Ferris v. State

735 A.2d 491, 355 Md. 356, 1999 Md. LEXIS 483
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 18, 1999
Docket127, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by226 cases

This text of 735 A.2d 491 (Ferris 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
Ferris v. State, 735 A.2d 491, 355 Md. 356, 1999 Md. LEXIS 483 (Md. 1999).

Opinions

RAKER, Judge.

Petitioner Peter Michael Ferris appeals the denial of his motion to suppress evidence seized by the police. Because the police officer in this case effected a seizure not premised upon the reasonable, articulable suspicion required under the Fourth Amendment, we shall hold that the Circuit Court for [362]*362Washington County erred in denying Ferris’s motion to suppress.

I.

In the early morning hours of May 7, 1996, Maryland State Trooper Andrew Smith was operating a laser speed gun on Interstate 70, just east of Route 66 in Washington County, Maryland. The posted speed limit was 65 miles per hour. At 1:06 a.m., Trooper Smith observed a westbound Toyota Camry traveling down a mountain at what appeared to be a high rate of speed. Engaging the laser device, the trooper clocked the vehicle’s speed at 92 miles per hour.

Trooper Smith activated his emergency lights and stopped the car without incident. The trooper parked his patrol car approximately twenty feet behind Petitioner’s car. Trooper Smith approached the Camry and observed Ferris, the driver, and one passenger, Michael Discher, in the front seat. Smith asked Ferris to produce his driver’s license and registration. At the hearing on Ferris’s motion to suppress tangible evidence seized by the trooper, Trooper Smith testified that during this initial encounter he noticed that Ferris’s “eyes were bloodshot and he did appear a little nervous, a little fidgety.”

Trooper Smith returned to his patrol car and requested a driver’s license and outstanding warrant check on Ferris. The trooper began to write the speeding citation. During this time, Trooper Smith glanced up several times and noticed that Ferris and Discher were moving around and looking back towards him “quite frequently.” Specifically, Smith testified that Ferris and the passenger looked back at the patrol car three or four times.

While Trooper Smith was writing the citation, Deputy John C. Martin of the Washington County Sheriffs Department arrived and parked ten feet behind Smith’s patrol car, activating his vehicle emergency “flashers.”1 Deputy Martin ap[363]*363proached Trooper Smith’s patrol car and spoke briefly with the trooper. After witnessing Ferris and Discher “moving around in the vehicle a lot and looking around,” the deputy relayed that observation to Trooper Smith.

Trooper Smith returned to the Canary with Deputy Martin, who went to the rear of the passenger’s side of the vehicle. Ferris signed the citation, and then the trooper returned Ferris’s driver’s license and registration along with a copy of the citation. Although Trooper Smith did not advise Ferris that he was free to depart or that he was not free to leave, the trooper testified: “I just asked him if he would mind stepping to the back of his vehicle to answer a couple of questions. He stated he didn’t mind.” Ferris accompanied the trooper to the rear of the Canary. During this time, Deputy Martin remained between the Canary and Trooper Smith’s patrol car and watched Discher, the passenger. At the suppression hearing, Trooper Smith testified that the reasons he asked Petitioner to step out of the car were that Petitioner’s eyes were bloodshot, Petitioner and the passenger were acting very nervous, and there was no detectable odor of alcohol on Petitioner’s breath.2

Behind the Camry, Trooper Smith first asked Ferris if he had smoked any drugs prior to the traffic stop. Trooper Smith testified that Ferns became more nervous in response to this question. Ferris answered by stating that he had not smoked anything. Trooper Smith again asked Ferris “was he sure that he hadn’t smoked any drugs because of the fact that [364]*364his eyes were bloodshot, extremely bloodshot and he didn’t have alcohol on his breath.” During the encounter, the trooper remained within two or three feet of Ferris.

At this juncture, Ferris admitted that he and his passenger had smoked a “joint” in Philadelphia about three hours earlier. Ferris stated that he and the passenger were traveling from Philadelphia to Morgantown, West Virginia. Trooper Smith then asked Ferris whether the passenger was in possession of any controlled dangerous substances. Ferris acknowledged that Discher possessed a small amount of marijuana. Thereupon Trooper Smith approached Discher, still seated in the front passenger seat of Ferris’s car. After Trooper Smith questioned Discher, the latter turned over a small baggie containing marijuana. Trooper Smith then searched the Canary. On the rear seat, the trooper found a green L.L. Bean book bag. Trooper Smith uncovered a gallon-sized plastic baggie inside the book bag containing a compressed, green vegetable matter, a substance the trooper believed to be marijuana.

As a result of this incident, the State’s Attorney for Washington County charged Ferris by criminal information with: operating a motor vehicle in excess of the posted speed limit, in violation of Maryland Code (1977, 1999 Repl.Vol.) § 21-801.1 of the Transportation Article; possession of marijuana, in violation of Maryland Code (1957, 1996 Repl.Vol., 1998 Supp.), Article 27, § 287; and possession of marijuana in sufficient quantity to reasonably indicate an intent to distribute that substance, in violation of Article 27, § 286(a)(1). Prior to trial, Ferris moved to suppress all evidence and statements illegally obtained.

At the suppression hearing, the State and Ferris presented essentially the same primary arguments made before this Court. The circuit court rejected the analytical path taken by the parties, instead reasoning:

Well I don’t want anybody to lose the forest for the trees. The citizen has a right not to be unreasonably seized nor to [365]*365have property unreasonably searched and seized under the totality of the circumstances.
You know I’ve heard the State talk about Terry and articulable suspicions and the defense talking about the end of one stop and seizure and the beginning of another stop and seizure. Quite frankly I think that neither argument is persuasive. What we have to do is look at the situation, the entire totality of the situation that the officer found himself in on this occasion to determine if he acted unreasonably in any stop, in any seizure, in any search and seizure.
Now the officer has a vehicle that’s going ninety-two miles an hour on a highway that even though I don’t think there was evidence of this fact but I think we can take judicial notice of the fact that the speed limit was sixty-five or under at the time. So we have a situation where he has a driver of a motor vehicle that’s going well over the speed limit.
He stops that motor vehicle. He notes that the driver of the motor vehicle has extremely bloodshot eyes, not just bloodshot eyes, extremely bloodshot eyes and is exhibiting signs or symptoms of nervousness, fidgety.
It’s an out of state vehicle. He checks the registration, ownership, license, determines that the license and registration are appropriate. But then [the officer] goes back to the vehicle. And what’s he going to do? What’s expected of him? Is he to allow a person who is operating at ninety-two miles an hour with bloodshot eyes to sign a citation and get back into the vehicle and drive it away?

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Bluebook (online)
735 A.2d 491, 355 Md. 356, 1999 Md. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferris-v-state-md-1999.