Grant v. State

786 A.2d 34, 141 Md. App. 517
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 2001
Docket2994, Sept. Term, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 786 A.2d 34 (Grant v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. State, 786 A.2d 34, 141 Md. App. 517 (Md. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

KRAUSER, J.

Responding to a 911 call, police officers entered the apartment of appellant, Eduardo Elias Rosas Grant. That intrusion led to a scuffle with appellant, and ultimately the discovery of cocaine and drug-related paraphernalia in his room. He was then arrested and charged with a variety of drug offenses, as well as assault and resisting arrest. A trial on *521 those charges was scheduled in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County.

Before trial, appellant moved to suppress the drugs and drug-related paraphernalia, which included, among other things: a digital scale, a bowl, a sifter, a cutting agent, and a pestle. That motion was denied, and, after a bench trial, appellant was convicted of possession of cocaine, possession with intent to distribute, possession of a device adopted for the production of controlled dangerous substances, possession of paraphernalia, resisting arrest and two counts of assault.

The circuit court thereafter merged appellant’s conviction for possession of cocaine into his conviction for possession with intent to distribute, and his conviction for possession of drug paraphernalia into his conviction for possession of a device adopted for the production of controlled dangerous substances. But the court denied appellant’s request that it merge his assault convictions into his conviction for resisting arrest.

Following sentencing, appellant noted this appeal, claiming that the police had unlawfully searched his room, that the scale found in his bedroom did not constitute a device adopted for the production of controlled dangerous substances, and that his assault convictions should have been merged by the circuit court into his resisting arrest conviction. Although we reject appellant’s contention that the search of his bedroom was unlawful, we agree that the scale did not constitute a device adopted for the production of controlled dangerous substances and that one of the assault convictions should have been merged -with his conviction for resisting arrest.

BACKGROUND

A. Motion to Suppress Hearing

Prior to trial, appellant filed a motion to suppress “all the evidence seized, both before ... and after the search warrant was obtained.” A pre-trial hearing was held on that motion and testimony presented by both sides. The following is a summary of the evidence presented at that hearing.

*522 On the evening of June 3, 2000, at approximately 7:30 p.m., the Salisbury City Police Department received an “open” 911 call; an “open” call is one in which no one speaks. In this instance, however, there were sounds of fighting in the background. In response to that call, police officers Howard Drewer, Chris Taylor and Lisa Purnell went to the address they were given by dispatch. That address was the apartment of appellant.

Upon arriving at appellant’s apartment, the three officers approached the front door. That door was “completely open,” but the outer storm door was closed. The storm door was aluminum with a screen panel. Looking through the screen, Officer ■ Taylor observed a woman, later identified as Betty Huntley, and a small child, Ms. Huntley’s grandchild. The small child, according to the officer, was “having fun walking around the living room.....”

Officer Taylor knocked on the storm door, and Ms. Huntley looked at him. Through the screen, Officer Taylor informed Ms. Huntley that the police department received an “open 911 line,” and asked her if “everything [was] okay.” Ms. Huntley responded that everything was fine, but did not approach the officers. Instead, according to Officer Taylor, she just “kept doing what she was doing.” Her peculiar behavior prompted the officer to ask if he and his fellow officers could enter the apartment. When Ms. Huntley indicated that they could, the three officers entered the apartment but remained in the foyer.

Within a few seconds, Ms. Huntley’s daughter, Tomeka Jackson, “walk[ed] around the comer” wearing a white shirt with “four or five blood spots.” The officers asked Ms. Jackson if “everything [was] ok.” In reply, Ms. Jackson stated, “there’s no problems,” and explained that her “child [had] dialed 911.” Referring to her blood stained shirt, Officer Purnell asked Ms. Jackson “who’s hurt?” She picked up her daughter and stated, “[0]h, she was running around and fell and busted her lip.” She then brushed the small child’s lip with her hand, as if to wipe off blood. But Officer Taylor *523 noticed that “there was no blood coming off on [Ms. Jackson’s] fingers” and that “the child’s lips were not swelled.” The officer further observed that the child’s lips “didn’t look bruised at all, the child wasn’t crying, no puffy eyes, eye’s weren’t red, it didn’t look like the child was upset at all.” He further noted that Ms. Jackson’s explanation was inconsistent with the fact that the child “was having fun walking around the living room when [the officers] first approached.”

The officers asked Ms. Jackson if there was anyone else in the house other than herself, her mother, and her child. She replied “no.” Just as she said “no,” the officers “heard a door shut behind [Ms. Jackson] coming from [the] hallway.” Concerned that there might be an injured individual in the apartment, Officer Drewer walked over to the door and knocked. From behind that door, appellant asked who it was, and Officer Drewer identified himself as a police officer. He then requested that appellant open the door. Instead of complying with the officer’s request, appellant asked what he wanted. The officer repeated his request.

While this was going on, Ms. Jackson, who was with Officers Taylor and Purnell in the living room, became upset. Officer Taylor asked her, “[W]ho’s hurt, who’s in there?” Ms. Jackson replied, according to Officer Taylor, “[W]hat ever it is, I did it,” and sat on a sofa in the living room with “her head down.”

Finally, as Officer Drewer had requested, appellant opened the door. He emerged from the room with two scratches on his neck that were “fresh and slightly bleeding.” In addition to the scratches, appellant was holding a bandana to his right arm. Officer Taylor asked appellant to remove the bandana. When he did, the officer observed a three-quarter inch cut within the crook of appellant’s elbow. This cut, according to the officer, “appeared to be deep” and “freshly bleeding.” Appellant’s “eyes were really red and glassy.” “At that point, not knowing ... if there was another person in [the room] injured or worse or caused the injury to [appellant], Officer Drewer went into the room to look for anybody else.” Refer *524 ring to the cut on appellant’s arm, Officer Taylor then “asked [Ms. Jackson] where the knife was;” she replied that appellant “had taken it ... into the room.”

The room Officer Drewer entered was “maybe fifteen feet long by maybe ten feet wide,” and rectangular in shape. The door to the room, which was at the base of the rectangle, opened to the left. Looking into the room from the door, the right side of the room was not visible. From that vantage point, Officer Taylor testified, “[t]here could be ... easily five or six people that we could not see.”

Inside the room, a sofa was resting against the left wall.

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Bluebook (online)
786 A.2d 34, 141 Md. App. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-state-mdctspecapp-2001.