Carter v. White

241 S.W.3d 357, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1780, 2007 WL 3314222
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 2007
Docket28230
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 241 S.W.3d 357 (Carter v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. White, 241 S.W.3d 357, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1780, 2007 WL 3314222 (Mo. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Appellants Lance White (“Officer White”) and Noranda Aluminum, Inc. (“Noranda”) (collectively “Appellants”) appeal the trial court’s judgment following a jury trial in favor of Respondents Landell Carter (“Landell”) and Darrell Carter (“Darrell”) (collectively “Respondents”) on their petition for conversion, 1 interference with a business relationship, and trespass. 2 The jury awarded each Respondent actual damages of $200.00 as against both Appellants; denied an award of punitive damages against Officer White; and awarded each Respondent punitive damages in the amount of $25,000.00 only against Noran-da. Appellants now assert three points of trial court error, discussed below.

The record reveals that in 1999, the Southeast Missouri (“SEMO”) Drug Task Force began several undercover investigations at private companies to help those companies uncover illegal drug activity and other internal issues. At that time, the SEMO task force worked with several executives at Noranda to place two undercover, commissioned officers, Officer White and Officer Darren Bullard (“Officer Bul-lard”), at Noranda as paid employees. 3 During the investigation, the undercover officers “worked as workers” at Noranda and did not report their findings to Noran-da while the investigation was pending; instead, the officers filed reports directly with the SEMO Drug Task Force. The undercover officers were paid by Noranda during the undercover investigation and did not receive wages from the drug task *360 force or any other law enforcement agency during that time. Officer White testified at trial that he “answered to the SEMO Drug Task Force. [He] didn’t have any contact with any personnel at Noranda ...” other than with his direct work supervisors who did not know about his undercover status. Officer Bullard testified the undercover officers “were ... under the direct control and .supervision of the SEMO Drug Task Force” throughout the investigation.

The undercover investigation at Noran-da lasted approximately eighteen months and at the close of the investigation the SEMO task force performed a series of searches at the homes of several suspects, including Respondents.

On January 29, 1999, Officer White and Officer Bullard, accompanied by a Missouri Highway Patrol officer, 4 performed consensual searches at the homes of both Respondents, who were Noranda employees.

Officer White testified that Landell’s home was searched because Officer White had received information that Landell along with Darrell and other Noranda employees had broken into a trailer and stolen several items. Officer White further testified that he had personal knowledge that Landell as well as Darrell “carried out items [belonging to Noranda] in their tool boxes or their lunch boxes.”

Officer White testified that on the morning of January 29, 1999, he and the other officers received written consent to search Landell’s home from his mother-in-law and that Landell was not at home at the time of the search. He stated the officers gathered numerous items which they believed to be stolen property; made a list of the items seized; “labeled [the items] as evidence and put it in the SEMO Drug Task Force Evidence Locker.” Officer White stated he “put evidence tape on [the items] ... put a property record on it, sealed it as evidence.... ” Officer Bullard also testified that the seized property was “gathered up and taken to a [SEMO Drug Task Force] locker ...” following the search.

Later on the morning of January 29, 1999, the officers went to Darrell’s home. Darrell was home at the time and gave the officers written consent to search his home. The officers seized approximately ten items which they believed belonged to Noranda from a shed on Darrell’s property and from his vehicle. The officers collected the items by following “evidence procedures” and Officer White made a list of the items for his police report when they returned to the police station. Officer White testified the items were “packaged, evidence tape across them, property records attached, placed in the SEMO Drug Task Force Evidence Locker.”

At trial, Landell testified that at an ensuing arbitration hearing he had asked a Noranda representative for the return of the items seized from his home but was told he could not have the items back. Landell admitted he lost his job with No-randa because the arbitrator found he had stolen property from Noranda. Darrell testified at trial that he never asked anyone to return the seized items to him. Darrell admitted he was fired from Noran-da because they found he was smoking marijuana while at work as well as for stealing from Noranda.

Officer White testified that on February 4, 1999, he removed the property seized *361 from Respondents’ homes from the SEMO Drug Task Force evidence locker and took it to the Sikeston Highway Patrol office for it to be identified by Noranda employees. The Noranda employees indicated the items “were used commonly at Noranda” and were “typical Noranda items.” In his police report, which was entered into evidence at trial, Office White noted that the Noranda employees noted that many of the items definitely “came through the warehouse” at Noranda and that many of the items were obviously for industrial use only.

Officer White testified that Noranda was in no way involved in the seizure of items from Respondents’ homes and he was not “ordered to go there by them.” He stated that the items seized were taken on behalf of a criminal investigation being performed by the SEMO Drug Task Force. Officer White also testified that he was then working for the Mineral Area Drug Task Force and he did not know the current location of the items seized from Respondents’ homes. He stated the last time he saw the items was at the arbitration hearing conducted in relation to Respondents’ discharges from Noranda.

Officer Bullard testified that Noranda was not involved in the seizure of items from Respondents’ homes and that at all times he and Officer White were operating a criminal investigation as police officers. He stated they took possession of the items “on behalf of the SEMO Drug Task Force.”

Sergeant Kevin Glaser (“Sergeant Glaser”), an officer with the Missouri Highway Patrol and the Coordinator of the SEMO Drug Task Force, testified that Officer White and Officer Bullard were working undercover for the task force while they were employed at Noranda. He stated they filed reports with the task force and sent drug samples and other evidence to the task force to be tested.

Rick Eisenbach, the superintendent of employee relations and security for Noran-da, testified that Landell was discharged from Noranda for “stealing] or attempting] to steal [Noranda] property....” He stated Darrell was discharged for the same reason as well as “for smoking marijuana on [Noranda] property, actually at work.” Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 S.W.3d 357, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1780, 2007 WL 3314222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-white-moctapp-2007.