State v. Furlow

260 N.W.2d 631, 1977 S.D. LEXIS 120
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1977
DocketNo. 11965
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 N.W.2d 631 (State v. Furlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Furlow, 260 N.W.2d 631, 1977 S.D. LEXIS 120 (S.D. 1977).

Opinion

PORTER, Justice (on reassignment).

Defendant appeals from his conviction on a charge of possession of a controlled substance. SDCL 39-17-95 (now SDCL 22-42-5 and SDCL 22-42-6). He contends that prejudicial error occurred when the trial court permitted the State to cross-examine him concerning the details of a former conviction. We sustain his contention and therefore reverse.

FACTS

On November 13, 1975, about 1:30 p. m., four officers entered Apartment 4, 109 North Duluth Avenue, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, to search the premises. They were acting under a search warrant issued in the case of State v. Darrell Crites, and were looking for marijuana. After knocking and receiving no response, they entered with a key earlier obtained from Crites, who had been taken into police custody on a street in Sioux Falls about 11:00 a. m. that day. The apartment telephone was listed in Crites’ name and the officers had reason to believe it was his apartment.

The apartment consisted of a room about twenty feet square, and an adjoining kitchenette about six by eight feet in size. There was a small bed or couch near the only door into the apartment, and a bed in another part of the room. The clothes closet was five or six feet long and full of male and female clothing, on hangers. Various jackets, underwear, shirts and socks were strewn about, and there were combat boots and other footwear on the floor.

When the officers entered, they found defendant lying on his stomach on the small bed or couch near the door. They tried but were unable to rouse him. They immediately handcuffed him because in their past experience, “He [had] always had dangerous weapons at hand.” Defendant was wearing blue jeans and a denim shirt, but no footgear. There was no one else in the apartment.

The officers searched the apartment. They found a 15.1 ounce bag of marijuana in the freezer compartment of the refrigerator in the kitchenette, two bags totaling 1.2 ounces in the refrigerator, and two bags totaling 1.2 ounces in a cake pan in a furniture cabinet in the main room. A car coat, which one of the officers had seen defendant wear on prior occasions, was found in the closet.

[633]*633Forty minutes after entry the officers were ready to leave. They roused defendant by physically pulling him up from the bed and standing him on his feet. In doing this they discovered two knives on the bed. Defendant was placed under arrest for possession of a controlled substance.

Once awakened and brought to his feet, defendant was belligerent, attempted to kick one of the officers in the groin, called them names, and told them they had no business there. When asked if he wanted to get his boots on he refused, and thereafter went without footgear. At defendant’s request an officer took him to the bathroom, which is apparently located down the hall from the apartment. While waiting outside the building for a police car defendant again called the officers names, told them they were not going to pin anything on him, and that they were not going to take him in. He then started walking down the sidewalk, at which time the officers physically restrained him until the police car arrived. He resisted being put into the patrol car, kicking one officer in the shins several times during the process; and on the way to the police station he spit at and bit one of the officers.

The State’s evidence established that defendant had opened an account in. a Sioux Falls bank on November 6, 1975, giving an address on South Spring Street, in Sioux Falls, together with a local telephone number, and requesting that his check blanks be sent to him in care of Darrell Crites at the North Duluth Street address. The thank-you note sent by the bank to the defendant at the South Spring Street address was returned with the notation that no one by defendant’s name lived there, whereupon a bank employee called for defendant at the telephone number he had given at the time he opened the account. The person answering in response to the call stated that his address had been changed to 109 North Duluth. A new thank-you note and a bank statement sent to defendant in his individual name at that address were never returned to the bank. The telephone number given by defendant at the time he opened the account was that listed under the name of Darrell Crites at 109 North Duluth. Approximately a week after defendant’s arrest, one of the officers who had participated in the search returned to the apartment building to look for another person. He saw a small check blank box addressed to defendant at Apartment 4, 109 North Duluth, lying on a board covering a heating radiator in the hallway of the building. The box bore postage and a bank name.

Defendant testified that although he was a friend of Darrell Crites, he was not living at Crites’ apartment on November 13, 1975. He testified that he had been drinking throughout the night of November 12 and knew that he could not make it home, and had gone to Crites’ nearby apartment to sleep. He denied having had any knowledge that marijuana was present in the apartment, and denied telling anyone at the bank that he lived at the North Duluth address.

ISSUE

Were the details of defendant’s 1968 conviction admissible either to impeach defendant, or as substantive proof of any element of the crime charged?

I

At trial the State contended it could cross-examine the defendant on the details of his 1968 conviction in order to impeach his previous testimony. On that basis the trial court allowed, over proper objection, the cross-examination questions and answers challenged on appeal.

The marijuana in the Crites apartment was not in defendant’s actual possession nor in the plain view of anyone coming into the apartment.1 Defendant did not claim that although he saw the marijuana he did not [634]*634recognize it as such. His defense, as given on his direct examination, was that he had been drinking all night and went to the nearby Crites apartment to sleep it off; that he knew Crites and had visited there before; that on entering the room he immediately lay down and went to sleep on the small bed or couch near the apartment door where the arresting officers found him asleep in the early afternoon of November 13; that at the time of his arrest he did not know of the marijuana in the apartment; and that the marijuana the officers found was not his.

On cross-examination the prosecutor, did not inquire whether defendant had ever looked inside the freezer compartment, the refrigerator, or the cabinet where the officers found marijuana. Instead, after objection was sustained to a question asking defendant if he knew the name of the plant contained in the bagged marijuana exhibits, the prosecutor asked, “Mr. Furlow, you know what marihuana looks like, don’t you?” This question, under the circumstances, can only be viewed as asked in order to create an issue, after which the 1968 conviction details would be elicited.2 “The device of eliciting a denial of some statement not properly in the case at the time of denial will not serve to inject an issue.

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Related

State v. Reiman
284 N.W.2d 860 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1979)
State v. Houghton
272 N.W.2d 788 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
260 N.W.2d 631, 1977 S.D. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-furlow-sd-1977.