People v. Beydoun

770 N.W.2d 54, 283 Mich. App. 314
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 2009
DocketDocket 280122
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 770 N.W.2d 54 (People v. Beydoun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Beydoun, 770 N.W.2d 54, 283 Mich. App. 314 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Gleicher, J.

This appeal focuses on the validity of a warrantless administrative search of a business owned by defendant Adnan Eddi Beydoun. After the administrative search and a subsequent seizure of tobacco products, a district court bound defendant over for trial on two charges of violating the Tobacco Products Tax Act (TPTA), specifically MCL 205.428(3) (possessing, acquiring, transporting, or offering for sale in violation of the act 3,000 or more tobacco products with an aggregate wholesale price of $250 or more). Defendant moved to suppress evidence of the seized tobacco and dismiss the charges, arguing that the warrantless searches violated his Fourth Amendment rights. The circuit court granted defendant’s motions, and the prosecution now appeals as of right. We reverse and remand.

i

At defendant’s preliminary examination, state police detective Michael Foley testified that in 2005 he was *317 working as a specialist with the state police’s tobacco tax team. Foley described the tax team’s responsibilities as including the performance of administrative inspections to ascertain whether establishments possessed state-mandated licenses to sell tobacco, pre-licensing activities, and “checking] on.. . counterfeit tobacco products and tobacco products brought into the state legally and illegally.” Foley further explained that “we would check for tobacco tax stamps [on cigarettes or] an OTP Stamp, which is other tobacco products stamp on cases,” as mandated by Michigan’s tobacco tax statutes.

Foley recounted that on September 23, 2005, he went to defendant’s Dearborn Heights business, the Arabian Market at 26018 Ford Road, intending to conduct an administrative inspection after having received an anonymous tip concerning the presence of illegal tobacco products at the market. When Foley entered the market, defendant identified himself as the store owner, prompting Foley to “explain[] to him who I was and who I was with that we were there to conduct [an] administrative inspection.” Foley requested “to see four months [sic] worth of invoices for all tobacco products on the premise[s]. . ., the tax ID of the store and any other licenses that he possessed.” According to Foley, defendant gave him invoices for the tobacco in the market and “a sales tax license for the store” and told him that he possessed a federal tobacco-related license. But Foley recalled that with respect to a Michigan tobacco tax license necessary for possessing or selling tobacco in Michigan, defendant denied having one, although he averred that “he had recently applied for one.”

Foley recalled that he reviewed the invoices defendant presented, intending to compare the listed tobacco products with those inside the Arabian Market. At least *318 one invoice identified the purchaser of some tobacco “from the Middle East” as Starco Import & Export, L.L.C., which defendant explained was “a business that he owns ... that... runs out of the same building that we were at.” 1 Foley related that he contacted the Department of Treasury and learned that the Arabian Market, Starco, and defendant did not hold Michigan tobacco tax licenses. When Foley inquired concerning the whereabouts of more than “two thousand cases of Molasses Tobacco that had been shipped to the United States” according to one invoice, defendant took Foley to a storeroom that contained more than 300 cases of molasses tobacco, which is considered “OTP” tobacco. Foley recounted defendant’s explanation that he had sold some of the tobacco shown on the invoice. None of the cases of tobacco stored at the Arabian Market bore Michigan tobacco tax stamps.

Foley testified that he and other agents seized the 300 plus cases of tobacco, valued at $84 a case, because defendant unlawfully possessed the tobacco without a Michigan tobacco tax license and the required state tobacco tax stamps. Foley averred that he gave defendant “a notice of seizure and an inventory of everything that was seized,” then placed the tobacco in police storage. Foley added that on October 20, 2005, a civil hearing occurred to examine the lawfulness of the Arabian Market tobacco seizure, that defendant disclosed at the hearing that the remaining number of about 2000 cases of tobacco listed on the molasses tobacco invoice “were at... a building that he owns” next door to the Arabian Market, and that defendant *319 and his counsel “agreed to turn it over to us at that time.” Around noon on October 21, 2005, after defendant’s counsel apprised Foley that the remaining tobacco was located at defendant’s Dearborn Heights residence, Foley went there to retrieve the remaining cases of tobacco. Foley recounted that defendant “invited us in,.. . took us to his basement and showed us where the remainder of the product was,” and “also showed us around the whole house to show that there was no other product anywhere else in the garage or any other bedrooms” and that the police “took out one thousand seven hundred and seventeen cases of Molasses Tobacco from his residence,” also worth $84 a case. The district court bound defendant over on the two charged counts, reasoning that “[MCL] 205.428 seems pretty clear, he’s got to have a license.”

In the circuit court, defendant moved to quash the charges. 2 Defendant additionally moved for an evidentiary hearing on the constitutionality of the September 23, 2005, warrantless seizure of tobacco from the Arabian Market. Defendant argued that “the search of [his] premises was not for administrative purposes but actually was intended for criminal purposes and the administrative subterfuge used by the Michigan State Police was a violation of the Fourth Amendment.” The prosecution responded that (1) “the TPTA and the product it seeks to regulate are part of a pervasively regulated industry,” rendering valid the warrantless “administra *320 tive search of the Arabian Market,” (2) the state police had probable cause supporting the search of the Arabian Market in light of the anonymous tip they received about a large quantity of “illegal contraband OTF¡” together with defendant’s admissions at the market that strengthened the reliability of the anonymous tip, and (3) the state police lawfully seized the tobacco products from defendant’s house on October 21, 2005, because (a) they had probable cause to believe they would find the tobacco products there after defendant admitted possessing additional cartons and (b) defendant consented to the police search of his home and the seizure of the additional “unstamped OTP cartons.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People of Michigan v. Dion Lamarr Vaughn
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2022
Willis v. Trierweiler
E.D. Michigan, 2021
People of Michigan v. Ricardo Rodriguez Jr
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2019
People of Michigan v. Quandraiko Hayes
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2019
Davor Vulic v. Department of Treasury
909 N.W.2d 487 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2017)
Value Inc v. Department of Treasury
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2017
K & W Wholesale LLC v. Department of Treasury
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2017
People v. Norwood
303 Mich. App. 466 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
770 N.W.2d 54, 283 Mich. App. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-beydoun-michctapp-2009.