Robert Thomas Mays v. Carter F. Davenport

560 F. App'x 958
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 2014
Docket12-10105
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 560 F. App'x 958 (Robert Thomas Mays v. Carter F. Davenport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Thomas Mays v. Carter F. Davenport, 560 F. App'x 958 (11th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Robert Thomas Mays, an Alabama prisoner serving a 99-year sentence for murder, appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of *959 habeas corpus. After a thorough review of the record and having had the benefit of oral argument, we conclude Mays is not entitled to habeas relief and we therefore affirm the district court’s judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

The following facts are not in dispute. On Wednesday, February 12, 2003, police officers in Cullman County, Alabama, found Paula Conn, Mays’s mother, dead in her home with a gunshot wound under her left eye. Conn had not been seen since Sunday, February 9, 2003. Based on the condition of Conn’s body, investigators estimated that she had been dead for 48 to 72 hours, that is, since Sunday, February 9th or Monday, February 10th. While investigating the crime scene, officers noticed that Conn’s purse had been rifled through and a brief search indicated that her credit cards and driver’s license were missing. During the ensuing investigation, Lieutenant Tim Creel with the Cull-man County Sheriffs Office learned that Mays had moved in with his mother several months prior to her death and that Mays regularly used crack cocaine. Lieutenant Creel also learned that Conn had recently purchased a new black Chevrolet pickup truck (the Chevrolet truck) which was not at her home.

The next day, Thursday, February 13, 2003, Lieutenant Creel returned to Conn’s residence and found photocopies of a driver’s license and a credit card as well as old credit card bills. Lieutenant Creel called the credit card company and had Conn’s credit card history run. Conn’s credit card transaction history revealed that the card had been used in and around the Montgomery area on Monday, February 10th, and Tuesday, February 11th — i.e., two days following her death on February 9th or 10th and two days before her body was discovered on February 12th. Late in the afternoon on February 13, 2003, Lieutenant Creel and another officer, Lieutenant Phillip Lambert, traveled to Montgomery and met with the Montgomery Police Department’s robbery and homicide unit. After Detective Guy Naquin with the Montgomery Police Department issued an announcement directing law enforcement officers to be on the lookout for Mays and the Chevrolet truck, an officer spotted the truck at the Peddlers Inn, which is located in an area of town known for its criminal and drug activity.

Upon their arrival at the motel, the officers maintained surveillance on the Chevrolet truck while other officers went to the front desk and looked for Mays’s name in the registry. Mays was not a registered guest at the Inn, but the officers learned from a paid informant who worked with Detective Naquin that Mays was currently in room 238. Thereafter, Lieutenants Creel and Lambert went to room 238 along with Detective Naquin and several other officers from the Montgomery Police Department. Someone inside the room opened the door and the officers entered the room. 1 The room smelled as if crack cocaine had recently been smoked.

*960 Inside the motel room, the officers found Mays along with two people who lived in the room: a woman, Angela Lewis, and another man, Joseph Davis. After entering the room, Detective Naquin handcuffed Mays and Lieutenant Creel removed Mays’s wallet from his pocket. Lieutenant Creel did not ask Mays anything before removing the wallet. Inside Mays’s wallet, Lieutenant Creel found Conn’s driver’s license.

During an interview with Lieutenant Creel, Lewis and Davis told Creel that they had met Mays that day, and that Mays was trying to sell a truck. Mays had also told Lewis and Davis that his mother was from Cullman and that she was terminally ill with cancer. After they were interviewed, Lewis and Davis were allowed to remain in their room at the Peddlers Inn while Mays was taken to the Montgomery Police Department. Police officers obtained a search warrant for the Chevrolet truck. While searching the truck, an officer with the Cullman County Sheriff’s Office found shotgun shells, including a spent 20-gauge shotgun shell. A grand jury subsequently issued an indictment charging Mays with murder.

Prior to trial, Mays filed a motion to suppress Conn’s driver’s license as well as evidence that had been seized from the Chevrolet truck. 2 The state trial court held a suppression hearing at which Detective Naquin and Lieutenant Creel testified about their investigation and Mays’s arrest. Mays did not testify. 3 Mays’s counsel argued in relevant part that:

As far as the wallet is concerned the law is very clear, federal and state, that a warrantless search or a warrantless arrest is presumptively unreasonable. Now, Officer Creel and Officer Naquin have both testified that they didn’t have a warrant for Mr. Mays’[s] arrest at the time that they took him into custody, so it is a warrantless arrest. There is a presumption that’s unreasonable and there are exceptions and the State has only talked about two; incident to a lawful arrest and exigent circumstances coupled with probable cause. It’s ... hard for the Defendant to argue there wouldn’t have been exigent circumstance. But there has to be probable cause as well.

After arguing that the officers did not have probable cause to arrest Mays, counsel maintained that “[t]o find whether Mr. Mays had an expectation of privacy in that hotel room, the Court has to look at how the Alabama courts treat a hotel compared to a home. And I have a case that I’m going to leave with the Court that a hotel is treated the same as a home. The standing argument on that should be met.” In summarizing his argument, Mays’s counsel explained, “we contend that due to the fact there was a warrantless arrest made, Mr. Mays had an expectation of privacy in that hotel room and the State has to show probable cause in exigent circumstance and they can’t show probable cause. They *961 can’t show probable cause.” The trial court denied Mays’s motion to suppress.

At trial, Angela Lewis testified that she and Davis lived in room 238 at the Peddlers Inn. Lewis explained that she first met Mays on February 12, 2003-the day before he was arrested. On February 12th, Lewis was working at a package store called Cash’s. Mays came into the store with a woman whom Lewis knew as Pocahontas. Although Mays and Pocahontas went to Cash’s to purchase cigarettes, they ultimately left the store without making the purchase. Lewis did not have any further interactions with Mays until the following day, February 13, 2003. On that day, Lewis was walking across the parking lot of the Peddlers Inn when Mays and Pocahontas stopped and asked Lewis if she wanted to ride with them. Lewis responded in the affirmative and accompanied Mays and Pocahontas while Mays sold the tires on the Chevrolet truck and then purchased crack cocaine. After Lewis smoked some of the crack cocaine, Mays dropped her off at the entrance to the Peddlers Inn. Lewis returned to her room, where Davis was already present. Sometime thereafter, Mays came to room 238 and knocked on the door.

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560 F. App'x 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-thomas-mays-v-carter-f-davenport-ca11-2014.