State of Tennessee v. Samantha Grissom Scott ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                        01/16/2020
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    May 14, 2019 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. SAMANTHA GRISSOM SCOTT
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Warren County
    No. 18-CR-1805 Larry B. Stanley, Jr., Judge
    No. M2018-01852-CCA-R3-CD
    The Defendant, Samantha Grissom Scott, pleaded guilty in the Circuit Court for Warren
    County to possession with the intent to deliver more than twenty-six grams of
    methamphetamine and to possession of drug paraphernalia. See T.C.A. §§ 39-17-434
    (2018) (possession with the intent to deliver methamphetamine), 39-17-425 (2018)
    (possession of drug paraphernalia). The trial court sentenced the Defendant to an
    effective eight years and ordered her to serve 180 days’ confinement with the remainder
    on probation. On appeal, the Defendant presents a certified question of law regarding the
    legality of the warrantless entry into her home. We dismiss the appeal because the
    certified question is not dispositive of the case.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Appeal Dismissed
    ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which NORMA
    MCGEE OGLE, J., joined. CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
    Brent Horst, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Samantha Grissom Scott.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; David H. Findley, Senior
    Assistant Attorney General; Lisa Zavogiannis, District Attorney General; and Matt
    Colvard, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    This case relates to the seizure of the Defendant and search of her home on
    December 20, 2017. Warren County Sheriff’s deputies were dispatched to the
    Defendant’s home at the request of the White County Sheriff’s Office to look for Ronnie
    Dishman, who was the Defendant’s stepbrother and who had multiple outstanding arrest
    warrants from White County. When the deputies arrived at the home, they saw an
    unknown male, who was later identified as codefendant Scott Bell, enter the home.
    Deputies saw the Defendant inside the home, as well. The deputies set up a perimeter
    around the home, and the Defendant and codefendant Bell were detained when they left
    the home approximately thirty minutes later. The Defendant provided the deputies with
    written consent to search the home to search for Mr. Dishman. Upon searching a
    bedroom for Mr. Dishman, the police saw a bag containing a “crystal substance” that
    later field-tested positive for methamphetamine. The deputies obtained a search warrant
    for the home, which resulted in the seizure of additional methamphetamine from a
    washing machine. The Defendant was charged with various drug-related offenses. She
    filed a motion to suppress the evidence found inside the home on the basis that her
    consent to search was the product of an illegal entry, illegal search, and coercion.
    At the suppression hearing, Warren County Deputy Tyler Glenn testified that the
    White County Sheriff’s Office requested that the Warren County Sheriff’s Office attempt
    to find Mr. Dishman, whom the White County Sheriff’s Office believed was armed with
    a handgun or rifle, at the Defendant’s home. Deputy Glenn said that he relied solely
    upon the information provided by the White County Sheriff’s Office that Mr. Dishman
    would be at the Defendant’s home and that he did not conduct an independent
    investigation to verify the information. Deputy Glenn said that he and five additional
    deputies drove to the Defendant’s home and that everyone was armed with “long arms,”
    which he described as shotguns, because many homes in the area had long driveways and
    open fields and that “a pistol is not something you want to have . . . if you get into a
    shootout.” Deputy Glenn said that “pretty much everyone” in Warren County owned a
    rifle or shotgun.
    Deputy Glenn testified that he and the deputies parked in the Defendant’s
    driveway and that Deputy Derek Bowles saw a man, whom Deputy Bowles believed was
    Mr. Dishman, standing on the porch. Deputy Glenn said that the man looked at Deputy
    Bowles, entered the home, and locked the door and that Deputy Bowles ran to the door.
    Deputy Glenn said the deputies surrounded the home. Deputy Glenn said that he could
    see into the home through a glass front door, that he saw “several subjects running
    throughout” the home, and that the deputies gave commands for the people inside the
    home to come outside with their hands up because they were “surrounded.” Deputy
    Glenn said that after about thirty minutes, the Defendant came outside and walked
    backward toward Deputy Bowles, who placed the Defendant in handcuffs.
    Deputy Glenn testified that after the Defendant was placed in handcuffs, the man
    inside the home came outside about five minutes later. Deputy Glenn thought that the
    man was Mr. Dishman but that the man was codefendant Bell. Deputy Glenn said
    codefendant Bell told the deputies that Mr. Dishman was not inside the home. Deputy
    Glenn said that Captain Bo Ramsey and Chief Deputy Tommy Meyers arrived at the
    -2-
    scene and that the Defendant provided written consent for the deputies to enter the home
    to search for Mr. Dishman. Deputy Glenn said that they “cleared” the home “in a tactical
    setting” with their guns drawn. Deputy Glenn said that after they established Mr.
    Dishman was not inside, the deputies left the home. Deputy Glenn said that when the
    deputies returned outside, Investigator Roberts stated that he had seen a bag containing
    methamphetamine on the floor inside a bedroom. Deputy Glenn said that Investigator
    Roberts and Investigator Stevens asked the Defendant about the bag and that the
    Defendant declined to provide her consent to further search the home. Deputy Glenn
    stated that Investigators Roberts and Stevens left the scene and returned several hours
    later with a search warrant. Deputy Glenn denied attempting to obtain the Defendant’s
    consent to search the home while the investigators obtained the warrant, although he
    admitted talking to the Defendant about the cold weather and “pretty much everything”
    not related to what was inside the home.
    On cross-examination, Deputy Glenn testified that he received the information
    from the White County Sheriff’s Office about twenty minutes before going to the
    Defendant’s home and that the only information provided was that Mr. Dishman had
    outstanding arrest warrants and might have been armed. Deputy Glenn agreed he did not
    have information showing that anyone was in immediate danger.
    A recording from the police dispatch center was played for the trial court, and it
    was consistent with Deputy Glenn’s testimony regarding the deputies’ arrival and
    surrounding the Defendant’s home. Deputy Glenn agreed the recording showed that the
    deputies did not know whether Mr. Dishman lived at the home. Deputy Glenn agreed
    that the Defendant’s consent to search for a person was the basis for entering the home.
    Deputy Glenn did not dispute the recording showed that at 2:12 p.m. a deputy said, “We
    got warrants, there might be something in there,” that at 2:27 p.m. the deputies
    surrounded the home, and that at 3:42 p.m. the deputies entered the home. He agreed that
    approximately one hour elapsed between the deputies’ surrounding the home and the
    Defendant’s consent to search.
    On redirect examination, Deputy Glenn testified that Deputy Bowles saw someone
    inside the home who matched the description of Mr. Dishman and that Deputy Bowles
    relayed this information to everyone at the scene. Deputy Glenn said that the deputies
    did not “breach the door” afterward because they had information that Mr. Dishman was
    likely armed. Deputy Glenn stated that they used a loudspeaker to communicate with the
    people inside the home that the deputies had the home surrounded and that they needed to
    come out of the home with their hands up. He said that he believed Mr. Dishman “ran
    back into the [home].” Deputy Glenn said that they did not use force, that the Defendant
    and codefendant Bell left the home, and that the Defendant consented to the search for
    -3-
    Mr. Dishman. Deputy Glenn did not recall having information that Mr. Dishman was the
    Defendant’s brother. Deputy Glenn said that although Mr. Dishman was not inside the
    home, the deputies told the Defendant that they smelled and saw methamphetamine and
    asked for her consent to search the home again. Deputy Glenn said that after the
    Defendant declined to provide her consent, a search warrant was obtained.
    Warren County Detective Steven Carpenter testified that when he arrived at the
    scene, several deputies were talking to the Defendant. He said that the Defendant did not
    appear distressed or under duress, although she was nervous. He said that “at some
    point” the Defendant provided her written consent for the deputies to enter the home to
    search for Mr. Dishman. He said that when he entered the home, he noticed a “strong
    chemical smell” and a “fog in the air.” He said that Investigator Roberts found a bag of
    methamphetamine on the floor when he “cleared” a bedroom. Detective Carpenter said
    that after they knew Mr. Dishman was not inside the home, they left to speak with the
    Defendant. Detective Carpenter said that they told the Defendant they had found a bag of
    methamphetamine and asked for her consent to search for drugs but that she did not want
    the deputies going inside again. Detective Carpenter said that, as a result, a search
    warrant was obtained, that it took about two or three hours to obtain and return with the
    warrant, and that methamphetamine was found during the second search.
    On cross-examination, Detective Carpenter stated that approximately nine law
    enforcement officers were at the scene.
    Brittany Pack, the Defendant’s daughter, testified that, on the day of the incident,
    she was at the Defendant’s home at 3:00 p.m. Ms. Pack said that she received a
    telephone call from her grandmother, who requested Ms. Pack go to the Defendant’s
    home. Ms. Pack said that when she arrived, four or five sheriff’s deputies pointed guns at
    her, asked who she was, and yelled for her to get out of the car. She said that she was
    scared and that they made her stand about forty feet from the Defendant. Ms. Pack said
    that the Defendant looked “very scared” and cried “hysterically.” Ms. Pack said that her
    grandmother arrived after she did and waited with her.
    Ms. Pack testified that Mr. Dishman was her uncle and that he was a “really big
    guy,” with red hair and a beard, and weighed 250 pounds. She denied knowing Mr.
    Dishman had outstanding arrest warrants at the time of the incident. She said that the
    Defendant was outside the home sitting on the ground when she arrived. She said that
    she was at the scene when the Defendant provided her consent to search the home for Mr.
    Dishman. Ms. Pack said that although the deputies did not hurt the Defendant, the
    deputies “kept on . . . pressuring her and pretty much telling her that they were going in
    regardless; either she signed it or they were still doing it.” Ms. Pack said that the
    -4-
    deputies told the Defendant that the Defendant “might as well go ahead and sign it, that
    they were going to do that with or without her help.” She was unsure whether the
    deputies were referring to a search warrant.
    Judy Dishman, the Defendant’s mother and Ms. Pack’s grandmother, testified that
    on the day of the incident she received a call on her way home from work from the
    Defendant and that Ms. Dishman drove to the Defendant’s home. Ms. Dishman said that
    the Defendant was inside the home when the Defendant called, that the Defendant
    sounded terrified, and that the Defendant reported the police were outside her home. Ms.
    Dishman said that when she arrived, she saw ten to fifteen police cars and that the
    deputies would not allow her to talk to the Defendant. Ms. Dishman said that she stood
    with her granddaughter and waited. Ms. Dishman said that the Defendant was “very
    upset” and crying and that two deputies stood with the Defendant.
    On cross-examination, Ms. Dishman testified that Mr. Dishman was her stepson
    and that Mr. Dishman had “a few” pending drug-related charges. She denied that Mr.
    Dishman was “armed and dangerous” and said that if he were armed, he would not shoot
    at anyone because Mr. Dishman was “too big of a coward.” She agreed the deputies
    allowed her to stay at the scene as long as she stood near the edge of the road. She
    agreed the Defendant had been arrested previously and had served time in confinement.
    The Defendant testified that on the day of the incident, her friend, codefendant
    Bell, was at her home. She said that she and he were getting ready to leave to pick up his
    vehicle when codefendant Bell stated that something was going on outside the home.
    She said that she looked outside and saw a group of deputies and “guns everywhere.”
    She said that the deputies were crouched behind open car doors with their guns pointed at
    the home. She said the cars were about ten to fifteen yards from the home. She said that
    deputies with guns stood around her home, including the backyard. She said that the
    deputies yelled, that codefendant Bell thought the deputies were looking for someone
    named “Ronnie,” and that the Defendant thought the deputies were looking for Mr.
    Dishman, who was not at the home. She said that it took time for her to realize what the
    deputies wanted. She said that she went outside because she did not think she had a
    choice to remain inside. She said she felt threatened and frightened and thought she
    “better do something” because she did not know what to do. She said that a panic attack
    initially prevented her from going outside and that the number of guns caused her to
    break down. She said about twenty minutes elapsed from when she saw the deputies to
    when she left the home.
    -5-
    The Defendant testified that she came out of the front door, that the deputies
    yelled, that they told her to put up her hands and to get on her knees, that she had to
    “walk” backward on her knees to the nearby woods in the rain and mud, and that all of
    the deputies pointed their guns at her. She said the deputies “jerked [her] up” when she
    reached them and that they did not handcuff her until they took her to the jail. She said
    that the deputies wanted her consent to search the home for Mr. Dishman, that she told
    the deputies that Mr. Dishman was not at the home, that she offered to call Mr. Dishman,
    and that the deputies declined. She said that the deputies asked “over and over
    continuously” for her consent to search the home. When asked what the deputies said to
    her, she stated that “[p]retty much . . . I felt like I didn’t have a choice. They were going
    to go in my home whether I signed it or not.” She said that the deputies told her that they
    “need [her] to sign these papers” in order for the deputies to enter the home and search
    for Mr. Dishman. She said that the deputies did not indicate they would leave her
    property and allow her to return to her home if she refused to consent. She said that she
    offered to “go and show [Mr. Dishman] wasn’t there” but that the deputies declined. She
    said that she understood the deputies “were absolutely not leaving” until she consented to
    the search.
    On cross-examination, the Defendant testified that when codefendant Bell returned
    to her home, codefendant Bell said, “Guns are pointed at me.” She denied that
    codefendant Bell said sheriff’s deputies had surrounded the home. She said that most of
    the police cars were unmarked and that “[t]here really wasn’t very many identifications
    on those vehicles out there.” She said that she heard the deputies yell for Mr. Dishman
    “maybe one time” and that she did not hear a lot because she was having a panic attack.
    She said that she left the home after she recovered from the panic attack in order to tell
    the deputies that Mr. Dishman was not inside. She said that after the deputies searched
    her and codefendant Bell did not have any weapons, the deputies began talking to her.
    She agreed that she was not placed in handcuffs.
    The Defendant testified that Mr. Dishman had previously but not recently stayed
    at her home. She denied that Mr. Dishman ever lived at her home, although he had
    stayed overnight once. She said that the deputies asked her for consent to search the
    home for Mr. Dishman and that she provided her written consent “after a lot of coercion.”
    She said that she did not sign the consent form initially and that she did not want to sign
    it. When asked how the deputies coerced her, she said, “They told me I might as well go
    ahead and sign it because they’re going . . . in anyway.” She said that the deputies “led
    [her] to believe [she] didn’t have a choice in the matter,” that she was scared to death,
    and that she did not recall the specific words used by the deputies because she was
    terrified. She said, though, the deputies told her that if she did not sign the consent form,
    the deputies could “still get in there anyway,” that “[i]t doesn’t matter,” that she needed
    -6-
    “to go ahead and sign” the form, and that “[t]his is just a form of technicality.” She
    described the deputy who told her this as having dark hair and a short beard and thought
    his name could have been Ramsey. She said the deputies threatened to obtain a search
    warrant multiple times. She agreed she signed the consent form.
    On redirect examination, the Defendant testified that she was cold and muddy and
    wanted the deputies to go away. She said that she requested dry clothes but that the
    deputies denied her request. She said that she told the deputies that someone could enter
    her home to obtain dry clothes but that the deputies refused and continuously placed the
    consent form “in [her] face.” On recross-examination, the Defendant testified that a
    deputy did not provide her with a poncho but that a deputy provided codefendant Bell
    with a poncho. She said, though, that she was so scared that she could have been
    wrapped in “something plastic.”
    On rebuttal, Warren County Deputy Steven Carpenter testified that he was not the
    primary deputy but that Captain Bo Ramsey was the deputy in charge. Deputy Carpenter
    said that he heard Captain Ramsey explain to the Defendant that the deputies were
    looking for Mr. Dishman because Mr. Dishman had outstanding arrest warrants in
    another county. Deputy Carpenter said that Captain Ramsey told the Defendant that the
    deputies wanted to search the home for Mr. Dishman, that the consent form was read to
    the Defendant, and that the Defendant signed the form. Deputy Carpenter denied that
    Captain Ramsey told the Defendant that the deputies were going inside the home
    regardless of whether she provided her consent. Deputy Carpenter said that Captain
    Ramsey provided the Defendant with a poncho.
    The trial court denied the Defendant’s motion to suppress. The court found that
    the White County Sheriff’s Office contacted the Warren County Sheriff’s Office with
    information that White County law enforcement officers believed Mr. Dishman was at
    the Defendant’s home and that Mr. Dishman had outstanding arrest warrants in White
    County. The court found that codefendant Bell matched the description of Mr. Dishman
    and that codefendant Bell entered the home without responding to the deputies’ first
    requests “to step out here.” The court found that once the deputies saw codefendant Bell,
    whom they believed to be Mr. Dishman, enter the home, close the door, and not
    reemerge, the deputies had the authority to seize the property to ensure that codefendant
    Bell did not go anywhere. The court found that because the deputies had the authority to
    seize the property, the Defendant’s consent was not involuntary and was not
    objectionable. The court conceded, though, that if the deputies lacked authority to seize
    the property, the Defendant’s consent would have been invalid.
    -7-
    After the suppression hearing, the Defendant pleaded guilty to possession with the
    intent to deliver methamphetamine and to possession of drug paraphernalia and pursuant
    to her plea agreement reserved one certified question for appeal:
    Was the consent provided by the Defendant to conduct a warrantless search
    of her home invalidated by the warrantless seizure and constructive search
    of her home and curtilage in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the
    Constitution of the United States of America and Article 1 §7 of the
    Constitution of the State of Tennessee, or did the officers have exigent
    circumstances to constructively seize and remain on the property while they
    obtained consent because there were facts which led them to reasonably
    believe that an exigent circumstance existed – which was that they
    possessed an arrest warrant for a person they believed to be inside the
    residence.
    Tennessee Criminal Procedure Rule 37(b)(2)(A) provides that an appeal can be
    taken from a plea of guilty if the Defendant enters into a plea agreement and explicitly
    reserves with the consent of the State and the trial court a certified question of law that is
    dispositive of the case. See Tenn. R. Crim. App. 37(b)(2)(A)(i)-(iv); State v. Armstrong,
    
    126 S.W.3d 908
    (Tenn. 2003). “An issue is dispositive when this court must either
    affirm the judgment or reverse and dismiss. An issue is never dispositive when we might
    reverse and remand[.]” State v. Wilkes, 
    684 S.W.2d 663
    , 667 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1984).
    Furthermore, the fact that the defendant, the State, and the trial judge have agreed the
    issue is dispositive does not bind this court. State v. Preston, 
    759 S.W.2d 647
    , 651
    (Tenn. 1988). “[T]he appellate courts must . . . determine if the record on appeal
    demonstrates how that question is dispositive of the case . . . If the appellate court does
    not agree that the certified question is dispositive, appellate review should be denied.”
    
    Id. (citing State
    v. Jennette, 
    706 S.W.2d 614
    , 615 (Tenn. 1986)); see State v. Dailey, 
    235 S.W.3d 131
    , 134-5 (Tenn. 2007).
    The record reflects that the certified question is not dispositive to the outcome of
    the case because even if the Defendant’s consent to search the home was constitutionally
    invalid and exigent circumstances did not exist, the evidence would have been inevitably
    discovered. The deputies received information from another law enforcement agency
    that Mr. Dishman had multiple outstanding arrest warrants, was armed and dangerous,
    and was at the Defendant’s home. When the deputies arrived at the home, they saw
    codefendant Bell, who matched the description of Mr. Dishman, on the porch.
    Codefendant Bell saw the deputies, returned to the home, and did not reemerge. The
    deputies saw more than one person inside the home. Although the deputies requested
    that everyone exit the home, they did not exit for approximately thirty minutes.
    -8-
    Based upon this evidence, the deputies had probable cause to believe that Mr.
    Dishman was inside the Defendant’s home. See Stegald v. United States, 
    451 U.S. 204
    ,
    214-15 (1981) (concluding that absent exigent circumstances and valid consent, law
    enforcement officers must obtain a valid search warrant based upon probable cause to
    search a home). The deputies could have obtained and executed a search warrant without
    the Defendant’s consent in order to search the home for Mr. Dishman, and the drug-
    related evidence would have been inevitably discovered. See T.C.A. §§ 40-6-103, -104;
    see also State v. Williams, 
    193 S.W.3d 502
    , 506 (Tenn. 2006) (“Probable cause generally
    requires reasonable grounds for suspicion, supported by circumstances indicative of an
    illegal act.”); State v. Patton, 
    898 S.W.2d 732
    , 735 (1994) (“Under [the inevitable
    discovery] doctrine, illegally obtained evidence is admitted by the court when the
    evidence offered would have inevitably been discovered by lawful means.”). Therefore,
    the certified question is not dispositive.
    In consideration of the foregoing and the record as a whole, we conclude that
    because the legality of the Defendant’s consent does not affect the admissibility of the
    evidence, the certified question is not dispositive. As a result, we lack jurisdiction and
    dismiss the appeal.
    ____________________________________
    ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., JUDGE
    -9-