Owens v. State

589 A.2d 59, 322 Md. 616, 1991 Md. LEXIS 82
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 29, 1991
Docket103, September Term, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 589 A.2d 59 (Owens v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owens v. State, 589 A.2d 59, 322 Md. 616, 1991 Md. LEXIS 82 (Md. 1991).

Opinions

CHARLES E. ORTH, Jr., Judge,

Specially Assigned.

Marla Gardin, a friend of Lenard Bernard Owens, permitted him to leave his luggage in her apartment. The luggage was a nylon bag with a zipper closure. The police, without a warrant, seized the bag in Owens’s absence and searched it. They found crack cocaine and a large sum of cash. Owens was charged in the Circuit Court for Washington County with various violations of the controlled dangerous substances laws. He filed a pretrial motion to suppress the evidence, and, after a plenary hearing, the motion was denied. A jury convicted him of possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute. The court imposed a sentence of imprisonment for a term of 20 years and ordered him to pay a fine of $10,000 and $280 costs. The judgment was affirmed by the Court of Special Appeals. Owens v. State, 83 Md.App. 353, 574 A.2d 362 (1990). We granted Owens’s petition for the issuance of a writ of certiorari.

[619]*619I

We glean the details of Owens’s misadventure from the proceedings at a hearing on the pretrial motion to suppress the evidence. Testimony was received from Owens, Gardin, and Nelson Morgan Sheppard, Jr., a detective with the Hagerstown Police Department, experienced in the investigation of drug violations.

We learn from Owens that he was a resident of Fort Pierce, Florida, and made frequent trips to Hagerstown, Maryland. On six or seven occasions he stayed at Gardin’s apartment. He characterized his relationship with Gardin as “[j]ust another person that I know, a friend.” He came to Hagerstown from Florida on 81 January 1988, accompanied by several other men. This time, however, he went to the home of another friend, “Miss Elizabeth,” whose last name he did not know, intending to stay there while in Hagerstown. He left his bag there. He asked Gardin to get the bag and take it to her apartment. He said he made the request so he could change to clothing that was in the bag. He did not give Gardin permission to open the bag, he “simply asked her to bring it over to her house.” He spent the night of 31 January 1988 in Gardin’s apartment because it was too late to go to Miss Elizabeth’s house. He did not have a key to Gardin’s apartment, and she let him in when he knocked on the door. He spent the night on a sofa in the living room. When Owens departed the apartment the next morning, he left the bag in the living room with Gardin’s permission, intending to pick it up “later on whenever I had time to.” The bag’s zipper was closed, and he insisted that he never gave Gardin “permission to go into [his] luggage or open it in any way, shape or form.” A luggage tag bearing his name and address was attached to the outside of the bag. He “gave [Gardin] some money for staying there, like I gave her money to buy some needs for her and the kid. I mean, as far as paying, I gave her money to go buy breakfast.”

[620]*620Gardin testified at the call of the State. She was the listed tenant of the premises, paying a monthly rental of $37 (she was on public assistance). She lived there with her two-year-old daughter. On 1 February 1988, Owens and several other men, some of whom were known to her from previous visits, arrived at her apartment with three pieces of luggage. Owens and one of the men had spent the night there before, as recently as two weeks ago, but this time they did not indicate that they intended to spend the night. “They said they was going to leave, could they leave their bags ’cause they was going to look for a room and I said yes.” After they left, the police came to her apartment and asked if they could search it. She had no objection and told them so. She executed a form by which she acknowledged her awareness of her constitutional rights, consented to the search of her apartment, and authorized the police to “take from my premises and property any ... things which they desire as evidence for criminal prosecution in the case or cases under investigation.” The document was received in evidence. The pieces of luggage brought by Owens and his companions were in the living room. She did not point them out to the officers — “they were setting right there for them to see them.” The police searched the apartment and the luggage with her permission. Owens’s bag was closed. She had not opened it; Owens had not given her permission to open it. Gardin denied that she had brought any of the pieces of luggage to the apartment.

Sheppard testified on behalf of the State. He and other officers went to Gardin’s apartment, without a search warrant, on 1 February 1988. Gardin answered the door. Sheppard identified himself and

indicated to her that [he] had received information that there were drugs in her apartment that was brought there by four subjects who just arrived there that morning.

[621]*621She stated that she had no problem with the police coming in and searching the house. She executed a consent to search form. She then

pointed to some luggage which was located on the southwest corner of the living room and she stated “they had just brought it here this morning and if there’s any drugs it would be in there.” I then asked her who “they” was and she related to me that there were four black males, Nard [Owens], Wink, Waddell and the fourth one was a new guy that she didn’t know his name.

She did not “indicate at any time that any of those individuals had spent the preceding day or night there,” but she acknowledged that all except “the new guy” had been there on prior occasions. A search of the bag with Owens’s name tag on it revealed two pairs of “tube” socks stuck into shoes. Inside the socks were plastic bags. One bag contained 436 pieces of crack; another 246 pieces of crack; another 291 pieces of crack, for a total of 325.79 grams. In a fourth sock was $1880 in United States currency, in denominations not smaller than $20. Sheppard summed up what he alleged Gardin had told him:

Basically the only thing was that she told me that they had come to the apartment that morning after they had just arrived from Florida, and her response also was that they would come to her apartment when they would come to town to sell crack, oftentimes leaving some in her apartment, but oftentimes taking it out on the street with them.

It was elicited from Sheppard that crack is usually not sold by the gram on the street but in $20 “pieces.” Now, he explained, “with the way the weight has been fluctuating, [the value] will run between $78,000 and $97,000 for that package.”

[622]*622II

A

Owens’s motion to suppress was founded on the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which is applicable to state prosecutions under the Fourteenth Amendment. Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643, 655, 81 S.Ct. 1684, 1691, 6 L.Ed.2d 1081 (1961). The Fourth Amendment has two parts. First, it guarantees “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” Second, it provides that “no Warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.” The Supreme Court

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Bluebook (online)
589 A.2d 59, 322 Md. 616, 1991 Md. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-state-md-1991.