State v. Duncan ( 2023 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2023-NCCOA-5
    No. COA21-794
    Filed 17 January 2023
    Catawba County, Nos. 19 CRS 2630–31
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    JOSHUA JEZRELL DUNCAN
    Appeal by the State from order entered 22 June 2021 by Judge Donnie Hoover
    in Catawba County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 20 September
    2022.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Nicholas R.
    Sanders, for the State.
    The Law Offices of J. Edgar Halstead, III, PLLC, by J. Edgar Halstead, III, for
    defendant-appellee.
    ZACHARY, Judge.
    ¶1           The State appeals from the trial court’s order granting Defendant Joshua
    Jezrell Duncan’s motion to suppress. After careful review, we reverse and remand to
    the trial court for further proceedings.
    I.     Background
    ¶2           On 31 August 2018, Sergeant Derek Slaughter and another Newton Police
    Department officer were surveilling a residence and the adjacent parking lot in
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    Newton. The officers had received information that “drug activity” was occurring at
    that location, and that a “black male with dreadlock-type hair” who had numerous
    outstanding indictments for trafficking marijuana was “at the residence on a frequent
    basis.”
    ¶3          As the officers watched from an unmarked vehicle, they saw a Cadillac pull
    into the driveway, drop off a passenger, and depart. While the officers could not
    positively identify the driver, they observed that he was “a black male with similar
    hairstyle of the subject in question[.]” They also noted the Cadillac’s license plate
    number, which they pulled up in the CJLEADS database.1 From CJLEADS, the
    officers determined that the driver’s license of the vehicle’s registered owner was
    “medically canceled,” and they called for a marked unit to conduct a traffic stop of the
    Cadillac.
    ¶4          Patrol Sergeant Brian Bixby of the Newton Police Department responded to
    the call and conducted the traffic stop of the Cadillac. Officer Bixby approached the
    vehicle and asked Defendant, the driver, for his driver’s license and registration.
    Through CJLEADS, Officer Bixby confirmed Sergeant Slaughter’s report that
    Defendant’s driver’s license was medically canceled.
    1CJLEADS is “a database which details a person’s history of contacts with law
    enforcement in the form of a list of criminal charges filed against the individual[.]” State v.
    Johnson, 
    378 N.C. 236
    , 2021-NCSC-85, ¶ 4.
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    ¶5         Later, at the hearing on Defendant’s motion to suppress, Officer Bixby testified
    that the officers had discussed the implications of a medically canceled license. Officer
    Bixby testified that initially, he “was confused[,]” because “medically canceled”
    “means no operator’s license or suspended.” Then, however, Officer Bixby “looked at
    the details of the cancellation, [and] saw it was suspended, which would have
    corroborated . . . Sergeant Slaughter’s statement that it was revoked.”
    ¶6         As Officer Bixby spoke with Sergeant Slaughter over the radio, he checked
    Defendant’s criminal record, which included past convictions for violent crimes that
    “raised [Officer Bixby’s] alert level.” He called for backup because he had “decided to
    arrest [Defendant] for driving while license revoked.” Once additional officers
    arrived, Officer Bixby arrested Defendant. During the search of Defendant incident
    to his arrest, Officer Bixby discovered baggies of a substance that he believed to be
    crystal methamphetamine hidden in Defendant’s hair. Later, while Defendant was
    being processed at the police station, Officer Bixby discovered a ball of “wadded up
    aluminum foil” on the ground at Defendant’s feet. Defendant explained that it had
    fallen out of his hair and admitted that it contained more methamphetamine.
    ¶7         On 24 June 2019, a Catawba County grand jury returned indictments charging
    Defendant with (1) possession with intent to manufacture, sell, or deliver
    methamphetamine,       (2)   maintaining     a   vehicle   for   keeping   and   selling
    methamphetamine or any mixture containing methamphetamine, and (3) attaining
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    2023-NCCOA-5
    Opinion of the Court
    the status of habitual felon. On 27 October 2020, the State filed notice of its intent to
    introduce evidence at trial that law enforcement officers obtained by virtue of a search
    without a search warrant. On 18 June 2021, Defendant filed a motion to suppress.
    ¶8           On 22 June 2021, Defendant’s motion to suppress came on for hearing in
    Catawba County Superior Court. After considering the testimony of Sergeant
    Slaughter and Officer Bixby, together with the arguments of counsel, the trial court
    granted Defendant’s motion to suppress. In its order entered the same day, the trial
    court made the following relevant findings and conclusions:
    THE ORIGINAL TIP TO OFFICER[S] TO BE ON THE
    LOOK OUT FOR A BLACK/MALE WITH DREADS WAS
    INSUFFICIENT TO CONSTITUTE REASONABLE
    SUSPICION TO PURSUE DEFENDANT FURTHER,
    INCLUDING THE DISCOVERY OF THE ISSUES WITH
    DEFENDANT’S DRIVER’S LICEN[S]E; THEREAFTER,
    THE DRIVING OFFENSE WAS TO BE TREATED AS A
    NO OPERATOR’S LICENSE PURSUANT TO N.C.G.S. 20-
    29.1 AND THEREFORE DID NOT CONSTITUTE
    PROBABLE CAUSE FOR ARREST.
    ¶9           The State gave oral notice of appeal at the conclusion of hearing and also timely
    filed written notice of appeal.
    II.    Discussion
    ¶ 10         On appeal, the State argues that the trial court erred by granting Defendant’s
    motion to suppress based on its erroneous conclusions that law enforcement officers
    lacked (1) reasonable suspicion to stop the Cadillac, and (2) probable cause to arrest
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    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant.
    A. Standard of Review
    ¶ 11         Our appellate courts review a trial court’s order granting “a defendant’s
    suppression motion by determining whether the trial court’s underlying findings of
    fact are supported by competent evidence and whether those factual findings in turn
    support the trial court’s ultimate conclusions of law.” State v. Parisi, 
    372 N.C. 639
    ,
    649, 
    831 S.E.2d 236
    , 243 (2019) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Under this standard of review, “the trial court’s findings of fact are conclusive on
    appeal if supported by competent evidence, even if the evidence is conflicting.” 
    Id.
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). However, the trial court’s
    “conclusions of law are reviewed de novo and are subject to full review, with an
    appellate court being allowed to consider the matter anew and freely substitute its
    own judgment for that of the lower tribunal.” 
    Id.
     (citations and internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    B. Analysis
    ¶ 12         The State contends that the trial court erred by determining that Officer Bixby
    lacked both reasonable suspicion to stop the Cadillac and probable cause to arrest
    Defendant, and therefore, by granting Defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence
    seized during the search incident to Defendant’s arrest. For the reasons that follow,
    we conclude that the trial court erred in reaching both conclusions, and in granting
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    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant’s motion to suppress. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further
    proceedings.
    1. Reasonable Suspicion to Stop Defendant
    ¶ 13          The trial court found that Officer Bixby did not have “REASONABLE
    SUSPICION       TO    PURSUE      DEFENDANT          FURTHER,      INCLUDING       THE
    DISCOVERY OF THE ISSUES WITH DEFENDANT’S DRIVER’S LICEN[S]E[.]”
    However, as explained below, a law enforcement officer does not need reasonable
    suspicion to investigate a plainly visible license plate number, because a license plate
    check does not implicate a defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. And as the State
    correctly contends, “[t]he ‘original tip’ referenced by the trial court is irrelevant
    because Officer Bixby had reasonable suspicion at the time of the seizure based on
    the traffic violation.”
    ¶ 14          “Both the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and
    article I, section 20 of the North Carolina Constitution protect private citizens against
    unreasonable searches and seizures.” Johnson, ¶ 16. The Supreme Court of the
    United States has recognized that “the State’s intrusion into a particular area,
    whether in an automobile or elsewhere, cannot result in a Fourth Amendment
    violation unless the area is one in which there is a constitutionally protected
    reasonable expectation of privacy.” New York v. Class, 
    475 U.S. 106
    , 112, 
    89 L. Ed. 2d 81
    , 89 (1986) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). In North Carolina,
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    2023-NCCOA-5
    Opinion of the Court
    a license plate must be affixed to the exterior of a car and be “plainly readable from
    a distance of 100 feet during daylight.” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-63
    (c)–(d) (2021). “[I]t is
    unreasonable to have an expectation of privacy in an object required by law to be
    located in a place ordinarily in plain view from the exterior of the automobile.” Class,
    
    475 U.S. at 114
    , 
    89 L. Ed. 2d at 90
    . And “[t]he exterior of a car, of course, is thrust
    into the public eye, and thus to examine it does not constitute a ‘search.’ ” 
    Id.
    ¶ 15         Pursuant to Class, it is evident that a license plate check is not a “search”
    under the Fourth Amendment. Although the State recognizes that our appellate
    courts have not explicitly ruled on whether a license plate check constitutes a search,
    the State notes that previous opinions of this Court have hinted at this conclusion.
    See State v. Murray, 
    192 N.C. App. 684
    , 688–89, 
    666 S.E.2d 205
    , 208–09 (2008)
    (analyzing the constitutionality of a traffic stop, notwithstanding the fact that the
    law enforcement officer had already conducted a “check of the license plate” of the
    defendant’s vehicle prior to the stop); cf. State v. White, 
    82 N.C. App. 358
    , 362, 
    346 S.E.2d 243
    , 246 (1986) (concluding that a law enforcement officer’s investigation of a
    driver’s license number marked on stereo equipment in plain view through window
    of a car was not “sufficiently intrusive as to amount to a constitutionally
    impermissible search of [the] defendant’s automobile”), cert. denied, 
    323 N.C. 179
    ,
    
    373 S.E.2d 124
     (1988). Our conclusion is in line with these precedents.
    ¶ 16         Further, our conclusion is consistent with the analysis of the federal appellate
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    Opinion of the Court
    courts that have ruled on this issue. See, e.g., United States v. Diaz-Castaneda, 
    494 F.3d 1146
    , 1152 (9th Cir.) (“[W]hen police officers see a license plate in plain view,
    and then use that plate to access additional non-private information about the car
    and its owner, they do not conduct a Fourth Amendment search.”), cert. denied, 
    552 U.S. 1031
    , 
    169 L. Ed. 2d 410
     (2007); Olabisiomotosho v. City of Houston, 
    185 F.3d 521
    , 529 (5th Cir.) (“A motorist has no privacy interest in her license plate number.
    Like the area outside the curtilage of a dwelling, a car’s license plate number is
    constantly open to the plain view of passersby.” (citations omitted)), reh’g denied, No.
    98-20027, 
    1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 26265
     (5th Cir. 1999). Accordingly, the investigation
    of the Cadillac’s license plate was not a Fourth Amendment search requiring any
    degree of suspicion. To the extent that the trial court implicitly concluded that
    Defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the Cadillac’s license plate
    number sufficient to implicate his Fourth Amendment rights, this was in error.
    ¶ 17         This leaves for resolution the issue of whether Officer Bixby had reasonable
    suspicion to stop the Cadillac based on the investigation of its license plate. “Law
    enforcement officers may initiate a traffic stop if the officer has a reasonable,
    articulable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot.” Johnson, ¶ 16 (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). In this case, the officers learned from their license
    plate checks that Defendant’s “driver’s license status was medically canceled[.]”
    ¶ 18          “A law enforcement officer may stop a motorist when the officer has probable
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    Opinion of the Court
    cause to believe that the motorist has committed a readily observed traffic infraction.”
    State v. Parker, 
    183 N.C. App. 1
    , 7, 
    644 S.E.2d 235
    , 240–41 (2007) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Therefore, a law enforcement officer with either probable cause or
    reasonable suspicion2 to believe that the driver of a vehicle is driving with a medically
    canceled license may conduct a lawful traffic stop of that vehicle without running
    afoul of the Fourth Amendment.
    ¶ 19         The officer here had sufficient information to believe that Defendant had, at
    the very least, “committed a readily observed traffic infraction”—if not a
    misdemeanor, as discussed below—and lawfully conducted a traffic stop of
    Defendant’s vehicle. 
    Id.
     Thus, the trial court erred by concluding otherwise.
    2. Probable Cause to Arrest Defendant
    ¶ 20         We next address whether Officer Bixby had probable cause to arrest
    Defendant, and therefore, to search him incident to that arrest. While “[i]t is a well-
    established principle that an officer may make a warrantless arrest for a
    misdemeanor committed in his or her presence[,]” State v. Brooks, 
    337 N.C. 132
    , 145,
    
    446 S.E.2d 579
    , 588 (1994); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-401(b)(1), a law enforcement officer
    has “no authority to arrest [an individual] for the commission of an infraction[,]” State
    2 “Reasonable suspicion . . . requires less than probable cause and considerably less
    than preponderance of the evidence.” Johnson, ¶ 16 (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
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    v. Braxton, 
    90 N.C. App. 204
    , 208, 
    368 S.E.2d 56
    , 59 (1988). Accordingly, this issue
    turns on whether Defendant’s alleged act of driving with a medically canceled license
    was a misdemeanor, or as Defendant argues and the trial court concluded, an
    infraction. We conclude that the offense of driving with a medically canceled license
    is a misdemeanor, justifying the warrantless arrest and search incident to the arrest.
    ¶ 21         Defendant claims that the official notice of his license’s medical cancellation
    provides “in plain language the punishment for noncompliance shall be deemed the
    equivalent of operating a motor vehicle without any driver’s license.” However, the
    four identical notices that DMV sent to Defendant during the period between 28 July
    2018 and 1 February 2019 include no such pronouncements.
    ¶ 22         The notices cite 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 20-9
    (g)(2) and 20-29.1 for the statutory
    authority to cancel Defendant’s license. Section 20-9(g) describes the DMV’s authority
    to issue restricted or unrestricted licenses, and subsection (g)(2) provides, in pertinent
    part, that the DMV “may request a signed certificate from a health care provider duly
    licensed to practice medicine in the United States that the applicant or licensee has
    submitted to a physical examination by the health care provider.” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-9
    (g)(2). Section 20-29.1 describes the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles’ authority
    to require a driver to submit to a reexamination upon “good and sufficient cause to
    believe that a licensed operator is incompetent or otherwise not qualified to be
    licensed[.]” 
    Id.
     § 20-29.1. In appropriate circumstances, the Commissioner “may
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    Opinion of the Court
    suspend or revoke the license of such person or permit him to retain such license, or
    may issue a license subject to restrictions or upon failure of such reexamination may
    cancel the license of such person until he passes a reexamination.” Id. Notably, this
    section also provides that “[r]efusal or neglect of the licensee to submit to such
    reexamination shall be grounds for the cancellation of the license of the person failing
    to be reexamined, and the license so canceled shall remain canceled until such person
    satisfactorily complies with the reexamination requirements of the Commissioner.”
    Id. (emphasis added).
    ¶ 23         Section 20-29.1 further describes the Commissioner’s discretionary authority
    to issue restricted or limited driver’s licenses, and adds:
    Such a limitation or restriction shall be noted on the face
    of the license, and it shall be unlawful for the holder of such
    limited or restricted license to operate any motor vehicle or
    class of motor vehicle not specified by such restricted or
    limited license, and the operation by such licensee of motor
    vehicles not specified by such license shall be deemed the
    equivalent of operating a motor vehicle without any driver’s
    license.
    Id. (emphasis added).
    ¶ 24         Defendant argues that § 20-29.1 “is clear and unambiguous. It clearly states
    that an infraction shall be deemed the equivalent of operating a motor vehicle without
    any driver’s license.” We find no such clear statement in the plain text of § 20-29.1.
    Section 20-29.1 describes the various circumstances under which a driver’s license
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    Opinion of the Court
    may be suspended, revoked, restricted, or canceled pursuant to the Commissioner of
    Motor Vehicles’ authority to require a driver to submit to medical examination, and
    it more specifically provides that a restricted licensee’s operation of a motor vehicle
    not specified by the license “shall be deemed the equivalent of operating a motor
    vehicle without any driver’s license.” Id. But this neither applies to a medically
    canceled license nor does it provide that the offense is an infraction.
    ¶ 25         First, we address the nature of a medically canceled license. Section 20-15(a)
    describes the DMV’s authority to cancel a license and provides, in pertinent part, that
    the DMV “shall have authority to cancel any driver’s license upon determining” that
    “[t]he licensee has failed to submit the certificate required under” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-9
    (g). 
    Id.
     § 20-15(a)(5). Section 20-4.01(2) defines “canceled” for purposes of
    Chapter 20: “As applied to drivers’ licenses and permits, a declaration that a license
    or permit which was issued through error or fraud, or to which [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 20-
    15(a) applies, is void and terminated.” Id. § 20-4.01(2) (emphasis added). Reading
    these provisions together, we conclude that a driver’s license that is medically
    canceled pursuant to § 20-29.1 for failure to submit a required medical certificate
    pursuant to § 20-9(g), thus subjecting the license to cancellation pursuant to § 20-
    15(a)(5), is “void and terminated” pursuant to § 20-4.01(2).
    ¶ 26         One argument advanced by the State is that the offense of driving with a
    medically canceled license is the functional equivalent of the misdemeanor offense of
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    driving while license revoked, see id. § 20-28(a), because Chapter 20 treats the terms
    “revocation” and “suspension” synonymously and defines them both as the
    “[t]ermination of a licensee’s . . . privilege to drive . . . for a period of time stated in an
    order of revocation or suspension[,]” id. § 20-4.01(36). However, the record does not
    contain such an order of revocation or suspension for the period in which Defendant’s
    license was medically canceled. We therefore disagree with the State that the offense
    of driving with a medically canceled license is necessarily akin to the offense of
    driving while license revoked. Rather, we agree with another of the State’s
    arguments: because a medically canceled license is “void and terminated” under § 20-
    4.01(2), the offense of driving with a medically canceled license is comparable to the
    offense of driving without a license.
    ¶ 27          Yet we do not accept Defendant’s blanket assertion that “a person operating a
    motor vehicle without a license is responsible for an infraction.” Section 20-35(a)
    states generally that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in subsection (a1) or (a2) of this
    section, a violation of this Article is a Class 2 misdemeanor unless a statute in the
    Article sets a different punishment for the violation.” Id. § 20-35(a).
    ¶ 28          Subsections (a1) and (a2) enumerate six exceptions to the general Class 2
    misdemeanor classification:
    (a1) The following offenses are Class 3 misdemeanors:
    (1) Failure to obtain a license before driving a motor
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    vehicle, in violation of [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 20-7(a).
    (2) Failure to comply with license restrictions, in
    violation of [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 20-7(e).
    (3) Permitting a motor vehicle owned by the person
    to be operated by an unlicensed person, in violation
    of [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 20-34.
    (a2) A person who does any of the following is responsible
    for an infraction:
    (1) Fails to carry a valid license while driving a
    motor vehicle, in violation of [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 20-
    7(a).
    (2) Operates a motor vehicle with an expired license,
    in violation of [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 20-7(f).
    (3) Fails to notify the Division of an address change
    for a drivers license within 60 days after the change
    occurs, in violation of [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 20-7.1.
    Id. § 20-35(a1)–(a2).
    ¶ 29         Defendant specifically cites § 20-35(a2)(3) (failure to report address change) to
    support his assertion that driving with a medically canceled license is an infraction,
    but we fail to see how that provision supports his claim. Instead, the provision that
    most plausibly supports Defendant’s argument is subsection (a2)(1) (failure to carry
    a valid license while driving).
    ¶ 30         However, the State argues that § 20-35(a2)(1) “applies only when a driver has
    a valid license in the first instance but fails to abide by the requirement set forth in
    [N.C. Gen. Stat.] § 20-7(a) that he or she ‘must carry the license while driving the
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    vehicle.’ ” Further, the State notes that “[t]he offense of no operator’s license
    encompasses a range of potential punishments” and is classified as a misdemeanor
    unless the conduct specifically falls within one of the enumerated exceptions to § 20-
    35(a2), or another statute provides otherwise. For example, each of the Class 3
    misdemeanors listed in § 20-35(a1) could also be described as driving without a
    license. See 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-35
    (a1). We thus reject the sweeping assertion that
    the offense of driving with a medically canceled license is necessarily an infraction,
    absent a showing of specific facts placing the offense within one of the enumerated
    exceptions to § 20-35(a2), which are not present in the case at bar. We conclude that
    the offense that Defendant was alleged to have committed does not fall within the
    enumerated exceptions of § 20-35(a1)–(a2) or another statute, and thus is a Class 2
    misdemeanor. Id. § 20-35(a).
    ¶ 31         In that the offense that Defendant allegedly committed was a misdemeanor,
    the trial court erred by concluding that “[t]he medical cancellation on [Defendant’s]
    license was not an arrestable offense[.]” “[A]n officer may make a warrantless arrest
    for a misdemeanor committed in his or her presence[,]” Brooks, 
    337 N.C. at 145
    , 
    446 S.E.2d at 588
    , and “[a]n officer may conduct a warrantless search incident to a lawful
    arrest[,]” State v. Robinson, 
    221 N.C. App. 266
    , 276, 
    727 S.E.2d 712
    , 719 (citation
    omitted), appeal withdrawn, 
    366 N.C. 247
    , 
    731 S.E.2d 161
     (2012). The law
    enforcement officers had probable cause to arrest Defendant and to search Defendant
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    incident to his arrest. Accordingly, the officers lawfully seized the evidence discovered
    during the search of Defendant incident to his arrest.
    III.    Conclusion
    ¶ 32         For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s order granting Defendant’s motion
    to suppress is reversed, and the matter is remanded to the trial court for further
    proceedings.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Chief Judge STROUD and Judge MURPHY concur.