State v. Miller ( 2014 )


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  • An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute
    controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance
    with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    NO. COA13-1368
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed: 20 May 2014
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.                                      Wake County
    Nos. 11 CRS 11876, 221347-50
    KASIN JERRELL MILLER
    Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 10 April 2013 by
    Judge Carl R. Fox in Wake County Superior Court.                    Heard in the
    Court of Appeals 18 March 2014.
    Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Special                   Deputy    Attorney
    General Richard E. Slipsky, for the State.
    Amanda S. Zimmer for defendant-appellant.
    BRYANT, Judge.
    Where the trial court’s findings of fact were based on a
    law   enforcement     officer’s     testimony     that    while   attempting      to
    detain defendant for further investigation, defendant suddenly
    drove away almost hitting the officer, such findings support the
    conclusion that the pursuit and eventual seizure of defendant
    was based on a reasonable and articulable suspicion of assault
    on an officer, and we affirm the order of the trial court.
    -2-
    Where defendant led law enforcement officers in a high speed car
    chase     ending   in    a   collision       of   defendant’s      vehicle     which
    defendant promptly abandoned, and officers thereafter observed
    what appeared to be cocaine on the floor of the vehicle, there
    existed    probable     cause    to    search     the   vehicle,      including   the
    trunk.
    On     24   and     25   October    2011,     defendant     was    indicted   on
    charges of possession with intent to sell and deliver marijuana,
    possession with intent to sell and deliver cocaine, speeding to
    elude arrest, possession of drug paraphernalia, assault with a
    deadly weapon on a government official, and attaining habitual
    felon status.         On 4 January 2012, defendant was arraigned and
    entered a plea of not guilty.
    Subsequently, defendant filed two motions to suppress: a
    “Motion to      Suppress     Evidence Based on Unlawful Stop”; and                  a
    motion to suppress “evidence seized pursuant to the warrantless
    search of the trunk of the Defendant’s vehicle.”                      These matters
    came on for hearing during the 8 April 2013 session of Wake
    County     Superior     Court,    the     Honorable      Carl    R.     Fox,   Judge
    presiding.
    By     final   order     entered     9   August     2013,   both    motions   to
    suppress were denied.            Judge Fox found that on 10 September
    -3-
    2011,     a    ranking    Senior   Officer     with    the    Raleigh    Police
    Department was in uniform and working when he stopped his marked
    patrol car at the Exxon Station at 9409 Glenwood Avenue for gas.
    The officer observed two men sitting in a vehicle.               “[T]hey were
    passing something back and forth between them.”                 When the two
    men noticed noticed the officer, “they appeared to be placing
    things underneath their seats and in their door pockets.”                    The
    officer moved his vehicle so that he could read the vehicle’s
    license plate number.        Defendant, who was seated in the driver’s
    seat, repositioned the vehicle by driving around the parking lot
    and backing into a parking space behind a row of parked cars.
    The passenger exited the vehicle.              The officer approached the
    vehicle       and   requested    defendant’s    driver’s      license,    which
    defendant was unable to produce.            Defendant said he was waiting
    on a friend; he did not know the name of the person who had been
    sitting in the passenger seat; and he was not the registered
    owner of the vehicle.           Defendant also stated there was nothing
    illegal in the vehicle.         Defendant was informed that he would be
    detained for further investigation and that a canine unit was
    being   requested.        Suddenly,   defendant       drove   away   while   the
    officer was standing beside the vehicle, “nearly striking him
    with his car.”           The officer returned to his patrol car and
    -4-
    pursued defendant with lights and siren activated.                                  Defendant
    traveled on Lumley Road entering onto I-540 traveling at speeds
    in    excess     of    90    mph.         As   they    traveled       down    the    highway,
    “Defendant       was    reaching          around      inside    the     car    and    putting
    something into his mouth”; “Defendant’s left hand was outside
    his window and he was releasing things from his hand”; and the
    officer     observed          white       powder       striking        his     patrol     car.
    Defendant’s          vehicle    ultimately           struck    another        vehicle,     and
    defendant jumped out of his vehicle and ran.                           However, defendant
    was    apprehended          after     a    short       foot    chase.          Another    law
    enforcement officer looking though the open driver’s side window
    of    defendant’s           vehicle       observed       a     small     plastic        baggie
    containing       a     white    powder         consistent      with     cocaine      on   the
    floorboard.           The officers informed defendant that his vehicle
    would be searched.             Defendant did not consent.                     In the trunk,
    the officers found digital scales, marijuana, empty baggies, and
    cocaine.
    As   to   defendant’s          initial      detention      in    the    gas    station
    parking lot, Judge Fox concluded that there was no violation of
    defendant’s rights against unreasonable seizure.                             Judge Fox also
    concluded that during the car chase, there arose grounds for a
    reasonable        and       articulable         suspicion       that         defendant     had
    -5-
    assaulted a government official with a deadly weapon and was
    possessing       and   /    or     selling     or   delivering    a     controlled
    substance, obstructing an officer, fleeing to elude an officer,
    and engaged in reckless driving.               Further, as to the search of
    defendant’s car trunk, Judge Fox concluded that the officers had
    probable cause to search the vehicle.                   Accordingly, defendant’s
    motions to suppress were denied.
    Following entry of the order denying defendant’s motions to
    suppress, defendant entered a guilty plea as to the charges of
    possession with intent to sell and deliver marijuana, possession
    with    intent    to   sell   and    deliver    cocaine,     speeding    to   elude
    arrest, possession of drug paraphernalia, assault with a deadly
    weapon on a government official, and obtaining habitual felon
    status.      Defendant also reserved his right to appeal from the
    order denying his motions to suppress.                    Accepting defendant’s
    pleas   of   guilty,       Judge   Fox   entered    a    consolidated    judgment,
    sentencing defendant to a term of 127 to 162 months.                     Defendant
    appeals from the denial of his motions to suppress.1
    1
    Defendant filed with this Court a petition for a writ of
    certiorari to correct a technical defect in trial counsel’s
    notice of appeal from the order denying defendant’s motions to
    suppress  rather  than  from   the  judgment  entered  against
    defendant. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-979(b) (“An order finally
    denying a motion to suppress evidence may be reviewed upon an
    appeal from a judgment of conviction, including a judgment
    -6-
    ________________________________
    On appeal, defendant raises the following issues: whether
    the trial court erred in (I) determining there was a factual
    basis   for   defendant’s       guilty   plea;       (II)    finding       the     law
    enforcement   officer     had    a   reasonable       suspicion       to     warrant
    stopping   defendant;     and   (III)    concluding     that    the    search       of
    defendant’s car trunk was reasonable.
    I
    Defendant   first    argues    that      the   trial     court       erred   in
    determining whether there was a sufficient factual basis given
    for the trial court to accept defendant’s guilty plea to the
    charge of assault on a government official with a deadly weapon.
    First, we must consider whether this argument is properly before
    us.
    Petition for writ of certiorari
    Contemporaneous with his brief, defendant filed with this
    Court a petition for a writ of certiorari to address the first
    argument presented in his brief.
    Acknowledging in his petition that he is not entitled to
    appeal as a matter of right the issue of whether the trial court
    entered upon a plea of guilty.”). To the extent that the notice
    of appeal was technically deficient, we grant defendant’s
    petition for writ of certiorari and hear defendant’s appeal from
    the judgment entered pursuant to his guilty plea.
    -7-
    properly     accepted   his   guilty        plea,   defendant   nevertheless
    requests that we grant him a writ of certiorari.                  We decline
    defendant’s request.
    The writ of certiorari may be issued in
    appropriate     circumstances     by    either
    appellate court to permit review of the
    judgments and orders of trial tribunals when
    the right to prosecute an appeal has been
    lost by failure to take timely action, or
    when   no    right    of   appeal    from   an
    interlocutory order exists, or for review
    pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 15A-1422(c)(3) of an
    order of the trial court denying a motion
    for appropriate relief.
    N.C. R. App. P. 21(a)(1) (2014).
    This Court has previously issued writs of certiorari to
    address a challenge to a trial court’s compliance with General
    Statutes Chapter 15A, Article 58 – Procedures Relating to Guilty
    Pleas in Superior Court.         See State v. Rhodes, 
    163 N.C. App. 191
    ,   
    592 S.E.2d 731
       (2004).     Specifically,     writs   have   been
    issued to address a challenge to the sufficiency of the factual
    basis given in support of a guilty plea.              See State v. Keller,
    
    198 N.C. App. 639
    , 641, 
    680 S.E.2d 212
    , 213 (2009); State v.
    Flint, 
    199 N.C. App. 709
    , 724, 
    682 S.E.2d 443
    , 451 (2009).
    Defendant   contends    that    that     there   were    insufficient
    grounds presented to support the charge of assault with a deadly
    weapon on a government official.             While defendant acknowledges
    -8-
    that the testifying officer stated “that he was nearly struck by
    the vehicle and that he was afraid he would be hit by the back
    portion of the vehicle as [defendant] drove off[,]” defendant
    contends that “a reasonable person in his position would not
    have    been     in    fear       of   immediate         bodily   harm.”         Defendant’s
    argument raises only the contention that the trial court erred
    in     finding        the     officer’s          testimony        more     credible       than
    defendant’s interpretation of the evidence. Compare Flint, 199
    N.C. App. at 726, 
    682 S.E.2d at 453
     (holding the trial court
    erred in accepting the defendant’s guilty plea where there was a
    lack of a factual basis given that would allow for the trial
    court to make an independent decision as to defendant’s guilt).
    We deny defendant’s petition for a writ of certiorari as to this
    issue.    As such, defendant’s first argument is dismissed.
    II
    Next, appealing from the denial of his                            first    motion to
    suppress,      defendant          argues    that         the    trial    court    erred    in
    concluding       that       the    law    enforcement          officer     had   reasonable
    suspicion      to      stop       defendant       after        defendant    terminated      a
    consensual       encounter         with    the    law      enforcement      officer.       We
    disagree.
    -9-
    “An order finally denying a motion to suppress evidence may
    be   reviewed    upon   an    appeal     from   a    judgment      of    conviction,
    including a judgment entered upon a plea of guilty.”                         N.C.G.S. §
    15A-979(b).     “Generally, an appellate court's review of a trial
    court's order on a motion to suppress is strictly limited to a
    determination of whether its findings are supported by competent
    evidence, and in turn, whether the findings support the trial
    court's ultimate conclusion.”            State v. Roberson, 
    163 N.C. App. 129
    , 132, 
    592 S.E.2d 733
    , 735 (2004) (citation and quotations
    omitted).
    We first note that the trial court found that the officer’s
    initial approach and discussion while defendant was sitting in a
    parked   car      did   not    amount     to    a     detention         or     seizure.
    Acknowledging that the officer informed defendant he was “being
    detained” while a canine unit was summoned,                       the trial court
    stated   “these    words,     standing    alone,      did   not    result       in   the
    functional      equivalent      of     detention,      or    an      ‘unreasonable
    seizure’” because among other things defendant remained in the
    automobile; was not handcuffed, removed from the automobile, or
    otherwise restrained from movement;                 defendant’s ignition keys
    were not seized; the detention lasted three to five minutes, and
    -10-
    defendant voluntarily left the area.               Therefore, he “did not
    believe he was not free to leave.”
    However, as to what happened after defendant drove away
    from   the   officer   in   the   parking   lot,   we   find   the   following
    findings of fact pertinent:
    21. Officer Larsen went to his vehicle
    and   pursued the   Defendant  because  the
    Defendant’s car nearly struck him as he
    exited the parking lot of the convenience
    store.
    . . .
    22. . . . Both vehicles were traveling
    at speeds in excess of 70 mph on Lumley road
    and increased speed once they got onto I-
    540.
    . . .
    27. The     Defendant’s   vehicle  was
    switching lanes left to right and right to
    left, cars were braking to avoid collisions
    with the Defendant’s vehicle. . . .
    28.   As  they   traveled  down   the
    highway, the Defendant was reaching around
    inside the car and putting something into
    his mouth.
    29. As they were traveling in excess
    of 80 mph down the highway, bags of white
    substance began striking Officer Larsen’s
    car.   The Defendant’s left hand was outside
    his window and he was releasing things from
    his hand.
    -11-
    Defendant’s vehicle stopped                  after colliding with another
    vehicle,   and     defendant       was     apprehended       by    law    enforcement
    officers after a short foot chase.
    Sergeant       Michael    F.    Schabel,       employed       with    the   Raleigh
    Police Department for fifteen years, responded to the Officer
    Larsen’s   call    for   assistance.             Following     the      collision    and
    defendant’s      abandonment       of     his     vehicle,        Sergeant       Schabel
    observed “a small plastic baggie with white powder . . . he
    recognized as being consistent with cocaine,” in the driver’s
    side floorboard.
    The    trial    court     concluded      that    Officer       Larsen’s      initial
    approach   and    discussion       with    defendant     did      not    amount     to   a
    seizure and detention.          However, based on the events occurring
    after   defendant     drove    away       from    Officer      Larsen,     the    court
    concluded the following:
    [U]nder the totality of the circumstances,
    [there] form[ed] in the mind of a reasonable
    and prudent man/officer that there was a
    reasonable and articulable suspicion that
    criminal   activity     was   afoot  in   that
    Defendant had/was (1) possession and/or
    selling    or     delivering    a   controlled
    substance,    (2)    assaulted   a  government
    officer with a deadly weapon, (3) obstructed
    an officer, (4) fleeing to elude an officer
    and (5) engaged in reckless driving.
    -12-
    The findings of fact support the trial court’s conclusion
    that the law enforcement officer had reasonable suspicion to
    stop defendant.          See Roberson, 163 N.C. App. at 132, 592 S.E.2d
    at 735.    Accordingly, defendant’s argument is overruled.
    III
    In     his    appeal       from   the   denial     of   his   second     motion   to
    suppress, defendant argues that the trial court erred when it
    relied on an inventory search of defendant’s vehicle as a basis
    for upholding the search of the trunk.                       Defendant’s argument
    ignores the trial court’s conclusion that there existed probable
    cause     to    search     defendant’s        vehicle.        The    trial     court’s
    conclusion       that     an     inventory         search   was     proper     was    an
    alternative basis to uphold the search and based on our probable
    cause analysis that alternative basis need not be addressed.
    The Fourth Amendment proscribes all
    unreasonable searches and seizures, and it
    is   a   cardinal  principle    that   searches
    conducted outside the judicial process,
    without    prior   approval    by    judge   or
    magistrate, are per se unreasonable under
    the Fourth Amendment-subject only to a few
    specifically established and well-delineated
    exceptions.   One   such   exception    is  the
    automobile exception. A police officer in
    the exercise of his duties may search an
    automobile without a search warrant when the
    existing    facts   and   circumstances     are
    sufficient to support a reasonable belief
    that   the   automobile   carries    contraband
    materials. If probable cause justifies the
    -13-
    search of a lawfully stopped vehicle, it
    justifies the search of every part of the
    vehicle and its contents that may conceal
    the object of the search.
    State v. Mitchell, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    735 S.E.2d 438
    , 441
    (2012) appeal dismissed, review denied, ___ N.C. ___, 
    740 S.E.2d 466
     (2013).
    Here, defendant led police officers on a car chase that
    reached speeds in excess of 90 mph.                   In unchallenged findings of
    fact, the trial court found that while defendant was driving
    down the highway he was observed eating something and releasing
    something from his hand outside of the driver’s side window,
    “when bags of white substance began striking Officer Larsen’s
    car.”     Following        defendant’s         abandonment      of    his    vehicle    and
    attempt    to     flee      on        foot,    Sgt.    Schabel        observed     inside
    defendant’s vehicle in plain view “a small plastic baggie with
    white   powder     .   .   .     he    recognized      as   being     consistent       with
    cocaine[.]”       Therefore, we hold the trial court’s findings of
    fact    support    a   conclusion         that       pursuant    to    the    automobile
    exception the law enforcement officers had probable cause to
    justify the search of every part of defendant’s vehicle that may
    have    concealed        cocaine,        including      the     trunk.           See    
    id.
    Accordingly, defendant’s argument is overruled.
    Affirmed.
    -14-
    Judges HUNTER, Robert C. and Judge STEELMAN concur.
    Report per Rule 30(e).
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-1368

Filed Date: 5/20/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021