Hernandez v. State

972 P.2d 730, 132 Idaho 352, 1998 Ida. App. LEXIS 126
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1998
Docket23459
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 972 P.2d 730 (Hernandez v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hernandez v. State, 972 P.2d 730, 132 Idaho 352, 1998 Ida. App. LEXIS 126 (Idaho Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

SCHWARTZMAN, Judge.

Luis Hernandez appeals from the district court’s order denying his petition for post-conviction relief. For the reasons stated below, we reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

[353]*353i.

FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1

On July 30, 1993, Officer Damron was conducting routine patrol for the city of Caldwell. At approximately 12:42 a.m., Damron observed Jerry Taylor and Rocky Salas standing and talking in' front of the Waldorf bar. Damron testified that the two were “looking around, acting suspicious. They looked nervous.” He continued to watch them and “it appeared that they may have handed" each other something.” Damron then observed Salas walk back across the street and get into a vehicle occupied by two individuals, Frank Garcia and Luis Hernandez.

Damron recognized Taylor from a previous drug arrest and was aware that he was involved in a grand jury indictment for delivery of cocaine. Despite Damron’s knowledge of Taylor’s prior drug history, Damron did. not follow Taylor but instead decided to follow the Garcia vehicle because he just felt that “maybe some type of a drug transaction occurred.” When the vehicle stopped in front of a residence five blocks from the bar, Damron parked about seventy-five feet behind the vehicle and watched the three occupants. He observed what he believed to be the front-seat passenger reaching back to get something from Salas in the back seat, and then observed the front-seat passenger step out of the vehicle. At this point, Damron approached the vehicle and saw Hernandez, the front-seat passenger, walk toward the residence.

Damron identified himself as a police officer and told Hernandez to stop. Hernandez looked at Damron and then “hurried into the residence.” Damron told him to stop again and tried to reach Hernandez before he entered the residence, without success. A woman at the front door stopped Damron from following Hernandez into the residence. Damron told Hernandez that he wanted Hernandez back outside and that he needed to talk to him. Damron testified that from the doorway, he could see Hernandez going into what he believed to be the kitchen. Five to ten seconds later, Hernandez exited the residence and Damron told him to step over to his police car. Damron confirmed Hernandez’s identity through a driver’s license, patted him down for weapons and finding none, told him to sit down on the front steps of the residence. Damron testified that he “didn’t see a crime at that time” and that he only “had suspicion that a crime — I needed to investigate further.” Damron also testified that he “probably ran a driver’s license check, which is standard procedure, on Mr. Hernandez____”2 Thereafter, Damron “was curious to see what — what he [Hernandez] did not want me to have or see or whatever, what he put in the kitchen, so I walked over to the kitchen window and looked inside the kitchen.”

In order to gain a view inside the kitchen, Officer Damron stood “[a] couple of feet off of the alleyway just on the — that would be the southeast corner of the residence.” From this vantage point, Damron observed “four bags of a white powdery substance packaged in plastic on the kitchen table.” As he was looking through the window, a woman inside the home closed the curtain so he could not see further inside.

Damron called the narcotics investigator “with the suspicious activity that I saw at the downtown bars, Luis Hernandez not stopping when I told him to stop, acting suspicious, going into the kitchen and then coming back out after ten seconds, seeing the white powdery substance packaged in the kitchen commonly the way drug dealers or sellers or— would package it, I felt that there might, you know, be sufficient evidence for a search warrant.” While awaiting the issuance of a search warrant, Damron stood in the doorway of the residence, informing the individu[354]*354ais present that a warrant was en route and that they were not free to go into the kitchen or leave the residence.

By the time the search warrant arrived, Hernandez had been sitting on the front porch for approximately one hour. During this time and during the execution of the warrant, Damron testified at both the preliminary hearing and court trial that Hernandez twice asked to use the bathroom. The first time, Damron told him to “hold it.” The second time Hernandez asked to use the bathroom, Damron testified that he asked the renter of the house if Hernandez could use the bathroom and she refused. However, at the post-conviction hearing, Damron testified that Hernandez only asked to use the bathroom once and was advised “that as soon as we finished the search, he would be allowed to use the restroom.” Damron also testified that the officers could not allow Hernandez into the house to use the bathroom because it was a crime scene and they could not take him around the back of the house because they would be assisting him in the commission of the crime of urinating in public. Furthermore, Damron noted that Hernandez “was advised that he could hold it just as several officers were doing until we were done searching and he would be-allowed to use the restroom.” He also testified that Hernandez was not detained for a long time and that a normal adult could “hold it” under the circumstances.

Eventually Hernandez left the front steps to urinate in or by the alleyway, which act was observed by Damron.3 Approximately forty-five minutes later, after the search of the residence revealed no contraband,4 Damron arrested Hernandez for urinating in public. Hernandez was searched incident to his arrest, and officers found .068 grams of methamphetamine folded up in a dollar bill in his sock.

Hernandez was charged with the possession of a controlled substance, I.C. § 37-2732(c)(1). A preliminary hearing was held on December 1, 1993, during which the court heard testimony from Officer Damron. When defense counsel attempted to question Damron about his observations of the individuals in front of the bar in downtown Caldwell and the time span between Hernandez’s arrest and those observations, the magistrate stated: “I don’t think what happened at the bar is relevant.” The magistrate found probable cause to believe Hernandez was in possession of methamphetamine and bound him over for arraignment in the district court.

The prosecutor then filed a Part II Amended Information charging Hernandez with being a persistent violator. On February 28, 1994, defense counsel filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized incident to Hernandez’s arrest, but withdrew it a week later. On March 10, defense counsel refiled the motion to suppress accompanied by Hernandez’s affidavit. On May 4, the day scheduled for a bench trial, defense counsel asked the court to hear argument on Hernandez’s motion to suppress. The court first noted that it had reviewed the preliminary hearing transcript and on the basis of that testimony would deny the motion. Defense counsel informed the court that there was insufficient information contained in the prehminary hearing transcript upon which it could determine whether there was sufficient probable cause for the officer’s initial detention of Hernandez, an issue not addressed by the magistrate. The court agreed and told the prosecutor to go forward with its evidence on the suppression issue. The state objected pursuant to Rule 12(b) of the Idaho Criminal Rules, arguing that defense counsel had failed to file the motion to suppress within the proper deadlines.

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Bluebook (online)
972 P.2d 730, 132 Idaho 352, 1998 Ida. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hernandez-v-state-idahoctapp-1998.