State v. Cummings, Unpublished Decision (01-16-2002)
State v. Cummings, Unpublished Decision (01-16-2002)
Opinion of the Court
This cause was heard upon the record in the trial court. Each error assigned has been reviewed and the following disposition is made: Appellant State of Ohio has appealed from an order of the Summit County Court of Common Pleas granting Appellee Clifford Cummings, Jr.'s motion to suppress evidence. This Court affirms.
After checking the vehicle and not finding Brumback inside, the officers knocked on the door of 1125 Peerless Avenue. Cummings, the appellee herein, asked from inside the home what the officers wanted. One of the officers responded that if Cummings would come to the door, they would explain the situation. Cummings then came to the door and partially opened it. The officers asked Cummings if Brumback was in the home, or if Cummings knew his whereabouts. Cummings responded that Brumback was not there, and that he had not seen Brumback.
As the officers spoke with Cummings, they detected an odor of marijuana coming from within the home. According to Officer Sherman, Officer Vaughn then said "Fine, if [Brumback] ain't here, but what about your weed?" At that point, Cummings tried to close the door, but was unable to do so because Officer Sherman's foot was between the door and the doorframe.1 Officer Sherman then tried to push the door back open, as Officer Vaughn went to call for backup units.
The officers finally got the door open and began wrestling with Cummings inside the home as they tried to place him under arrest. During the scuffle, the officers observed a marijuana blunt burning in an ashtray. Cummings continued to struggle as the officers took him outside and tried to subdue him. After several shots from a taser brought by one of the backup officers, Cummings was finally brought under control, handcuffed, and placed in a police wagon.
Officer Sherman then went back inside the home along with Detectives Shadie and Shaeffer, who had arrived on the scene as backup, to tag the marijuana that Officer Sherman had observed burning in the ashtray during the struggle. Inside the home, Detective Shaeffer observed a picture of a young girl on the wall. Detective Shaeffer then initiated a search of the rest of the house to look for the child, and anyone else who might be in the home.
In an upstairs bedroom, Detective Shaeffer found a gun "in plain view" next to a bed, which he unloaded for his safety. In a closet of another bedroom, he discovered a pile of what appeared to be marijuana drying on the floor. Detective Shaeffer then proceeded to the basement, where he found a number of marijuana plants. No one, including the girl in the picture, was found during the search.
Detective Shaeffer then contacted Narcotics Detective Malick, who, based on the contraband discovered by Detective Shaeffer, obtained a search warrant for the premises. Before the warrant had been secured, the I.D. Bureau was also summoned to the home, and took pictures of the scene.
Cummings was indicted for two counts of assault stemming from the altercation with the police officers, in violation of R.C.
The trial court committed error suppressing the evidence in this case.
In its sole assignment of error, the state has argued that the trial court erred in granting Cummings' motion to suppress. Specifically, the state has contended that the officers did not violate Cummings'
An appellate court reviews a trial court's decision on a motion to suppress de novo. State v. Bing (1999),
The
Numerous Ohio courts have addressed the issue of what constitutes consent to police officers entering a home without a warrant. In Statev. Robinson (1995),
In upholding the order suppressing the marijuana as evidence, the First District Court of Appeals held:
Robinson consented to the officers' initial breach of the threshold of his apartment. When Robinson opened the door * * *, he did so freely and voluntarily[.]
* * *
The officers' progress into the apartment was not, however, made in conformity with the
Fourth Amendment consent doctrine. Robinson communicated to the officers the limited scope of his consent to the initial intrusion when he attempted to bar the officers' entry into the apartment by closing the door, and the officers exceeded the scope of Robinson's voluntary consent when they forced their way over the threshold and into the apartment.
Id. at 495. See, also, State v. Scott (1999),
In the instant case, the state failed to meet its burden at the suppression hearing of showing that Cummings consented to the police officers' entry into the home. Cummings has not contested that he consented to the officers' presence on his porch at the time of their initial conversation regarding Brumback, during which the officers detected the odor of marijuana. However, just as Cummings manifested his consent to the presence of the officers on the porch by opening the door and conversing with them, his attempt to close the door constituted a termination of the consensual encounter, and communicated his lack of consent to any further intrusion by the officers. See Robinson,
In the absence of consent, Payton clearly requires that exigent circumstances be present to justify a warrantless arrest inside the home: "In terms that apply equally to seizures of property and to seizures of persons, the
Following Mincey v. Arizona (1978),
In Bowe, this Court also identified six factors constituting exigent circumstances that would mandate a warrantless entry of a home:
(1) [T]he offense involved is a crime of violence; (2) the suspect is reasonably believed to be armed; (3) a clear showing of probable cause to believe that the suspect committed the crime involved; (4) a strong reason to believe that the suspect is in the premises being entered; (5) the likelihood that the suspect will escape if not swiftly apprehended; and (6) the entry, though not consented, is made peaceably.
Bowe at 114. Because there was no evidence of violence or that the suspects were armed, and because the police had secured all exits from the home to prevent the suspects' escape, this Court in Bowe found that no exigent circumstances existed.2 Id.
The state has argued that the officers were justified in entering Cummings' home to arrest him for assault of a police officer because the officers were in "hot pursuit" of Cummings after he slammed the door on Officer Sherman's foot. The essence of the "hot pursuit" exception is that "a suspect may not defeat an arrest which has been set in motion in a public place * * * by the expedient of escaping to a private place."United States v. Santana (1976),
In Santana, the United States Supreme Court upheld a warrantless entry and arrest where the police first approached the defendant as she stood in the open doorway of her home. Santana,
In the instant case, the state has argued that when the officers entered Cummings' home, they were in "hot pursuit" of him for assaulting a police officer. The state has asserted that Cummings' attempt to close the door while Officer Sherman's foot was between the door and the doorframe constitutes an assault, and that the officers forcibly entered the home in "hot pursuit" of Cummings for this offense. In support of this contention, the state has cited State v. Hagstrom (June 21, 1999), Butler App. No. CA 98-07-157, unreported, 1999 Ohio App. LEXIS 2851 (holding that the "hot pursuit" exception allowed police to pursue the defendant into his garage and his home to arrest him, after the defendant swung at a police officer while standing in his driveway).
Essential to the "hot pursuit" exception, as articulated in Santana and its progeny, is that the arrest be initiated in a public place. Santana,
The reasoning behind the "hot pursuit" exception to the warrant requirement is that a person should not be able to avoid arrest simply by fleeing from a public place to a private place. This exception has no bearing on the present case, however, because the suspects were already in the house. The suspects did not flee inside from an outside location. A "hot pursuit" scenario simply does not exist when the suspect is already in a private dwelling.
(Citations omitted.) State v. Huff (June 10, 1999), Highland App. No. 98 CA 23, unreported, 1999 Ohio App. LEXIS 2907, at *15. In Huff, police officers did not initiate any arrests until after their warrantless entry of a home after observing, through an open window, what appeared to be several underage persons playing cards and drinking beer in a kitchen. See, also, State v. Howard (1991),
[T]he suspect's attempted arrest was not set in motion in a public place. * * * We find the fact that the officer was aware that the suspect was inside appellee's residence does not, standing alone, create suitable or sufficient basis for the application of the hot pursuit doctrine.
Likewise, in the case at bar, the arrest of Cummings was not initiated in a public place. The arrest was initiated only after Cummings attempted to close the door to his home, but was prevented from doing so by Officer Sherman's foot. Under the "expectation of privacy" analysis applied bySantana, neither Cummings nor his home was exposed to the public at the time he attempted to close the door. Cummings had terminated any consensual encounter with the officers, and the act of closing the door to his home constituted an assertion of his
Because the police officers' initial entry of Cummings' home was unlawful, evidence thereafter obtained was properly suppressed as "derivative of an illegality, or `fruit of the poisonous tree.'" Statev. Carter (1994),
Judgment affirmed.
The Court finds that there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common Pleas, County of Summit, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy of this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App.R. 27.
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the period for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(E).
Costs taxed to Appellant.
Exceptions.
BETH WHITMORE, CARR, J. CONCURS IN JUDGMENT ONLY.
Concurring Opinion
I would agree with the majority, but for a different reason. The officers may have partially entered the home to arrest Defendant. Had the officers accomplished the arrest within the home, any illegal contraband in plain view would have been subject to confiscation. The fact, as testified to, is that the major portion of the struggle and arrest took place outside the home.
At the suppression hearing, the officers did not provide any reason to believe that someone remained in the home; however, they stated that they believed someone was present when they re-entered. Therefore, although there may have been probable cause to get a search warrant, there were no exigent circumstances to warrant re-entry into the home without a search warrant.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.