Standley v. State

751 S.W.2d 364, 25 Ark. App. 37, 1988 Ark. App. LEXIS 321
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJune 15, 1988
DocketCA CR 87-213
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 751 S.W.2d 364 (Standley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standley v. State, 751 S.W.2d 364, 25 Ark. App. 37, 1988 Ark. App. LEXIS 321 (Ark. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

John E. Jennings, Judge.

The appellant, James Standley, was found guilty by a jury of the manufacture of a controlled substance (marijuana), possession of a controlled substance (cocaine), possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver (marijuana), and being a felon in possession of a firearm. The trial court sentenced him to a total of 30 years in prison and fined him a substantial sum. Before trial, appellant filed a motion to suppress evidence. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion. The sole issue on appeal is whether this was error.

On or about August 26, 1986, Captain Lonnie Nichols, a Carroll County Sheriff’s Deputy, received a phone call from a confidential informant telling him that appellant was growing marijuana at his home. On September 2, 1986, Carroll County Sheriff Leroy Shower and two deputies, drove out to appellant’s place, in rural Carroll County, in an unmarked pickup truck. They saw that appellant’s house was surrounded by a fence and that there were tall weeds growing up in back of the house. They could not see what lay behind the weeds from the road.

The officers decided to park the truck on the road and investigate from behind appellant’s east fence. To do so they went through a gate into a field, apparently owned by appellant’s neighbor, went over a cross-fence, and entered an area of heavy woods located just to the east of appellant’s property. From this vantage point they could see into a garden area, fenced off with barbed wire and bounded on three sides by tall weeds. The officers could see what appeared to be five foot marijuana plants growing in the garden area (see diagram).

Deputy Behymer estimated that it was about 20 to 30 yards from their vantage point in the woods to the marijuana patch. There was also testimony that the marijuana lay less than 50 feet from the back of appellant’s house. In order to get a closer look, the officers crossed Standley’s east fence and entered an open area just to the east of the fenced marijuana patch. They did not cross the fence that surrounded the patch.

They then left the area and obtained a search warrant from Municipal Judge Allen Epley. The subsequent search produced marijuana, cocaine, and several firearms.

The question for decision is whether what the officers did, before obtaining the search warrant, constituted an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment, as made applicable to the states through the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We affirm the trial court’s decision that it did not.

The substance of appellant’s argument is (1) that the fenced marijuana patch was a part of the curtilage of his home and (2) that because the officers had no permission to be in the appellant’s neighbor’s woods nor to be in the open area on appellant’s property behind the marijuana patch, their visual observation into the curtilage constituted an unreasonable search. While we agree with the first proposition we cannot agree with the second.

In Sanders v. State, 264 Ark. 433, 572 S.W.2d 397 (1978), the defendant had a garden located between 100 and 200 yards behind his house trailer. A fence separated the trailer from the garden. The garden contained vegetables and growing marijuana plants. A water hose ran from the house trailer to the garden. Police officers searched the defendant’s house and found the marijuana growing in his garden. On appeal the supreme court held that the garden was part of the curtilage.

In Gaylord v. State, 1 Ark. App. 106, 613 S.W.2d 409 (1981), we held that the test to be applied in distinguishing an open field from curtilage was whether the marijuana patch lay within the defendant’s reasonable expectations of privacy, relying on Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967).

In United States v. Dunn, 480 U.S. _, 107 S. Ct. 1134 (1987), the court said that the curtilage question should be resolved with particular reference to four factors: the proximity of the area claimed to be curtilage to the home; whether the area is included within an enclosure surrounding the home; the nature of the uses to which the area is put; and the steps taken by the resident to protect the area from observation by people passing by. The Court said that these factors were only “useful analytical tools,” in determining whether the area in question is so intimately tied to the home itself that it should be placed under the home’s “umbrella” of Fourth Amendment protection. Dunn at _, 107 S. Ct. at 1139. Whether we apply the holding in Sanders, the test we used in Gaylord, or the factors described in Dunn, the appellant’s marijuana patch was part of the curtilage.

Our next inquiry is whether the officer’s conduct constituted an unreasonable search of appellant’s property. State v. Peakes, 440 A.2d 350 (Me. 1982), is almost in point. There two police officers had received an anonymous tip that the defendant was growing marijuana in a garden behind his house. They drove past his house on a rural road but were unable to see the garden. They obtained permission from the defendant’s neighbor to go onto the neighbor’s land, walk to the boundary line separating the two tracts, and from there were able to see the growing marijuana plants. They left and obtained a search warrant. The defendant contended that the officers’ observation of the plants constituted an unreasonable search of his property, a contention which the Supreme Court of Maine rejected. The court said:

The defendant correctly notes that his garden was not open or exposed to the public. But the defendant made no attempt to conceal the garden from the view of his neighbors. He cannot be said to have had an actual expectation of privacy in the garden under the circumstances. There was no invasion of his property. The officers observed something which was “open and patent” to the defendant’s neighbors and their invitees. [Citations omitted.]

The only real difference between Peakes and the case at bar is that here the permission of appellant’s neighbor was not obtained. But in Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S. 170 (1983), the Court held that the government’s intrusion upon an open field does not become a search in the constitutional sense merely because that intrusion is a trespass at common law. In the case of open fields, the general rights of property protected by the common law of trespass have little or no relevance to the applicability of the Fourth Amendment. Oliver, 466 U.S. at 184.

Unquestionably, a wooded area may be an open field as that term is used in the context of the Fourth Amendment. Oliver, 466 U.S. 170, 180 n.11; Bedell v. State, 257 Ark. 895, 521 S.W.2d 200 (1975). While this is not an open field search case it is clear that the officers’ observations were made from “open fields.”

The Court in Oliver reversed State v. Thornton, 453 A.2d 489 (Me. 1982).

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Bluebook (online)
751 S.W.2d 364, 25 Ark. App. 37, 1988 Ark. App. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standley-v-state-arkctapp-1988.