Smiley v. State
Smiley v. State
Opinion
Robert Clinton Smiley, the appellant, was charged in a single indictment with ten counts of robbery in the first degree. These charges were based on five separate robberies of store cashiers that occurred in Decatur in late October 1990. At the close of its case-in-chief, the State moved to dismiss the two charges relating to one of the robberies because the victim of that particular robbery did not appear at trial. The *Page 214 remaining eight counts were submitted to the jury, which returned four convictions of robbery in the third degree. The trial court sentenced the appellant as a habitual offender to fifteen years' imprisonment on each conviction, with two of the sentences to run consecutively and the remaining two to run concurrently with those running consecutively. Three issues are raised in this appeal; all three concern the search of the apartment in which incriminating items were found.1
The appellant was arrested around noon on November 1, 1990, on an outstanding misdemeanor warrant and for failing to appear on a speeding ticket. At the time of his arrest, the appellant was the suspected perpetrator of the robberies, having been identified by two police officers from their review of store surveillance video tapes of some of the robberies. The afternoon of the arrest, several Decatur police officers went to the residence of the appellant's mother because the appellant "stayed there sometimes." R. 19. With the written consent of the appellant's mother, Ms. Carolyn Langford, the officers searched her residence but found no incriminating evidence.
The appellant's sister, Ms. Rachel Wiggins, was present at Ms. Langford's residence when it was searched. Shortly after the search of Ms. Langford's residence, Ms. Wiggins accompanied the officers to the West Court Apartments. Once at the apartments, Ms. Wiggins signed a consent to search form for apartment # 11, which was leased to her. During the search of this apartment, the officers found a jacket, which was later identified by some of the robbery victims as the jacket worn by the robber, and a black starter's pistol, which was later identified by some of the robbery victims as the gun wielded by the robber.
A suppression hearing was held immediately prior to the appellant's trial. At this hearing, Decatur Police Detective Sergeant Johnny Coker testified that the officers went to the West Court apartment "[b]ecause Ms. Wiggins who was present at [Ms. Langford's residence] said that Mr. Smiley was staying at her residence sometimes." R. 20. Coker stated that Ms. Wiggins voluntarily accompanied the officers to the West Court Apartments, where she pointed out # 11 as her apartment. Coker also testified that Ms. Wiggins told the officers "that the apartment was hers," "that her brother, Mr. Smiley, was staying there with her consent," and "[t]hat her utilities had been cut off for lack of payment and the apartment was hers, but she stayed with her boyfriend sometime." R. 13-14. During the search of the apartment, the officers found "clothing in each bedroom. Some male, some female." R. 14.
Ms. Wiggins testified at the suppression hearing that, at the time of the search, she was staying with her boyfriend at 1601 Jackson Street, that she had been doing so "continuously" for "[a]bout four months," and that she did not have any clothes at the West Court apartment. R. 36. She stated that she had given her brother permission to live in the apartment, although they had no "formal agreement" about the matter, and that he had been living in the apartment "[a]bout a month" at the time of the search. R. 36-39. Ms. Wiggins also testified that she had given her brother the keys to the apartment and that she did not have a set of keys herself. She stated that "[t]he detectives had the keys to [her] apartment and [they] said [the appellant] had g[iven] them to them." R. 39. *Page 215
On cross-examination by the prosecutor, Ms. Wiggins stated that the West Court apartment was "listed in" her name, but that she did not pay any rent on this apartment because she "was under Section Eight." R. 45. Although she maintained that she had "basically moved out and was living with [her] boyfriend at the time," she testified that her "dishes and all of that" were still in the apartment. R. 44. She acknowledged that, while she had given her keys to the appellant, "really that was still [her] apartment, . . . [she] w[as] just letting him live there." R. 45.
In response to specific questioning by the trial judge, Ms. Wiggins acknowledged that she had "signed the lease . . . for this apartment," that she "had a right to come and go when [she] wanted to," that she had "a right to take that furniture out and dispose of it if [she] wanted to," that she had "a right to take the dishes out and dispose of them if [she] wanted to," that she had "a right to move back into that apartment and live there if [she] wanted to," and that she had "a right to remove the Defendant or tell him to leave the apartment and not come back." R. 46-48. At the close of the suppression hearing, the trial judge denied the appellant's motion to suppress, stating, "I find from the testimony that the consent was valid and that the search was proper, based upon that consent to search." R. 55.
The United States Supreme Court has made it clear that a valid consent to search may be given by a third party who "possesse[s] common authority over or other sufficient relationship to the premises or effects sought to be inspected." United States v. Matlock,
According to Detective Sergeant Coker, Ms. Wiggins stated unequivocally that the West Court apartment "was hers," although she was permitting the appellant to stay there. Compare United States v. Chaidez, 919 F.2d at 1201 (third party told officers " 'that she had rented the property for her [step]father,' " which raised the possibility of a sublease situation and, without further information, vitiated apparent authority). Ms. Wiggins' own testimony at the suppression hearing clearly established that she was the sole lessee of the West Court apartment and that she had not sublet the apartment to the appellant. Contrary to the appellant's assertion, the evidence also shows that Ms. Wiggins had not "abandoned" the apartment. Throughout her suppression hearing testimony, Ms. Wiggins referred to the West Court apartment as "my apartment." By her own admission, Ms. Wiggins had left her household possessions in the apartment. She acknowledged that she was merely allowing the appellant to live in the apartment and that she had the right to enter the apartment at any time, the right to remove *Page 216 her furniture and dishes, and the right to order the appellant to vacate the apartment. We also note that when defense counsel asked Ms. Wiggins where she was during the search of the apartment, she responded: "I was going back and forth. It was three of them [police officers]. One of them in my bedroom and one in my living room and my other room. I was going back and forth, trying to keep an eye on all of them." R. 42 (emphasis added).
Moreover, the trial judge had before him the testimony of Detective Sergeant Coker, who stated that Ms. Wiggins told the officers that "she stayed there [at the West Court apartment] sometimes. Sometimes stayed with her boyfriend." R. 14. While Ms. Wiggins's testimony conflicted with Coker's on this point and as to whether she kept any clothes in the apartment, "conflicting evidence given at [a] suppression hearing presents a credibility choice for the trial court." Atwell v. State,
We note that Ms. Wiggins's testimony that she did not, at the time of the search, have a key to the apartment, was uncontested. We recognize that "possession of a key [to the premises searched] in itself has special significance" in determining the validity of a third party consent. UnitedStates v. Guzman,
Whether Ms. Wiggins had "moved out" of the West Court apartment was in dispute. However, she was undisputedly the sole lessee of the apartment, and she had left her furniture and household possessions there (as well as clothes, if Coker's testimony is to be believed). Ms. Wiggins was, by her own admission, concerned *Page 217 about those possessions and went "back and forth" in the apartment during the search so that she could "keep an eye" on the officers. Thus, there are a number of factors pointing to Ms. Wiggins's authority to consent to the search that more than offset her lack of a key. We find that it "was reasonable for the trial court to conclude that [Ms. Wiggins] retained actual authority to consent to the search of the [West Court apartment]." United States v. Brannan, 898 F.2d at 108.
At the suppression hearing, Ms. Wiggins testified that the police officers "told me that they could have a search warrant for my apartment within an hour or something. That's why I agreed to the search form or whatever, the consent form or whatever." R. 41. Her testimony on this point was uncontradicted.
When the State seeks to justify a search on the basis of consent, the prosecutor "has the burden of proving that the consent was, in fact, freely and voluntarily given."Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
McLemore v. State,"In order to establish the voluntariness of a consent, the prosecutor must prove two distinct elements: (1) that the consent 'was evidenced by a statement or some overt act sufficient to indicate an intent to waive the constitutional right,' and (2) that 'there was no duress or coercion, express or implied.' Both elements must be established by 'clear and positive testimony.' "
We observe at the outset that the State did nothing to satisfy its burden on the voluntariness aspect. It was defensecounsel who established through the testimony of Officer Gary Walker, who participated in the search of the West Court apartment, that Ms. Wiggins did not "appear to be intoxicated or under the influence of any kind of controlled substances or anything of that nature" when she executed the consent to search form. R. 33. Defense counsel also elicited from Ms. Wiggins the information that, other than the officers stating that they could get a search warrant for her apartment, there were no "other threats or promises, inducements or anything else that was said to [her] to make [her] sign" the consent to search form. R. 43.
A review of the totality of the circumstances surrounding Ms. Wiggins's consent reveals that the only factor that militates against a finding of voluntariness is the statement by the officers that they could obtain a search warrant for Ms. Wiggins's apartment.2 However, an officer's threat to obtain a search warrant does not necessarily vitiate consent. Miller v.State,
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Robert Clinton Smiley, Alias Willie Jones v. State of Alabama.
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published