State v. Trappen ( 2017 )


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  •               NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    STATE OF FLORIDA,                           )
    )
    Appellant,                     )
    )
    v.                                          )         Case No. 2D15-5129
    )
    JUDITH WINA TRAPPEN,                        )
    )
    Appellee.                      )
    )
    Opinion filed June 30, 2017.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for
    Hillsborough County; Samantha L. Ward,
    Judge.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General,
    Tallahassee, and Chelsea S. Alper,
    Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for
    Appellant.
    Leon H. Jones of LHJ Law, Tampa, for
    Appellee.
    SALARIO, Judge.
    The State appeals from a final order that granted Judith Trappen's motion
    to dismiss filed pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.190(c)(4). We hold
    that the undisputed allegations of Ms. Trappen's motion and the State's traverse made
    out a prima facie case that Ms. Trappen violated section 790.23(1), Florida Statutes
    (2014), which makes it unlawful for a felon "to own or to have in his or her care, custody,
    possession, or control any firearm." Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further
    proceedings.
    In a one-count information, the State charged Ms. Trappen with violating
    section 790.23(1). Tracking the statutory language, the State alleged that Ms. Trappen,
    who had been convicted in 2006 of a felony for obtaining property in exchange for a
    worthless check for more than $150, violated section 790.23(1) in December 2014.
    Ms. Trappen filed a verified motion to dismiss pursuant to rule 3.190(c)(4)
    in which she alleged that her husband, a gun enthusiast who owned multiple firearms,
    passed away in November 2014. According to the motion, Ms. Trappen was strapped
    for cash while waiting on payments from her husband's life insurance and decided to
    sell her husband's guns. She and a friend went to a pawn shop, where Ms. Trappen
    submitted her fingerprint and sold the firearms. According to the pawn shop employee's
    deposition, the employee could not remember the events in any detail and, in particular,
    could not remember whether Ms. Trappen actually touched the guns at any point. The
    arresting detective, who was also deposed, did not witness the events.
    Based on these allegations, Ms. Trappen asserted two legal bases for
    dismissal under rule 3.190(c)(4). First, she asserted that under the undisputed facts the
    State could not make a prima facie case that she actually possessed a firearm because
    no witness could testify that she actually touched any firearm and, even if she did, the
    State could not show "that the touching was in a manner that the statute intended to
    forbid." Second, relying on Henderson v. United States, 
    135 S. Ct. 1780
    (2015), a
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    decision of the United States Supreme Court interpreting the federal felon in possession
    statute, Ms. Trappen argued that the State could not make out a prima facie case that
    she constructively possessed the firearms.
    The State filed a traverse pursuant to rule 3.190(d) that admitted the
    material allegations of Ms. Trappen's motion but included additional facts. It alleged
    that Ms. Trappen admitted to the arresting detective that "she took the firearms and
    pawned them." It also said that Ms. Trappen personally completed the paperwork and
    answered all questions related to the sale, put her thumbprint on a transaction form
    indicating that she owned the firearms, and took money from the pawn shop in
    exchange for the firearms. Based on these allegations, the State argued that it had
    made a prima facie case that Ms. Trappen constructively possessed the firearms and
    that the federal statute at issue in Henderson was distinguishable from the language of
    section 790.23(1) such that the reasoning of that case could not be applied here.
    At a hearing on the motion to dismiss, Ms. Trappen admitted the additional
    facts alleged in the State's traverse. Without hearing argument, the trial court
    announced that Ms. Trappen's motion would be granted. The trial court later entered a
    written order consistent with its oral ruling. The State timely appeals.
    We review an order granting a rule 3.190(c)(4) motion de novo. Bell v.
    State, 
    835 So. 2d 392
    , 394 (Fla. 2d DCA 2003). The purpose of the rule 3.190(c)(4)
    procedure is to avoid a trial in a criminal case when there are no material facts
    genuinely at issue. State v. Kalogeropolous, 
    758 So. 2d 110
    , 111 (Fla. 2000). Under
    that procedure, a defendant may seek dismissal where "[t]here are no material disputed
    facts and the undisputed facts do not establish a prima facie case of guilt." Fla. R. Crim.
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    P. 3.190(c)(4). "It is the defendant's burden to demonstrate that no prima facie case
    exists upon the undisputed facts set forth in detail in the motion." State v. Cadore, 
    59 So. 3d 1200
    , 1202 (Fla. 2d DCA 2011) (citing 
    Kalogeropolous, 758 So. 2d at 111
    ).
    Where, as here, the State responds to a motion to dismiss with a traverse admitting the
    material facts and adding new facts of its own, the question for the trial court is whether
    the State can show that the undisputed facts make out a prima facie case of the
    defendant's guilt. See State v. Dickerson, 
    811 So. 2d 744
    , 746 (Fla. 2d DCA 2002); see
    also Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.190(d).
    In assessing whether there is a prima facie case of guilt set forth on the
    facts presented, the evidence must be taken in the light most favorable to the State,
    with all inferences resolved against the defendant. State v. Pasko, 
    815 So. 2d 680
    , 681
    (Fla. 2d DCA 2002); see also 
    Bell, 835 So. 2d at 394
    . The State is not required to
    produce all of the facts or evidence it might present at a trial, Kalogeropolous, 
    758 So. 2d
    at 112, nor is it required to produce facts and evidence that would survive a motion
    for judgment of acquittal, 
    Dickerson, 811 So. 2d at 747
    . Instead, it is "only where the
    most favorable construction to the state" of the facts in the motion and traverse would
    fail to establish a prima facie case of guilt that a rule 3.190(c)(4) motion should be
    granted. 
    Pasko, 815 So. 2d at 681
    (quoting State v. Hunwick, 
    446 So. 2d 214
    , 215-16
    (Fla. 4th DCA 1984)).
    Under these standards, we agree with the State that the factual
    allegations of the motion taken together with the facts added by its traverse present a
    prima facie case that, at a minimum, Ms. Trappen constructively possessed a firearm in
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    violation of section 790.23(1).1 See Bundrage v. State, 
    814 So. 2d 1133
    , 1134 (Fla. 2d
    DCA 2002) ("Possession of a firearm by a convicted felon can be proven either by an
    actual or a constructive possession theory."). To survive Ms. Trappen's rule 3.190(c)(4)
    motion on a constructive possession theory, the State needed to show a prima facie
    case that Ms. Trappen knew the gun was present and had the ability to exercise control
    over it. See Watson v. State, 
    961 So. 2d 1116
    , 1117 (Fla. 2d DCA 2007) (explaining
    elements of proof for felon in constructive possession of a gun).
    The undisputed facts in the motion and traverse make out a prima facie
    case of knowledge of the firearms and the ability to control them. Ms. Trappen's own
    allegations are that she made a decision to pawn the guns and that she and a friend
    went to a pawn shop to make that happen. Those allegations are direct evidence of Ms.
    Trappen's knowledge of the guns, inasmuch as it would have been impossible for her to
    execute a plan to sell them without knowing about them, and are at a minimum
    circumstantial evidence of her ability to control them, inasmuch as a fair inference from
    the fact that she pawned them is that she had the ability to control them. See 
    Cadore, 59 So. 3d at 1203-04
    (holding that entirely circumstantial evidence of constructive
    possession was sufficient to overcome rule 3.190(c)(4) motion to dismiss). Moreover,
    Ms. Trappen's own statement—as provided by the State's traverse—that "she took the
    firearms and pawned them" can reasonably be interpreted as an admission of both
    1
    In its opposition to the motion to dismiss in the trial court, the State
    argued only constructive possession. It did not argue that Ms. Trappen actually
    possessed a firearm or that she violated the felon in possession statute in another
    specified way. See § 790.23(1) (prohibiting a felon from owning a firearm or having
    care, custody, or control of a firearm). Because we can resolve this appeal solely on
    the ground argued by the State in the trial court, we need not consider whether the
    State preserved any other grounds or whether such grounds would have merit.
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    knowledge of and the ability to control the firearms as the act of taking and pawning the
    firearms implies both. See 
    Dickerson, 811 So. 2d at 747
    (reversing rule 3.190(c)(4)
    dismissal where the State's traverse alleged that defendant admitted to knowing of the
    presence of contraband).
    Ms. Trappen, however, argues that the United States Supreme Court's
    decision in Henderson shows that the concept of constructive possession cannot
    operate to extend section 790.23(1) to the facts of this case. In Henderson, the Court
    interpreted the federal felon in possession statute, then in effect, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g),
    which made it unlawful for a felon "to ship or transport in interstate or foreign commerce,
    or possess in or affecting commerce, any firearm or ammunition." There, a federal felon
    who had surrendered his firearms to the FBI later asked the FBI to transfer them to a
    friend who he said had agreed to buy 
    them. 135 S. Ct. at 1783
    . The FBI refused on
    grounds that the transfer would place the felon in constructive possession of the
    firearms in violation of § 922(g). Mr. Henderson then filed a petition seeking to compel
    the transfer of the firearms to his wife or the friend, which a federal district court denied.
    The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 
    Id. at 1783.
    The Supreme Court reversed and held that the federal felon in possession
    statute did not reach as far as the lower courts had held. While recognizing the
    argument that § 922(g) "prevents a court from ordering the sale or other transfer of a
    felon's gun to someone willing to give the felon access to them or to accede to the
    felon's instructions about their future use" because this would amount to constructive
    possession, 
    id. at 1784,
    the Court explained that interpreting the statute to prohibit a
    felon from disposing of his guns through another "wrongly conflates the right to possess
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    a gun with another incident of ownership, which § 922(g) does not affect: the right
    merely to sell or otherwise dispose of that item;" 
    id. at 1785.
    The Court emphasized
    that "[s]ection 922(g) proscribes possession alone" and "[b]y its terms, [§] 922(g) does
    not prohibit a felon from owning firearms." 
    Id. at 1784.
    Because the statute did not
    regulate ownership of guns, the Court reasoned, a convicted felon retains the right to
    sell or dispose of his guns. 
    Id. at 1784-85.
    The Court also reasoned that a construction
    of the term "possession" that precluded such a sale extended § 922(g) beyond its
    purpose because it would prevent a felon from disposing of firearms in a way that would
    guarantee that the felon never used those firearms again. 
    Id. at 1786.
    It ultimately held
    that so long as "a court is satisfied that a felon will not retain control over his guns,
    § 922(g) does not apply," and a court may act within its equitable power to grant a
    felon's request that his or her firearms be transferred to a particular person. 
    Id. at 1787.
    Ms. Trappen's argument that "[b]ased upon the rationale of Henderson,"
    the State "cannot prove that [she] constructively possessed the firearms" at issue
    misunderstands that case. Henderson hinged on the fact that the interpretation of the
    statutory term "possession" endorsed by the lower courts interfered with a legal activity
    § 922 did not reach—the ownership of a firearm by a felon. Legal ownership
    necessarily includes the right to dispose of what one owns, and prohibiting a felon from
    disposing of a firearm he owns prohibits that which the statute, by its terms, actually
    permits. See 
    id. at 1174-75.
    Section 790.23(1), however, does not present that issue;
    by its terms, it criminalizes both possession and ownership of a firearm by a felon.
    § 790.23(1) (making it a crime for a felon to "own . . . any firearm" (emphasis added)).
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    The Florida statute thus does not require that we confront the interpretative problem in
    the federal statute with which the Henderson Court was presented.
    Moreover, Henderson is distinguishable in two critical respects. First,
    even assuming that the Florida statute permitted ownership of a firearm by a convicted
    felon, the undisputed facts here, unlike the facts in Henderson, do not establish that Ms.
    Trappen in fact owned the firearms. Ms. Trappen's motion alleged only that the firearms
    were her husband's, that her husband died, and that after her husband died, she
    decided to sell them. It is certainly possible on those facts that Ms. Trappen became
    the owner of those firearms through inheritance or some other means—and this opinion
    does not restrict either Ms. Trappen or the State from making that case on remand—but
    it is also possible that the firearms were part of an estate being administered in probate
    or that Ms. Trappen's husband had by will devised the firearms to someone else or that
    some other circumstance existed that prevented Ms. Trappen from claiming ownership
    of her husband's firearms, such that she had no right to dispose of them. See ch. 732,
    Fla. Stat. (2014) (governing intestate succession and wills). In Henderson, the felon's
    ownership of the firearms was a given, and the Court's application of the statutory term
    "possess" depended on his having the right to dispose of the firearms that is an incident
    of ownership. The allegations of Ms. Trappen's motion do not establish that right,
    however, and on that score her motion failed to meet her burden of demonstrating that,
    on the undisputed facts, the State could not make out a prima facie case of guilt.2 See
    2
    Ms. Trappen argues for the first time on appeal that she possessed the
    firearms for the purpose of lawful disposal. Florida courts have recognized a defense to
    a prosecution for possession of a controlled substance based on temporary possession
    for the sole purpose of lawful disposal. See, e.g., Robinson v. State, 
    57 So. 3d 278
    ,
    281 (Fla. 4th DCA 2011) ("We have previously recognized that temporary control of
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    Kalogeropolous, 758 So. 2d at 111
    ("Under this rule it is the defendant's burden . . . to
    demonstrate that no prima facie case exists upon the facts set forth in detail in the
    motion.").
    In addition, in Henderson, unlike this case, the lower courts interpreted
    "possession" to reach a transaction in which the felon's involvement was quite
    attenuated. Mr. Henderson's only participation was selecting the person to whom
    ownership of the firearm would pass; apart from that, the weapon would pass from the
    FBI to Mr. Henderson's friend without his involvement. As the Supreme Court
    recognized, saying that those circumstances constitute constructive possession is in
    tension with the element of control underlying that concept precisely because Mr.
    Henderson's ability to exert influence over the firearm was attenuated. 
    See 135 S. Ct. at 1785
    (reasoning that constructive possession is designed to preclude a situation in
    which "the felon would have control over the guns, even while another person kept
    physical custody" and to "allow[] the law to reach beyond puppets to puppeteers"
    contraband for the purpose of legal disposition by throwing it away, destroying it, or
    giving it to police can be a valid defense to the crime of possession of a controlled
    substance."); Fla. Std. Jury Instr. (Crim.) 3.6(m) ("It is a defense to the charge of
    [possession of a controlled substance] [trafficking via possession] for a person to briefly
    possess a controlled substance for the sole purpose of legal disposal."); cf. Marrero v.
    State, 
    516 So. 2d 1052
    , 1054 (Fla. 3d DCA 1987) (discussing necessity defense and
    noting that "the law has long recognized that there may be circumstances under which a
    convicted felon's possession of a firearm would be justified" in the case of self-defense).
    We have found no case adopting that defense in a prosecution for felon in possession
    of a firearm, but cf. West v. State, 
    69 So. 3d 1075
    (Fla. 1st DCA 2011) (assuming
    without comment that the defense exists), and Ms. Trappen has not developed the
    argument beyond half a sentence in her brief. She did not make this argument in the
    trial court, and her motion does not develop the alleged record necessary to make out
    the defense under the rule 3.190(c)(4) standard. See State v. Quetglas, 
    901 So. 2d 360
    , 362 (Fla. 2d DCA 2005) (stating that it is the defendant's burden on a rule
    3.190(c)(4) motion to show that the undisputed facts make out a valid defense).
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    (quoting United States v. Al-Rekabi, 
    454 F.3d 1113
    , 1118 (10th Cir. 2006))). In
    contrast, Ms. Trappen's ability to exert influence over the firearms here was, on the facts
    alleged in the motion and traverse, quite direct: she made the decision to sell them, she
    took them to the pawn shop with a friend, she walked into the pawnshop with her friend
    and the guns, and she transferred the guns to the pawn shop in exchange for money,
    using her own fingerprint to do so. As described above, her involvement in the
    transaction virtually required that she have had the ability to exercise control over her
    husband's firearms and is thus quite consistent with the concept of constructive
    possession as typically understood in Florida.
    If the facts alleged in the motion and traverse are really all there is, one
    might fairly wonder why the State would bring this kind of prosecution. But on the
    limited facts in the motion and traverse we do not know whether that is really all there is,
    and nothing about this case suggests that the State's reasons for bringing the
    prosecution are legally relevant at this stage of the proceedings. The only legally proper
    consideration at present is whether the facts alleged in the motion and traverse make
    out a prima facie case that Ms. Trappen violated section 790.23(1). They do. We
    therefore reverse the trial court's dismissal order and remand the case to the trial court
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded.
    SILBERMAN and CRENSHAW, JJ., Concur.
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