Fitts v. State

25 P.3d 1130, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 117, 2001 WL 568468
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 25, 2001
DocketA-7254
StatusPublished

This text of 25 P.3d 1130 (Fitts v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitts v. State, 25 P.3d 1130, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 117, 2001 WL 568468 (Ala. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

James Lorenzo Fitts appeals his conviction for first-degree robbery. 1 He contends that much of the evidence against him was obtained during an illegal search of his room. Fitts also contends that the judge who presided over his trial wrongfully prevented his attorney from asking certain questions of a government witness, questions that would have revealed a potential defense to the robbery charge. Finally, Fitts contends that the prosecuting attorney engaged in improper argument during his summation to the jury. For the reasons explained here, we affirm Fitts's conviction.

Underlying facts

In the early morning of November 9, 1997, a youth who identified himself as "J.D." called for a taxi. Cab driver Christian Eck-man was dispatched to answer this call. Eckman picked up two youths, later identified as James Fitts and Mario Gonzalez, LeBaron. The two youths told Eckman to drive them to 5720 East Fourth Avenue. When they arrived at that address, Fitts pulled out a black semi-automatic pistol, pointed the gun at Ecekman's head, and announced, "this is a fucking jack" [i.e., a robbery].

Eckman struggled, but Fitts and Gonzalez subdued him by striking him some thirty to forty times. Eckman ultimately surrendered his bankroll: a $100 bill, three $20 bills, a $5 bill, and some $1 bills. Fitts and Gonzalez then ran off into some nearby woods.

When police officers arrived to investigate, they discovered Fitts's wallet in the back seat of the cab. Using the information in this wallet, the police contacted Fitts's mother, who gave the officers a telephone number to contact her son. This telephone number belonged to an apartment at 5701 Rocky Mountain Court, a couple of blocks from the scene of the robbery. The police went to this apartment, which was rented by Gonzaleg's mother, Sarah LeBaron. After LeBaron allowed them to enter, the officers found Fitts and Gonzalez in an upstairs bedroom.

*1132 The officers arrested Fitts and Gonzalez, and they then asked Sarah LeBaron for permission to search the apartment. LeBaron signed a written consent-to-search form, and the police conducted a search of the bedroom where they had found Fitts and Gonzalez.

During that search, the officers opened a saxophone case belonging to Fitts. They found a loaded handgun hidden in the lining of the case. The officers also found Gonzalez's wallet in a bureau. This wallet contained $175 in cash, including a $100 bill and some $20 bills.

Meanwhile, the officers asked their dispatcher to contact Eckman and have him come to 5701 Rocky Mountain Court. When Eckman arrived, he positively identified Fitts as the robber who held the gun on him.

The legality of the search of Fitts's room

Following his indictment, Fitts asked the superior court to suppress the evidence found during the search of the bedroom. Fitts conceded that the residence was owned (actually, rented) by Mario Gonzalez's mother, Sarah LeBaron. Fitts further conceded that the police lawfully obtained her consent for the search. Nevertheless, Fitts claimed that LeBaron did not have the authority to consent to a search of the bedroom that he shared with LeBaron's son, Mario Gonzalez. Fitts asserted that he and Gonzalez were LeBaron's subtenants-that they each paid a monthly rent to LeBaron, and that the bedroom was their exclusive space within the house.

At an evidentiary hearing, both Fitts and LeBaron testified in support of these contentions. However, their testimony was at odds with the information that LeBaron gave the police on the night of the robbery. At that, time, when the police questioned LeBaron about Fitts's status as a resident in her apartment, LeBaron told the officers that Fitts was staying in her son's bedroom for free. She also told the officers that she enjoyed complete access to every room in the house, including the bedroom shared by Fitts and her son. LeBaron further informed the police that she had had enough of Fitts's and Gonzalez's activities, and that she was about to kick them out.

On appeal, Fitts argues that the testimony presented at the evidentiary hearing, if believed, proved that LeBaron did not have the authority to consent to a search of Fitts's bedroom. Fitts relies on case law holding that landlords do not have the authority to consent to a search of a tenant's apartment. 2 Fitts argues that his situation is analogous to these cases because he was renting a private room within LeBaron's apartment.

We need not resolve this issue. Even if Sarah LeBaron did not actually have the authority to consent to a search of Fitts's bedroom, the search would still be valid if she had the apparent authority to consent to the search. 3 That is, the police could lawfully search Fitts's bedroom so long as they reasonably believed that LeBaron had the authority to authorize the search. 4 The test is whether the information available to the officers, viewed with reasonable caution, would have warranted the conclusion that LeBaron had authority over the premises to be searched. 5

Even assuming that Fitts's and LeBaron's testimony at the evidentiary hearing was true in every respect (ie, even assuming that Fitts and Gonzales were rent-paying subtenants in LeBaron's apartment, and that LeBaron had granted Fitts and Gonzalez exclusive control over the bedroom they occupied), the police were not aware of these facts when they asked for LeBaron's consent to search the apartment. The officers knew only what LeBaron had told them: that she was in control of the apartment, that Fitts was not paying rent, and that Fitts was staying there at her sufferance.

*1133 The "apparent authority" doctrine will not validate a consent search when the police unreasonably turn a blind eye to facts that would undermine a person's claim of authority over the property. The police can not rely on a consenting party's unreasonable assertions of authority, and, in ambiguous circumstances, they must inquire into the basis of the consenting party's authority. 6 But here the circumstances tended to support LeBaron's assertion of authority.

The bedroom was not set up as a separate apartment. Rather, it was simply one of the bedrooms in LeBaron's two-bedroom apartment. The main occupant of this bedroom was LeBaron's son, Mario Gonzalez. Gonzalez was sixteen years old-not an age where one would expect to find him in a landlord-tenant relationship with his mother. And Fitts was sleeping on a mattress on the floor of the bedroom, a cireumstance that tended to corroborate LeBaron's assertion that Fitts was a guest who was staying there for free.

A person may consent to a search of premises or property if that person "generally [has] joint access or control for most purposes". 7

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Bluebook (online)
25 P.3d 1130, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 117, 2001 WL 568468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitts-v-state-alaskactapp-2001.