State of Iowa v. Tiffani A. Taylor ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 16-1424
    Filed May 17, 2017
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    TIFFANI A. TAYLOR,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Sioux County, Robert J. Dull,
    District Associate Judge.
    Tiffani Taylor appeals her conviction for possession of methamphetamine
    contending the district court erred in denying her motion to suppress.
    AFFIRMED.
    Robert B. Brock II of Law Office of Robert B. Brock II, P.C., Le Mars, for
    appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Benjamin M. Parrott, Assistant
    Attorney General, for appellee.
    Considered by Vogel, P.J., and Doyle and McDonald, JJ.
    2
    DOYLE, Judge.
    Tiffani Taylor appeals her conviction for possession of methamphetamine.
    She claims the district court erred in denying her motion to suppress. Upon our
    review, we conclude the district court properly denied the motion to suppress
    because the “plain view” exception applied to the warrantless search of Taylor’s
    purse. Accordingly, we affirm Taylor’s conviction and sentence.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    On August 15, 2015, Michelle Bellis and Tiffani Taylor visited an inmate at
    the Sioux County Jail. Both women provided identification as a part of the check-
    in procedure. A correctional officer determined neither had a valid license to
    drive. Since the women had arrived at the jail in a van driven by one of them, the
    officer notified Sioux County Deputy Sheriff Oostra of the situation. The deputy
    parked near the jail and laid in wait.       When the women left the jail, the
    correctional officer observed Bellis driving the van and notified Deputy Oostra.
    The deputy stopped the van after it drove past his lair. After confirming that
    Bellis was driving without a valid license, the deputy had Bellis get out of the van,
    and she and the deputy headed toward the patrol car. The deputy asked if
    anyone else in the van had a valid license. Bellis said Taylor had a license and
    could drive. The deputy returned to the van, and from the still open driver’s
    window, he asked Taylor, who was sitting in the front passenger seat, if she had
    a valid driver’s license. According to Deputy Oostra’s report attached to the
    minutes of testimony, the following transpired:
    [Taylor] told me she did. I asked to see it and she reached for a
    purse located by her left foot that was [sitting] on the floor.
    3
    [Taylor] retrieved from that purse a smaller purse, it
    appeared as a small, mostly tan in color 3x5 inch makeup purse.
    She unzipped it and opened it. I could see into the purse and saw
    a card of some sort and a small blue baggie that appeared to have
    a white colored substance in it; possibly a controlled substance.
    [Taylor] quickly handed me an Iowa identification card and closed
    the purse zipping it shut. I told her this was only an identification
    card and not good for driving. I then confronted her with what I
    knew; she did not have a driver’s license. [Taylor] acknowledges
    she did not have one.
    I then asked about the small baggie I saw in the purse which
    she retrieved her identification card from. [Taylor] then opened the
    purse again and held it so I could not see in. I asked what was in
    the baggie. [Taylor] just held the purse bouncing it in her hand in
    what appeared to be an attempt to cover the baggie with the other
    contents of the small purse. I then told [Taylor] to hand me the
    purse. She did and I reached in and took out the small ¾ inch by
    1 ½ inch blue baggie.
    The deputy then took the small makeup purse with him and had Taylor stay in
    the van while he finished writing the traffic citation for Bellis in the patrol car. He
    went back to the van, searched Taylor’s large purse and the van’s passenger
    compartment area near where Taylor was sitting. Asked what testing the white
    powder might reveal the powder to be, Taylor responded, “it may test for meth.”
    Taylor was read her Miranda rights, taken to jail, and arrested.
    By trial information, the State charged Taylor with possession of
    methamphetamine, first offense, in violation of Iowa Code section 124.401(5)
    (2015), a serious misdemeanor. Taylor filed a motion to suppress all evidence
    recovered by the State, contending the evidence was obtained in violation of her
    rights under the Fourth Amendment and article I section 8 of the Iowa
    Constitution. The State resisted, and a hearing was held.
    Thereafter, the district court denied Taylor’s motion, concluding:
    Deputy Oostra observed the baggy and its contents in the
    purse when he asked [Taylor] for her driver’s license, which she
    4
    had told him she had. She opened the purse and the baggy was in
    plain view, at which time Deputy Oostra immediately believed it to
    contain a controlled substance. Under these facts, the court
    concludes Deputy Oostra was legally entitled to take possession of
    the baggy pursuant to the plain view exception. See State v.
    McGrane, 
    733 N.W.2d 671
    , 680 (Iowa 2007).
    Taylor waived her right to a jury trial, and the matter was tried to the court.
    The court found Taylor guilty as charged. Judgment was entered, and Taylor
    was sentenced.
    Taylor now appeals. She contends the district court erred in denying her
    motion to suppress. Specifically, she argues the court should have found that
    the warrantless search of her possessions was in violation of the United States
    and Iowa Constitutions.
    II. Standards and Scope of Review.
    Because Taylor asserts the district court violated her constitutional rights
    in denying her motion to suppress, we review her claim de novo. See State v.
    Coleman, 
    890 N.W.2d 284
    , 286 (Iowa 2017). “We independently evaluate the
    totality of the circumstances found in the record, including the evidence
    introduced at both the suppression hearing and at trial.” State v. Gaskins, 
    866 N.W.2d 1
    , 5 (Iowa 2015) (citation omitted). We are not bound by the district
    court’s credibility determinations, but we can give them deference. See State v.
    Naujoks, 
    637 N.W.2d 101
    , 106 (Iowa 2001).
    III. Discussion.
    Taylor asserts the warrantless seizure and search of her makeup purse
    violated her constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment of the United
    States Constitution and under article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution. She
    5
    does not argue that we should evaluate her claims differently under the two
    constitutional provisions.    The United States Constitution and the Iowa
    Constitution both grant protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.
    See U.S. Const. amend. IV; Iowa Const. art. I, § 8. “We follow an independent
    approach in the application of our state constitution. However, when a party
    does not argue an independent approach, ‘we ordinarily apply the substantive
    federal standards but reserve the right to apply the standard in a fashion different
    from federal precedent.’” State v. McIver, 
    858 N.W.2d 699
    , 702 (Iowa 2015)
    (quoting State v. Tyler, 
    830 N.W.2d 288
    , 291-92 (Iowa 2013)).
    “Searches conducted without a warrant are per se unreasonable, ‘subject
    only to a few specifically established and well-delineated exceptions.’” State v.
    Watts, 
    801 N.W.2d 845
    , 850 (Iowa 2011) (quoting Katz v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 357 (1967)).       Iowa law recognizes exceptions to the warrant
    requirement for “searches based on consent, plain view, probable cause coupled
    with exigent circumstances, searches incident to arrest, and those based on the
    emergency aid exception.” State v. Lewis, 
    675 N.W.2d 516
    , 522 (Iowa 2004).
    The State has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that an
    exception to the warrant requirement applies.       See State v. Simmons, 
    714 N.W.2d 264
    , 272 (Iowa 2006). If the State fails to meet its burden, evidence
    obtained in violation of the warrant requirement is inadmissible. See State v.
    Crawford, 
    659 N.W.2d 537
    , 541 (Iowa 2003).
    If “‘the facts and circumstances would lead a reasonably prudent person to
    believe that the vehicle contains contraband,’” probable cause to search the
    vehicle exists. State v. Edgington, 
    487 N.W.2d 675
    , 678 (Iowa 1992) (quoting
    6
    United States v. Strickland, 
    902 F.2d 937
    , 942-43 (11th Cir. 1990)). “The facts
    and circumstances upon which a finding of probable cause is based include ‘the
    sum total . . . and the synthesis of what the police have heard, what they know,
    and what they observe as trained officers.’” 
    Id. “[P]robable cause
    need not rise
    to the level of proof required for conviction, or even indictment, [but] it requires
    ‘more than bare suspicion.’” State v. Horton, 
    625 N.W.2d 362
    , 365 (Iowa 2001)
    (citation omitted). In considering whether Deputy Oostra had probable cause to
    seize and search Taylor’s makeup pouch, we conduct “an independent
    evaluation of the totality of the circumstances as shown by the entire record.”
    State v. Maddox, 
    670 N.W.2d 168
    , 171 (Iowa 2003) (quoting 
    Crawford, 659 N.W.2d at 541
    ).
    There is no dispute the deputy would have had sufficient probable cause
    to seize and search Taylor’s makeup purse upon observation of evidence of
    drugs within the purse. See, e.g., State v. Cullor, 
    315 N.W.2d 808
    , 811 (Iowa
    1982) (“Items in plain view within a car, viewed by police officers standing outside
    the car where they have a right to be, can furnish probable cause for a
    subsequent search of the car.”); see also State v. Eubanks, 
    355 N.W.2d 57
    , 60
    (Iowa 1984) (“Once the patrolman lawfully stopped the car and had probable
    cause to search for contraband, all containers within the car when it was stopped
    were fair game for the car search. [Eubanks] had no right to insulate her purse
    or any other container from a lawful warrantless search by the simple expedient
    of physically removing the purse and its contents from the car while the search
    was in progress.”).
    7
    Taylor does not argue the traffic stop was invalid, the deputy was not in a
    place he had a right to be, or the seized baggie was not in plain view to the
    deputy.    Rather, Taylor argues the plain view exception to the warrant
    requirement is not applicable here because the incriminating nature of the baggie
    was not known or immediately apparent to the officer when he observed it.
    Taylor asserts the incriminating nature of the baggie was not known to the deputy
    and that “[t]he ultimate seizure of the property, the subsequent statements of
    [Taylor], and finally the lab test results of the baggies, cannot retroactively create
    reasonable grounds for the [deputy] to believe that the layered, non-transparent,
    object that he glimpsed momentarily were in fact contraband.”
    The State had the burden of proving the seized baggie’s “‘incriminating
    character’ was ‘immediately apparent.’” 
    McGrane, 733 N.W.2d at 680
    (citations
    omitted). At the suppression hearing, the deputy testified on direct examination:
    Q. And where was that identification card? A. It was in a
    small makeup-sized case that was in her purse.
    Q. Did she take this purse out? A. Yes, she did.
    Q. Did you see anything in the purse? A. Yes. When she
    was opening this makeup case she opened it right where I could
    look into it, she took out her ID card. While looking into it I could
    see a small container used to hold illegal substances quite often.
    Q. Could you describe that small container. A. It was a small
    three-quarters by inch and three-quarters or so sized little baggie.
    ....
    Q. And you observed that on—from—without holding the
    purse? A. No, she was holding the purse, zipped it open in this
    fashion, was trying to get her ID card out. There was numerous
    other papers, other documents. This baggie was sitting right on top
    (gesturing).
    Q. In your past training and experience as a law
    enforcement officer what are those baggies typically used for?
    A. Generally these baggies are used for holding illegal substances,
    methamphetamine, cocaine.
    Q. Is that what you perceived them to be containing that
    day? A. Yes.
    8
    Plastic baggies are commonly used as a container for narcotics and are
    known for their use in the drug trade. See State v. Carter, 
    696 N.W.2d 31
    , 38
    (Iowa 2005).    Deputy Oostra had previously seen other individuals package
    narcotics in small baggies like the one he observed in Taylor’s makeup purse.
    This was not a garden variety sandwich-sized baggie. An officer’s training and
    experience may be taken into account when determining whether the
    incriminating nature of the evidence was readily apparent to the officer. See 
    id. at 37.
    The deputy could also take into account Taylor’s furtive actions in trying to
    hide the baggie. After he asked Taylor what was in the baggie, Taylor
    then reached down, got her purse back out that was containing this
    little blue baggie. She opened it up again so I could not see it and
    started jiggling it in her hand as though to probably try to cover
    what I had seen. I then . . . told her to give me the bag and she did.
    There is no requirement that the State prove Deputy Oostra “knew” the
    baggie contained illicit drugs before seizing it. The State only needed to prove
    Deputy Oostra reasonably believed the baggie contained illicit drugs. Based on
    the totality of the circumstances, we believe the State satisfactorily proved that
    the baggie’s incriminating nature was immediately apparent to Deputy Oostra.
    Therefore, the deputy’s seizure and search fell within the plain view exception
    and was valid under both constitutions.
    IV. Conclusion.
    Because we conclude the search of Taylor’s purse fell within the plain
    view exception to the warrant requirement, we affirm the district court’s ruling and
    Taylor’s conviction.
    AFFIRMED.