Ingram v. State

226 So. 2d 169, 45 Ala. App. 108, 1969 Ala. App. LEXIS 338
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1969
Docket6 Div. 375
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 226 So. 2d 169 (Ingram v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingram v. State, 226 So. 2d 169, 45 Ala. App. 108, 1969 Ala. App. LEXIS 338 (Ala. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinions

[110]*110PRICE, Presiding Judge.

This is an appeal from a conviction for possession of marijuana, with a penitentiary sentence of five years.

A pretrial motion to suppress the evidence was interposed by defendant and was denied.

The evidence taken at the hearing on the motion to suppress is as follows:

Detectives. Swindall and Hayes, attached to the gambling detail of the vice squads of the .City of Birmingham, were riding in an automobile “looking for gamblers,” in the 2500 Block of 18th Street, North in Birmingham, about September 2, 1967, around 7:00 o’clock in the evening. It was still daylight. They saw four persons seated at a. table, with approximately four onlookers “standing around.” The table was between two houses on the west side of 18th Street. The police pulled the car in between the houses, got out and walked to the table. The defendant was standing at the left front portion of the table. When the policemen approached they saw him take a package, wrapped in a paper napkin, from the left front pocket of his pants and throw it to the ground. Just prior to this, one Hudson, who was in a wheel chair with a jacket lying across him, threw the jacket to the ground. Officer Swindall picked up the jacket and asked Hudson if it was his and he said it was not. He then picked up the package and asked whose it was, but no one claimed it. He opened the package and saw that it contained marijuana. He searched the jacket and found five packs of marijuana wrapped in tin foil. He arrested defendant for possession of the one package and arrested Joseph Willie Hudson for possession of the five packets in the jacket. Whereupon, he searched Ingram and Hudson and found on defendant a paper napkin similar to the one that was thrown to the ground.

Officer Swindall stated that it was approximately twenty to thirty feet to the table from where they parked the car; that he saw no gambling as the car pulled up and he began to get out. He said, “I couldn’t testify as to what was going on except the crowd that I testified to around this table.” He said he did not stop the car to make an arrest for what he saw them doing and that he did not find sufficient evidence of gambling to make an arrest for that offense; that none of the people were known to him; that he had no warrant for the arrest of any of the individuals he later learned were there; that he had no search warrant for the premises nor for any individual; that a domino game had been going on. The dominoes were still on the table and the people were sitting and standing around it.

Joseph Willie Hudson testified at the hearing on the motion that he lived with his sister at 2506 18th Street, North, Birmingham, on September 2, 1967; that he paid his. sister rent for his room out of his social security check; that he knows Clinton Ingram. Witness is a cripple and unable to. work. Clinton Ingram is retired from U. S. Steel Corporation, and was at the home of witness on the occasion of the arrest, “I invited him. Each day they came down, all of the old men came down there and plays dominos with me.” The table where they played was in his sister’s yard. Ingram was a guest, having been invited on this occasion by witness. On cross examination he stated he didn’t know the location of the property lines between the houses. A photograph of the location of the houses and yard was introduced.

Clinton Ingram testified he was present on this occasion; that he was invited to play dominoes by Hudson; that he had been retired from U. S. Steel for five or six months. He denied dropping the package to the ground and also denied having a napkin in his pocket.

[111]*111In denying the motion to suppress the evidence, the court stated that in the absence of a showing of Alabama law to the contrary, he was of opinion there was a legal entry on the property and that upon seeing the defendant dispose of the package the officers had the right to search and arrest him and that the finding of the marijuana on the ground did not constitute a ■search.

Section 154, Title 15, Code 1940, provides in pertinent part:

“An officer may also arrest any person, without warrant, on any day and at any time, for any public offense committed, or a breach of the peace threatened in his presence; * *

In Schook v. United States, 337 F.2d 563 (8th Circuit 1964) the court said:

“Reasonable grounds for suspicion when accompanied by facts or circumstances strong enough to justify a reasonably cautious man to believe the guilt of the suspect, suffice to constitute probable cause necessary for arrest without warrant,” and that a police officer who is only attempting to routinely question persons under suspicious circumstances to ascertain their identity and actions is executing permissible police procedure to safeguard the community against criminal activity and is not making an arrest. See also Hayes v. State, 44 Ala.App. 539, 215 So.2d 604; Maples v. State, 44 Ala.App. 491, 214 So.2d 700.

The testimony shows that if the officers “had a duty to go on the premises to investigate a possible violation of law, it must have been because they had reasonable grounds for suspecting the parties were engaged in •gaming.

Section 263 of Title 14, Code 1940, in pertinent part, provides :

“Any person who plays at any game with cards or dice, or any device or substitute therefor, * * * in any public house, highway, or in any other public place * * * shall, on conviction, be fined not less than twenty nor more than fifty dollars.”

The act of card playing is not a vice or crime in itself. Bythwood et al. v. State, 20 Ala. 47; City of Birmingham v. Richard, 44 Ala.App. 127, 203 So.2d 692, and the statute does not prohibit gaming in a private home. Town of Boaz v. Jenkins, 32 Ala.App. 299, 25 So.2d 394; City of Birmingham v. Richard, supra.

In some of the earlier cases it was said:

“Within the meaning of Section 4792 of the Code 1896 (now Title 14, Sec. 263), a place in the yard or curtilage of a private house 40 feet away and open to observation from a public highway—so near and so open that persons traveling the highway can see card or dice playing thereat — is abstractly and per se a public place, and to be so declared by the court as matter of law.” Lee v. State, 136 Ala. 31, 33 So. 894.

In Moseley v. State, 161 Ala. 74, 49 So. 807, the court said the question is, “whether or not the playing was so pear the public road that parties in or traveling the same could see and tell that they were playing cards. It is not sufficient that the players were seen and could be recognized, but could persons in the road see them playing cards ? * * *." See also Ford v. State, 123 Ala. 81, 26 So. 503.

From the officer’s own testimony that there was no visible evidence of any unlawful behavior of any person and that he did not go on the premises to investigate suspicious activity or to make an arrest, the yard was not per se a public place under the gaming statute. His entry upon the premises, in the hope of discovering evidence to justify an arrest was without legal authority and the search could not be justified as an incident of a lawful arrest.

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248 So. 2d 758 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1971)
Ingram v. State
226 So. 2d 169 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
226 So. 2d 169, 45 Ala. App. 108, 1969 Ala. App. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-state-alactapp-1969.