State of Tennessee v. Jacob Kyle Tipton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 19, 1996
Docket01A01-9510-CV-00445
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Jacob Kyle Tipton (State of Tennessee v. Jacob Kyle Tipton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Tennessee v. Jacob Kyle Tipton, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellee, ) Appeal No. ) 01-A-01-9510-CV-00445 v. ) ) Dickson Circuit

FILED JACOB KYLE TIPTON, ) No. CR-1584 ) Defendant/Appellant. ) Jan. 19, 1996

Cecil Crowson, Jr. COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE Appellate Court Clerk

MIDDLE SECTION AT NASHVILLE

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT FOR DICKSON COUNTY

AT CHARLOTTE, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE ROBERT E. BURCH, JUDGE

CHARLES W. BURSON Attorney General and Reporter

EUGENE J. HONEA Assistant Attorney General Criminal Justice Division 450 James Robertson Parkway Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0493 ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE

BILL R. BARRON Contract Appellant Defender 124 East Court Square Trenton, Tennessee 38382

JOSEPH L. HORNICK Assistant Public Defender P. O. Box 160 Charlotte, Tennessee 37036 ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT

DISMISSED AND REMANDED SAMUEL L. LEWIS, JUDGE O P I N I O N

This case presents what is purportedly an appeal under

Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 37(b). The issue of law

involves a juvenile's plea of guilty to delinquency in the Circuit

Court of Dickson County.

This case arose when Ms. Vivian McCord, Principal of

Charlotte Elementary School in Dickson County, Tennessee, filed a

petition in the Juvenile Court for Dickson County. She alleged

that appellant, eleven year old Jacob Kyle Tipton, was a delinquent

child because she found him with marijuana while at school.

Thereafter, appellant filed a motion to suppress in the

Dickson County Juvenile Court. Appellant alleged that school

officials and police officers had violated his constitutional

rights when they took a statement from him at the school and when

they conducted a search and found the evidence at issue in this

case. A hearing was held on appellant's motion by the juvenile

court. In July 1994, the juvenile court entered an order denying

the motion. On that same date, the juvenile court entered an order

finding Jacob Kyle Tipton to be an "unruly child."

In August 1994, appellant filed a "notice of appeal"

notifying the circuit court that he was appealing "from an Order

entered by the Dickson County Juvenile Court on July 19, 1994, in

which the Honorable Andrew Jackson overruled appellant's motion to

suppress evidence." Thereafter, the circuit court held a hearing

on appellant's motion to suppress.

At the hearing, Ms. McCord testified to the facts underlying

her petition. In May 1994, she learned that students, appellant in

2 particular, were bringing drugs to school. She believed that the

only way to catch the students in possession of the drugs was to

search the students as they got off the school bus.

Ms. McCord asked Officer John Patterson to be present when

she met the school bus, and he complied with her request. She

entered the bus and asked appellant to empty his pockets and shoes.

She stated: "I, basically, searched him. The officer stayed -- He

was on the bottom step of the bus, and he just stand [sic] there

and observed." The search on the bus did not turn up any drugs.

Ms. McCord took appellant to her office. She testified that

she did not consider appellant to be "under arrest," that he was

free to come and go, and that she told him of her suspicions. She

then testified as follows: "Well, first he denied it.... And, of

course, finally, we -- he admitted it in this little blue -- it's

a pencil thing that he carries in his notebook. So we looked at

that, and, at that point in time, I let the officer look at it; and

there was some remains of [marijuana] cigarettes." Ms. McCord

further testified that appellant admitted that he "used" marijuana

two or three times a week and on weekends. She also testified that

he used cocaine about once a week and that other students had told

her that appellant had sold them marijuana.

On cross-examination, she testified that she would not force

a student to answer questions if they did not wish to do so, but

"they can't just get up and walk out." She also stated: "Jacob

knows he could ask to leave at any time. But, no, they're not

going to be allowed to get up and just [go] out at any time."

Officer Patterson testified that appellant voluntarily

allowed Ms. McCord to look in his pencil container. Officer

Patterson also stated as follows: "Yes, sir, he did, after we had,

3 several times, told Mr. Tipton that he didn't have to talk to us

and that he was, indeed, free to leave if he did not want to talk

to us."

There was no evidence presented by appellant to contradict

any of the testimony of Ms. McCord or of Officer Patterson.

At the hearing, the circuit court judge stated as follows:

The Court holds for the purpose of searching for drugs and obtaining confessions and so forth, the principal is a State officer. A principal is an officer of the State empowered by statute to search for illegal substances; and therefore, is carrying out a legitimate State instance [sic]. Therefore, in certain conditions, custodial warnings must be given because it is a State action, and the Fourth Amendment applies to the State.

Subsequently, the circuit court entered an order which stated:

IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that when a principal of a school is searching for illegal materials, he/she is an officer of the State, acting with State interest in mind, the 4th amendment would apply and thus custodial warnings could be necessary.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that a principal, along with police officers, questioning a student in custodial [sic]; however, in this case it was made clear to the minor Defendant that he could leave and, therefore, this was non-custodial and all statements were voluntary.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that minors consenting to adults should be looked at carefully and an acquisition [sic] to authority would not necessarily be consent, but in this case there was consent because it was made clear that he could refused to be searched.

On 7 December 1994, the circuit court entered what it termed

an "Agreed Order of Disposition." The order provided that the

parties agreed with the court's declaration that appellant was a

"delinquent child." On 30 January 1995, the trial court entered an

"amended order" placing appellant on probation and, pursuant to

Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 37(b)(2)(i),(iv), allowing

4 appellant to preserve for appeal those issues presented in his

motion to suppress.

On 1 March 1995, appellant filed a notice of appeal in the

Court of Criminal Appeals. The State moved to transfer the appeal

to the Court of Appeals. The Court of Criminal Appeals granted the

motion and transferred the case pursuant to Tennessee Rule of

Appellate Procedure 17.

Subsequently, the State moved to dismiss the appeal on

jurisdictional grounds. Thereafter, this court entered an order

stating in pertinent part:

It appears that the issues raised in the appellee's motion should be disposed of only after the briefing schedule has been completed....

It is, therefore, ordered that the motion to dismiss be overruled. The court reserves judgment on the issues of law presented the motion pending the final disposition of this appeal.

Both appellant and the State of Tennessee have presented

issues; however, we are of the opinion that the resolution of the

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