State v. Lewis , 259 N.C. App. 366 ( 2018 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA17-888
    Filed: 1 May 2018
    Hoke County, Nos. 14 CRS 51735-37, 15 CRS 557
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    ROBERT DWAYNE LEWIS
    Appeal by defendant from judgments entered 7 February 2017 by Judge
    Richard T. Brown in Hoke County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 22
    February 2018.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Milind
    Dongre, for the State.
    Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Kathryn L.
    VandenBerg, for defendant.
    DIETZ, Judge.
    Defendant Robert Dwayne Lewis appeals his convictions for three counts of
    armed robbery, one count of attempted armed robbery, and five counts of kidnapping
    related to a string of robberies at businesses in Hoke County. After the trial court
    denied his motion to suppress, Lewis pleaded guilty to all charges, reserving his right
    to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress.
    On appeal, Lewis argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to
    suppress because the affidavit law enforcement submitted with its search warrant
    STATE V. LEWIS
    Opinion of the Court
    application was insufficient to establish probable cause for a search of the cars and
    house where the evidence was found. As explained below, the warrant application
    and accompanying affidavit contained sufficient information to establish probable
    cause to search the two vehicles allegedly involved in the crimes. But we agree with
    Lewis that the warrant application did not contain sufficient information to establish
    probable cause to search the home. We therefore vacate Lewis’s convictions and
    remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Facts and Procedural History
    On 21 September 2014, a man wearing a blue mask, dark clothing, and
    carrying a handgun robbed a dollar store in Hoke County and fled in a blue Nissan
    Titan. Witnesses described the suspect as calm and composed. Five days later,
    another dollar store was robbed. Again, witnesses described the suspect as a
    composed man, wearing a blue mask and dark clothing, and carrying a handgun. The
    man ordered two people into a bathroom before fleeing the scene. Two days later, a
    third dollar store was robbed. Once again, witnesses described the suspect as a man
    in a blue mask, carrying a handgun. And again, the man ordered people into a
    bathroom before fleeing.
    Detective William Tart of the Hoke County Sheriff’s Office was assigned to the
    case. Tart got a break in the case several weeks later on 19 October 2014, when law
    enforcement in Smithfield notified him that a man in a blue head cover, dark clothing,
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    Opinion of the Court
    and carrying a handgun robbed a business in neighboring Johnston County. The
    Smithfield police reported that they saw the suspect flee in a Kia Optima and were
    able to identify him from a previous encounter as Defendant Robert Dwayne Lewis.
    The same day, Smithfield police issued an arrest warrant for Lewis.
    Hoke County Sheriff’s Deputy Tim Kavanaugh, acting on information from the
    Johnston County investigation, drove to Lewis’s address, 7085 Laurinburg Road in
    Hoke County, and saw a blue Nissan pickup truck parked in the yard matching the
    description of the Nissan Titan witnesses saw during the first robbery. Deputy
    Kavanaugh did not see the Kia Optima that officers saw during the fourth robbery.
    Deputy Kavanaugh continued his normal patrol duties and then drove past
    7085 Laurinburg Road again later in the day. This time he saw a Kia Optima in the
    yard of the house. Kavanaugh parked nearby and watched the house until he
    observed a man matching Lewis’s description walk from the house out to the mailbox
    and take mail out. Kavanaugh approached the man and asked him for his name. The
    man said “Robert Lewis” and Kavanaugh placed him under arrest.
    After arresting Lewis, Deputy Kavanaugh walked up to the front door of the
    home at 7085 Laurinburg Road and spoke to a man who identified himself as Waddell
    McCollum, Lewis’s stepfather. Kavanaugh asked McCollum if Lewis lived at the
    residence and also asked who owned the vehicles parked in the yard. McCollum told
    Kavanaugh that Lewis lived there, that the Nissan truck belonged to McCollum but
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    Opinion of the Court
    Lewis sometimes drives it, and that the Kia belonged to Lewis. After speaking with
    McCollum at the front door of the house, Kavanaugh “went over to the Kia that was
    in the yard, and looked inside of the passenger area, the rear of the vehicle” and saw
    “a BB&T money bag on the passenger floor of the vehicle” as well as some dark
    clothing. The Kia was “backed into the yard, in front of the residence, not in the
    driveway but in the grass” about twenty feet from the front porch where Kavanaugh
    spoke to McCollum.
    After law enforcement arrested Lewis, Detective Tart prepared a search
    warrant application to search the residence at 7085 Laurinburg Road where Lewis
    was arrested and the blue Nissan Titan and Kia Optima on the premises.
    The affidavit accompanying the application provided a detailed description of
    each of the two vehicles, including color, year, make and model, NC registration
    number, and VIN number. The affidavit also described the three September 2014
    Hoke County robberies and the October 2014 Johnston County robbery, including the
    similarities between the four robberies and the descriptions of the suspect in each
    robbery. It further provided that Smithfield police identified the suspect in the
    Johnston County robbery as Lewis, that officers saw Lewis flee the scene in a Kia
    Optima, and that Hoke County officers then arrested Lewis at a residence located at
    7085 Laurinburg Road. The affidavit stated that a witness observed the suspect in
    the first robbery flee in a dark blue Nissan Titan and that the witness’s description
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    Opinion of the Court
    of that vehicle was consistent with a dark blue Nissan Titan officers observed at the
    7085 Laurinburg Road address while arresting Lewis. The search warrant
    application did not include any reference to what Deputy Kavanaugh had observed
    when he walked into the yard and looked in the window of the Kia Optima.
    Based on the information provided in the affidavit, a magistrate issued a
    search warrant for the residence and the two vehicles. Hoke County officers executed
    the warrant the same day and seized various evidence. In the Kia, officers found a
    BB&T bank bag containing documents connected to the Smithfield business that was
    robbed, a blue helmet liner that was consistent with the blue head covering worn by
    the suspect in the Hoke County robberies, and a rusted handgun.
    On 21 September 2015, the State indicted Lewis for three counts of robbery
    with a dangerous weapon, one count of attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon,
    and five counts of second degree kidnapping related to the three September 2014
    Hoke County robberies.
    Lewis filed a motion to suppress the evidence recovered during the execution
    of the search warrant, arguing that the search warrant application did not provide
    probable cause for the search. Lewis argued that the warrant affidavit failed to
    establish a sufficient nexus between the evidence being sought and the places to be
    searched. Lewis also argued that the evidence Deputy Kavanaugh saw through the
    window of the Kia Optima was not admissible under the plain view doctrine.
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    Opinion of the Court
    The trial court heard the motion to suppress on 7 April 2016. Detective Tart
    and Deputy Kavanaugh both testified at the hearing. Tart described the steps he took
    in his investigation of the robberies, how he determined the four robberies were
    connected, and how he obtained Lewis’s name, the 7085 Laurinburg Road address,
    and identified the two vehicles linked to the robberies. Deputy Kavanaugh described
    his actions on 19 October 2014, including receiving information about the fourth
    robbery, which lead to his arrest of Lewis and his observations through the window
    of the Kia.
    On 3 June 2016, the trial court denied Lewis’s motion to suppress, finding that
    the search warrant affidavit was sufficient to establish probable cause for the search
    and that the evidence Deputy Kavanaugh observed through the window of the Kia
    was admissible under the plain view doctrine. On 7 February 2017, Lewis pleaded
    guilty to all of the charges, reserving his right to appeal the denial of his motion to
    suppress. The trial court sentenced Lewis to three consecutive terms of 103-136
    months in prison. Lewis timely appealed.
    Analysis
    Lewis argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress
    because the affidavit Detective Tart submitted with the search warrant application
    was insufficient to establish probable cause for a search of the house and two cars at
    7085 Laurinburg Road, rendering the search warrant and search invalid. Lewis
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    STATE V. LEWIS
    Opinion of the Court
    contends that the affidavit failed to establish a connection between him, the address
    on Laurinburg Road, the two cars listed on the warrant, and the crimes. As explained
    below, we hold that the warrant established probable cause to search the two vehicles
    located at 7085 Laurinburg Road, but not the home itself.
    Our review of a trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress is “strictly limited
    to determining whether the trial judge’s underlying findings of fact are supported by
    competent evidence, in which event they are conclusively binding on appeal, and
    whether those factual findings in turn support the judge’s ultimate conclusions of
    law.” State v. Cooke, 
    306 N.C. 132
    , 134, 
    291 S.E.2d 618
    , 619 (1982). “We review de
    novo a trial court’s conclusion that a magistrate had probable cause to issue a search
    warrant.” State v. Worley, __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    803 S.E.2d 412
    , 416 (2017).
    A search warrant affidavit must contain sufficient information to establish
    probable cause “to believe that the proposed search for evidence probably will reveal
    the presence upon the described premises of the items sought and that those items
    will aid in the apprehension or conviction of the offender.” State v. Arrington, 
    311 N.C. 633
    , 636, 
    319 S.E.2d 254
    , 256 (1984). “A magistrate must make a practical,
    common-sense decision, based on the totality of the circumstances, whether there is
    a fair probability that contraband will be found in the place to be searched.” State v.
    McKinney, 
    368 N.C. 161
    , 164, 
    775 S.E.2d 821
    , 824 (2015). “[T]he affidavit in support
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    Opinion of the Court
    of a search warrant must establish a nexus between the objects sought and the place
    to be searched.” State v. Oates, 
    224 N.C. App. 634
    , 644, 
    736 S.E.2d 228
    , 235 (2012).
    “This standard for determining probable cause is flexible, permitting the
    magistrate to draw reasonable inferences from the evidence in the affidavit
    supporting the application for the warrant.” 
    McKinney, 368 N.C. at 164
    , 775 S.E.2d
    at 824–25 (citations omitted). “That evidence is viewed from the perspective of a police
    officer with the affiant’s training and experience and the commonsense judgments
    reached by officers in light of that training and specialized experience.” 
    Id. at 164–
    65, 775 S.E.2d at 825 
    (citations omitted). “When reviewing a magistrate's
    determination of probable cause, this Court must pay great deference and sustain the
    magistrate’s determination if there existed a substantial basis for the magistrate to
    conclude that articles searched for were probably present.” State v. Parson, __ N.C.
    App. __, __, 
    791 S.E.2d 528
    , 536 (2016). In doing so, this Court “should not invalidate
    warrants by interpreting affidavits in a hypertechnical, rather than a commonsense,
    manner.” State v. Allman, 
    369 N.C. 292
    , 294, 
    794 S.E.2d 301
    , 303 (2016). “The
    resolution of doubtful or marginal cases in this area should be largely determined by
    the preference to be accorded to warrants.” State v. Riggs, 
    328 N.C. 213
    , 222, 
    400 S.E.2d 429
    , 435 (1991). “[A]s long as the pieces fit together well and yield a fair
    probability that a police officer executing the warrant will find contraband or
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    STATE V. LEWIS
    Opinion of the Court
    evidence of a crime at the place to be searched, a magistrate has probable cause to
    issue a warrant.” 
    Allman, 369 N.C. at 294
    , 794 S.E.2d at 303.
    With this precedent in mind, we turn to Lewis’s arguments on appeal. At the
    outset, we acknowledge that the warrant application is missing a key fact known to
    law enforcement that, if included, would have made this a far easier case. Specifically,
    the warrant application did not describe how the officers linked Lewis to the 7085
    Laurinburg Road address—for example, there is no statement in the warrant
    application that, after identifying Lewis as the suspect, law enforcement searched
    records and determined that 7085 Laurinburg Road was Lewis’s current residence.
    The only information in the affidavit linking Lewis to 7085 Laurinburg Road is the
    fact that officers arrested Lewis at that location.
    We begin with the probable cause to search the two vehicles located at that
    residence. Although the affidavit could have been more detailed, we hold that it
    contained enough information, together with reasonable inferences drawn from that
    information, to establish a substantial basis to believe that the evidence sought
    probably would be found in the blue Nissan Titan and Kia Optima located at 7085
    Laurinburg Road. Parson, __ N.C. App. at __, 791 S.E.2d at 536; 
    Allman, 369 N.C. at 294
    , 794 S.E.2d at 303; see also State v. Spillars, 
    280 N.C. 341
    , 350, 
    185 S.E.2d 881
    ,
    887 (1972).
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    Opinion of the Court
    Specifically, Detective Tart’s affidavit described the four robberies in detail
    including similarities in the manner of the crimes and the descriptions of the suspect.
    All four robberies involved a suspect with a blue cover over his head and face, wearing
    dark clothing, and carrying a handgun who robbed retail locations in a relatively close
    geographic area. The affidavit also stated that witnesses saw the suspect in the first
    robbery leave the scene in a dark blue Nissan Titan with North Carolina registration.
    A law enforcement officer saw the suspect in the fourth robbery flee the scene in a
    Kia Optima. That officer identified the suspect as Lewis based on a previous
    encounter with him in which the officer was concerned that Lewis was casing a
    different retail location. Finally, the affidavit stated that officers located and arrested
    Lewis at 7085 Laurinburg Road and, while making the arrest, saw a dark blue Nissan
    Titan at that location.
    The affidavit also contained much more detailed information about the two
    vehicles to be searched, including the color, year, make, model, NC registration, and
    VIN number for each vehicle. The affidavit did not explain how law enforcement
    obtained this information.
    But even setting this detailed information aside, the affidavit contained
    sufficient information to justify a search of a dark blue Nissan Titan and a Kia
    Optima found at 7085 Laurinburg Road. The affidavit established probable cause to
    believe Lewis was the suspect who committed four robberies at retail establishments
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    STATE V. LEWIS
    Opinion of the Court
    in Hoke and Johnston counties while wearing a blue face cover and dark clothing,
    and carrying a handgun. In the first robbery, witnesses saw the suspect flee in a dark
    blue Nissan Titan. In the fourth robbery—which occurred the same day that
    Detective Tart submitted the warrant application and affidavit—a law enforcement
    officer saw Lewis flee the scene of the robbery in a Kia Optima. Later on the same
    day of the fourth robbery, officers arrested Lewis at 7085 Laurinburg Road and saw
    a dark blue Nissan Titan at that location during the arrest.
    Simply put, the “pieces fit together well and yield a fair probability that a police
    officer executing the warrant will find contraband or evidence of a crime at the place
    to be searched.” 
    Allman, 369 N.C. at 294
    , 794 S.E.2d at 303. There was evidence that
    the same suspect committed four robberies, the first while driving a dark blue Nissan
    Titan and the fourth while driving a Kia Optima. Later on the same day of the fourth
    robbery, officers arrested Lewis. When they located him they saw—of all the makes,
    models, and colors of all the vehicles in the world—a dark blue Nissan Titan,
    matching the description of the vehicle used in the first robbery. These facts were
    more than sufficient for the magistrate to conclude that, if officers returned to that
    location and found a dark blue Nissan Titan and a Kia Optima there, there was
    probable cause to believe those vehicles contained evidence connected to the
    robberies. Parson, __ N.C. App. at __, 791 S.E.2d at 536; 
    Allman, 369 N.C. at 294
    , 794
    S.E.2d at 303. Accordingly, we hold that there was probable cause to issue a search
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    STATE V. LEWIS
    Opinion of the Court
    warrant for the dark blue Nissan Titan and Kia Optima located at 7085 Laurinburg
    Road.
    Lewis also challenges the search of the residence at 7085 Laurinburg Road. We
    agree with Lewis that the warrant application and affidavit fail to establish probable
    cause to search this home. As the State concedes, although Lewis resided at 7085
    Laurinburg Road, the affidavit does not say that. The only information in the affidavit
    tying Lewis to 7085 Laurinburg Road is the statement that Hoke County officers
    observed a dark blue Nissan Titan “at the residence of 7085 Laurinburg Road . . .
    when serving a felony arrest warrant on Robert Lewis issued by Smithfield Police
    Department.” As explained above, this statement is sufficient to establish that Lewis
    was found at that location; but it does not follow from that statement that Lewis also
    must reside at that location. Indeed, from the information in the affidavit, 7085
    Laurinburg Road could have been a someone else’s home with no connection to Lewis
    at all. That Lewis visited that location, without some indication that he may have
    stowed incriminating evidence there, is not enough to justify a search of the home.
    See 
    McKinney, 368 N.C. at 165
    –66, 775 S.E.2d at 825–26; State v. Campbell, 
    282 N.C. 125
    , 131–32, 
    191 S.E.2d 752
    , 756–57 (1972). Accordingly, we agree with Lewis that
    the trial court should have granted his motion to suppress with respect to the search
    of the home.
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    STATE V. LEWIS
    Opinion of the Court
    On appeal, neither party addressed which evidence officers seized from the
    vehicles and which evidence they seized from the home, and the record on appeal is
    insufficient for this Court to answer the question. Accordingly, we vacate Lewis’s
    convictions and remand this case with instructions for the trial court to allow Lewis’s
    motion to suppress the evidence seized from the residence located at 7085 Laurinburg
    Road. The trial court properly denied the motion to suppress with respect to the
    vehicles, and any evidence seized in those separate searches is admissible. See State
    v. Edwards, 
    185 N.C. App. 701
    , 704, 
    649 S.E.2d 646
    , 649 (2007); State v. McKinney,
    
    361 N.C. 53
    , 58, 
    637 S.E.2d 868
    , 872 (2006).
    In light of our ruling, we need not address Lewis’s argument that a separate
    search of the Kia Optima was not supported by the plain view doctrine. The
    incriminating evidence that this other officer saw through the car window (a bank
    bag from BB&T and dark clothing) was not included in the warrant application and
    accompanying affidavit. Thus, even if this search through the car window was
    impermissible, it would not render the search warrant, based on separate evidence,
    invalid. 
    McKinney, 361 N.C. at 59
    , 637 S.E.2d at 873.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons discussed above, we vacate the trial court’s judgments and
    remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    VACATED AND REMANDED.
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    Opinion of the Court
    Judges HUNTER, JR. and ARROWOOD concur.
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