Commonwealth of Virginia v. Leigh Ann Jennings

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 23, 2024
Docket1443233
StatusUnpublished

This text of Commonwealth of Virginia v. Leigh Ann Jennings (Commonwealth of Virginia v. Leigh Ann Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Commonwealth of Virginia v. Leigh Ann Jennings, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Fulton, Causey and Raphael Argued by videoconference

COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1443-23-3 JUDGE JUNIUS P. FULTON, III JANUARY 23, 2024 LEIGH ANN JENNINGS

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CAMPBELL COUNTY J. Frederick Watson, Judge

Sandra M. Workman, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellant.

No brief or argument for appellee.1

On May 8, 2023, Leigh Ann Jennings was indicted in the Circuit Court of Campbell County

on one count of possession of a Schedule I/II controlled substance, in violation of Code § 18.2-250.

Jennings was also charged with one count of driving under the influence of alcohol in violation of

Code § 18.2-266. Jennings filed a motion to suppress certain evidence, and on August 10, 2023, the

trial court held a hearing on that motion and ultimately granted Jennings’s motion. The

Commonwealth filed this pre-trial appeal. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 Appellee submitted a timely brief in opposition to the Commonwealth’s petition for appeal. However, after the petition for appeal was granted, appellee failed to timely file a brief in opposition to the Commonwealth’s appeal. Therefore, only the Commonwealth presented argument on appeal. BACKGROUND2

At about 11:20 a.m. on December 7, 2022, Dyron Martin, an emergency medical

technician for Campbell County Public Safety, went to the scene of a reported car crash on Route

501. Martin found Leigh Ann Jennings in one of the vehicles involved in the incident. After

ensuring that the vehicle was turned off, Martin noticed that Jennings was disheveled, dazed, and

confused. Martin explained to Jennings that she had struck another car, crossed the median, and

hit three more cars. Jennings stated that she could not remember what happened. Due to

Jennings’s appearance and condition, Martin asked if she was under the influence of anything.

She replied that she and her boyfriend had “smoked some weed last night.”

Martin helped Jennings out of her car and into an ambulance that had arrived on the

scene. Martin asked Jennings if she had her identification. She said it was in a pink bag in her

car. Martin went to the vehicle and found a pink box. Martin opened the box and saw “what

appeared to be a sizeable bag of marijuana,” two pipes, a jewelry screwdriver, a set of scales, and

a “light bulb shaped container” with a “sugary looking crystallized product.”

Virginia State Police Trooper Sica arrived on the scene at 11:34 a.m. When Trooper Sica

tried to talk to Jennings in the ambulance, she appeared very confused and had “pinpoint pupils.”

Jennings said she left her boyfriend’s house on Sage Drive but remembered nothing after that.

Jennings said she wanted to get in her vehicle and drive home. Trooper Sica testified that

Jennings’s car was “not drivable at all.” The ambulance left to transport Jennings to the hospital.

Martin told Trooper Sica about the contents of the box, with what appeared to be marijuana and

2 “In an appeal by the Commonwealth of an order of the trial court suppressing evidence, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the defendant and findings of fact are entitled to a presumption of correctness unless they are plainly wrong or without evidence to support them.” Commonwealth v. Peterson, 15 Va. App. 486, 487 (1992). -2- drug paraphernalia. Trooper Sica walked to the vehicle with Martin, and at Trooper Sica’s

request, Martin took the pink box out of the car and gave it to Trooper Sica.

Trooper Sica testified that the applicable police procedure under the circumstances was to

conduct an inventory search of Jennings’s car and subsequently to have the car towed.

Specifically, Trooper Sica testified that the procedure when a non-drivable vehicle remains at the

scene of an accident was to call a tow truck and “then usually conduct the inventory search of the

vehicle. That way we know what is and isn’t in the vehicle while it’s taken to the tow lot since

it’s not going directly back to the driver.” Trooper Sica stated that he performed what he

believed to be an inventory search of the vehicle. However, Trooper Sica admitted that the

impetus for his “search” was to retrieve what he believed to be drugs and accompanying

paraphernalia. Further, he admitted that he did not complete any sort of “inventory list” from the

search. Ultimately, the substances found in the pink box were determined to be contraband.

In support of her motion to suppress the evidence seized from the pink box, Jennings

argued that the police violated her Fourth Amendment rights when they searched her car without

a warrant. The Commonwealth conceded that Trooper Sica asking Martin to retrieve the box

constituted a police search of the vehicle. However, the Commonwealth asserted that Trooper

Sica had probable cause to believe drugs were in the car based on Jennings’s impaired condition

and Martin’s discovery of apparent drugs and paraphernalia. The Commonwealth contended that

under the automobile exception, the police were authorized to search the vehicle without a

warrant, so long as they had probable cause to do so. Alternatively, the Commonwealth

contended that the evidence was admissible under the doctrine of inevitable discovery, as

Trooper Sica testified that it was standard police procedure to conduct inventory searches of such

automobiles involved in car crashes before having them towed.

-3- The trial court questioned whether the automobile exception applied because Jennings’s

vehicle was completely “totaled,” and ultimately had been rendered entirely “immobile” by the

events of the car crash. Further, the trial court was skeptical of any purported “inventory

search,” given that Trooper Sica expressly testified that his intent in carrying out the search was

to retrieve the drugs and paraphernalia contained in the pink box.

Ultimately, the trial court found that Martin was acting as a community caretaker when

he initially entered Jennings’s car and discovered the box. Further, the trial court concluded that

once Martin told Trooper Sica about the contents of the box, Trooper Sica possessed probable

cause to believe that Jennings’s car contained contraband. The court then opined that “the issue

turn[ed] on the question of the mobility of the car, could the car actually be driven.” The court

concluded that because Jennings’s car could not be driven, it “was not mobile” and the

automobile exception therefore did not apply. The court also rejected the Commonwealth’s

argument concerning inevitable discovery because Trooper Sica did not follow standardized

procedures in conducting an inventory search. For these reasons, the trial court granted the

motion to suppress.

ANALYSIS

On appeal, the Commonwealth argues that the trial court erred (1) in holding that the

automobile exception to the warrant requirement did not apply to the set of facts in this case and

(2) in holding that the doctrine of inevitable discovery did not ratify the warrantless search. We

agree with the Commonwealth that the automobile exception applies, and we therefore reverse

and remand for further proceedings.3

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