Kenneth Ray Arp v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 21, 2014
DocketA14A0390
StatusPublished

This text of Kenneth Ray Arp v. State (Kenneth Ray Arp v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth Ray Arp v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION BARNES, P. J., BOGGS and BRANCH, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

May 21, 2014

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A14A0390. ARP v. THE STATE.

B RANCH, Judge.

In an attempt to arrest Christopher Watson pursuant to an arrest warrant, law

enforcement officers entered the curtilage of Kenneth Ray Arp’s home by approaching

Arp’s back door where, based on the officers’ observations of events inside the house,

they entered without consent and discovered marijuana. Watson had no relation to

Arp, was not in Arp’s home, and did not live there. After a stipulated bench trial, Arp

was convicted of marijuana possession and making terroristic threats. On appeal, Arp

contends the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress the evidence used

against him. He contends that neither the arrest warrant nor the surrounding

circumstances authorized the officers to enter the curtilage of his home and that,

therefore, the ensuing search was illegal. We agree and reverse. A trial judge’s findings of fact on a motion to suppress should not be disturbed

if there is any evidence to support them; determinations of fact and credibility must

be accepted unless clearly erroneous; and the evidence must be construed most

favorably to the upholding of the trial court’s findings and judgment. Tate v. State,

264 Ga. 53, 54 (1) (440 SE2d 646) (1994); Jackson v. State, 258 Ga. App. 806, 807-

808 (2) (575 SE2d 713) (2002). Where the trial court denies the motion to suppress

without explanation or findings of fact, we construe the facts in favor of the trial

court’s decision. Corey v. State, 320 Ga. App. 350, 351 (739 SE2d 790) (2013).

The record of the hearing on the motion to suppress shows that on February 5,

2013, Sergeant Dan Blythe of the Henry County Police Department and other officers

from Flint and Clayton County were attempting to arrest Watson pursuant to an arrest

warrant dated January 10, 2013 for misdemeanor obstruction of an officer, which

listed Watson’s address as 137 Chestnut Lane in McDonough. Blythe was familiar

with Watson and his family, and Blythe and other officers were aware that Watson

had a reputation of running from and fighting with police, stealing, and breaking into

houses. In fact, Watson had fled some of the same officers earlier that day.

Blythe and the other officers went to the Watson home at the address shown on

the warrant and spoke with Watson’s mother, but W atson was not there. Watson’s

2 mother told the officers that Watson had been picked up that day by a woman named

Wendy Wilson in a small red car. Blythe then used a police computer to determine

that Wilson had a “previous address” or “last known location” of 487 Lakeshore

Drive. Both Blythe and other officers knew that the house located at 487 Lakeshore

Drive was not Watson’s residence. The officers did not have a search warrant for the

Lakeshore Drive address, and they did not perform a computer search to determine if

Wilson still lived there or who was listed as a resident.

Blythe and the other officers drove to 487 Lakeshore Drive, arriving in the dark,

and they saw a red Chrysler Sebring parked either in the driveway or on the side of

the property, facing out, such that the license tag could only be seen from the back.

While other officers approached the front door, Blythe, Sergeant Romano, and

Sergeant Fowler ran past the Chrysler to the back of the property without stopping to

check the license tag of the red car as they passed it. Blythe testified that he saw there

was no fence in the back, “so we found the back door and kind of got in the area of

the back door while the other agents knocked on the front door”; Romano was

positioned “just shy of the back door.” The blinds were partially up on the window

located beside the back door. Blythe also testified that before he got to the door, he

saw movement inside of the house from a point near the property line and that he and

3 Fowler then moved up to the back door and window to see what was happening and

for officer safety, to make sure that the person was not grabbing a weapon. From his

position at the back door, Blythe looked through the window and saw a woman speak

with another person in a hallway at the door to the bedroom. Blythe then saw the

woman run into the bedroom where she grabbed something, then run to the bathroom,

run back to the bedroom to grab a closed, clear plastic container, and come back to the

bathroom, passing so close to Blythe that he could see what appeared to be marijuana

in the container.

Blythe told Fowler and Romano what he had seen, and the officers therefore

decided to enter the back door of the house “for the sole purpose of preventing [the

woman] from destroying what we believed to be . . . marijuana.” The officers yelled

“police,” opened the unlocked back door, and seized the marijuana in the bathroom.

Based on the seizure and Arp’s statements to Sergeant Romano after Romano entered

the home, Arp was charged with possession of more than an ounce of marijuana and

with making terroristic threats. Neither Watson, the subject of the arrest warrant, nor

Wilson were found in the Arps’ home.

Arp testified that his wife had purchased the home in foreclosure the previous

June or July and that Arp owned the Chrysler. Arp testified that the Chrysler was

4 parked in his front yard, not in the driveway. He testified that he did not know Watson

or Wilson and that when officers arrived at his front door that night, he opened the

door but did not consent to the officers entering the home.

Arp moved to suppress all the evidence and alleged contraband seized in his

home including any fruit of the illegal search and seizure. The trial court denied Arp’s

motion without explanation or findings of fact. In accordance with a stipulation of the

parties, the court adopted the testimony from the hearing on the motion to suppress

as the trial evidence and, based on that and other stipulated evidence, the court found

Arp guilty of possession of marijuana and making terroristic threats. Arp appeals the

ruling on the motion to suppress.

1. The Fourth Amendment protects against “unreasonable searches and

seizures[.]” U.S. Const. Amend. IV. This protection has been interpreted to mean that

even if officers have probable cause, absent exigent circumstances or proper consent,

warrantless searches and seizures within a home by officers in pursuit of their

traditional law enforcement duties are presumptively unreasonable. See, e.g., Kentucky

v. King, ___ U. S. ___ (II) (A) (131 SCt 1849, 179 LE2d 865) (2011); Payton v. New

York, 445 U. S. 573, 589 (II) (100 SCt 1371, 63 LE2d 639) (1980). The United States

5 Supreme Court has further clarified that an arrest warrant is an insufficient basis,

standing alone, to search a third party’s home:

[E]ven when armed with an arrest warrant, police must have either a search warrant, exigent circumstances or consent to lawfully enter a third person’s home to arrest someone who does not reside there. Steagald v. United States, 451 U. S. 204

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Kenneth Ray Arp v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-ray-arp-v-state-gactapp-2014.