Ferguson v. State

458 S.W.2d 383, 249 Ark. 138, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1075
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 12, 1970
Docket5517
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 458 S.W.2d 383 (Ferguson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferguson v. State, 458 S.W.2d 383, 249 Ark. 138, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1075 (Ark. 1970).

Opinions

George Rose Smith, Justice.

The appellants, Bobby Glenn Ferguson and his wife Martha, were charged with having burglarized the Town & Country Restaurant at Fort Smith on August 18, 1969. Both were found guilty. The jury sentenced the husband to twenty-five years imprisonment, as a habitual criminal, and the wife to two years imprisonment. The appellants urge twelve points for reversal, but inasmuch as we find a new trial to be necessary we need discuss only those assignments of error that are apt to arise again during another trial.

The most serious question in the case concerns the validity of a search warrant that was used by the city police to search the defendants’ apartment in Fort Smith, where certain incriminating articles were found. The vital .question is whether the affidavit for the search warrant sufficiently established probable cause for the search. As a background for our discussion of that issue it will be necessary for us to narrate the pertinent facts in some detail.

The manager of the Town & Country Restaurant dosed and locked it at about 10:30 p.m. on the evening of Sunday, March 17, 1969. A few hours later, at about 1:00 a.m., Norman Pound, a baker employed at the restaurant, arrived at the premises, unlocked the door, and went in to begin the preparation of food for the next day’s business. Pound discovered that the restaurant had been entered. He called the police, who arrived promptly.

Entry had been gained by the removal of a piece of metal siding from the outside of the building and the removal of a plywood panel from the inside of the wall. In the restaurant an upright safe had been partly opened, when, it may be surmised, the burglar or burglars had been frightened away. A sufficient opening had been made in the safe to expose a layer of asbestos and cement filling, fine particles of which were scattered about the floor. Among the burglary tools still at the scene were a sledge hammer, a smaller hammer, a long-shank punch, a crescent wrench, a Samsonite suitcase containing other tools, and a half-inch electric drill, Skil brand, bearing serial number 624092. It was not shown at the trial that any fingerprints were found.

The officers checked the cars in the vicinity. At a nearby motel, within sight of the restaurant, they found a Chevrolet El Camino parked in a breezeway. According to the proprietor of the motel, the El Camino did not belong to anyone registered there.

An El Camino is a two-door, one-seated vehicle, designed to be used both as a passenger car and a pick-up truck. The windows of the El Camino were down. Simply by looking into the vehicle the officers observed two electric drills and two pairs of gloves, on the floor. The gloves, upon being shaken, appeared to have on them a substance similar to the asbestos or cement material that came from the safe. That material is flaky and tends to cling to clothing.

Upon leaving the premises the officers left one of their number to watch the El Camino (which proved to be registered in the name of the defendant Ferguson’s mother or mother-in-law). At about 2:30 a.m. the Fergu-sons drove up to the motel in a Cadillac car. Mrs. Ferguson got into the El Camino, and the two vehicles drove away.

The police, notified by the officer who was watching, stopped the two cars within a few blocks. The Fergusons gave the same version of their activities that they seem to have adhered to ever since. They were living temporarily at the Mumey Apartments in Fort Smith while they were buying a house in the city. They had been living at Jacksonville, Arkansas. On the preceding night they had driven to Jacksonville, spent the night in their home there, and packed up some of their belongings, which they took to their apartment in Fort Smith.

During their absence they had left the El Camino with a man named David Williams, who was staying at the Town 8c Country Motel and who was going to make some repairs at the house which the Fergusons were buying. When the Fergusons returned from Jacksonville to their apartment early in the morning, they decided that Mrs. Ferguson would need the El Camino to use in going to work the next morning. That, in substance, was their explanation of their activities immediately preceding their return to the motel.

When the officers stopped the two cars and questioned the couple, Ferguson said that he owned one of the drills in the El Camino, but he did not own the other drill or the gloves. Ferguson, driving the El Camino, was taken to police headquarters and questioned for a short time, after which he was released.

When Ferguson was taken to headquarters Mrs. Ferguson started back to the apartment in the Cadillac. Officer Adams followed her to the Mumey Apartments, where another officer was already waiting, having gone there in response to a request radioed by Officer Adams. The two officers entered the apartment with Mrs. Ferguson, who denied at the trial that she voluntarily invited them in. The officers looked around the apartment for a minute or two, satisfying themselves that no accomplice was present. They saw a number of tools in the apartment, including some drills and a keyhole saw.

According to Mrs. Ferguson’s testimony at the trial, when her husband returned a short time later from police headquarters, the two of them went down to examine the El Camino more carefully. In a compartment behind the seat, not readily visible, they found an empty box with a slip of paper in. it. They took the box up to the apartment and left it on a bureau.

Before noon on that same day the police arrested both the Fergusons upon the charge of burglary. At some time they examined the Fergusons’ hair, eyebrows, clothing, and shoes for particles similar to those that came from the safe, but nothing was found. It is not certain from the record whether those examinations were made when the Fergusons were first stopped on the street or after their arrest.

At about five o’clock that afternoon Officer Brooks, in company with a deputy prosecuting attorney, applied to the municipal judge in Fort Smith for a search warrant to search the Fergusons’ apartment. We quote the affidavit in full:

AFFIDAVIT
At approximately 1:00 A.M., Monday, August 18, 1969, Mr. Harold Adams, an employee, entered the Town 8c Country Restaurant, and found that there had been an attempt to break into the safe in the office. The metal covering on the door had been peeled back, some of the asbestos filling had been stripped away. There was a large suitcase and burglar tools present: to wit, 1, V2 inch electric drill, numerous drill bits, a sawed-off sledge hammer (etc). The point of entry to the building was in the rear of the building at the Northwest corner. Mr. Adams didn’t see anyone. Police arrived and searched the immediate scene and didn’t find anyone. Police found a 1968 Chevrolet El Camino, Maroon color, 69 Ark. ABC617, parked on the south side of the Town & Country Motel in direct view of the point of entry, about 100 yards away, in the breezeway. Two electric drills, were observed inside the El Camino and also two pair of gloves. It was then placed under police surveillance. At approximately 2:45 A.M., a 1967 Bronze Cadillac, 69 Oklahoma ZF4514, with two occupants, Bob Ferguson and Martha Ferguson, drove up.

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Related

Miller v. State
605 S.W.2d 430 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1980)
Cary v. State
534 S.W.2d 230 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1976)
Jenkins v. State
485 S.W.2d 541 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1972)
Morris v. State
479 S.W.2d 860 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1972)
Grimmett v. State
476 S.W.2d 217 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1972)
Montgomery v. State
473 S.W.2d 885 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1971)
Ridgeway v. State
472 S.W.2d 108 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1971)
Poe v. State
470 S.W.2d 818 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1971)
Ferguson v. State
458 S.W.2d 383 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
458 S.W.2d 383, 249 Ark. 138, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-state-ark-1970.