State v. Rogers
State v. Rogers
Opinion
*152 **398 During a drug investigation, law enforcement officers pulled defendant over and discovered two bags of crack cocaine hidden behind the gas-cap door of the car that he was driving. After the trial court denied defendant's motion to dismiss, defendant was convicted of, among other things, keeping or maintaining a vehicle which is used for the keeping or selling of controlled substances. We hold that it can reasonably be inferred from the evidence at trial, when viewed in the light most favorable to the State, that defendant had kept the car that he was driving, and that he was using that car to store crack cocaine when he was arrested. We therefore conclude that the trial court correctly denied defendant's motion to dismiss as to the charge of keeping or maintaining a vehicle which is used for the keeping or selling of controlled substances.
Detective Evan Luther of the New Hanover County Sheriff's Office Vice and Narcotics Unit became familiar with defendant over the course of a months-long drug investigation. On 8 August 2013, while that investigation was ongoing, Detective Luther obtained information implicating defendant in drug activity that, according to Detective Luther's trial testimony, "needed to be acted upon that day." Detective Luther also learned that defendant would be driving a particular white Cadillac and staying in Room 129 of a specific Econo Lodge hotel. After obtaining this information, Detective Luther began the process of getting a search warrant for the hotel room and the Cadillac. While he was doing so, he told assisting officers that defendant was "wanted on outstanding warrants"
**399 and that, as a result, officers could initiate contact with defendant at any time.
As part of Detective Luther's investigation, Lieutenant Leslie Wyatt of the New Hanover County Sheriff's Office went to set up surveillance at the hotel where defendant was expected to be. When Lieutenant Wyatt got there, he spotted a Cadillac matching the description that Detective Luther had given him. Lieutenant Wyatt briefly went to a nearby gas station, and when he got back, the Cadillac was gone. About ten minutes after Lieutenant Wyatt had set up stationary surveillance on the hotel, the Cadillac returned and parked in front of Room 129. Defendant, who was the only person in the car, got out and went into that room. He stayed there for about forty-five minutes but then left the room and drove away in the Cadillac. At least one officer stayed behind to conduct surveillance on the hotel room.
Other officers followed defendant as he drove to an apartment complex, turned around, left the complex, and continued driving. This behavior was "[i]ndicative of someone seeing if they're being followed," according to Lieutenant Wyatt's trial testimony, so the officers pulled defendant over. Defendant was alone in the car, and the officers arrested him based on his outstanding warrants. While defendant was in custody, his cell phone continuously received calls and text messages. A contact named "Surf City Lick" called a number of times and sent several text messages, and a contact named "Mexican Friend Lick" also called a number of times. The word "lick," Detective Luther testified, is a slang term for someone who purchases drugs. Detective Luther also testified that the contents of some of the text messages, which the arresting officers could see on the screen of the phone, could be consistent with a customer's asking if a drug delivery was forthcoming.
The officers who arrested defendant took defendant and the Cadillac back to the hotel. Detective Luther arrived at the hotel shortly thereafter with a signed warrant to search the Cadillac and Room 129 of the hotel. Collectively, the officers at the hotel had conducted surveillance for about an hour and a half before they executed the search warrant. When officers searched the Cadillac, they found two purple plastic bags hidden in the small space behind the door covering the gas cap. Both bags contained crack cocaine. As in many cars, the gas-cap compartment of the Cadillac was accessible only by operating a switch inside the car. When the officers searched inside the car, they found a marijuana cigarette, $243 in cash hidden inside a boot, and a service receipt dated 29 May 2013 with defendant's name printed on it.
**400 Meanwhile, the officers who searched the hotel room found two purple plastic bags *153 containing a much larger amount of crack cocaine hidden behind the toilet paper holder in the bathroom. The purple bags in the hotel room were the same type of bags as those found in the gas-cap compartment of the Cadillac. Officers also found a number of small Ziploc bags in the hotel room-bags that, according to Detective Luther, drug dealers commonly use to package drugs into smaller amounts for sale. Finally, officers found a digital scale disguised to look like an MP3 player in the hotel room. Investigating officers determined that the car was registered to someone other than defendant, that the hotel room was checked out under someone else's name, and that defendant did not leave personal luggage inside the hotel room. These practices, Detective Luther testified, are consistent with drug sale activity.
Defendant was indicted for possession with intent to manufacture, sell, and/or deliver cocaine; manufacture of cocaine; possession of cocaine; keeping or maintaining a vehicle which is used for the keeping or selling of a controlled substance; possession of drug paraphernalia; possession of up to one-half ounce of marijuana; and having attained the status of a habitual felon. The State declined to proceed on the manufacture-of-cocaine charge. At the close of the State's evidence, defendant moved to dismiss all of the remaining charges against him. The trial court granted the motion as to the possession-of-cocaine charge, but denied the motion as to all other remaining charges. The jury found defendant guilty of all of these charges.
Defendant appealed to the Court of Appeals, arguing, among other things, that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the charge of keeping or maintaining a vehicle which is used for the keeping or selling of a controlled substance. In an opinion that split on this issue, the Court of Appeals reversed that conviction. The majority held that there was insufficient evidence that defendant kept or maintained the Cadillac, and also held that "there was insufficient evidence that defendant used [the Cadillac] on any prior occasion for the purpose of keeping or selling a controlled substance."
State v. Rogers
, --- N.C. App. ----, ----, ----,
Defendant was convicted of keeping or maintaining a car which is used for the keeping or selling of a controlled substance in violation
**401
of N.C.G.S. § 90-108(a)(7). That provision says, in pertinent part, that "[i]t shall be unlawful for any person ... [t]o knowingly keep or maintain any ... vehicle ... which is used for the keeping or selling of [controlled substances] in violation of this Article." N.C.G.S. § 90-108(a)(7) (2017). To prove a defendant guilty under this portion of subsection 90-108(a)(7), the State must prove that the defendant "(1) knowingly (2) ke[pt] or maintain[ed] (3) a vehicle (4) which [wa]s used for the keeping or selling (5) of controlled substances."
State v. Mitchell
,
In this case, officers conducted surveillance for approximately an hour and a half on the day that defendant was arrested. During that time, they did not see any person other than defendant driving or occupying the Cadillac. A subsequent search of the Cadillac revealed two bags of crack cocaine stored in the gas-cap compartment. Thus, the only issues before us are whether there was substantial evidence to show that defendant "ke[pt] or maintain[ed]" the Cadillac and, if so, whether there was substantial evidence that the Cadillac was "used for the keeping ... of" controlled substances. 1
**402
"In the construction of any statute, ... words must be given their common and ordinary meaning, nothing else appearing."
In re Clayton-Marcus Co.
,
In this case, officers conducted surveillance for about an hour and a half before searching the Cadillac and defendant's hotel room. During their surveillance, the officers saw defendant arrive at the hotel in the Cadillac, stay in his room awhile, and then leave in the Cadillac. Defendant, moreover, was the only person that the officers saw using the car. And let's not forget an additional, very important piece of evidence: the service receipt found inside the Cadillac bearing defendant's name-a receipt that bore a date from about two and a half months before defendant's arrest. Viewing this evidence in the light most favorable to the State, and drawing all reasonable inferences from it, we hold that a reasonable jury could conclude that defendant had possessed the **403 car for about two and a half months, at the very least. 2 The State therefore presented *155 sufficient evidence that defendant "ke[pt]" the Cadillac.
We thus turn to the other issue before us: whether the State presented sufficient evidence that defendant used the Cadillac "for the keeping ... of" illegal drugs. N.C.G.S. § 90-108(a)(7). Ordinarily, "words used in one place in [a] statute have the same meaning in every other place in the statute."
Campbell v. First Baptist Church of Durham
,
In this case, the State presented substantial evidence that defendant was using the Cadillac to store crack cocaine. Officers found the cocaine hidden in, of all places, the gas-cap compartment. At no point did the officers see anyone other than defendant use the Cadillac or access its gas-cap compartment, nor did the officers see defendant himself access the gas-cap compartment at any point during their observation period. So a jury could reasonably infer that the bags of cocaine had been placed **404 there before the Cadillac was under stationary surveillance-indeed, that seems to be the only plausible inference. And defendant's actions-arriving at the hotel, staying there for about forty-five minutes while the drugs evidently stayed hidden in the gas-cap compartment, and leaving in the Cadillac again-seem to indicate that defendant was not using the car only to transport drugs from one place to another. 3 Plus, a defendant who wants to store contraband will, all other things equal, want to store it in a hidden place, which is exactly what putting the cocaine in the gas-cap compartment would accomplish. Finally, putting the drugs in a place that is somewhat hard to access-and that is not inside the passenger compartment of the car at all-likewise suggests storage rather than mere transportation. So, when viewing this evidence in the light most favorable to the State and drawing all reasonable inferences from it, the evidence indicates that defendant was using the Cadillac to store cocaine within it.
In addition, the evidence suggesting that defendant was involved in selling drugs also permits us to draw a reasonable inference that defendant was using the Cadillac to store cocaine. Officers found $243 in cash hidden inside a boot kept in the car, and the continuous stream of calls and messages to defendant's phone when defendant was in custody suggested that he was about to conduct a drug sale. The cocaine found inside the gas-cap compartment of the Cadillac, moreover, was stored in purple plastic bags of the same color, type, and size as the bags of cocaine that officers found in defendant's hotel room. And when officers searched the hotel room, they also found a number of *156 smaller Ziploc bags and a digital scale that was disguised to look like something else. These circumstances, when viewed in the light most favorable to the State, indicate that defendant used the hotel room to split up large amounts of crack cocaine into smaller portions that he would then store inside the Cadillac until they were sold.
This Court has discussed subsection 90-108(a)(7) on only one prior occasion, in
State v. Mitchell
,
**405
The store clerk then called the police, at which time the defendant left the store.
The main dispute in
Mitchell
was whether the State presented substantial evidence that the defendant's car "was used for keeping or selling marijuana."
In
Mitchell
, the State's evidence from the night that the defendant went to the convenience store was sufficient to raise an inference that the defendant temporarily possessed marijuana in his car, but nothing more.
Even though
Mitchell
reached the correct result, however, part of its reasoning was inconsistent with the text of subsection 90-108(a)(7). Specifically,
Mitchell
interpreted "the keeping ... of [drugs]" to mean
**406
"not just possession, but possession that occurs over a duration of time."
In sum, viewing the evidence in this case in the light most favorable to the State and drawing all reasonable inferences from that evidence, a reasonable jury could find that defendant kept the Cadillac in question and that defendant used that Cadillac to store crack cocaine. The trial court correctly denied defendant's motion to dismiss the charge of keeping or maintaining a vehicle which is used for the keeping or selling of controlled substances. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals as to the issue before us. The remaining issues that the Court of Appeals addressed are not before us, and we leave its decision as to those issues undisturbed.
REVERSED.
A defendant may be convicted of violating subsection 90-108(a)(7) if he keeps or maintains a vehicle which is used for "the keeping
or
selling of" drugs. (Emphasis added.) The Court of Appeals majority failed to analyze whether substantial evidence supported the theory that the Cadillac that defendant was driving was used for the
selling
of drugs-even though the State made that argument on appeal. Because the Court of Appeals majority did not conduct this analysis,
see
Rogers
, --- N.C. App. at ----,
Possessing a car for two and a half months is sufficient to show that an individual "ke[pt]" a car under subsection 90-108(a)(7). But we do not mean to imply that possession for that long is necessary to satisfy that element. "[K]eep[ing]" a car for a much shorter period of time may suffice-we need not, and do not, take any position on that to decide this case. And, of course, as we have already suggested, the State may also be able to prove that a defendant has "ke[pt]" a car by proving that the defendant possessed a car, and that he intended to continue possessing it in the future, when he was arrested.
Of course, if a defendant used a car to transport illegal drugs to, for instance, a drug sale, that fact might well be evidence that he was "us[ing]" the car "for the ... selling of " controlled substances. See N.C.G.S. § 90-108(a)(7) (emphasis added). But, as we have already said, we are not addressing the "selling" element of subsection 90-108(a)(7) due to the limited scope of this appeal.
As we have already suggested in footnote 3, though, evidence that a defendant has transported or possessed drugs inside a car may, in conjunction with additional evidence, be enough to satisfy the " selling " element of subsection 90-108(a)(7). (Emphasis added.)
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of North Carolina v. Antwarn Lee ROGERS
- Cited By
- 17 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Whether the State presented sufficient evidence to survive defendant's motion to dismiss a charge of keeping or maintaining a vehicle which is used for the keeping or selling of a controlled substance.