State v. Dannebohm

CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 6, 2018
Docket116981
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Dannebohm, (kan 2018).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 116,981

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellant,

v.

BRANDON ALVIN DANNEBOHM, Appellee.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. When a defendant's standing to challenge a search is in question, the burden falls on the defendant to show an expectation of privacy in the property searched. Defendants may testify at a suppression hearing to establish their standing to challenge a search without jeopardizing their defense at trial.

2. To have standing to challenge a home search, a guest must show a degree of acceptance into the household or an ongoing and meaningful connection to the host's residence so that the guest has a reasonable expectation of privacy in the host's residence.

Review of the judgment of the Court of Appeals in an unpublished opinion filed August 11, 2017. Appeal from Barton District Court; RON SVATY, judge. Opinion filed July 6, 2018. Judgment of the Court of Appeals reversing the district court is reversed. The case is remanded to the Court of Appeals with directions.

Douglas A. Matthews, assistant county attorney, argued the cause, and Amy J. Mellor, county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, were with him on the brief for appellant. Donald E. Anderson II, of Anderson, Bristow, & Anderson Law Office, of Ellinwood, argued the cause and was on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

STEGALL, J.: Law enforcement officers searched Alexis Tracy's apartment for Brandon Alvin Dannebohm but did not find him. Instead, they found his safe, which contained 447.5 grams of methamphetamine. Dannebohm moved to suppress this evidence. But the State argued Dannebohm lacked standing to challenge the search because the apartment was not his and he did not live there.

The district court at first agreed with the State, but upon reconsideration, it found Dannebohm had standing and went on to suppress the evidence. The State filed an interlocutory appeal, and our Court of Appeals reversed, holding Dannebohm lacked standing. We disagree. Dannebohm had a reasonable expectation of privacy in Tracy's apartment at the time of the search, so he has standing to challenge the search. We thus reverse and remand this appeal to the Court of Appeals so it can rule on the merits of the State's appeal.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On June 23, 2015, officers Chance Bailey and Jacob Harlow of the Ellinwood Police Department were searching for Dannebohm who had an outstanding arrest warrant. That evening, law enforcement received a tip that Dannebohm was at Tracy's apartment in Ellinwood. In fact, Dannebohm had arrived at Tracy's apartment that morning carrying a blue cooler as Tracy was leaving to run errands.

No one was present at Tracy's apartment when the officers arrived. Eventually, the apartment manager helped Officer Harlow get in touch with Tracy over the phone. He

2 told Tracy they were looking for Dannebohm and believed he was inside her apartment. Tracy—who was in Great Bend—said Dannebohm was not there. She said she was driving home. Tracy did not mention that Dannebohm was with her in the vehicle at the time of the call. Afterwards, she dropped him off at her mother's house and returned to Ellinwood.

Once she arrived, Tracy told the officers she was "pretty sure" there was nobody in her apartment. Officer Harlow testified that Tracy said Dannebohm had been there earlier that day but "she didn't believe he was still there." Officer Harlow still asked Tracy for her consent to search the apartment for Dannebohm, and she assented. Tracy remained outside with Officer Bailey while other officers—along with a police dog—searched the apartment. Dannebohm was not inside. But resting on a bed was "a glass pipe with white and burnt residue." In the same room was a black Sentry safe being used as a TV stand. Tracy said the safe belonged to Dannebohm. Also in the room was the same blue cooler Dannebohm carried into the house that morning. Somewhere in the apartment the officers found a duffel bag containing clothing that evidently belonged to Dannebohm.

At some point, the dog alerted to the presence of drugs on the bed near the pipe. It also detected the presence of drugs on the safe. The officers seized the pipe and the safe but not the duffle bag. Rather than trying to open the safe, they took it to the police department where they placed it in an evidence locker. After obtaining a warrant, the officers opened the safe using the combination (which they already possessed because they had dealt with the same safe in a prior case). Inside was a warrant and bonding information for Dannebohm as well as 447.5 grams of methamphetamine.

Tracy said Dannebohm brought the safe to her apartment sometime before June 9, 2015. Before the search, she told the officers that if there were drugs in the safe, they belonged to Dannebohm and not her. Tracy stored no personal items in the safe. When asked if she could access its contents, she responded, "I'm pretty sure the PIN was written

3 down somewhere but, I mean, I never really got into it." She said the safe was occasionally left open.

The State charged Dannebohm with possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine and no drug tax stamp. Before trial, he moved to suppress the evidence because he believed the search with the dog exceeded the scope of Tracy's consent. But before the court considered the merits of Dannebohm's claim, the State moved to dismiss his motion, arguing he lacked standing to challenge the search because he had no reasonable expectation of privacy in Tracy's apartment.

The district court conducted a bifurcated evidentiary hearing on the motion to dismiss. Tracy testified she had known Dannebohm for about 10 years. She and Dannebohm had no romantic relationship. Tracy thought of him as a brother. That summer Dannebohm was at her apartment at least once a day to check on her because she was pregnant. Tracy considered Dannebohm a welcomed guest. When asked if Dannebohm would ever stay the night, she answered, "Maybe once or twice." Tracy let him keep some clothes and "other things" at the residence. Tracy also permitted Dannebohm to be at the apartment when she was not there.

At the same time, Tracy stated on cross-examination that she was the only person on the lease. Dannebohm paid no portion of the rent, utilities, or food. He had no key to the apartment, and Tracy typically locked the door when she left. She did not believe Dannebohm listed her apartment as his address.

Dannebohm testified he had been a friend of Tracy's family for 15 years and he had known Tracy most of her life. At the time of the arrest, Dannebohm lived at a house north of Great Bend. He kept some clothes at Tracy's apartment and would at times sleep on the couch for a few hours. When asked whether he had ever stayed the night with her that summer, he responded, "Not that I recall. I might have but wouldn't have been like

4 all night, you know. I probably fell asleep over there for a couple two, three hours or whatever and left. . . . . She'd cook[] supper and I would eat and fall asleep and leave." Dannebohm said he came and went from the apartment in June 2015 because Tracy was pregnant, and he was checking on her. For a two-week period, he was at the apartment daily to bring her items she requested. Sometimes Tracy would meet him at his vehicle, and Dannebohm would not come inside.

Officer Harlow testified he did not think anyone other than Tracy and her newborn child lived at the apartment. Officer Bailey—who had responded to a call on a separate incident at Tracy's apartment—knew Tracy resided at the apartment.

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State v. Dannebohm, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dannebohm-kan-2018.