Court Opinion

ID: 5142139
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-31 01:09:58.421232+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:33.415104
License: Public Domain

Kenneth Mahai v. State of Maryland, No. 41, September Term, 2020. Opinion by Getty,
J.

CRIMINAL LAW – COURTS AND JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS –
POSTCONVICTION PROCEEDINGS – APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO
APPEAL DENIED – Court of Appeals held that § 12-202 of the Courts and Judicial
Proceedings Article of the Maryland Code is constitutional under Article IV, § 14A of the
Maryland Constitution. Court of Appeals held that phrase “intermediate appellate
jurisdiction” in Article IV, § 14A does not create a substantive limit on the Court of Special
Appeals’ jurisdiction.
Circuit Court for Baltimore City
Case No. 107109037, P.C. 11825
Argued: March 8, 2021

                                                                                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                         OF MARYLAND

                                                                                                No. 41

                                                                                        September Term, 2020

                                                                                           KENNETH MAHAI

                                                                                                     V.

                                                                                         STATE OF MARYLAND

                                                                                    Barbera, C.J.,
                                                                                    McDonald
                                                                                    Watts
                                                                                    Hotten
                                                                                    Getty
                                                                                    Booth
                                                                                    Biran

                                                                                                     JJ.

                                                                                      Opinion by Getty, J.

                                                                                   Filed: July 20, 2021
 Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
Materials Act
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

                        2021-07-20 15:10-04:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
       The Court of Special Appeals’ denial of an application for leave to appeal is a

“winnowing device[] designed to sift precious metal from ordinary silt[,]” similar to this

Court’s denial of a petition for writ of certiorari. Conaway v. State, 464 Md. 505, 524 n.18

(2019). The “objective of both processes is the ascertainment of whether there is something

about the questions raised in either context that merits further consideration.” Id. at 523

n.18. In this case, we address the constitutionality of § 12-202 of the Courts and Judicial

Proceedings Article (“CJ”) of the Maryland Code, which precludes this Court from

reviewing the Court of Special Appeals’ denial of an application for leave to appeal in a

postconviction proceeding.    After considering the plain language and history of the

adoption of Article IV, § 14A of the Maryland Constitution (“Article IV, § 14A”), we hold

that Mr. Mahai has failed to demonstrate that CJ § 12-202 clearly violates the Maryland

Constitution and thus has failed to overcome the presumption of constitutionality that is

afforded to CJ § 12-202. We therefore dismiss this appeal due to lack of subject matter

jurisdiction pursuant to CJ § 12-202.

                                    BACKGROUND

A.     Stabbing and Police Investigation.

       The murder of Jermaine Morrison occurred in broad daylight on Nome Street at the

Holabird Park Apartments in Woodmere, Baltimore City, Maryland. Several witnesses in

the vicinity of the murder recounted their observations to investigators from the Baltimore

City Police Department about a street fight that resulted in deadly violence.

       One witness, Angel Rodriguez, stated that he left for lunch about noon on October

25, 2005, from his job in the maintenance department of the Holabird Park Apartments.
He also lived in the same apartment complex at 1717 Nome Street. On the walk to his

apartment, he encountered two individuals that he knew, Mr. Morrison and Kenneth Mahai.

Mr. Rodriguez could see and hear Mr. Morrison and Mr. Mahai arguing about “being on

the same street.”

       A second witness, Stephen Smith, was walking from his residence at 1719 Nome

Street to a nearby gas station. Mr. Smith observed Mr. Mahai and Mr. Morrison engaged

in a fistfight. A third person, unknown to Mr. Smith, broke up the fight, and Mr. Smith

watched Mr. Morrison leave on foot.

       Phyllis Becote, who lived near Nome Street, was a third witness. About the same

time that the first two witnesses saw the street fight, she was alerted by her son that a man

had just fallen down on the street. Ms. Becote went outside and saw Mr. Morrison laying

on the ground. She instructed her son to call for emergency assistance and then attempted

to determine what was wrong with Mr. Morrison. Moving his shirt aside, she saw “a lot

of blood.” In response, Ms. Becote covered the bleeding wound and waited for an

ambulance to arrive.

       A fourth—and key—witness, Sharon Mosely, was also a resident of Nome Street.

While Ms. Mosely was visiting a friend who lived in the same apartment building as she

did, Mr. Mahai entered the apartment and told Ms. Mosely and her friend that he had “just

got in a[n] altercation with this guy and he stabbed the guy three times.” Mr. Mahai then

cleaned a knife off, threw the knife into the trash, took the trash out, and dumped it by a

nearby shop.

                                            2
       Meanwhile, Mr. Morrison was transported to Johns Hopkins Bayview Hospital by

ambulance where he was pronounced dead. A postmortem examination was conducted by

the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Maryland. The medical examiner concluded

that Mr. Morrison died of stab wounds to his chest, abdomen, and arm.

       While investigating Mr. Morrison’s death, the police conducted witness interviews

of Ms. Becote, Mr. Rodriguez, Mr. Smith, and Ms. Mosely. Ms. Becote was interviewed

in a neighborhood canvas. Mr. Rodriquez was later interviewed and told the police that

Mr. Mahai and Mr. Morrison were “neighborhood drug dealers” who had an altercation

“over territory.” In his police interview, Mr. Smith stated that he observed Mr. Mahai hit

Mr. Morrison twice in the “chest area” and additionally identified Mr. Mahai in a photo

array. Finally, Ms. Mosely provided the police with a taped statement recounting her

observations of Mr. Mahai’s actions and statements on October 25. Ms. Mosely also

identified Mr. Mahai in a photo array and wrote on the array form a short description of

the same facts that she provided in the taped statement.

B.     First Indictment.

       Less than a month after Mr. Morrison’s death, Mr. Mahai was arrested on November

20 and charged with the murder of Mr. Morrison. The following month, a grand jury

indicted Mr. Mahai on December 19 in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City on charges of

first-degree murder, carrying a weapon openly with intent to injure, and carrying a

concealed dangerous weapon.

       An initial trial date was set for April 24, 2006. However, the trial was repeatedly

postponed. Mr. Mahai requested the first postponement due to a change in his counsel.

                                           3
The second postponement occurred at the request of Mr. Mahai’s counsel because of

additional discovery that had been provided by the State. The State then requested the

third, fourth, and fifth postponements because of the State’s continued difficulty in locating

their key witness, Ms. Mosley. At the time of the fourth postponement, Mr. Mahai began

asserting his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial and that the delay in “bringing [him]

to trial was now of constitutional proportion[.]”

       On December 6, the State requested yet another postponement because of the

ongoing problems in locating witnesses. The circuit court granted the State an additional

twenty-four hours to produce its witnesses. However, the next day the State was still

unable to produce its witnesses and again requested a postponement. The circuit court

denied this request, and the State, pursuant to Maryland Rule 4-247(a), entered a nolle

prosequi on the record thereby terminating the prosecution and dismissing the charges

against Mr. Mahai.

C.     Second Indictment, Trial, and Sentencing.

       On February 7, 2007, the court issued another warrant for Mr. Mahai’s arrest for the

same charges of the murder of Mr. Morrison. On April 13, Mr. Mahai was arrested. Six

days later, a grand jury indicted Mr. Mahai in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City on the

same first-degree murder and weapons charges as the first indictment.

       Mr. Mahai filed a motion to dismiss on May 17. In the motion, Mr. Mahai raised

the identical arguments from his prior trial that his Sixth Amendment constitutional right

to a speedy trial had been violated as a result of the eighteen-month delay from the time of

his first arrest until the time of this motion. The circuit court judge denied Mr. Mahai’s

                                            4
motion from the bench. The circuit court judge reasoned that the period of time and causes

for the delay were not sufficient to warrant dismissing the case, and the judge had “heard

nothing that would deny [Mr. Mahai] a right to a fair trial.”

       A three-day jury trial was held in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City on August 8,

9, and 10. The jury found Mr. Mahai guilty of first-degree murder, carrying a weapon

openly with intent to injure, and carrying a concealed dangerous weapon. On September

28, the circuit court judge sentenced Mr. Mahai to life in prison for first-degree murder and

a consecutive three-year term for carrying a weapon openly with intent to injure. The

remaining weapon conviction, carrying a concealed dangerous weapon, was merged for

sentencing purposes. Mr. Mahai timely noted an appeal.

D.     Appeal and Opinion of the Court of Special Appeals.

       On September 8, 2009, in an unreported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals

affirmed Mr. Mahai’s murder conviction but reversed his weapon convictions. Mahai v.

State, No. 1748, Sept. Term, 2007 (filed Sept. 8, 2009). The court first applied the

balancing test announced in Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S. 514 (1972), that weighs both the

conduct of the prosecution and the defendant, and the court held that Mr. Mahai’s right to

a speedy trial was not violated.

       Next, the intermediate appellate court turned to Mr. Mahai’s argument that various

jury instructions were erroneous and misleading. Mr. Mahai conceded that his defense

counsel at trial (“trial counsel”) had not objected to these instructions at trial. However, he

argued that on appeal the court should review the instructions for plain error. The court

individually analyzed each jury instruction at issue.

                                             5
       On the issue of the opening and closing jury instructions pertaining to reasonable

doubt, the court held that plain error review of these instructions was not warranted. On

the issue of the opening and final instructions on the state’s failure to use investigative

techniques, the court held there was no plain error. Notably, on the issue of the jury

instruction pertaining to whether a penknife is a dangerous weapon, the court held that the

circuit court committed plain error by failing to include a necessary element of the offense

of carrying a dangerous weapon. Consequently, on the basis of this plain error, the

intermediate appellate court reversed Mr. Mahai’s convictions for carrying a dangerous

weapon openly with intent to injure and carrying a concealed dangerous weapon. These

two charges were remanded for a new trial.1

       Finally, Mr. Mahai contended that his trial counsel’s failure to object to the

sufficiency of the evidence relating to his alleged use of a penknife deprived him of

effective assistance of counsel.    In analyzing this argument, the court noted that a

postconviction proceeding was the appropriate way for Mr. Mahai to raise a claim of

ineffective assistance of counsel, and absent any showing on the record otherwise, the court

must adhere to the presumption that trial counsel’s conduct was reasonable professional

conduct. Concluding that Mr. Mahai failed to rebut this presumption, the court did not

address Mr. Mahai’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.

       Mr. Mahai filed a pro se petition for writ of certiorari to this Court, which was

denied on December 18, 2009. Mahai v. State, 411 Md. 741 (2009).

1
  On October 26, 2009, following the Court of Special Appeals’ decision, the State
dismissed both weapons charges by entering a nolle prosequi.

                                           6
E.     Postconviction Petition and Hearing.

       On September 6, 2017, nearly ten years after Mr. Mahai was sentenced for his first-

degree murder conviction, he filed a pro se petition for postconviction relief, which was

later supplemented by postconviction counsel. The supplemented petition sought a new

trial, permission to file a belated motion for modification of his sentence, and permission

to file a belated application for review of his sentence by a three-judge panel. The petition

alleged ineffective assistance of trial counsel and appellate counsel on the basis of nine

individual claims.

       The Circuit Court for Baltimore City held a hearing on Mr. Mahai’s postconviction

petition over two days, September 9 and 10, 2019.             At the hearing, Mr. Mahai’s

postconviction counsel argued that his trial counsel failed to object to a defective voir dire

process that permitted jurors to self-assess their ability to be fair, and his appellate counsel

failed to present a claim of plain error in connection with the voir dire process on direct

appeal. Mr. Mahai further contended that his trial counsel’s failure to object to the

improper voir dire deprived him of his right to an impartial jury resulting in an unfair trial

from which prejudice could be presumed.

       Mr. Mahai’s postconviction counsel argued that the trial judge inappropriately

assisted the prosecution by asking various questions of witnesses to “fill in the gaps” of the

prosecution’s case. Noting that Mr. Mahai’s trial counsel did not object to these questions,

Mr. Mahai’s postconviction counsel asserted that both the trial court’s error and the

ineffective assistance of trial counsel prejudiced Mr. Mahai.

                                             7
       Additionally, similar to an argument raised on direct appeal, Mr. Mahai’s

postconviction counsel pointed to inconsistent jury instructions pertaining to reasonable

doubt—one given at the beginning of trial and one given prior to jury deliberations. Mr.

Mahai’s postconviction counsel argued that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance of

counsel by failing to object to these instructions or to request a curative instruction.

       Mr. Mahai’s postconviction counsel also argued that his trial counsel was

ineffective for failing to file a motion for modification of his sentence and a motion for a

three-judge panel to review his sentence—both of which he requested in a written letter to

his trial counsel on the day following his conviction. His postconviction counsel argued,

in the aggregate, the prejudice resulting from these issues entitled Mr. Mahai to a new trial.

       In response, the State argued that Mr. Mahai waived his voir dire arguments when

he failed to raise them on direct appeal. On the issue of the trial judge’s role in jury

communication and witness questioning, the State noted that the Court of Special Appeals

had already held that there was no excessive interference on the part of the trial judge.

Additionally, the State argued there was no prejudice resulting from the trial judge’s

conduct and that lack of objection by trial counsel was a deliberate and strategic tactic at

trial instead of ineffective assistance.

       The State further argued that the trial judge’s jury instructions were proper, and, in

any event, no prejudice resulted from the reasonable doubt jury instructions given. Lastly,

the State did not object to the postconviction court allowing Mr. Mahai to file a belated

motion for sentence modification or a belated application for a three-judge panel to review

his sentence.

                                             8
       On February 27, 2020, the postconviction court entered a written opinion and order

denying Mr. Mahai’s petition for relief. The opinion thoroughly addressed each issue

raised in the petition and argued at the hearing. Regarding trial counsel’s failure to object

to the formulation of the voir dire questions, the court held that “nothing [was] improper

about the questions posed to the jury” and therefore Mr. Mahai’s claim of ineffective

assistance of counsel on this ground was meritless. Regarding trial counsel’s failure to

object to what Mr. Mahai construed as inconsistent jury instructions pertaining to

reasonable doubt, the court drew a distinction between “a trial judge giving preliminary

instructions and jury instructions after the presentation of evidence prior to deliberation[.]”

The court reasoned that the trial judge intended to give an “overview of what was to come

from the trial” by giving preliminary remarks on reasonable doubt, and did not intend these

preliminary remarks to be taken as jury instructions. Thus, the lack of objection or request

for a curative instruction by trial counsel did not support a claim of ineffective assistance

of counsel. Finally, regarding trial counsel’s failure to file post-trial motions for sentence

review and modification, the court ruled that Mr. Mahai had not provided sufficient

evidence that he timely asked trial counsel to file these motions.

       Ultimately, the court concluded that all of the issues raised, taken in the aggregate,

did not result in any prejudice to Mr. Mahai, and the court accordingly held that Mr.

Mahai’s Sixth Amendment right to a speedy and fair trial had not been violated.

                                             9
F.     Application for Leave to Appeal Postconviction Denial.

       On March 17, 2020, Mr. Mahai filed an application for leave to appeal in the Court

of Special Appeals. In an order issued on August 14, 2020, the Court of Special Appeals

denied Mr. Mahai’s application for leave to appeal without explanation.

       Subsequently, Mr. Mahai timely petitioned this Court for writ of certiorari, which

we granted on November 10, 2020. Mahai v. State, 471 Md. 263 (2020). Before us are

the following questions:

       1. Does Article IV, § 14A of the Maryland Constitution, which authorizes
       the Court of Special Appeals to exercise only intermediate appellate
       jurisdiction, preclude the Court of Special Appeals from exercising final
       appellate jurisdiction by issuing a summary denial of an application for leave
       to appeal without addressing the issues raised, which has been held to bar
       further appellate review under CJ § 12-202?

       2. Did Petitioner receive ineffective assistance of counsel at trial when
       counsel failed to object to jury instructions regarding the definition of
       reasonable doubt?

       3. Did Petitioner receive ineffective assistance of counsel at trial when
       counsel failed to object to voir dire questions that shifted the burden of
       determining bias to the venirepersons?

       4. Did Petitioner receive ineffective assistance of counsel when counsel
       failed to file a motion for modification of sentence and a motion for sentence
       review?

       For the reasons more fully stated below, we answer the first question in the negative

and hold that CJ § 12-202 is not precluded by Article IV, §14A. Therefore, by finding that

this Court does not have jurisdiction to review the Court of Special Appeals’ discretionary

denial of Mr. Mahai’s application for leave to appeal in his postconviction proceeding

                                          10
pursuant to CJ § 12-202, we do not reach the second, third, or fourth questions. We

accordingly dismiss this appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

                                   STANDARD OF REVIEW

       To declare an act of a coordinate branch of government unconstitutional is an

exercise of judicial review “of a grave and delicate nature, which never can be warranted

but in a clear case.” Anderson v. Baker, 23 Md. 531, 628 (1865) (emphasis omitted). “We

begin with a presumption that the statute is constitutional,” and the party challenging the

statute has the burden of overcoming this presumption. Walker v. State, 432 Md. 587, 626

(2013) (citing Galloway v. State, 365 Md. 599, 610–11 (2001)). To overcome this

presumption, there “must be a clear and unequivocal breach of the Constitution, not a

doubtful and argumentative implication.” Anderson, 23 Md. at 628.

                                          DISCUSSION

A.     Parties’ Contentions.

       Mr. Mahai, Petitioner, argues that the Court of Special Appeals is constitutionally

precluded under Article IV, § 14A from exercising final appellate jurisdiction by denying

an application for leave to appeal without addressing the issues raised. In supporting this

argument, Mr. Mahai points to Article IV, § 14A, which states in relevant part, “[t]he

General Assembly may prescribe the intermediate appellate jurisdiction of these courts of

appeal . . . .” Md. Const. art. IV, § 14A (emphasis added). Mr. Mahai maintains that CJ §

12-202, which prohibits the Court of Appeals from reviewing the Court of Special Appeals’

denial of an application for leave to appeal in a postconviction proceeding, is

                                           11
unconstitutional because it confers final, not intermediate, appellate jurisdiction on the

Court of Special Appeals.

       Moreover, Mr. Mahai points out that pursuant to Article IV, § 15 of the Maryland

Constitution (“Article IV, § 15”), “the judgment of the Court of Appeals shall be final and

conclusive.” Md. Const. art. IV, § 15. In light of this constitutional provision, Mr. Mahai

argues that CJ § 12-202 is unconstitutional because it “confers final jurisdiction on the

Court of Special Appeals” by “prevent[ing] a case from being reviewed by” this Court.

Mr. Mahai further argues that “[t]he denial of an application for leave to appeal operates,

for all intents and purposes as an affirmance of the lower court’s decision.” Thus, in

reading Article IV, §§ 14A and 15 together, Mr. Mahai contends that by denying an

application for leave to appeal, the Court of Special Appeals is exercising final appellate

jurisdiction by entering a final and conclusive judgment that is unreviewable by this Court.

Accordingly, Mr. Mahai asks this Court to reverse the Court of Special Appeals’ denial of

his application for leave to appeal.2

       Conversely, the State of Maryland, Respondent, argues that CJ § 12-202 is

constitutional under both Article IV, §§ 14A and 15. Article IV, § 14A allowed the creation

2
  Mr. Mahai additionally contends that the Court of Special Appeals’ practice to deny
applications for leave to appeal with the simple statement indicating the petition for
postconviction relief has been read, considered and denied is unconstitutional under Article
IV, § 15, which states “an opinion, in writing, shall be filed” in every case heard by either
this Court or an “intermediate court of appeal[.]” Md. Const. art. IV, § 15. Because this
is not a case on the merits, but instead an application for leave to appeal, the Court of
Special Appeals denies the application by order as provided for under the Maryland Rules.
Md. Rule 8-204(f) (“On review of the application, any response, the record, and any
additional information obtained pursuant to section (e) of this Rule, without the submission

                                           12
of multiple intermediate courts by the General Assembly as it saw fit, although the General

Assembly has only created one intermediate court—the Court of Special Appeals. The

State maintains that the use of the word “intermediate” as a qualifier to both “courts” and

“appellate jurisdiction” in Article IV, § 14A was merely a clarifying term to distinguish

any new appellate courts from the existing Court of Appeals. Additionally, as evidenced

by its use of the term “intermediate” to describe both courts and jurisdiction, the State

argues the term “intermediate” in “intermediate appellate jurisdiction” does not provide for

a substantive limit on the Court of Special Appeals’ jurisdiction, but instead merely

provides consistency and clarity.

       Moreover, the State argues that the clause “the judgment of the Court of Appeals

shall be final and conclusive” in Article IV, § 15 sets out a restriction on the General

Assembly preventing the establishment of any “other superior court of appellate

jurisdiction[.]” Hammond v. Ridgely’s Lessee, 5 H. & J. 245, 269 (1821). Likewise, the

“final and conclusive” reference in Article IV, § 15 indicates that this Court’s decisions are

the “law of the case” and as such are binding on the courts below. See Chesapeake &

C.B.R. Co. v. Richfield Oil Corp. of N.Y., 180 Md. 192, 194 (1942). Thus, the State argues

that Article IV, § 15 “spells out the consequence of t[his] Court entering judgment, not

of briefs or the hearing of argument, the Court shall . . . deny the application . . . . The
Clerk of the Court of Special Appeals shall send a copy of the order disposing of the
application to the clerk of the lower court.”).

                                           13
when t[his] Court must, or should be able to, review a case to enter judgment in the first

place.”

       The State further emphasizes that criminal defendants do not possess a

constitutional right of appeal, and instead “the right to seek appellate review is statutory;

the Legislature can provide for, or preclude, the right of appeal.” Fuller v. State, 397 Md.

372, 382 (2007) (citations omitted). Here, the State notes that Maryland’s Uniform

Postconviction Procedure Act denies postconviction petitioners a plenary right of appeal

and instead provides that “a person aggrieved by the order . . . may apply to the Court of

Special Appeals for leave to appeal the order.” Md. Code (2001, 2018 Repl. Vol.),

Criminal Procedure (“CP”) § 7-109(a).

       Additionally, the State notes that the Court of Special Appeals’ decision to grant or

deny an application for leave to appeal is unreviewable by this Court pursuant to CJ § 12-

202. However, the State maintains that this Court has narrowly construed CJ § 12-202 by

stating, “although we may not review the Court of Special Appeals’ exercise of discretion

in granting the State’s application for leave to appeal, we are authorized to review that

court’s decision on the merits remanding the case to the trial court.” Grayson v. State, 354

Md. 1, 11 (1999) (quoting Williams v. State, 292 Md. 201, 210–11 (1981)). The State

argues that the Court of Special Appeals’ denial of Mr. Mahai’s application for leave to

appeal was not a merits determination, but instead merely established Mr. Mahai was not

allowed an appeal by law.

       In sum, the State asserts that Mr. Mahai has failed to carry his burden to extinguish

all “reasonable doubt” about the constitutionality of CJ § 12-202, and therefore asks this

                                           14
Court to dismiss this appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction or, alternatively, to affirm

the order of the Court of Special Appeals denying Mr. Mahai’s application for leave to

appeal.3

B.     Analysis.

       When reviewing a statute for constitutionality, “[w]e begin with a presumption that

the statute is constitutional, and the burden rests on Petitioner to show why that is not the

case.” Walker, 432 Md. at 626. “We are reluctant to find a statute unconstitutional if, ‘by

any construction, it can be sustained.’” Galloway, 365 Md. at 611 (quoting Beauchamp v.

Somerset Cty. Sanitary Comm’n, 256 Md. 541, 547 (1970)). A “[r]easonable doubt in [a

statute’s] favor is enough to sustain it.” Beauchamp, 256 Md. at 547 (quoting Pitts v. State

Bd. of Exam’rs of Psychologists, 222 Md. 224, 227 (1960)). “The Court will not denounce

a statute as void on the ground that the lawmaking power has violated the Constitution,

except when such violation is clear and unmistakable.” Kirkwood v. Provident Sav. Bank

of Balt., 205 Md. 48, 59 (1954).

3
       In his brief to this Court, Mr. Mahai additionally argues that he received ineffective
assistance of counsel when his trial counsel failed to object to jury instructions regarding
reasonable doubt, failed to object to voir dire questions that shifted the burden of
determining bias to the venirepersons, and failed to file a motion for modification of
sentence and a motion for sentence review.

        In turn, the State contends that the Court of Special Appeals soundly exercised its
discretion in denying Mr. Mahai’s application for leave to appeal. The State argues that
Mr. Mahai’s appellate counsel did not supply the requisite record to the Court of Special
Appeals, Mr. Mahai did not properly allege prejudice, and Mr. Mahai did not properly
challenge the postconviction court’s finding of fact that his trial counsel was unaware of
his desire to file post-trial sentencing motions. We decline to delineate these arguments
further because we hold that CJ § 12-202 is constitutional and therefore do not reach these
issues.

                                             15
       Here, Mr. Mahai challenges the constitutionality of CJ § 12-202, which lists five

statutory exceptions to the broad authority of this Court to grant a writ of certiorari “in any

case or proceeding pending in or decided by the Court of Special Appeals” codified at CJ

§ 12-201. Md. Code (1973, 2020 Repl. Vol.), CJ § 12-201. CJ § 12-202 provides:

       A review by way of certiorari may not be granted by the Court of Appeals in
       a case or proceeding in which the Court of Special Appeals has denied or
       granted:
              (1) Leave to prosecute an appeal in a post conviction proceeding;
              (2) Leave to appeal from a refusal to issue a writ of habeas corpus
              sought for the purpose of determining the right to bail or the
              appropriate amount of bail;
              (3) Leave to appeal in an inmate grievance commission proceeding;
              (4) Leave to appeal from a final judgment entered following a plea of
              guilty in a circuit court; or
              (5) Leave to appeal from an order of a circuit court revoking
              probation.

Md. Code (1973, 2020 Repl. Vol.), CJ § 12-202.

       This Court has interpreted the limitation to its jurisdiction in CJ § 12-202 to “relate[]

only to the action of the Court of Special Appeals in granting or denying an application for

leave to appeal.” Williams, 292 Md. at 210. Addressing whether this Court could review

the merits of a case after the Court of Special Appeals had granted leave to appeal in a

postconviction proceeding and subsequently reversed the trial court’s decision, we stated:

       Under [CJ § 12-202(1)], this Court has no jurisdiction to review a decision
       of the Court of Special Appeals granting or denying leave to appeal in a post
       conviction proceeding. However, once the Court of Special Appeals grants
       leave to appeal in such a case and transfers the case to its appeal docket, the
       matter takes the posture of a regular appeal, and we do have jurisdiction

                                            16
       under [CJ] § 12-201 . . . to review the Court of Special Appeals’ decision on
       the appeal itself.

Jourdan v. State, 275 Md. 495, 506 n.4 (1975).

       More specifically, as the State correctly asserts, we may review any decision of the

Court of Special Appeals that amounts to anything more than a discretionary grant or denial

of leave to appeal regardless of whether the case has been transferred to the Court of Special

Appeals’ regular docket. See Grayson, 354 Md. at 12 (holding that this Court had

jurisdiction to review the Court of Special Appeals’ denial of applications for leave to

appeal where the Court of Special Appeals’ held two postconviction petitions were not

allowable as a matter of law). However, “[i]t is the long and well-established law that t[his]

Court has no certiorari jurisdiction to grant post-conviction relief when the Court of Special

Appeals has simply denied an application for leave to appeal in a post-conviction

proceeding.” Sherman v. State, 323 Md. 310, 311 (1991) (citing Williams, 292 Md. 201).

       Here, Mr. Mahai asserts that the “denial of an application for leave to appeal

operates, for all intents and purposes, as an affirmance of the lower court’s decision.” To

the extent that this statement may be read as an argument that the Court of Special Appeals’

denial of Mr. Mahai’s application for leave to appeal was the equivalent of a decision on

the merits of his claim, we have directly disposed of this argument in the past by stating,

“[w]hen the Court of Special Appeals . . . denie[s] leave to appeal it [does] no more than

say, ‘There shall be no appeal in this case.’ ‘[N]o decision on the merits’ of [the] claim

. . . has ever been rendered by any appellate court of this State.” State v. Hernandez, 344

Md. 721, 728–29 (1997) (emphasis omitted). Therefore, a denial of an application for leave

                                           17
to appeal is wholly distinguishable from an affirmance or reversal of the lower court’s

decision after considering the merits of the claim. Accordingly, we note that pursuant to

CJ § 12-202 we do not have jurisdiction to review the Court of Special Appeals’

discretionary denial of Mr. Mahai’s application for leave to appeal in his postconviction

proceeding.

       We now turn to the crux of this case—Mr. Mahai’s constitutional challenges to CJ

§ 12-202. Mr. Mahai argues CJ § 12-202 is unconstitutional under Article IV, §§ 14A and

15 of the Maryland Constitution. Article IV, § 14A states:

       The General Assembly may by law create such intermediate courts of appeal
       as may be necessary. The General Assembly may prescribe the intermediate
       appellate jurisdiction of these courts of appeal, and all other powers
       necessary for the operation of such courts.

Md. Const. art. IV, § 14A (emphasis added). Article IV, § 15 states:

       Any judge of the Court of Appeals or of an intermediate court of appeal who
       heard the cause below either as a trial judge or as a judge of any intermediate
       court of appeal as the case may be, shall not participate in the decision. In
       every case an opinion, in writing, shall be filed within three months after the
       argument, or submission of the cause; and the judgment of the Court of
       Appeals shall be final and conclusive.

Md. Const. art. IV, § 15 (emphasis added).

       “When interpreting constitutional provisions, we generally employ the same rules

of construction that are applicable to the construction of statutory language.” Fuller v.

Republican Cent. Comm. of Carroll Cty., 444 Md. 613, 629 (2015) (quoting Davis v. Slater,

383 Md. 599, 604 (2004)). We first look to the plain language of the constitutional

provision “with a goal of ‘discern[ing] the legislative purpose, the ends to be accomplished,

or the evils to be remedied by a particular provision . . . .’” Id. (quoting Davis, 383 Md. at

                                           18
605). “If the meaning remains ambiguous, we consult the history of the enactment or

adoption, which we may consult in any event as a check or verification on the apparent

plain meaning.” Miles v. State, 435 Md. 540, 554 (2013) (citing Robey v. State, 397 Md.

449, 454 (2007)).

       a.     Plain language analysis of Article IV, § 14A.

       Beginning with the plain language of Article IV, §14A and the related plain

language of Article IV, § 15, Mr. Mahai focuses his argument on the term “intermediate”

in both constitutional provisions. He maintains that the term “intermediate court” was

“intended to draw a distinction between the authority of the Court of Special Appeals and

this Court.” Moreover, Mr. Mahai contends that the phrase “intermediate appellate

jurisdiction” in Article IV, § 14 “does not, and cannot, include final appellate

jurisdiction[.]” Similarly, Mr. Mahai points out that the last sentence in Article IV, § 15,

which states “the judgment of the Court of Appeals shall be final and conclusive[,]”

demonstrates the ultimate, final authority of this Court while also emphasizing the limited,

intermediate authority of the Court of Special Appeals. Thus, Mr. Mahai argues CJ § 12-

202 is unconstitutional under the plain language of Article IV, § 14A because—when read

together with Article IV, § 15—the constitutional language clearly indicates that the Court

of Special Appeals may exercise only intermediate appellate jurisdiction. Mr. Mahai

asserts that by denying this Court the authority to review a denial of an application for

leave to appeal from a postconviction proceeding, the statute has “interfered with the

supremacy of this Court” by “confer[ring] final jurisdiction on the Court of Special

Appeals[.]”

                                          19
       To support his interpretation of the plain language of Article IV, § 14A, Mr. Mahai

largely relies on an Indiana case in which the Indiana Supreme Court held unconstitutional

a jurisdictional statute that made “the Supreme Court virtually inferior to the Appellate

Court[.]” Ex parte France, 95 N.E. 515, 523 (Ind. 1911). At issue in that case was a statute

passed by the Indiana Legislature that divided appellate jurisdiction between the Indiana

Supreme Court and the Indiana Appellate Court. See id. at 516. The legislation limited

jurisdiction of the Indiana Supreme Court to twenty-one classes of appealable cases and

granted the Indiana Appellate Court jurisdiction over all other cases, thereby sweeping the

“entire residuum of appellate jurisdiction” into the lower court. Id. In considering the

constitutionality of the jurisdictional statute, the Indiana Supreme Court analyzed Article

7, § 1 of the Indiana Constitution which provided that: “[t]he judicial power of the state

shall be vested in a Supreme Court, in circuit courts, and in such other courts as the General

Assembly may establish.” Id. at 517.

       The Indiana Supreme Court held that the legislation was unconstitutional because it

created a court equal in rank with the Indiana Supreme Court stating:

       That the effect of the act is to make the Appellate Court within the
       jurisdiction conferred upon it coordinate with the Supreme Court, and to
       withdraw from the latter court all revising and reviewing power, and
       therefore make the Appellate Court supreme . . . is manifest. That such
       power, under our Constitution, cannot be exercised by the Legislature, is well
       settled . . . . There cannot be a court of co-ordinate jurisdiction with this
       court, for otherwise it would be supreme.

Id. at 521–22 (citations omitted). The court went on to state:

       It is vain to argue that the act in question has due regard for the supremacy
       of the Supreme Court. That this is not true is apparent from the fact that it
       confers final jurisdiction upon the Appellate Court in all cases for the

                                           20
       recovery of money without any limitations as to the amount and, in effect,
       excludes the Supreme Court from exercising any jurisdiction whatever in
       such cases. That this results in respect to such cases in making the Supreme
       Court virtually inferior to the Appellate Court is self-evident. . . . That which
       the Legislature is by the Constitution prohibited from doing directly it cannot
       do indirectly.

Id. at 523. Mr. Mahai points to this language and argues that similar to the jurisdictional

statute in Ex parte France, CJ § 12-202 strips this Court of its jurisdiction by prohibiting

it from reviewing the denial of an application for leave to appeal in a postconviction

proceeding. Mr. Mahai goes on to argue that the “Maryland [L]egislature cannot interfere

with the supremacy of this Court” by “conferring final jurisdiction to the Court of Special

Appeals in these types of cases.”

       However, the State correctly distinguishes this case from Ex parte France. In Ex

parte France, the statute at issue granted the intermediate appellate court broad and

exhaustive jurisdiction on the merits of various classes of cases. The Ex parte France court

“noted that the character of the cases over which the Appellate Court is given final

jurisdiction is quite important.” Id. at 516. Of particular concern, the intermediate

appellate court was granted jurisdiction over civil cases with no cap on the amount of

damages as well as given the power to construe statutes and interpret contracts. Id.

Because the decisions of the intermediate appellate court were unreviewable, there was no

“revisory power or control” to ensure that the intermediate appellate court adhered to

decisions of the Indiana Supreme Court. Id. Consequently, the Indiana Supreme Court

held that the Indiana Legislature had in fact created a court “equal in rank to the Supreme

Court[,]” which deprived the Indiana Supreme Court of its “authority incident to its

                                            21
position as the superior judicial tribunal of the state[,]” thereby rendering the jurisdictional

statute unconstitutional. Id. at 518–19.

         Here, as the State correctly asserts, unlike the statute in Ex Parte France, CP § 7-

109(b) grants the Court of Special Appeals the power to “affirm, reverse, or modify” the

lower court’s judgment in a postconviction proceeding only “[i]f the application for leave

to appeal is granted[.]”4 As discussed supra, once an application for leave to appeal is

granted, this Court has authority to review any decision on the merits—be it an affirmance,

reversal, or modification of the lower court’s order—pursuant to the broad certiorari

4
    CP § 7-109(b) provides in full:

         (b)    (1) The application for leave to appeal shall be in the form set by the
                Maryland Rules.
                (2) If the Attorney General or a State’s Attorney states an intention to
                file an application for an appeal under this section, the court may:
                        (i) stay the order; and
                        (ii) set bail for the petitioner.
                (3) If the application for leave to appeal is granted:
                        (i) the procedure for the appeal shall meet the requirements of
                        the Maryland Rules; and
                        (ii) the Court of Special Appeals may:
                                 1. affirm, reverse, or modify the order appealed from;
                                 or
                                 2. remand the case for further proceedings.
                (4) If the application for leave to appeal is denied, the order sought to
                be reviewed becomes final.

Md. Code (2001, 2018 Repl. Vol.), CP § 7-109(b).

                                             22
powers granted to this Court in CJ § 12-201.5 See Jourdan, 275 Md. at 506 n.4. However,

if the application for leave to appeal is denied by the Court of Special Appeals, the order

sought to be reviewed becomes final pursuant to CP § 7-109(b)(4). Put another way, it is

as if no appeal were allowed by law. See Hernandez, 344 Md. at 728–29.

         Therefore, the broad and exhaustive final jurisdiction granted to the Indiana

intermediate appellate court on important and varied classes of cases is dissimilar to the

exceedingly narrow scope of unreviewable actions here—that is to say, it is only the Court

of Special Appeals’ discretionary act of granting or denying leave to appeal that this Court

may not review. As the State argues, “the Court of Special Appeals cannot deploy its

[application for leave to appeal] docket to make law, much less declare the law of the case

in a manner that competes with this Court’s preeminence as the highest court of the State.”

We agree and accordingly do not find support in Ex parte France for Mr. Mahai’s plain

language interpretation of CJ § 12-202.

5
    CJ § 12-201 provides:

         Except as provided in § 12-202 of this subtitle, in any case or proceeding
         pending in or decided by the Court of Special Appeals upon appeal from a
         circuit court or an orphans’ court or the Maryland Tax Court, any party,
         including the State, may file in the Court of Appeals a petition for certiorari
         to review the case or proceeding. The petition may be filed either before or
         after the Court of Special Appeals has rendered a decision, but not later than
         the time prescribed by the Maryland Rules. In a case or proceeding described
         in this section, the Court of Appeals also may issue the writ of certiorari on
         its own motion.

Md. Code (1973, 2020 Repl. Vol.), CJ § 12-201.

                                             23
       Instead, we find persuasive the plain language analysis offered by the State. The

State argues that the word “intermediate” in Article IV, §§ 14A and 15 was used as a

clarifying adjective to provide consistency across several constitutional provisions and to

distinguish the new appellate courts authorized by Article IV, § 14A from this Court. The

State contends that there is no authority to support that the term “intermediate” was

“intended to serve as a substantive limit on the intermediate court’s appellate

jurisdiction[,]” which “has always been defined by legislation separate and apart from”

Article IV, § 14.

       We agree. The Court of Special Appeals’ appellate jurisdiction was initially given

by the Maryland Legislature and has since been expanded by statute. “At the time of its

nativity, the intermediate appellate court’s jurisdiction was limited to criminal matters

involving sentences other than death” and was codified at Article 26, § 130 of the Maryland

Code in 1973. Dep’t of Human Res. v. Howard, 397 Md. 353, 360 (2007); see also 1973

Md. Laws 1st Sp. Sess., ch. 2. In 1970, the Maryland Legislature “expanded the Court of

Special Appeals’ jurisdiction to include certain civil matters” and now the Court of Special

Appeals has, with few exceptions, “exclusive initial appellate jurisdiction over any

reviewable judgment, decree, order or other action of a circuit court, and an orphans’

court.” Howard, 397 Md. at 360–61; see also 1970 Md. Laws, ch. 99; Md. Code (1973,

2020 Repl. Vol.), CJ §§ 12-307 and 12-308. It is apparent to us that any substantive

limitations to the Court of Special Appeals’ jurisdiction would appear in statute, and, by

contrast, should not be derived from the term “intermediate” appearing in constitutional

provisions.

                                          24
       Additionally, we find this plain language analysis further supported by the fact that

“intermediate” is used as a descriptive adjective a total of four times in Article IV, §§ 14A

and 15. Out of the four uses, the term “intermediate” is used in connection with “court” or

“courts” three times, which has little bearing on a substantive limit of the Court of Special

Appeals’ jurisdiction. By contrast, the term “intermediate” is only used once in connection

with “appellate jurisdiction.” Thus, Mr. Mahai’s plain language analysis largely rests on

the basis of a single, isolated use of the term “intermediate,” which we find to be

inadequate. Therefore, we agree that the term “intermediate” is merely a clarifying

adjective intended to dispel any confusion between this Court and the Court of Special

Appeals.

       Next, we consider the State’s plain language analysis of the final clause in Article

IV, § 15 stating, “the judgment of the Court of Appeals shall be final and conclusive.” As

the State correctly notes, the “final and conclusive” clause has already been construed by

this Court according to the text’s plain language in a manner that does not support Mr.

Mahai’s argument.       Two centuries ago, this Court held that the words “final and

conclusive” are intended to be “declaratory of the quality and legal effect of a decision of

the [C]ourt of [A]ppeals[,]” and should be “understood to mean, that the [C]ourt of

[A]ppeals so provided for, should be a tribunal of ultimate resort . . . . [T]here should not

be created any higher court of appellate jurisdiction[.]” Hammond, 5 H. & J. at 268–69

(June Term, 1821). As such, the “final and conclusive” clause “constitutionally guard[s]

against the establishment by the [L]egislature, of any other superior court of appellate

jurisdiction[.]” Id. at 269.

                                           25
       Furthermore, we have held that Article IV, § 15 “provides that the judgments of the

Court of Appeals shall be final and conclusive. Therefore, the decision of this Court in any

cause is binding upon the lower Court and cannot be disregarded.” Chesapeake & C.B.R.

Co., 180 Md. at 194. Likewise, we have stated in connection with Article IV, § 15, “[t]he

effect of a final judgment is to conclude the rights of the parties litigant upon the subject-

matter in controversy.” Dorsey’s Lessee v. Gary, 37 Md. 64, 74 (1872).

       Thus, we have determined that the “final and conclusive” clause in Article IV, § 15

has been interpreted to serve several purposes. It precludes the Maryland Legislature from

creating a court of higher jurisdiction than this Court, and it ensures that the decisions of

the Court of Appeals are binding on the parties and the courts below. By speaking to the

quality and effect of the Court of Appeals’ decisions, the clause indicates the consequence

of this Court entering judgment without providing guidance on when this Court should

enter judgment. Therefore, we do not agree with Mr. Mahai’s contention that the plain

language of Article IV, § 15 grants this Court the authority to review every discretionary

action of a lower court, but instead provides that when we do issue a judgment, that

judgment carries ultimate authority.

       b.     History of the Adoption of Article IV, § 14A.

       To verify our plain language analysis, we now consult the history of the adoption of

Article IV, § 14A. See Miles, 435 Md. at 554. In response to this Court’s increasingly

large criminal docket, proponents of the constitutional amendment advocated for an

intermediate appellate court. See Walston v. Sun Cab Co., Inc., 267 Md. 559, 564–65

(1973). As we have explained in the past:

                                           26
       The immediate purpose of [Article IV, § 14A] was to enable the General
       Assembly to relieve this Court of the substantial increase of criminal appeals
       which had inundated the Court and yet provide at least one appeal as of right,
       either to this Court or to an intermediate court to be created by statute. There
       was also an underlying general purpose to provide sufficient flexibility in the
       grant of power by the constitutional amendment to provide for a grant of
       appellate power to the intermediate appellate court or courts to be created
       over certain—or perhaps ultimately all—civil cases.

Id.

       On March 23, 1966, the General Assembly passed three bills relevant to this case:

Senate Bill 73, Senate Bill 10, and Senate Bill 74. 1966 Md. Laws, ch. 10, 11, and 12.

Senate Bill 73 was a constitutional amendment that created Article IV, § 14A. It “was a

general grant of power to the General Assembly to create by law ‘such intermediate courts

of appeal, as may be necessary’ and to ‘prescribe the intermediate appellate jurisdiction of

these courts of appeal, and all other powers necessary for the operation of such courts.’”

Walston, 267 Md. at 564; 1966 Md. Laws, ch. 10.

       Senate Bill 10 was enabling legislation that created the intermediate appellate court

upon ratification of the constitutional amendment. Of particular import, the bill granted

the intermediate appellate court jurisdiction for criminal cases not involving the death

penalty, “subject in each case to a further appeal to the Court of Appeals as provided by

Section 21A of Article 5 of this Code . . . .” 1966 Md. Laws, ch. 11 (emphasis added).

       Senate Bill 74, in pertinent part, created Article 5, § 21A of the 1957 Maryland

Code, which expressly precluded appeals to this Court on the basis of an intermediate

court’s grant or denial of leave to appeal in postconviction proceedings. 1966 Md. Laws,

ch. 12. Article 5, § 21A provided:

                                           27
       In any criminal case, post conviction or defective delinquent proceeding in
       which a decision has been rendered by the Court of Special Appeals upon
       appeal from the circuit court of any county, the Criminal Court of Baltimore,
       or one of the law courts of Baltimore City if it shall be made to appear to the
       Court of Appeals upon petition of any party, whether a defendant or the State,
       that a review is desirable and in the public interest, the Court of Appeals shall
       require, by certiorari or otherwise, any such case to be certified to the Court
       of Appeals for its review and determination, except no such petition shall be
       entertained by the Court of Appeals from the denying or granting by the
       Court of Special Appeals of an application for leave to prosecute an appeal
       in post conviction and defective delinquent proceedings and from the
       denying or granting by the Court of Special Appeals of a petition for review
       filed under Section 21 of this article.

1966 Md. Laws, ch. 12 (emphasis added). This language is now codified at CJ § 12-202.

The contemporaneous passage of these three bills demonstrates that from the inception of

the intermediate appellate court, the General Assembly intended to prohibit this Court from

reviewing the grant or denial of an application for leave to appeal in a postconviction

proceeding.

       Several months later on November 8, 1966, Article IV, § 14A was ratified by the

electorate and “[p]ursuant to that constitutional amendment, the General Assembly created,

by statute, the Court of Special Appeals as the second ever intermediate appellate court in

Maryland.”6 Howard, 397 Md. at 360.

6
  During the Revolutionary War period, the State of Maryland provided in its Constitution
for an intermediate appellate court called the General Court. Md. Const. of 1776, art. 56.
The court was organized into two branches: the General Court of the Western Shore, which
sat in Annapolis and the General Court of the Eastern Shore, which sat in Easton. See
Howard, 397 Md. at 360 n.8. In 1806, the General Court was abolished, “leaving the Court
of Appeals as the State’s only appellate court until the Court of Special Appeals” was
established in 1966. Id.; see also 1804 Md. laws, ch. 55.

                                            28
       Mr. Mahai correctly points out that “[t]he constitutional amendment and

implementing legislation was largely conceived and originally promoted by the Maryland

State Bar Association.” Walston, 267 Md. at 566. In Walston, we stated:

       [T]he State Bar Committee reconsidered the whole subject and on June 24,
       1965, recommended the creation of the Court of Special Appeals limited
       originally to appellate jurisdiction in criminal (other than death cases), post-
       conviction and defective delinquency cases. The Committee’s basic premise
       was that ‘a litigant is entitled to at least one appeal as a matter of right in each
       case and where this appeal was to the Court of Special Appeals, a petition
       for a writ of certiorari could be filed to the Court of Appeals by the litigant
       adversely affected whether it be the accused or the State.’ . . . This Report
       was unanimously adopted by the Maryland State Bar Association, 70
       Maryland State Bar Association at 134 (1965).

Id. (emphasis omitted). Mr. Mahai relies on this language as an assertion that the framers

of the constitutional amendment intended to provide each adversely affected litigant with

the opportunity to petition this Court for a writ of certiorari.

       While we agree that the Report of the Seventieth Annual Maryland State Bar

Association is useful in discerning the intent of the Maryland Legislature in framing Article

IV, § 14A, we do not reach the same conclusion as Mr. Mahai. Instead, after reviewing

this report, we determine that the Maryland State Bar Association intended for the Court

of Special Appeals to have final discretion on the denial of an application for leave to

appeal in a postconviction proceeding. The report states:

       The recommendation as you all know is for the creation of a Court of Special
       Appeals. The jurisdiction of this Court would be, first, all criminal cases
       where no death penalty was imposed; secondly, applications under the
       Uniform Post-Conviction Procedure Act in cases where no death penalty was

                                             29
       imposed. . . . That, in broad outline, is the suggested initial jurisdictional
       limits for this Court.
                                              ***
       The next thing that should be brought to your attention is how the Court of
       Appeals will fit into this general scheme. First there are two areas in which
       appeals will be taken directly to the Court of Appeals, and will not go, as the
       Committee envisions it, to the Special Court. . . . Conversely, no petition for
       writ of certiorari will be allowed to the Court of Appeals in the following two
       types of cases: first, those in which the Court of Special Appeals has denied
       a petition for writ of certiorari where the appeal came from a court of limited
       jurisdiction; and secondly, those in which the Court has denied an
       application for leave to appeal in post-conviction and defective delinquent
       matters. So much then for the jurisdiction.

Maryland State Bar Ass’n, Proceedings of the Seventieth Annual Meeting of the Maryland

State Bar Association, Inc., at 109–11 (1965) (emphasis added).

       It is apparent to us that the Maryland State Bar Association fully contemplated that

the Court of Special Appeals would have the final authority to deny an application for leave

to appeal in a postconviction proceeding. This—taken together with the fact that the

General Assembly passed enabling legislation expressly precluding appeals to this Court

on the basis of an intermediate court’s denial of applications for leave to appeal in

postconviction proceedings on the same day as it passed the referendum language—

provides ample evidence that our earlier plain language analysis is correct. The term

“intermediate” in Article IV, § 14A is a clarifying adjective, not a substantive limitation on

the Court of Special Appeals’ jurisdiction.

       Therefore, in light of both the plain language and history of the adoption of Article

IV, § 14A, we conclude that Mr. Mahai has failed to overcome the presumption of

constitutionality that attaches to CJ § 12-202, and as such we hold that CJ § 12-202 is

constitutional.

                                           30
                                      CONCLUSION

      In summary, for the foregoing reasons, we hold that CJ § 12-202 is not precluded

by Article IV, §14A of the Maryland Constitution. Thus, pursuant to CJ § 12-202, this

Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to review the Court of Special Appeals’

discretionary denial of an application for leave to appeal in a postconviction proceeding.

We accordingly dismiss this appeal.

                                               APPEAL DISMISSED. COSTS TO BE
                                               PAID BY PETITIONER.

                                          31