People v. Hutchins

100 Cal. App. 3d 406, 161 Cal. Rptr. 48, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2454
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 26, 1979
DocketCrim. No. 34741
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 100 Cal. App. 3d 406 (People v. Hutchins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hutchins, 100 Cal. App. 3d 406, 161 Cal. Rptr. 48, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2454 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Opinion

LILLIE, Acting P. J.

Wynn, Walker, Hutchins and Taylor were charged with conspiracy to transport and sell PCP, and with transportation and sale of PCP; Hutchins and Taylor alone were charged with possession for sale of PCP. On motion of Hutchins and Taylor pursuant to section 1538.5, Penal Code, the trial court ordered suppressed evidence recovered as a result of their arrest. The People appeal from order suppressing evidence and dismissing the cause as to Hutchins and Taylor.1

On October 12, Deputy Carpenter, acting in an undercover capacity in Antelope Valley, received a call from defendant Wynn2 who offered to sell him 20 ounces of leaf PCP for $2,000 but said they would have to meet with another person to finalize the deal; he told Wynn to contact the person.

The next day (Oct. 13) at 11:30 a.m. Wynn called Deputy Carpenter and said that the people selling the 20 ounces of leaf PCP wanted to see the money but a photograph of the money would suffice. Deputy Casita was then sent to a 7-Eleven store parking lot with $2,000. At noon Deputy Carpenter picked up Wynn and drove to 7-Eleven and entered Deputy Casita’s vehicle where Deputy Carpenter took three Polaroid [409]*409pictures of the $2,000 and gave them to Wynn. About 8:30 p.m. Wynn called Deputy Carpenter and said the PCP was “here,” they were ready to “do the deal,” the people they were buying from were coming to his house and he would call “as soon as they were ready to go.” At 1:30 a.m. Wynn called Deputy Carpenter and said that because “the people with the narcotics” had to take a friend to the hospital, the deal would be delayed to the next morning.

On October 14 at 10 a.m. Wynn called Deputy Carpenter and said he could sell or was with someone who could sell him 16 ounces of liquid PCP for $2,000, and that the PCP was coming from Pasadena; Deputy Carpenter then heard Wynn yell in the background, “Shirley come here and cover the phone”; they conversed and arranged to meet at Sambo’s. Shortly thereafter, Wynn called Deputy Carpenter and made arrangements for him (Carpenter) to, and he did pick him up and meet Shirley at an intersection; defendant Shirley Walker told him she was not the one who had possession of the PCP, and that the 16 ounces of liquid PCP for which the price was $2,000 was in possession of someone in Pasadena, and they would have to go to Pasadena to get it and he would have to “front the money”; Deputy Carpenter told her he wanted the PCP but would not do the transaction that way whereupon Shirley made a call from a phone booth; Deputy Carpenter, about 6 feet away, saw Shirley dial a number, heard her say, “Hi, this is Shirley, I have to have Preacher’s number,” and saw her write something on the wall; Shirley then dialed a number and Carpenter heard her say, “Preacher, this is Shirley. He won’t do the deal the way we want to do it”; at the conclusion of her conversation she told Deputy Carpenter they could “do the transaction that way” but it would be at Denny’s; she would bring the PCP to him (Carpenter) and he would give her the money which she would take to her friend; Shirley left and Wynn showed him a paper on which he had copied down “Preacher’s” phone number, and said they could deal directly with him.

At the station Deputy Carpenter called Wynn to confirm “Preacher’s” number which he had memorized; through official channels he learned it was listed to defendant Clifton Hutchins at an address in Altadena. Deputy Carpenter advised Sergeant Wachsmuth, his superior who was familiar with the undercover operation, that the negotiations for the purchase of 16 ounces of PCP were progressing, Wynn had introduced him to Shirley who was involved in the negotiations, and he had the phone number of Hutchins in Pasadena. Deputy Wachsmuth commenced surveillance of Deputy Carpenter and Wynn.

[410]*410At 1 p.m. Wynn called Deputy Carpenter and told him to pick up him and Shirley and they would go to Denny’s where “Preacher’s girl friend was going to do the transaction.” Fifteen minutes later Wynn called back and advised Deputy Carpenter that Shirley contacted him and said the transaction would have to be done at the Villa Princessa off-ramp of the freeway; Deputy Carpenter refused. Fifteen minutes later Wynn again called Deputy Carpenter that Shirley said they would do the transaction at Denny’s under his terms; he told Carpenter Shirley said he (Carpenter) was to pick them up, drive to Villa Princessa and drop her (Shirley) off, then he (Carpenter) would proceed to Denny’s where she, “Preacher” and his girl friend would respond and do the transaction, and that the people were coming to Villa Princessa from Pasadena.

Deputy Carpenter advised Sergeant Wachsmuth that the transaction was supposed to go down at Denny’s, someone was to deliver 16 ounces of PCP to Villa Princessa off-ramp, “Preacher” and his girl friend were supposed to be on Villa Princessa off-ramp, and to go there. Deputies Wachsmuth and Jensen arrived at Villa Princessa off-ramp at 2 p.m.; they observed a female Negro (defendant Hattie Ruth Taylor) standing at a stop sign looking up the southbound off-ramp, and a male Negro (defendant Clifton Hutchins) seated in the driver’s seat of a Mazda parked under the overpass; they continued on Villa Princessa and stopped a quarter of a mile away; looking back they saw the Mazda, and Taylor at the stop sign still looking up the ramp; the area around the off-ramp was open, surrounded by desert; they circled around, reentered the freeway and as they crossed the Villa Princessa overramp, observed the Mazda but no one near it; making a U-turn in the middle of the freeway they observed Taylor still standing at the stop sign; they waited in an area away from the freeway.

Deputy Carpenter picked up Wynn; at Shirley’s residence he was advised she was en route to Wynn’s house; too much time had elapsed and he feared if he returned for Shirley that those waiting at Villa Princessa would leave; he did not go back to Wynn’s house but effected the arrest of Wynn, recovering from his person the Polaroid photo of $2,000 he had taken the day before at 7-Eleven.

Immediately Deputy Carpenter advised Sergeant Wachsmuth via radio that he had arrested Wynn, and told him to proceed to Villa Princessa off-ramp, investigate and take whatever action he deemed ap[411]*411propriate, the deal was becoming complicated, “the point in time” had passed as a result of which he had to arrest Wynn. Sergeant Wachsmuth proceeded to the freeway and exited at Villa Princessa; seated in the Mazda were Hutchins and Taylor; he ordered them to exit, and as they got out of the car, he detected the odor of PCP; Taylor and Hutch-ins came to the front of the car where they identified themselves and were “booked”; he walked to the open right passenger door of the vehicle and from outside could smell the odor of PCP; he then opened the right rear passenger door and advanced toward the point where he detected the strongest odor but found nothing; Hutchins and Taylor were under arrest at that time.3

This court is bound by the trial court’s determination, based upon what it perceived as a conflict in the testimony of Sergeant Wachsmuth, that Wachsmuth arrested Hutchins and Taylor before he detected the odor of PCP. (People v. Lawler, 9 Cal.3d 156, 160 [107 Cal.Rptr. 13, 507 P.2d 621

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Related

People v. Enriquez
132 Cal. App. 3d 784 (California Court of Appeal, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 Cal. App. 3d 406, 161 Cal. Rptr. 48, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hutchins-calctapp-1979.