Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Phillip Dixon

482 S.W.3d 386, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 11, 2016 WL 673543
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 2016
Docket2014-SC-000511-DG
StatusUnknown
Cited by1 cases

This text of 482 S.W.3d 386 (Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Phillip Dixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Phillip Dixon, 482 S.W.3d 386, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 11, 2016 WL 673543 (Ky. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE KELLER

Phillip Anthony Dixon entered a conditional guilty plea to drug charges following the denial of his motion to suppress. The Court of-Appeals reversed and remanded the denial and the judgment of conviction. This Court granted the Commonwealth’s motion for discretionary review, and we reverse the Court of Appeals.

I. BACKGROUND.

Kentucky State Police (KSP) received an anonymous complaint that Phillip Dixon was using and making methamphetamine in his home. KSP Troopers Charles White and Jeremy Smith went to the address provided by police dispatch to investigate. On arrival, they discovered that the address belonged to Dixon’s mother who told them that Dixon lived in a nearby trailer separated from her house by woods. The troopers proceeded down a nearby gravel road, passed at least two more residences, and located Dixon’s trailer at the end of the road.

• The troopers noted several indications of methamphetamine production at Dixon’s trailer, including: an open fire burning near the front door, which smelled like burning plastic; windows covered from the inside; and four vehicles parked in the driveway. The -troopers approached the front door in order to perform a warrant- *388 less knock and talk, but before they reached it, Dixon came out of the trailer and met them in front of the porch.

As Trooper White and Dixon spoke, Trooper Smith walked along the outskirts of the maintained area surrounding the trailer to watch for anyone attempting to flee through the back door. Dixon told Trooper White that he would like to cooperate but would not allow the troopers to search his home without a warrant. Immediately thereafter, Trooper Smith radioed from his position behind the trailer and reported that he could see two 2b-ounce bottles containing white residue that appeared to be one-step methamphetamine labs near the back porch. Trooper White and Dixon joined Trooper Smith at his position in tall grass, about 15 feet froin the back porch. From this location, both troopers saw smoke emanating from the open back door and smelled a -chemical odor consistent with methamphetamine production.

Based on these observations, the troopers believed that the trailer was housing an active methamphetamine lab. Trooper White asked Dixon if there was anyone else inside, and Dixon replied that he had friends inside. Acting pursuant to what they believed to be exigent circumstances, the troopers entered the trailer and evacuated the 1 occupants for safety reasons. During their protective sweep, the troopers observed methamphetamine precursor chemicals and three more bottles that also appeared to be one-step labs in plain view. Based on his observations inside and outside of the trailer, Trooper White immediately contacted a KSP clean-up unit and obtained a search warrant for further investigation.

Dixon was charged with numerous drug-related criminal offenses in a twelve-count indictment. Dixon moved to suppress all the- evidence collected from his trailer and argued that the- troopers had unlawfully-exceeded the scope of the knock and talk by entering the protected curtilage of his residence. The trial court held a suppression hearing, and Trooper White testified consistent with the facts set forth above. Specifically as to the issue of curtilage, Trooper White testified as follows:

Trooper White: As I approached the front; door, Mr. Dixon, which was the one we received the complaint on, exited — comes out of the front door and meets us there right in front of his porch.
Commonwealth: Let me stop you. Was Trooper Smith with you at that time as well in front of the residence?
Trooper White: He was. . But as I began to speak,, actually as I went toward the front door, Mr. Dixon met me, Trooper Smith went outside the curtilage around the residence to the backside. There was just a, small area in front of this house that was even mowed — that was taken care of. He went around the gravel drive, around the outside curtilage, to the back cor- ,, ner of this residence. There’s a pond to the left-hand side, it’s grown up weeds in that area,-that’s the area he was standing- in watching, the back door, ...
Commonwealth: And ,-why- would he .. have done that? •
Trooper White: Like I said, it was a drug complaint, wanted to make sure that no one had run out the- back door — that effect — -while I was speaking to Mr. Dixon.
Commonwealth: Now, you describe Trooper Smith as going around outside the curtilage. Can you describe how far he would have been from that back deck when he would have observed those bottles there?
*389 Trooper White: Like I said, it was — this was not maintained well. There was barely enough room to walk around that trailer as far as what had been mowed, so he was — I would say — 15 feet away from the trailer, which is this pond is probably 25 feet from the trailer, just guessing.
Commonwealth: Fence around the trailer or anything?
Trooper White: No, there's no fence. It just simply leads into a grassy area — a tall grass area— there’s a pond and then the ■ rest of it is all wooded.
... [on cross-examination]
Defense Coúnsehln front of the residence was the grass mowed down?
Trooper White: Just a short patch in front of it but not all the way. There was a gravel drive that went down in front of the residence and went down into the woods, but it wasn’t maintained.
Defense Counsel: Okay, so in the back it wasn’t maintained?
Trooper White: Just like I said, just a small area was maintained at all.
Defense Counsel: And that was only in the front of the residence?
Trooper White: Like I say, mowed-r— looked like the width of one mower went around the edge of the trailer to the back.
Defense Counsel: And while you were in front, that was when Trooper Smith went around back?
Trooper White: While I encountered Mr. Dixon he was around the back corner.
Defense Counsel: Was he with you originally?
Trooper White: Just when we got out of the residence — got out ■ at the residence. I seen him- start toward me but then he went on around the back corner.

Near the end of Trooper White’s testimony, defense counsel admitted two photographs of the rear of Dixon’s trailer. The photographs show one plastic bottle on a small back porch or deck and the trailer’s backdoor slightly ajar. The area surrounding the back of Dixon’s trailer appears overgrown with tall grass and trees, and it is littered with trash and" other debris. There also appears to be another structure, resembling á residence, to the left of Dixon’s trailer visible through the trees.

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482 S.W.3d 386, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 11, 2016 WL 673543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-of-kentucky-v-phillip-dixon-ky-2016.