Patterson v. State
This text of 413 So. 2d 1036 (Patterson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
David Allen PATTERSON
v.
STATE of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*1037 Jeffrey Jones, Memphis, Tenn., James H. Mathis, Corinth, for appellant.
Bill Allain, Atty. Gen. by Charles W. Maris, Jr., Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.
Before PATTERSON, C.J., and BROOM and DARDEN, JJ.
DARDEN, Justice, for the Court:
The defendant was indicted for three burglaries and the cases were tried together. The Circuit Court of DeSoto County directed a verdict of not guilty in one of the cases. From a conviction on the remaining two charges and consecutive sentences of five years the defendant appealed. We affirm.
On a report that a person had backed a car into the carport of a house in northwestern DeSoto County and peeped in a window of the house, Deputy Sheriff Ward obtained a description of the person, the car, and its Tennessee license plate numbers. The car and, in general, the person matched the description of a car and person seen in the neighborhood where some forty burglaries of residences had recently been committed. Other officers were alerted by Ward and another sheriff's patrol car spotted the car and signaled with blinking light and siren for it to stop. It proved to be the defendant, who stopped, but as the officers got out of the car to approach his vehicle from the rear, he drove off at an excessively rapid speed.
The officers gave chase for two or more miles, the defendant exceeding the speed limit and running one or more stop signs and finally running his car into a ditch. As defendant crawled out of his wrecked car, Regular Deputy Quarrels and Reserve Deputy Robb placed him under arrest for traffic violations, searched him for weapons, handcuffed him and Quarrels advised him of his Miranda rights. Defendant voluntarily stated that he was on narcotics and had broken into some houses that morning.
There was a pistol, holster and cartridges on the front seat and another pistol on the floorboard, all in plain view through the open front door of the car. When Deputy Ward and Reserve Deputy Looney arrived, defendant was in the back seat of Quarrels' patrol car, handcuffed. Ward testified that when he arrived that he gave Patterson his Miranda rights and that Patterson voluntarily told him he was on narcotics and had burglarized three houses that morning. He offered to show Deputy Ward the houses. Later Regular Deputy Madden, who had heard the radio report of the chase and wreck, arrived at the scene.
A wrecker was called and Ward ordered a search of the car trunk and an inventory of the contents, which Madden made out. There was a conflict in the testimony of the several officers at the hearing of a motion to suppress the physical evidence resulting from that search as to whether Ward talked to the defendant prior to the search of his car trunk.
Quarrels and Robb transported defendant from the scene of the wreck to jail and on the way there, he again said he was on narcotics and had been told there were some easy touches to be made down in DeSoto County breaking into houses. He said he wanted to make a deal. No promises were made to him and no threats or coercive conduct used to induce him to make the statement.
*1038 When Ward came into the jail defendant said he wanted to cooperate, that he was on narcotics and wanted to clear things up and would go and show the officers the three houses he had broken into that morning. They drove to two of the houses which had doors forced open or broken, and which defendant identified as having been burglarized by him. He could not remember the location of the third house and it was not until a later report of burglary by the owner that it was identified.
A motion to suppress evidence in regard to the contents of the car trunk opened at the wreck was sustained. The court held there was ample opportunity for the officers to obtain a search warrant for the car trunk and absent that the physical evidence resulting from the search could not be elicited.
For purposes of our discussion of defendant's rights against self-incrimination, we assume here that the search was illegal and in violation of rights secured by Section 23 of our Constitution and the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
In indulging such an assumption, we refer to the search as illegal, but we do not here pass upon the reasonableness of the search of the car trunk, or the validity of the trial court's ruling excluding the evidence resulting from such search. We have held that a search made in connection with an inventory where a car is impounded by police is a reasonable one, within the meaning of Section 23 and the Fourth Amendment. See, for example, Gordon v. State, 222 So.2d 141 (Miss. 1969); Jackson v. State, 243 So.2d 396 (Miss. 1970) and Florence v. State, 397 So.2d 1105 (Miss. 1981). Also of interest in connection with warrantless searches of motor vehicles are Horton v. State, 408 So.2d 1197 (Miss. 1982); Robbins v. California, 453 U.S. 420, 101 S.Ct. 2841, 69 L.Ed.2d 744 (1981), and New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454, 101 S.Ct. 2860, 69 L.Ed.2d 768 (1981).
On the trial there was ample proof of the corpus delicti, but strenuous objection by able counsel was interposed to testimony in regard to the confession of burglary and the identification by defendant of the two houses broken into. The basis of the objection was that the confession was the poisoned fruit of the illegal search of defendant's car trunk. The trial court held that the confession and identification of the houses were voluntary untainted.
The appeal presents the question of whether the trial court was in error in holding that the incriminating statements of defendant were not triggered or induced by the illegal search.
In his appeal the defendant undertakes to rely upon the principles announced in Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471, 83 S.Ct. 407, 9 L.Ed.2d 441 (1963) and its progeny.
There was no question raised and no valid basis for questioning the arrest of defendant. The pistol, cartridges and holster were in plain view of the officers in defendant's car. Any information obtained by means of the eye where no trespass has been committed in aid thereof is not illegally obtained. Goodman v. State, 158 Miss. 269, 130 So. 285 (1930). See, also, a discussion of the plain view doctrine in Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 91 S.Ct. 2022, 29 L.Ed.2d 564 (1971). The pistol and holster were later shown to have been taken from one of the two burglarized homes defendant pointed out to Ward. No illegality in respect to this item occurred.
We have held that a confession obtained by confrontation of an accused with articles indicating the commission of a crime obtained as a result of an illegal search renders the contemporaneous confession inadmissible. Likewise, where the confession comes so closely in time subsequent to the confrontation that the lapse has not attenuated the taint of illegality, proof of the confession may not be given. The reasoning is that violation of Fourth Amendment rights and those protected by section 23 of our Constitution destroys the voluntary nature of a confession made after an accused is presented with the results of that violation.
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413 So. 2d 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-state-miss-1982.