DocketNumber: Nos. C-950912 and C-950927.
Judges: Hildebrandt, Doan, Bettman
Filed Date: 12/24/1996
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The facts are as follows. Around 11 p.m. on August 14, 1995, Cincinnati Police Sergeant Donald Luck was patrolling Metropolitan Housing Authority property in Winton Terrace Findlater Gardens ("Winton Terrace"), an alleged high-crime and drug-trafficking area, when he noticed a stopped car. The car was driven by Nathan Hill. Sergeant Luck testified that three young African-American men stood around the car, and that one of the men was leaning toward the passenger's window. When the marked police vehicle approached, the gentleman leaning stood up and abruptly left, and the young men fled from the area. Sergeant Luck checked the license plate number of the car Hill was driving and discovered that it was registered to an individual who resided outside the Winton Terrace area. *Page 32
Based on these facts, Sergeant Luck, a ten-year veteran of the police force, decided "to see what his [Hill's] business was on Metropolitan Housing Authority Property." Sergeant Luck testified that he believed that he might have witnessed a drug transaction.3
Hill began to drive away and Sergeant Luck followed. After traveling a short distance, Hill stopped the car on his own accord on a public street. Sergeant Luck then turned on the lights of his police car, pulled his car behind Hill and asked to see Hill's driver's license. Hill, however, had no driver's license. Sergeant Luck therefore issued Hill a citation and informed Hill that he would be unable to drive the car further. At this point, Lang, who was nearby, stepped forward, claimed ownership of the car and stated that he would drive the car home.4
Before Lang could take the car, Sergeant Luck shined his flashlight into the interior of the vehicle. Sergeant Luck spotted what he believed to be a bag of crack cocaine partially covered by a piece of paper on the passenger seat.5 Upon seeing the cocaine, Sergeant Luck testified that he planned to hold the vehicle for forfeiture. He testified that he completed an inventory search of the automobile's contents, following normal police procedures. Sergeant Luck further testified that he checked the trunk and that Lang told him that all the contents therein belonged to Lang. While looking in the trunk, Lang took a small box from one side of the trunk and tossed it on top of a purse on the other side. Lang told Sergeant Luck that the purse contained $1,800, which belonged to his girlfriend. Sergeant Luck opened the purse and found approximately $3,250 and some cocaine. Next to the purse, in a brown lunch bag, Sergeant Luck found more cocaine. He then placed Lang under arrest. Based on these facts, the trial court denied Lang's motion to suppress.
Lang's assignment of error raises two distinct questions, which we will address separately. First, Lang contends that the seizure of contraband from his automobile violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures and that, therefore, the trial court should have granted his motion to suppress the evidence seized from his trunk. In his motion to suppress, Lang contested the search of his automobile on the ground that the *Page 33 police lacked probable cause to conduct a warrantless search. This assignment of error is overruled.
Initially, in his argument, Lang questions the sufficiency of the probable cause to stop the automobile. Even assuming for the sake of argument that Sergeant Luck seized Hill pursuant to an investigatory stop in contravention of the principles ofTerry v. Ohio (1968),
It is uncontroverted that Hill stopped the vehicle on his own accord, prior to any show of authority by Sergeant Luck. Lang watched Sergeant Luck from behind the sidewalk while the sergeant spoke with Hill and did not make his presence known until Sergeant Luck informed Hill he would not be permitted to drive the vehicle because he lacked a driver's license. Lang then approached the sergeant and claimed ownership of the vehicle, expressing a desire to take it. This interaction between Lang and Sergeant Luck was an encounter outside the boundaries of the Fourth Amendment in that Lang initiated the contact. There is no evidence to demonstrate any assertion of authority by the police towards Lang at this point. See United States v. Pajari (C.A.8, 1983),
However, under the facts of this case as they pertain to Lang, we do not believe Fourth Amendment analysis is applicable to each stage of the episode that culminated in the seizure of the cocaine from Lang's trunk. "The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable government intrusions into areas where legitimate expectations of privacy exist." State v. Claytor
(1993),
The dissent examines the propriety of the discovery of the evidence on the front seat of the vehicle under the "plain view" doctrine, which does invoke Fourth Amendment analysis in that it occurs when a search is in progress. We believe, however, that a different sort of plain view, which does not trigger Fourth Amendment concerns as to the discovery of the cocaine in the front seat, is more applicable. The distinctions between these two analyses are as follows:
"``The fact that there is a plain view in the Coolidge [v. NewHampshire (1971)
"``By comparison, the concern here is with plain view in aquite different sense, namely, as descriptive of a situation inwhich there has been no search at *Page 35 all in the Fourth Amendment sense. This situation, which perhapsis deserving of a different label so as to avoid confusion of itwith that discussed in Coolidge, encompasses those circumstancesin which an observation is made by a police officer without aprior physical intrusion into a constitutionally protected area.This includes the case in which an officer discovers an object which has been left in an ``open field' or similar nonprotected area, and also those cases in which an officer — again, withoutmaking a prior physical intrusion — sees an object on the person of an individual, within premises, or within a vehicle. In each of these instances there has been no search at all because of the plain view character of the situation, and this means that the observation is lawful without the necessity of establishing either pre-existing probable cause or the existence of a search warrant or one of the traditional exceptions to the warrant requirement.
"``It is extremely important to understand that the kind of plain view described in the preceding paragraph, because it involves no intrusion covered by the Fourth Amendment, need not meet the three requirements set out in the Coolidge plurality opinion. By definition, there is no prior valid intrusion. Whether it is immediately apparent that what has been observed is evidence of crime may have a bearing upon what the police may do as a result of this nonsearch observation, but it is clearly irrelevant to the threshold issue of whether the observation was a search.' (Footnotes omitted and emphasis added.) 1 LaFave, Search and Seizure (2 Ed. 1987) 321-322, Section 2.2(a)."State v. Claytor,
See, also, State v. Harris,
As to the subsequent warrantless search of Lang's trunk, this court has previously set forth the required analysis:
"It is now well settled that the absence of a warrant does not render an automobile search invalid on constitutional grounds. All that is required to support a warrantless intrusion is probable cause to believe that a particular vehicle is carrying evidence of a crime. Michigan v. Thomas (1982),
We are persuaded that the discovery of the Baggies of cocaine in open view on the front seat of the vehicle provided Sergeant Luck the required probable cause to search the vehicle's trunk.
In his argument supporting the second portion of his assignment of error, Lang contends that the jury's finding of guilt was against the manifest weight of the evidence, but he then addresses sufficiency concerns. Thus, we will address both the sufficiency and the weight of the evidence.
"The test for the sufficiency of evidence is whether any rational trier of fact, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, could have found the elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt." State v. Allen (1995),
Officer Luck testified that he found two Baggies of cocaine on the front passenger seat and that, in the trunk, he found the purse, the money and some cocaine bundled in the money, which Lang tried to cover with the small box. He testified that the cocaine he found in the paper bag in the trunk was bundled as if for sale on the street. The drug analyst of the Hamilton County Coroner's office testified that the cocaine found in Lang's automobile was over three times the bulk amount of cocaine. Lang's girlfriend testified that she had never seen the purse before and that the money did not belong to her.
Hill testified that he approached Lang to buy cocaine and that Lang told him that he had some on the front seat of his automobile and asked Hill to get into the vehicle. Hill had known Lang for some time and the two of them had worked on the vehicle earlier in the afternoon. Hill stated that he had no idea what was in the trunk of the automobile. Hill denied that the money and the cocaine found in the automobile were his.
Lang testified that he gave Hill his automobile so Hill could fix the brakes and did not see it again until Hill and Officer Luck stopped beside the road. Lang testified that he gave Officer Luck permission to search his vehicle. He denied being alongside Officer Luck when he searched the trunk, that he identified the money as his girlfriend's, and that he threw a box over the purse. Officer Brazile, who had previously testified on Lang's behalf about Lang's community service and who had responded to a call from the scene, testified on rebuttal that Officer Luck received consent to search the automobile and that he observed Lang standing next to Officer Luck when he found the purse. Based on the above evidence, we conclude that the evidence was substantial enough for the jury to have reasonably concluded that the state had proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Lang had engaged in drug trafficking as set forth in R.C.
Therefore, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *Page 38
DOAN, J., concurs separately.
MARIANNA BROWN BETTMAN, P.J., dissents.