State v. Huff, Unpublished Decision (6-10-1999)
State v. Huff, Unpublished Decision (6-10-1999)
Dissenting Opinion
I respectfully dissent. The trial court sua sponte raised the issue of standing when it made a factual finding that the appellant was neither "an owner or occupant" of the home. While a trial court can generally raise an issue sua sponte,
fundamental fairness usually requires the court to give each side an opportunity to present evidence on the new issue. Generally, see State Ex Rel. Edwards v. Toledo Bd. Of Edn.
(1995),
Here, I would remand this cause to the trial court with instructions to make a finding regarding standing after it gives each side notice and an opportunity to present evidence about whether the appellant was an occupant of the home in question.
Thus, I dissent.
The Court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this Court directing the Hillsboro Municipal Court to carry this judgment into execution.
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute that mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure. Exceptions.
Kline, P.J.: Dissents with Opinion
Evans, J.: Concurs in Judgment Opinion
For the Court
BY: ___________________________ Peter B. Abele, Judge
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction and sentence entered by the Hillsboro Municipal Court, upon a bench trial, finding Rachelle Marie Huff, defendant below and appellant herein, guilty of underage drinking in violation of R.C.
"THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN OVERRULING APPELLANT'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS EVIDENCE OBTAINED WITHOUT WARRANT BY ENCROACHMENT OF OFFICERS ONTO THE CURTILAGE AND UPON DOING SO GAINING A POSITION ENABLING THEM TO VIEW INTO THE HOME OF THE APPELLANT THROUGH THE WINDOWS.
BY UNAUTHORIZED ENTRY INTO THE HOME OF APPELLANT WITHOUT INVITATION, WARRANT, OR THE EXISTENCE OF EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCES.
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN OVERRULING THE MOTION OF APPELLANT TO SUPPRESS PHYSICAL EVIDENCE SEIZED FROM THE RESIDENCE, AND BY OVERRULING APPELLANT'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS STATEMENTS OF APPELLANT TO OFFICER UPON BEING QUESTIONED WITHOUT MIRANDA WARNINGS, AND AFTER THE OFFICER HAD KNOCKED, ANNOUNCED THEIR PRESENCE, ENTERED AND SECURED THE APPELLANT[']S HOME.
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN OVERRULING THE MOTION TO SUPPRESS RENEWED AT TRIAL, INCLUDING THE CONDUCT OF HGN TESTING; AND THE TAKING OF ORAL STATEMENTS. THE COURT FURTHER ERRED IN OVERRULING DEFENSE OBJECTION TO THE EVIDENCE OBTAINED BY UNAUTHORIZED PEEKING THROUGH THE WINDOWS OF APPELLANT'S HOME WHILE IN THE CURTILAGE SURROUNDING THE HOME.
THE PROSECUTION RELIES UPON THE PLAIN VIEW DOCTRINE IN THE MAKING OF ITS CASE, AND AS FOUNDATION FOR THE OFFICER['] ENCROACHMENT ON THE PROPERTY SURROUNDING APPELLANT'S HOME, AND THE SURREPTITIOUS VIEW THROUGH THE APPELLANT'S WINDOWS AND THE OBSERVATIONS RESULTING FROM SUCH CONDUCT.
IN STATE V. HOWARD, (App 4 dist 1991)
75 Ohio App.3d 760 ,600 N.E.2d 809 , OFFICERS WERE ATTEMPTING A TAKING INTO CUSTODY OF ONE HAMILTON ON WHOM THEY HAD A WARRANT TO ARREST. THE SUBJECT WAS IN HOWARD[']S HOME AND WAS SEEN BY THE OFFICERS LOOKING INTO THE HOME THROUGH THE WINDOW. THE COURT REJECTED THIS ARGUMENT, HOLDING THAT ABSENT WARRANT TO SEARCH OR OTHER EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCES EXCUSING THE WARRANT REQUIREMENT ENTRY WAS BARRED BY THEFOURTH AMENDMENT.IN HOWARD SUPRA, THE COURT AFTER SETTING FORWARD THE LANGUAGE OF THE
4TH AMENDMENT, U.S. CONSTITUTION:'THE RIGHT OF THE PEOPLE TO BE SECURE IN THEIR PERSONS, HOUSES, PAPERS, AND EFFECTS AGAINST UNREASONABLE SEARCHES AND SEIZURES SHALL NOT BE VIOLATED, AND NO WARRANTS SHALL ISSUE BUT UPON PROBABLE CAUSE, SUPPORTED BY OATH OR AFFIRMATION, AND PARTICULARLY DESCRIBING THE PLACE TO BE SEARCHED AND THE PERSONS OR THINGS TO BE SEIZED.'
THE 4TH AMENDMENT PROTECTS AGAINST UNREASONABLE GOVERNMENT INTRUSIONS INTO AREAS WHERE LEGITIMATE EXPECTATIONS OF PRIVACY EXIST. UNITED STATES V. CHADWICK (1977)
433 U.S. 1 ,97 S.Ct. 2476 .THE REJECTION OF THE 'VIEW THROUGH THE WINDOW' IN HOWLAND, SUPRA WAS HELD TO BE INSUFFICIENT AS JUSTIFICATION FOR THE ENTRY AND TAKING OF THE APPELLANT IN THE CASE IS OF LARGE ASSISTANCE THEREIN WHERE POLICE OFFICERS HAVE RELIED AN UNAUTHORIZED ENCROACHMENT ONTO THE PROPERTY WHICH APPELLANT HAD A REASONABLE EXPECTATION OF PRIVACY, AND FROM SUCH VANTAGE POINT TO ENGAGE IN LOOKING INTO THE HOME THROUGH THE WINDOW IS EQUALLY SUSPECT. AND THE CLAIM OF RIGHTFUL SEIZING OF EITHER PERSONS OR THINGS BECAUSE OF EXIGENCY IS NOT CLEARLY MADE OUT AND FOR SUCH REASON THE ENTRY, THE QUESTIONING, AND THE SUBJECTION OF APPELLANT TO TESTING ARE ALL EVENTS CLEARLY DENIED THE STATE BY THE 4TH AMENDMENT PROTECTIONS."1
The record reveals the following facts pertinent to this appeal. In the early morning hours of May 30, 1998, a dispatch went out from the Hillsboro Police Department concerning possible domestic violence at a residence located on Holmes Street in Hillsboro, Ohio. Three (3) patrolmen, Officers Priest, Reffit and Williams, responded to the dispatch. Officer Priest arrived first on the scene, and he went to the side of the suspected residence (where the "front door" was located) to investigate and see if he could "hear anything." He apparently detected nothing from inside the suspected residence but did hear "a large commotion coming from the back" of the house next door.
Thinking that this might be the location of the suspected domestic violence, Officer Priest investigated. He was joined by Officers Reffit and Williams and all three (3) of them observed, "through the open kitchen window and the open kitchen door window," a number of young people sitting around a table, playing cards and drinking beer.2 Officer Priest approached the door, knocked and announced that they were Hillsboro policemen. Several of the youngsters inside ran toward the front of the house and, at this point, the officers entered the premises and secured the scene.
Appellant was one of the individuals inside the house. She had an odor of alcohol about her and she admitted to the patrolmen that she had been "consuming" beer that evening just "like the rest of them." Officer Reffit gave appellant a horizontal gaze nystagmus test (hereinafter referred to as "HGN") and, after receiving a positive result, Officer Williams transported her to the Police Department where a breath test was administered. The results of that test showed .058 grams of alcohol in her breath.3
Officer Priest filed a criminal complaint on June 1, 1998 charging appellant with underage drinking in violation of R.C.
On August 20, 1998 the trial court held a bench trial. There was never any question in this case that appellant had committed the offense for which she had been charged. Joshua Keets, a defense witness, even testified that appellant was among the group at the house that evening who were all "playing cards and drinking some alcohol." Officer Priest also testified that appellant had admitted to him that she had been drinking beer. None of this evidence was ever contradicted. Instead, the focus of the trial centered on the propriety of the actions taken by police. The trial court repeated its decision overruling appellant's motion to suppress evidence and, ultimately, found her guilty. She was given a one hundred eighty (180) day suspended jail sentence, a $100 fine, three (3) years probation and ordered to perform twenty (20) hours of community service. A judgment to that effect was entered the same day and this appeal followed.
The gist of appellant's lengthy assignment of error is that the trial court erred in overruling her motion to suppress evidence. It should be noted at the outset that appellate review of this ruling presents a mixed question of law and fact. See United States v. Martinez (C.A. 11 1992),
Appellant essentially advanced three (3) arguments for suppressing the evidence below. The first of these arguments dealt with the presence of Officers Priest, Reffit and Williams on the premises and their subsequent entry into the home. Appellant asserted that the officers were unlawfully "peep[ing]" into the house and then unconstitutionally entered the home without an invitation, warrant or the existence of exigent circumstances. The second argument she advanced for suppressing the evidence was that the officers never informed her of her constitutional right to remain silent or to refuse to answer questions. Finally, appellant argued that she was never informed of any right to refuse to submit to the HGN or breath test. She concluded that the results of those tests should, likewise, be suppressed. These arguments all raise different issues and will be addressed separately.
We first consider the presence of the patrolmen on the property and their subsequent entry into the home. Our analysis begins with the
In the instant case the officers responded to a report of suspected domestic violence at a residence on Holmes Street. Officer Priest approached the suspected residence but found nothing to indicate a disturbance therein. He then turned his attention to the house next door from which loud noises could be heard. Thinking that this might be the location of the suspected domestic violence, Priest stood in or around a gravel driveway separating the two (2) houses and observed through the window what appeared to be a number of "underage" individuals drinking alcohol. He and the other two officers then approached the dwelling.
There is no question that police are privileged to go upon private property in the exercise of their duties. State v.Israel (Sep. 26, 1997), Hamilton App. No. C-961006, unreported. The officers in the cause sub judice were investigating a report of domestic violence in the area of these two (2) houses. Such conduct was manifestly within the scope of their official duties and this was not a case of surreptitious "peeping" as appellant would have us believe. Moreover, the illegal activity at issue here (i.e. underage drinking) was clearly visible to the officers from several open windows. This tends to negate any claim of privacy or assertion by appellant that her
This brings us to the considerably more problematic question of whether the officers could lawfully enter the premises without a warrant. It is well settled law that the
It is true that one of the exigent circumstances justifying a warrantless entry into a home is when police are in "hot pursuit" of a fleeing suspect. See United States v. Santana
(1976),
We are equally unpersuaded by the State's arguments that the evidence was "easily destructible." A warrantless entry into a residence may be justified in some circumstances in which evidence is in danger of being removed or destroyed in the amount of time it would take police to obtain a warrant. Katz, Ohio Arrest, Search and Seizure (1998 Ed.) 171, § T10.02; alsosee State v. Hickson (1990),
The State's final argument is that exigent circumstances existed because the officer's witnessed a crime (underage drinking) being committed. Again, we are not persuaded. The United States Supreme Court in Welsh, supra at 752, indicated that the gravity of the underlying offense is an important factor to be considered in deciding if an exigency exists. However, the Court refused to apply the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement where the police entered a suspect's home to arrest him for a non-criminal traffic offense. Id. at 753. That holding has been interpreted as limiting exigent circumstances to serious crimes not including misdemeanors. See Shields, supra at 122,
In summary, this Court concludes that no exigent circumstances existed that would have allowed for a warrantless entry in the cause sub judice. Such entry was therefore unreasonable and in violation of the
The proper remedy for unreasonable entry into this home is to exclude from use at trial any evidence obtained by police subsequent to that entry. See generally United States v.Calandra (1974),
Accordingly, the trial court's judgment of conviction and sentence is reversed and the appellant is discharged.
JUDGMENT REVERSED.4
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