Cartnail v. State

753 A.2d 519, 359 Md. 272, 2000 Md. LEXIS 326
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 14, 2000
Docket84, Sept. Term, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by127 cases

This text of 753 A.2d 519 (Cartnail v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cartnail v. State, 753 A.2d 519, 359 Md. 272, 2000 Md. LEXIS 326 (Md. 2000).

Opinion

HARRELL, Judge.

Mr. Rondorian Wayne Cartnail, Petitioner, was found guilty at a bench trial, following a not guilty plea and upon an agreed statement of facts, in the Circuit Court for Frederick County of driving with a revoked license. Immediately prior to trial, Petitioner unsuccessfully moved to suppress evidence obtained by the police as a result of a traffic stop. The trial judge sentenced Cartnail to one year in prison, suspended all but four months of the term of incarceration, and directed a two year probation upon his release.

Petitioner appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, arguing that the Circuit Court erred in denying the motion to suppress. In an unreported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed. We granted Petitioner’s request for a writ of certiorari which presented the following question:

Did a police officer have reasonable suspicion to stop a gold Nissan occupied by two black men approximately one hour and fifteen minutes after the report of an armed robbery in a different section of the city of Frederick where the report indicated that a gold or tan Mazda with unknown tags and *277 occupied by three black men had fled in “no known direction”?

We reverse and hold that the police did not have reasonable suspicion to stop and seize Petitioner.

I.

The relevant facts of this case, proffered by counsel at the suppression hearing, are not in dispute. What to make of those facts, however, is the crux of the case. At approximately 1:49 a.m. on 26 August 1997, the City of Frederick police investigated a reported robbery of the Quality Inn hotel at 420 Prospect Avenue, located near the interchange of Interstate 70, Interstate 270, Route 15, and Route 340 in Frederick. Information supplied to the police from unidentified sources was that three black male suspects had fled from the scene in an unknown direction driving a gold or tan Mazda. That also was the extent of the information made available to the patrol officer who later encountered Petitioner.

At approximately 3:05 a.m. of the same morning, Petitioner was observed by a patrol officer driving a vehicle in the vicinity of West 7th Street and the Frederick Memorial Hospital, an area of the City of Frederick northeast of where the Quality Inn is located. 1 He was pulled over by the officer. The officer stopped Petitioner based on the information he had *278 received regarding the Quality Inn robbery. At the time, Petitioner was driving a gold Nissan and had one passenger with him. Both Petitioner and his guest are black men.

The officer requested Petitioner’s driver’s license and registration. Petitioner volunteered that he was driving on a revoked driver’s license. After apparently requesting a computer check of Petitioner’s driving record, the officer confirmed that he was in fact driving with a revoked license. 2

Petitioner was arrested and charged based on the information obtained pursuant to the traffic stop. At the suppression hearing, Petitioner moved to suppress “any statements [he made] after the stop or any resulting information” because the officer did not stop him due to suspicion of having committed a traffic violation, nor did the officer have a reasonable, articula-ble suspicion of any other criminal activity. The State responded that the police officer had articulable suspicion based on the information obtained about the robbery earlier that morning and, even if that- information did not support an articulable suspicion, the officer would have obtained the disputed evidence by inevitable discovery. 3

The Circuit Court concluded that the officer had an articula-ble suspicion to pull over Petitioner and denied the motion to suppress. In addition to noting that the roads in the early morning hours are sparsely populated, the trial judge stated:

[w]ell, what impresses me in this case is the—apparently there was not the exact identification of the first car that indicated it might have been a Mazda. You said gold or tan Mazda with unknown tags occupied by three people. Well, you don’t have to be a genius to figure that if there was three people, one or more could have been let out in an hour and 15 minutes. Considering the time that was involved and certainly the similarity between a—I’m familiar with *279 both types of cars, a Mazda and a Nissan, and one was described as a gold or tan Mazda and then the other was, when they found the Nissan, it was gold in color and occupied by two black males, and black males, three in number, had been described by the officer at the time of the investigation of the suspected robbery. Under those circumstances, I think certainly that’s an articulable reason for the officer to check on that vehicle ...

After denial of the motion, the parties proceeded on a not guilty plea and an agreed statement of facts, the latter comprised of Petitioner’s trial counsel reading from the arresting officer’s Statement of Probable Cause. Petitioner was found guilty of driving with a revoked license.

He appealed to the Court of Special Appeals which, affirming the Circuit Court’s judgment, held:

[I]n this case, the color of the vehicle was the same as that reported, the vehicle type was similar, it was in the same metropolitan area, and it had multiple occupants. The stop occurred in the early morning hours when there were few vehicles on the street. See Watkins v. State, 90 Md.App. 437 [601 A.2d 1115] (1992) (A police officer responding to a robbery was advised that the robbers were two black men who left in a small compact car. One of the men was described as wearing a grayish sweat jacket, and the other was described as having a thin beard, a mustache, and large eyes. The officer stopped three black men in a Hyundai car approximately thirty minutes after the incident. One of the occupants had characteristics similar to one of the robbers described by the witnesses. The stop was held to be lawful.)
While presenting a closer question than that in Watkins, we conclude that the motion to suppress was properly denied.

We granted certiorari to decide whether the police stop of Petitioner was lawful.

*280 II.

Petitioner contends essentially that the only description of the robbery suspects, used by the police officer to pull him over, was that they were three black men who drove away from the robbery scene in an unknown direction in a gold or tan Mazda over an hour and fifteen minutes before Petitioner was stopped. He asserts that such information does not support a reasonable and articulable suspicion for the police officer to stop his vehicle simply because he was driving in another part of Frederick later that same morning, that he and his passenger are black men, and that he was driving a gold Nissan. In sum, he believes the police officer was operating on a “hunch.”

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Bluebook (online)
753 A.2d 519, 359 Md. 272, 2000 Md. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cartnail-v-state-md-2000.