People v. Tacardon

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 7, 2020
DocketC087681
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Tacardon (People v. Tacardon) 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. Tacardon, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 7/22/20; Certified for publication 8/7/20 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (San Joaquin) ----

THE PEOPLE, C087681

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. STK-CR-FER- 2018-0003729) v.

LEON WILLIAM TACARDON,

Defendant and Respondent.

Defendant Leon William Tacardon was charged with possession of a controlled substance for sale (Health & Saf. Code, § 11351) and misdemeanor possession of marijuana for sale (Health & Saf. Code, § 11359). Evidence of these crimes was seized following an interaction with San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Deputy Joel Grubb, the details of which will be set forth momentarily. After an unsuccessful motion to suppress

1 the evidence made during the preliminary hearing pursuant to Penal Code1 section 1538.5, defendant renewed the motion in the superior court under section 995 and prevailed. The People appeal. We reverse. BACKGROUND The facts are taken from the evidence presented at the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress. Deputy Grubb testified that at 8:45 p.m. on March 20, 2018, he was in uniform and driving a marked patrol car, with its high beams on, on Fairway Drive in Stockton.2 The deputy saw a gray BMW legally parked between two houses with its engine and headlights off. Three people were in the BMW, two of whom were reclining in the front seats wearing hooded sweatshirts. Smoke was coming out of the car windows that were slightly cracked open. Deputy Grubb made a U-turn, pulled up 15 to 20 feet behind the BMW, and parked, intending to contact the persons inside. He did not activate his siren or emergency lights, but turned on his spotlight to illuminate the car’s interior. He got out and began to approach the car; his weapon was not drawn. As Deputy Grubb approached the BMW, the passenger who had been in the rear seat, M.K., jumped out and closed the door behind her, moving very quickly and “kind of abrupt[ly].” Her conduct struck the deputy as “unusual” and caused him to be concerned for his safety, although he did not see anything in her hands or any bulge in her clothing, and she did not make any movements that appeared threatening.

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code. 2 According to Deputy Grubb, the search took place in “west Stockton,” a high- crime, high-drug area. However, the immediate neighborhood was known as Riviera Cliffs and was adjacent to “the Country Club area.” The deputy did not know how many drug arrests had recently been made in Riviera Cliffs or how the drug arrest rate there compared to that in other parts of west Stockton.

2 When M.K. got to the rear of the BMW, Deputy Grubb asked her what she was doing. She replied: “I live here.” The deputy asked her to stay outside the car and near the sidewalk behind it, where he could observe her and react in time in case she were armed or began to act irrationally. He did not draw his gun or Taser and spoke in a “moderate” and “fairly calm” voice. She complied with his orders. Deputy Grubb did not smell marijuana before M.K. got out of the BMW, as he was not close enough to the car yet. However, he smelled the substance at about the time she got out and he made contact with her.3 At that point, the deputy did not consider any of the car’s occupants free to leave. The deputy then approached the BMW, using his flashlight to illuminate the interior because the rear windows were tinted. On the rear passenger floorboard, he saw three large clear plastic bags, the largest at least eight inches across and “kind of tied off,” containing a green leafy substance. He also saw a custom-rolled dark brown and green cigarette in the center console, containing a burnt green leafy substance; he did not believe it was lit. Deputy Grubb contacted the two men in the front seat and asked for their identification. Defendant, who was in the driver’s seat, did not produce identification but gave his name and said he was on probation. The front seat passenger produced identification that the deputy took and retained while speaking to the men. The deputy told defendant to stay in the car. Deputy Grubb returned to his patrol car and conducted a records check that confirmed the identifications of the BMW’s occupants and showed defendant was on searchable probation. The deputy secured defendant in the back of the patrol car. Along with other deputies, Deputy Grubb conducted a probation search of the BMW. The search uncovered, in addition to the plastic bags, an unlabeled prescription

3 The deputy stated that detaining M.K. and smelling the marijuana happened “all kind of simultaneously.”

3 vial containing 76 suspected hydrocodone pills in a storage area near the passenger-side rear door. Defendant was arrested, and $1,904 was found on his person. Laboratory analysis showed the plastic bags contained 696.3 grams of marijuana and the pills were hydrocodone. An expert opined both substances were possessed for purposes of sale. The Magistrate’s Ruling After hearing argument on the suppression motion, the magistrate ruled: “Deputy Grubb said that he was on Fairway Drive, which is in Riviera Cliffs, which I always thought was one of the wealthier areas of Stockton, but he said it[] . . . has a high crime rate. . . . I’ve been a judge for 34 years. I don’t recall that many cases coming out of Riviera Cliffs. In any case, he saw a BMW with three people in it at 8:45 p.m., March 20th of 2018. And two are in the front, one was in the back. And he saw smoke. The windows were cracked. I took that to mean they were open a small amount. The engine was not running. The vehicle was not moving. He . . . was going to contact the people. So he turned on his spotlight and illuminated the vehicle. At that point, the female passenger from the back seat exited quickly, jumped out, as he described it. Then he . . . said that -- and this was subject to quite a few questions -- that I think what happened was as she -- up until then, he didn’t smell marijuana. When she opened the door, he told her to stop. At that point, he did not smell the marijuana. But then more or less -- well, a little bit after she opened the door, a little bit after he told her to stop, he smelled the marijuana. And he told her . . . to stay in his vision for safety. So then . . . he used . . . his flashlight. And he turned the flashlight -- he had the flashlight on. And he can see large clear plastic bags with green leafy substance, approximately eight inches in diameter, in plain sight in the vehicle. This was as a result of looking through the windows with a flashlight. That . . . is not considered a search. He saw a cigarette in the center console that was rolled. It was dark, a burned substance, but it was a green leafy substance. I guess it was a combination of both. As it turned out, the

4 substance was marijuana, . . . 696.3 grams. So there were three baggies. So I would say this is approximately half a pound per bag. And after all this happened -- and this all happened pretty quickly. Once he flashed his light on the vehicle and observed the material, he then asked for ID from the defendant. The defendant didn’t have it. Then he obtained the name and date of birth from the defendant. And he subsequently recovered the marijuana. He . . . also discovered a vial of 76 pills in the passenger door, which were determined to be [O]xycodone. So then he arrested the defendant. “[I]t’s not against the law to possess an ounce, but if it’s more than an ounce, then it’s against the law. In other words, possession for sale of marijuana is still a felony.[4] So I think the officer had probable cause to believe that . . . this was more than an ounce that he saw in plain sight. I think it was a police contact. . . . [I]n other words, he didn’t stop the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Tacardon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tacardon-calctapp-2020.