Lance William Cooksey v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 2011
Docket04-10-00424-CR
StatusPublished

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Lance William Cooksey v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION No. 04-10-00424-CR

Lance William COOKSEY, Appellant

v.

The STATE of Texas, Appellee

From the 216th Judicial District Court, Kerr County, Texas Trial Court No. A07334 Honorable N. Keith Williams, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice Concurring Opinion by: Marialyn Barnard, Justice

Sitting: Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice Rebecca Simmons, Justice Marialyn Barnard, Justice

Delivered and Filed: May 11, 2011

REVERSED AND REMANDED

Appellant, Lance William Cooksey, pleaded “no contest” to the offense of possession of

marijuana in an amount more than four ounces but less than five pounds and received five years’

deferred adjudication probation and a five hundred dollar fine. He appeals the trial court’s order

denying a pretrial motion to suppress evidence. We reverse and remand. 04-10-00424-CR

BACKGROUND

On May 31, 2007, Sergeant Ken Clegghorn of the Kerrville Police Department informed

Kerr County Sheriff’s Lieutenant Bill Hill that a confidential informant said appellant was

growing marijuana at his home in Center Point, Texas. Sergeant Clegghorn told Lieutenant Hill

the confidential informant was both credible and reliable. Acting solely on the information from

Sergeant Clegghorn and without obtaining a search warrant, Lieutenant Hill, Deputy Sheriff

Vince Isley, and Sheriff’s Narcotics Investigator Danny Monk drove out to appellant’s home to

conduct a “knock and talk” investigation. Lieutenant Hill testified the purpose of the knock and

talk was “to go to that location and see if we could get consent to search.” When asked why he

did not obtain a search warrant, Lieutenant Hill testified: “Because, number one, I didn’t know

that individual who [gave] this information. I didn’t feel comfortable writing a search warrant

based on that information.”

Appellant lives in a mobile home that sits about seventy-five to eighty yards off the

public road and is accessible by a curved dirt driveway. The mobile home is located in a wooded

area and is not visible from the public road. There are no neighboring homes within several

hundred yards, and no other homes are visible from appellant’s property. A chain-link fence

encloses a portion of appellant’s front yard, in which appellant keeps two large dogs. Visitors

must pass through a gate in the fence in order to access the mobile home’s front door. Appellant

testified an inoperable pickup truck is parked along the dirt driveway leading up to the mobile

home, and a sign posted in the pickup’s window states: “Posted. No trespassing. Violators will

be shot. Survivors will be shot again.” The sheriff’s officers testified they could not recall

seeing the sign.

-2- 04-10-00424-CR

When the sheriff’s officers arrived at appellant’s home, they saw appellant and his wife,

Betty, looking out an open window at the front of the mobile home. Without entering the fenced

portion of appellant’s front yard, the officers approached the open window, announced

themselves as sheriff’s officers, and told appellant and Betty they would like to speak with them.

Appellant and Betty looked at the officers but did not respond. The sheriff’s officers then

observed appellant walk quickly toward the back of the mobile home, while Betty remained at

the window. “[B]ecause of officer safety issues,” and because he “was concerned that someone

could come around the corner with a gun,” Deputy Isley moved to the side of the mobile home,

where he could monitor both the front and the back of the property, but did not draw his weapon.

Deputy Isley testified: “I didn’t feel I was going to be shot. I wanted to prevent the situation

from happening. [In] my years of experience, I’ve seen numerous videos where suspects will

just appear from the back of a house with a weapon and shoot police officers right in their spot.”

Investigator Monk followed Deputy Isley to the side of the house, while Lieutenant Hill

remained in the front yard. All three sheriff’s officers testified they had no information

suggesting Betty and appellant, who is in his mid-sixties and who Deputy Isley described as

“elderly,” were armed or dangerous, nor did they observe any weapons on the property.

From the side of the mobile home, Deputy Isley and Investigator Monk observed

appellant in the backyard, about to reenter the mobile home through the back door. Deputy Isley

entered the backyard, approached appellant, and said: “Hi, how are you doing?” Appellant, who

was standing among some potted plants on the mobile home’s back steps, responded: “Good

until now,” gesturing to the plants. Deputy Isley testified he could see the potted plants on the

mobile home’s back steps from where he was standing in the backyard when he greeted

appellant. The sheriff’s officers later identified the plants as marijuana.

-3- 04-10-00424-CR

After making contact with Deputy Isley, appellant reentered the mobile home and came

out the front door and through the gate in the fence. Deputy Isley remained in the backyard, and

Investigator Monk returned to the front of the house. Appellant greeted Lieutenant Hill, shook

his hand, and introduced himself, stating he knew what the officers were looking for. Appellant

then led Lieutenant Hill and Investigator Monk around to the back of the mobile home, where he

sat down on the back steps and stated the marijuana plants were his. Investigator Monk asked

appellant to sign a form consenting to a search of the mobile home, and appellant signed it.

Appellant testified he was compliant with the sheriff’s officers because he had just

received a call from his neighbor, who told him sheriff’s officers had broken down her front door

earlier that day and “shot” her dogs before searching her home for marijuana. Appellant’s

neighbor testified the sheriff’s officers shot her dogs with tranquilizer darts before they entered

her home by force and placed her in handcuffs. Appellant testified: “I was sure that if I said

anything I wasn’t supposed to, if I made any move I wasn’t supposed to, that I would have a

whole troop coming down in front of my driveway; that they would shoot my dogs up; that they

would harass my wife like they did [my neighbor] . . . . So I was really worried, sir. I was

scared.” During the search, the sheriff’s officers confiscated the potted marijuana plants from

appellant’s back steps, as well as more marijuana and marijuana-related contraband from inside

the home.

Prior to trial, appellant moved to suppress all the evidence seized from his property,

arguing that the sheriff’s officers conducted an illegal search and seizure. The trial court held a

hearing on the motion to suppress and later denied the motion. Subsequently, appellant pleaded

“no contest” to the charges against him and received probation and a fine. In his sole issue on

appeal, appellant argues the trial court erred by denying the pretrial motion to suppress.

-4- 04-10-00424-CR

DISCUSSION

In order to determine whether the evidence was erroneously admitted, we must first

determine whether appellant had a constitutionally protected right to privacy in his backyard. If

so, we evaluate whether the sheriff’s officers were authorized by law to enter the backyard

without a warrant. If they were not, we must determine whether appellant’s written consent to

search was voluntary under the circumstances and, therefore, permitted introduction of the

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