Martin v. State

297 P.3d 896, 2013 WL 1279653, 2013 Alas. App. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMarch 29, 2013
DocketNo. A-10592
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 297 P.3d 896 (Martin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. State, 297 P.3d 896, 2013 WL 1279653, 2013 Alas. App. LEXIS 35 (Ala. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Gene V. Martin Jr. appeals his convictions for second-degree and fourth-degree controlled substance misconduct, based on his manufacturing of methamphetamine. The primary evidence against Martin was obtained during the execution of a search warrant at a residence that Martin was visiting at the time. This search warrant, in turn, was based in large measure on the testimony of a state trooper who walked up to the residence, looked through a narrow opening in the window blinds, and observed a number of supplies that are commonly used for making methamphetamine.

The question presented in this appeal is whether the state trooper acted lawfully when he approached the residence and peered through the window. As we explain more fully in this opinion, the evidence supports the trial court's findings that the trooper made his observations by looking through a window while standing on a walkway or deck that was open to the public, and that the methamphetamine supplies were in plain view through an opening in the window blinds. Based on these findings, the trooper's observations were lawful. We therefore uphold the search warrant for the residence, and we accordingly affirm Martin's convie-tions.

Underlying facts

'On February 17, 2008, a loss prevention officer working at the Fred Meyer store in Wasilla contacted Trooper Mike Ingram. The loss prevention officer informed Trooper Ingram that a group of three individuals appeared to be interested in various items that are commonly used in the manufacture of methamphetamine.

Ingram arrived at the store while the individuals were still there, and the loss prevention officer identified some of those individuals to Ingram. Trooper Ingram then followed two of the people as they left the Fred Meyer store, joined two other people in a pickup truck, and drove to 405 North Old Glenn Highway, the site of a multi unit residence. There were five residential units at this address; because Trooper Ingram had to drive past the address to remain undetected, he did not see which of the five units the suspects entered.

Ingram requested the assistance of other law enforcement officers, and then he and the backup officers waited at the building (watching the suspects' car and apparently hoping that one or more of the four suspects would emerge). After waiting for approximately two hours, Ingram approached the structure, walked onto the deck or walkway adjacent to the building, and looked through the window of the first unit he came to.

This window had blinds, and the blinds were closed. But through a crack in the closed blinds (an opening ereated by a broken piece of blind), Ingram spotted various items used in making methamphetamine: several bottles of the fuel additive "HEET', [898]*898Pyrex glassware, a container of solvent, and tubing. Ingram also noticed a slight chemical odor.

After making these observations, Ingram returned to his patrol car and telephonically obtained a search warrant for this residential unit. During the execution of this warrant, Gene Martin and three companions were arrested inside the residence.

Martin and the others were indicted for second-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance (ie., manufacturing methamphetamine, and possessing precursor chemicals with the intent to manufacture methamphetamine), as well as fourth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance (possession of methamphetamine).

Prior to trial, Martin asked the superior court to conduct an in camera review of the personnel file of every officer and other law enforcement employee who would be a witness in the case. The superior court denied this request.

Martin was ultimately tried for, and convicted of, the controlled substance offenses.

The trooper's observation of the methamphetamine supplies

Martin argues that Trooper Ingram violated our state's constitutional guarantee against unreasonable searches 1 when he approached the apartment and then peered through the closed blinds.

For purposes of our legal analysis, Ingram's actions had two components: first, the trooper's act of approaching the apartment to the point where he was standing outside the window; and second, the troop er's act of looking through the crack in the blinds.

The law allows a law enforcement officer to approach a residence without a warrant, and without an invitation, if the officer's path of approach is impliedly open to the public. As our supreme court explained in Pistro v. State, 590 P.2d 884 (Alaska 1979), the question is whether the officer "[is] standing upon a part of [the] property that has been expressly or impliedly opened to the public use":

Thus, it [was] held that an officer who [left the] driveway [of a residence] and crosse[d] a portion of a yard which was not a normal access route to any door, so as to position himself next to a window in order to spy through a gap of about two inches at the bottom of a window shade, unlawfully intruded on the rights of privacy of the occupants.
In contrast, a [court upheld a search involving] a police officer's observations through a screen door, ... [when the officer used] a normal means of access to the house leading up to a side door. Similarly, observations from a common passageway between apartments have been upheld. [And] officers walking through an unfenced driveway to inquire at premises have been held not to invade any reasonable expectation of privacy.

Pistro, 590 P.2d at 886-87 (internal citations omitted).

As this Court noted in Michel v. State, 961 P.2d 436, 437 (Alaska App.1998), "[the underlying premise of Pistro is that visitors-including unsolicited visitors-can be expected to use normal means to approach a residence."

In Martin's case, Trooper Ingram approached the apartment, and the window, by walking on a deck or walkway that ran along the building. The superior court found that this deck was impliedly open to the public:

Ms. Foley [the tenant living in the apartment] may well be correct [in her testimony] that the people who live in the building treat the front deck as private property. But she testified that delivery people will walk along the deck if they go to the wrong door. More important, the [photographs] of the building demonstrate that a reasonable person walking up to the building would have no reason to believe that the deck [was the] private property [of the individual renters].... [T)he deck is not divided into separate areas; there are no signs ... indicating that any of the deck is private; all of the deck is readily accessible from the parking area for the building; and the deck leads around to the south side of the buildingl,] to a door which provides access to another apartment....
[899]*899A reasonable person, such as a delivery person or a repair person, would feel free to walk onto and along the deck to gain access to the appropriate apartment.

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Related

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Kelley v. State
347 P.3d 1012 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 P.3d 896, 2013 WL 1279653, 2013 Alas. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-state-alaskactapp-2013.