State v. Alls

2018 Ohio 3353
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 21, 2018
Docket17 CAA 10 0070
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 Ohio 3353 (State v. Alls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Alls, 2018 Ohio 3353 (Ohio Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Alls, 2018-Ohio-3353.]

COURT OF APPEALS DELAWARE COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

STATE OF OHIO : JUDGES: : Hon. W. Scott Gwin, P.J. Plaintiff - Appellee : Hon. John W. Wise, J. : Hon. Craig R. Baldwin, J. -vs- : : WILLIAM ALLS : Case No. 17 CAA 10 0070 : Defendant - Appellant : OPINION

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING: Appeal from the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 17-CR-I-02-0097

JUDGMENT: Affirmed

DATE OF JUDGMENT: August 21, 2018

APPEARANCES:

For Plaintiff-Appellee For Defendant-Appellant

CAROL HAMILTON O'BRIEN APRIL F. CAMPBELL Prosecuting Attorney Campbell Law, LLC 545 Metro Place South, Ste 100 By: KIMBERLY E. BURROUGHS Dublin, Ohio 43017 Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Delaware Co. Prosecutor’s Office 140 North Sandusky Street Delaware, Ohio 43015 Delaware County, Case No. 17 CAA 10 0070 2

Baldwin, J.

{¶1} Appellant, William Alls, appeals the trial court’s denial of his motion to

suppress the introduction of the contents of his wallet. Appellant entered a plea of no

contest to one count of Forgery in violation of R.C. 2913.31(A)(3), a fifth degree felony,

and was found guilty. Appellee is the State of Ohio.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND THE CASE

{¶2} This case arises from an investigation of an alleged use of fraudulent credit

cards on August 27, 2016 in Delaware County. An employee of a local Staples

department store reported that a white male attempted to purchase a gift card and, when

the store employee asked the man for photo identification, the man bolted from the store

and entered a blue van in the parking lot. The Staples employee reported the incident

and provided the Delaware County Sheriff’s office with a description of the man, the van

he entered and the other occupants of the van. He also provided a photograph of the

license plate on the van. The Staples employee reported that the same white man, and

one of the other occupants, a white woman, had used a fraudulent credit card at that

Staples store several days prior to this incident.

{¶3} Deputies Lee, Griffith, and Johnson of the Delaware County Sheriff’s Office

were dispatched to investigate. Deputy Lee found the vehicle in the parking lot of a

nearby department store and watched the vehicle until the white man came out of a store

and returned to the van. The white female in the van exited and entered on the driver

side; the white male, identified as Jeremiah Jones, entered in the passenger side. Deputy

Lee stopped the van and asked Mr. Jones to exit the vehicle and asked him several Delaware County, Case No. 17 CAA 10 0070 3

questions. When Mr. Jones exited the van, Deputy Lee noticed a stack of credit cards

banded together on the floor of the van.

{¶4} Mr. Jones initially denied going to the Staples earlier that day but later

admitted he had been in Staples and attempted to purchase a gift card. He claimed that

the transaction was unsuccessful because the gift card he had used to purchase the new

gift card was lacking funds. This story was inconsistent with the report by the Staples

employee who described Mr. Jones as fleeing from the store before completing the

transaction.

{¶5} Deputy Lee asked Mr. Jones if he had anything dangerous on his person

and Mr. Jones admitted he had a syringe in his pants pocket. Deputy Lee patted Mr.

Jones down, found the syringe and what appeared to be drugs, handcuffed and detained

him in the back of the deputy’s cruiser.

{¶6} Appellant had remained in the vehicle and was asked by Deputy Lee to step

outside the van. When he exited the vehicle he had a cell phone and a wallet in his hands

and the deputy asked him to put them on the roof of the van while Deputy Lee patted him

down. Appellant was cooperative and consented to a search of his pockets. Appellant

denied possessing any drug paraphernalia or being involved in Mr. Jones activities. He

was then handcuffed and put in the back of Deputy Griffith’s cruiser. According to the

testimony at trial, the deputies forgot that the cell phone and wallet were still on the roof

of the van. They did not search the wallet at that time.

{¶7} Deputy Lee then asked the female to step out of the van and spoke to her

briefly. She admitted that Jones was her husband and that he was a heroin user. She

was not handcuffed, but was placed in the same cruiser as her husband. During the Delaware County, Case No. 17 CAA 10 0070 4

suppression hearing Deputy Lee could not recall why the woman was not handcuffed but

he did recall placing her in the cruiser for officer safety. The woman was not arrested and

she was permitted to drive the van home once the van had been searched.

{¶8} The deputies searched the van and retrieved the stack of credit cards

Deputy Lee observed when Mr. Jones had exited the van. They also found syringes

hidden throughout the vehicle, including the storage pockets attached to the front

passenger seat immediately in front of where the Appellant was sitting. After searching

the van, Deputy Lee picked up the wallet that Appellant had placed on top of the van and

found three credit or debit cards inside with the Appellant's name on them. Using a

handheld scanning device, the deputies determined that the electronic information

encoded on those cards did not match the information printed on them. The three credit

cards were determined to be forged and Appellant was arrested.

{¶9} Appellant was indicted on three counts of forgery, a violation of R.C.

2913.31 (A)(3), a felony of the fifth degree. Appellant filed a motion to suppress the

discovery of the three credit cards on May 1, 2017 and asserted several bases for the

suppression of the credit card evidence. The State filed a memorandum contra on May

15, 2017 and a hearing was conducted on May 31, 2017. On June 12, 2017 the trial court

issued a judgment entry denying the motion to suppress finding, among other things, that

“[b]y carrying his wallet in a mobile vehicle and then by openly revealing to the deputies

that wallet's existence in the middle of a roadside investigative stop, the defendant

willingly subjected that wallet to the kind of warrantless search that state and federal

courts have repeatedly permitted under the Fourth Amendment's automobile exception.”

(Entry Denying Motion to Suppress, June 12, 2017, p. 16). Delaware County, Case No. 17 CAA 10 0070 5

{¶10} Appellant then pled no contest on August 16, 2017 to a single count of

forgery and the trial court accepted his plea and sentenced him on September 26, 2017.

Appellant filed a notice of appeal on October 9, 2017 and submitted two assignments of

error:

{¶11} “I. ALLS'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS THE CONTENTS OF HIS WALLET

SHOULD HAVE BEEN GRANTED:

THE DEPUTIES SEIZED ALLS'S WALLET WITHOUT PROBABLE CAUSE, TO

SEARCH AND DETAIN ALLS UNREASONABLY IN HANDCUFFS (sic). THUS, THE

FRUIT OF THE POISONOUS TREE DOCTRINE APPLIES TO THEIR SUBSEQUENT

NONCONSENSUAL AND WARRANTLESS SEARCH OF IT.”

{¶12} “II. ALLS'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS THE CONTENTS OF HIS WALLET

ALSO SHOULD HAVE BEEN GRANTED, BECAUSE THE AUTOMOBILE EXCEPTION

DOES NOT APPLY AND CANNOT CURE, THE OFFICERS' UNLAWFUL SEARCH OF

IT.”

STANDARD OF REVIEW

{¶13} Appellate review of a motion to suppress presents a mixed question of law

and fact. State v. Burnside, 100 Ohio St.3d 152, 2003-Ohio-5372, 154–155, 797 N.E.2d

71, 74, ¶ 8.

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