Carter v. State

72 P.3d 1256, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 132, 2003 WL 21512636
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 3, 2003
DocketA-8217
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 72 P.3d 1256 (Carter v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. State, 72 P.3d 1256, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 132, 2003 WL 21512636 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Samuel K. Carter was one of four occupants of a hotel room in Fairbanks. The police were interested in investigating the room because they suspected that drug activity was occurring there. The police obtained the hotel management's permission to search the room after Carter and the other occupants checked out (i.e., after they vacated the room, and before the hotel's cleaning staff began to work on the room).

However, the police decided to speed up this process. The police knew that the hotel's check-out time was one o'clock p.m., so at one o'clock they ordered Carter to gather his belongings and leave the room. In the process of gathering his belongings, Carter opened a night stand drawer,. When he did so, the police observed crack pipes and syringes in the drawer. Based on this discovery (and other evidence obtained in the ensuing investigation), Carter was convicted of fourth-degree controlled substance miscon-duet. 1

We conclude that the police did not have the authority to remain in Carter's hotel room, nor did they have the authority to order Carter to gather his belongings and leave the hotel room. We therefore conclude that the evidence against Carter should have been suppressed, and that his conviction must be reversed.

The evidence relating to Carter's tenancy in the hotel room and the authority granted to the police by the hotel management

On January 9, 2001, Carter and three other people occupied a room at the Fairbanks Comfort Inn; the other occupants of the room were Pamela Fain, her adult daughter Amy Fain, and Amy's minor child.

The hotel room had initially been rented on January 5th for one night. However, the rental had been extended on a day-to-day basis, up to and including the night of January 8th. The established check-out time at the Comfort Inn was one o'clock in the after *1258 noon. Thus, the check-out time for Carter and the other cccupants of the room was one o'clock on the afternoon of January 9th.

Carter was under police surveillance on the morning of January Oth. The police were investigating a report that Carter had threatened Amy Fain with a gun, and they were also aware that Carter had a history of using narcotics.

Investigator James O'Malley, a Fairbanks police officer assigned to the Statewide Drug Enforcement Unit, decided to contact the management of the Comfort Inn to seek permission to search Carter's room. O'Mal-ley spoke to the front desk clerk, Judith Tonkovich, asking that he be allowed to search Carter's room after the occupants checked out, but before the housekeeping staff cleaned the room. Tonkovich told O'Malley that he could search the room after the occupants checked out. Tonkovich also informed O'Malley that the established check-out time was one o'clock.

O'Malley's conversation with Tonkovich took place around noon. To kill time until Carter and the other occupants checked out, O'Malley ate lunch and then he went to the Comfort Inn to renew his surveillance of the hotel and of Carter's vehicle (which was parked in back of the hotel). O'Malley's purpose was to see who came out of the hotel at check-out time, who drove away in Carter's vehicle, and what they might be carrying.

But at approximately 12:45 p.m., a new development occurred: several Alaska State Troopers arrived to take Amy Fain into custody on a citizen's arrest complaint. O'Mal-ley and his surveillance partner decided to assist the troopers with this arrest.

The troopers and the officers entered the hotel room at about one o'clock. Following a struggle, Amy Fain was arrested and the troopers removed her from the hotel room. But Officer O'Malley and his partner decided not to leave with the troopers; instead, they remained in the hotel room.

Following Amy's arrest, Pamela Fain took Amy's child and left the room. Thus, of the original four occupants, only Carter remained.

According to the superior court's later findings of fact, it was now slightly past one o'clock. O'Malley ordered Carter to gather his belongings and leave the room. O'Malley later testified that he believed he had the authority to order Carter to leave because (a) the room was not rented in Carter's name, (b) no one had paid for another night, and (c) it was now past the hotel's check-out time of one o'clock.

While Carter was gathering his belongings, he opened a night stand. Inside the night stand drawer, O'Malley and his partner observed crack pipes and syringes in the night stand. This discovery led to the charge in the present case.

The superior court's ruling that the police lawfully discovered this evidence under the "plain view" doctrine, and (alternatively) because Carter had no expectation of privacy in the room after one o'clock

Following his indictment, Carter asked the superior court to suppress the evidence against him. He argued that the police had had no right to order him to gather his belongings and leave the room, and thus their observation of the crack pipes and syringes in the night stand drawer was the fruit of a Fourth Amendment violation.

Superior Court Judge Mary E. Greene denied Carter's suppression motion because she concluded that the discovery of the crack pipes and syringes had resulted from a "plain view" observation. But the judge's decision actually contains two alternative rationales for the seizure of the crack pipes and syringes.

First, Judge Greene found that the police officers lawfully observed this contraband when, after they ordered Carter to leave the room (so that they could begin searching it), Carter opened the night stand drawer. Thus, the contraband was in "plain view". To justify a seizure of evidence under the plain view doctrine, the police must make their observation from a place where they are entitled to be. Judge Greene found that the officers were authorized to remain in Carter's room, and to order Carter to vacate the room, because the management of the *1259 hotel had consented to have the officers enter and search the room.

Judge Greene acknowledged that the police "[had] not [been] requested by the Comfort Inn to eviet Mr. Carter". But she then offered an alternative rationale for the seizure of the crack pipes and syringes. She ruled that Carter had no right to occupy the room after one o'clock-ie, that Carter's expectation of privacy in the room expired at one o'clock-because (1) one o'clock was the Comfort Inn's established check-out time and (2) Carter had done nothing at that point to extend his occupancy of the hotel room (by, for example, informing the hotel management that he intended to stay for another night). She concluded that, because Carter had no expectation of privacy in the room after one o'clock, he could not complain that the officers forced him to gather his belongings and leave the room.

A hotel guest's expectation of privacy in a hotel room

The superior court's decision rests on two foundations, one factual and the other legal.

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Related

Laney v. State
842 A.2d 773 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
72 P.3d 1256, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 132, 2003 WL 21512636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-state-alaskactapp-2003.