Nikolic v. State

384 So. 2d 1141, 1979 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1595
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 18, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 384 So. 2d 1141 (Nikolic v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nikolic v. State, 384 So. 2d 1141, 1979 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1595 (Ala. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Possession of cocaine: five years.

Briefly, the facts were that a Montgomery police officer, attached to the narcotics and dangerous drugs detail, received information over the telephone from an informer. That information was in reference to Milan Nikolic [the appellant] and two companions. After a short surveillance, the appellant and two companions were apprehended and four small bags of white crystalline powder, later determined to be cocaine, were seized.

Prior to trial, the appellant filed a motion to suppress, and an evidentiary hearing was held. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Corporal David Green, assigned to the narcotics and dangerous drugs detail of the Montgomery Police Department, testified that, at approximately 12:05 A.M. on July 22, 1977, he received a police radio *Page 1143 dispatch instructing him to return a telephone call. Green, after making the telephone call, was informed that Mike Martis, Debbie Spann and the appellant were in possession of cocaine at the Cloverdale Grill on Cloverdale Road, Montgomery, Alabama. The informer stated that the three were driving a yellow, two-door Chevelle with Alabama license plate number BEA-329.

Green said the informant had personally seen the three in possession of the cocaine within twenty-four hours prior to Green receiving the information. Green stated that he knew the three individuals alleged to be in possession of the cocaine. Further, Green testified that he knew the informant and had received, on previous occasions, reliable information leading to several narcotic convictions.

According to Green, he then drove to the Cloverdale Grill where he discovered an automobile matching the description given to him by the informant. Green radioed for a "black and white police unit" to assist him. Green stated that they waited for "about fifteen minutes" before the three individuals came out of the grill and got into the yellow Chevelle. Further, Green testified that about two or three minutes elapsed between the time the three got into the automobile and the time they drove away.

Green and his partner, Officer Laing, proceeded onto Cloverdale Road in their unmarked police car, with the "black and white police unit" following them. The uniformed police unit stopped the Chevelle west of the intersection of Cloverdale Road and Felder Avenue. At that point, one of the uniformed officers conducted a weapons' search of the individuals, and a white envelope found on the street, several yards from the scene of the stop, was given to Green. Green found four small bags of white crystalline powder inside the envelope. All three suspects were placed under arrest for possession of cocaine and were taken to police headquarters. Also, at that time, the three individuals were informed of their constitutional rights.

Green testified that, at police headquarters, he performed a cobalt thicyanate field test on the seized white crystalline powder. The results indicated the presence of cocaine.

During cross-examination, Green acknowledged that the informer had given information on more than twenty previous occasions, but Green could remember the names of only two individuals who had been convicted.

Green stated that the cocaine had been shown to the informer and had been represented to be cocaine by the appellant and his two companions. Green added that they were trying to sell "some of it" to the informant.

Montgomery Police Officer Travis A. Hudson testified that he was riding in the front passenger seat of the "black and white police unit" which assisted in arresting appellant and his companions. According to Hudson, all three suspects were sitting in the front seat with the girl sitting in the middle. The appellant was sitting on the passenger side of the car. Hudson testified that he observed "an arm come out the right passenger side window — a big arm — that was a male arm." Hudson said that the car was almost stopped when the white envelope was thrown from the passenger side of the car. Further, Hudson stated that, when the car was stopped, he saw Mike Martis in the driver's seat, Debbie Spann sitting in the middle of the front seat, and the appellant sitting in the front, passenger seat. Hudson recalled that he observed Officer Taylor "frisk" the appellant and take two syringes from his left front pants pocket.

At the end of Hudson's testimony the court overruled the motion to suppress and the jury was selected from the venire.

After opening instructions from the court, the jury was returned to the jury room. One of the twelve jurors requested to speak with the trial judge. The juror, Linda Lushington, a nurse, told the judge that she remembered, after being seated as a juror, that the defendant's mother had been a past patient of hers. Further, she *Page 1144 stated, "it's possible that . . ." her nurse-patient relationship with the defendant's mother would affect her ability to render a fair and impartial verdict in the case. At that point, the court declared a mistrial and instructed that a new jury be chosen from the same venire. Further, the court said that Mrs. Lushington's name was to be removed from the venire list before the second jury was chosen.

The defense counsel objected, stating "If a mistrial is declared you can't require the defendant or either side to strike from a jury that has already been stricken from because your other side knows who you are going to strike and who you are not going to strike and you can't get a fair and impartial jury that way."

The trial court overruled the defense's objection and denied his request for a continuance. The court noted:

"One of the jurors after the jury was in the box remembered that she knew someone involved in this case that would in some way affect her ability to render a fair, just and impartial verdict and the court for that reason has declared a mistrial and we are about to strike this jury again and the defense takes an exception to that and the exception is hereby noted."

During the selection of the second jury, the State, prior to striking, represented that it would strike the same veniremen who were stricken before the mistrial was declared. After the State had made precisely the same strikes that it had previously made, the defense attorney renewed his objection and, from aught it appears, made the same strikes that he had previously made. The defense attorney again objected, stating "that we feel that it will not be satisfactory for the defendant to strike from the same jury under any circumstances, manner, shape or form." Further, the defense attorney said: "the reason for that is because it is . . . known by the jury; the jurors left off, they knew they were left off." At this point, the defense counsel's objection was noted and the new jury was seated and the trial began.

Officer Travis Hudson was called as the first witness, and he gave substantially the same testimony that he had given at the suppression hearing.

Montgomery Police Officer J.G. Laing, assigned to narcotics and dangerous drugs detail, testified that, around midnight on the night in question, he was working with Corporal Green near the Cloverdale Grill in Montgomery, Alabama. According to Laing, they were conducting a surveillance of a yellow Chevelle with an Alabama license plate containing number "BEA." Laing said they observed the vehicle for about forty-five minutes and that they were being assisted in the surveillance by a "patrol unit." During the surveillance and subsequent pursuit of the appellant's car, Laing was seated on the front passenger side of the unmarked police unit. He stated that the unmarked vehicle pulled alongside appellant's car and from his position he could view the suspect's car from the driver's side only.

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Johnson v. State
406 So. 2d 446 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
384 So. 2d 1141, 1979 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nikolic-v-state-alacrimapp-1979.