an 
appealable final order for purposes of CJP § 12-302(c)(3)(ii).  Hoile does not assist the 
State.  In that case, Hoile was sentenced; the sentence was then reduced on Hoile’s motion; 
and the court subsequently vacated the reduced sentence on the victim’s motion, effectively 
reinstating the original sentence.  404 Md. at 597–601.  We held that the order vacating the 
reduced sentence itself imposed a sentence—the original sentence—and therefore was 
appealable.  Id. at 619.  We also emphasized that a new commitment order had been filed, 
 
 
14 
 
verdict of guilty is not a final judgment until sentence is pronounced”); Campbell v. State, 
373 Md. 637, 665 (2003) (“[A] verdict without a sentence in a criminal case is not a final 
judgment.”); Webster v. State, 359 Md. 465, 491 (2000) (“Under Maryland law, a final 
judgment in a criminal case is comprised of the verdict of guilty, and the rendition of 
sentence.”). 
V. 
Conclusion 
We hold that the circuit court’s grant of Clements’s Rule 4-345(a) motion to correct 
an illegal sentence and vacation of the sentence imposed in 1989 was an interlocutory order 
that will not become a final judgment triggering the State’s right to appeal pursuant to CJP 
§ 12-302(c)(3)(ii) until such time as the circuit court imposes a new sentence.    
We therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals that reaches the 
same result. 
 
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF 
SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED; 
COSTS TO BE PAID BY PRINCE 
GEORGE’S COUNTY. 
                                                          
 
providing additional indicia of finality.  Id. at 618.  Hoile presented an altogether different 
factual circumstance than is presented here.