Kenneth M. Abernathy v. State of Arkansas

2021 Ark. App. 79, 617 S.W.3d 738
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 24, 2021
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 79 (Kenneth M. Abernathy v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth M. Abernathy v. State of Arkansas, 2021 Ark. App. 79, 617 S.W.3d 738 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 79 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document DIVISION IV No. CR-19-959 2023.06.22 13:58:01 -05'00' 2023.001.20174 Opinion Delivered February 24, 2021

KENNETH M. ABERNATHY APPEAL FROM THE SALINE APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 63CR-18-1100] V. HONORABLE GRISHAM PHILLIPS, STATE OF ARKANSAS JUDGE APPELLEE REVERSED AND REMANDED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Chief Judge

Kenneth Abernathy was convicted of two felony drug charges and now appeals the

Saline County Circuit Court’s denial of his motion to suppress a warrantless search of his

home. He argues that the police officer’s warrantless entry into his home occurred without

consent and that any contraband obtained after the illegal entry should have been suppressed.

We agree that the officer entered Abernathy’s home without legal justification and that any

evidence obtained as a result of the officer’s entry should have been suppressed. Because

there is no evidence to support Abernathy’s conviction, we reverse and remand.

In December 2018, the State charged Abernathy with possession of drug

paraphernalia to inhale methamphetamine and possession of a controlled substance

(methamphetamine) after law enforcement seized certain contraband from Abernathy’s

home upon a warrantless entry. The circuit court convened a bench trial on 9 August 2019;

but prior to presenting evidence, the parties stipulated that the crime-lab report would be 1 introduced without objection. The lab report stated that “the clear bulb in glass smoking

device containing white residue was methamphetamine,” that the net weight of the

methamphetamine was 0.2905 grams, and that the paraphernalia and the methamphetamine

had been found in Abernathy’s house. The circuit court also noted that a motion to suppress

would be ruled on as part of the evidence in the trial.

When the trial commenced, Danny Rucker, an officer with the Saline County

Sheriff’s Department, testified that on 13 October 2018, he responded to a report of

property damage on White Estates Road. The report stated that a red Grand Am had been

driving suspiciously back and forth and had hit a mailbox before leaving the scene. A

description of the vehicle was transmitted to other local officers, and a Bryant police officer

reported that he had just stopped a similar vehicle and that the driver was Kenneth

Abernathy. Rucker was familiar with Abernathy, his vehicle, and where he lived. Rucker

also knew that Robert Johnson, who used a wheelchair, lived with Abernathy.

Rucker explained that he went to Abernathy’s home, which was a trailer, and saw

the red Grand Am in the driveway. Rucker noticed damage to the front of the vehicle that

fit the description of the mailbox incident. It was raining heavily when the officer went to

the front porch, which had no roof, and knocked on the door. Johnson opened the door.

Rucker “stepped into the threshold of the door” and asked to speak with Abernathy.

Johnson yelled for Abernathy, who was not in the room. Abernathy yelled, “What?” and

Rucker yelled that it was the sheriff’s department and he needed to speak to him

(Abernathy). As he stood at the threshold to get out of the rain, Rucker noticed a strong

2 odor of methamphetamine being burned.

Abernathy then pulled back a blanket that had been used as a door between the living

area and a bedroom; when the blanket was pulled back, Rucker saw Abernathy and a female

sitting on his bed with a meth pipe. Abernathy came into the living area, and Rucker asked

Abernathy if he was smoking meth but also said he (Rucker) was there to talk about the

mailbox incident. Abernathy admitted hitting the mailbox, and when asked a second time

if he was smoking meth, he said yes. Abernathy was “very angry” with Johnson for opening

the door. Rucker detained Abernathy and sat him on the couch; he then went into the

bedroom to retrieve the pipe and to make sure the woman was not armed. He brought the

woman into the living area and began to detain her as well; at that point, Abernathy said,

“[I]t’s mine. It’s all mine.” Abernathy was arrested and charged.

On cross-examination, Rucker agreed that he had stepped inside the door “for

convenience” because it was raining and that he had not smelled any kind of controlled

substance before he stepped inside. He also agreed that the main door to the trailer opened

inward, which was important because Johnson, who was in a wheelchair, had to roll

backward inside the home to open that door. Officer Rucker did not recall a storm door

that he had to open before he stepped onto the threshold. He said:

I actually didn’t step into the door, ma’am, I stepped onto the threshold which is a plate about the width of this here. I had my raincoat on and a rain hat and I was soaked with water and it was dripping. I tried not to enter into the—so that rain would get in his floor as I would do in my own house.

He agreed that he was “balancing” on the threshold of the door. Upon questioning by the

court, Rucker explained that Abernathy had said angrily to Johnson, “Why the hell did you

3 open the dam [sic] door . . . now I’m going to friggin’ jail . . . because you opened the door

and let him in.”

Robert Johnson testified that he had resided with Abernathy from June to October

2018. He said that he paid rent and had his own bedroom. Johnson said the door to the

trailer consisted of a regular door that opened into the living area and a storm door that

opened toward the outside. Johnson stated that he had seen a vehicle approach the house

and had spoken to Rucker from the doorway while Rucker was still in the yard. Johnson

explained, “[I]t was raining real bad and I had sorta—it takes me a minute to back up and

by the time I had backed up to holler at Kenneth he was up on the porch and in the door.”

Johnson estimated that Rucker was “probably just a foot” inside the door and that the storm

door had already been open. According to Johnson, when Abernathy entered the living

area, he asked Rucker to “step back outside,” but Rucker did not leave. Johnson denied

ever inviting Rucker into the home or giving him any indication that he could come inside

the home. But he also agreed that Abernathy had been “screaming and hollering” at him

because he had let Rucker inside. The following exchange then took place between the

court and Johnson:

THE COURT: Can you tell me, as best you can remember, what Mr. Abernathy was saying to you about—why he was mad at you and why he was yelling at you? Just can you remember what he was saying?

THE WITNESS: He was telling me not to let no police or officers in his house, this and that, and I just—I can’t tell what’s outside until I open the door. I’m sorry. I’m too short.

THE COURT: So, and again, it’s somewhat important I think, you’re

4 saying that he was mad at you for letting the officer in?

THE WITNESS: Yeah.

Defense counsel argued that the circuit court should suppress the “fruit” of the search

because the officer stepped inside the home without being invited in. In denying the

motion, the circuit court explained,

One reason I was curious about what Mr.—what the officer said and Mr. Abernathy was saying to Mr. Johnson and what Mr. Johnson said was the what appears to be an impression of Mr. Abernathy that Mr. Johnson let the officer in. That’s the reason I wanted specific words. I’ll be frank with you.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 Ark. App. 79, 617 S.W.3d 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-m-abernathy-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2021.