State v. Garza

877 P.2d 451, 19 Kan. App. 2d 825, 1994 Kan. App. LEXIS 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 1, 1994
Docket70,665
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 877 P.2d 451 (State v. Garza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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. Garza, 877 P.2d 451, 19 Kan. App. 2d 825, 1994 Kan. App. LEXIS 72 (kanctapp 1994).

Opinion

Lewis, J,:

The defendant stands charged with one count of possession of marijuana with intent to sell and one count of possession of marijuana without a Kansas tax stamp. A motion to suppress certain evidence was filed by the defense, alleging that the evidence was obtained in violation of the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. The trial court granted the motion .to sup7 press. The State prosecutes this interlocutory appeal from that order. We reverse and remand.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Early on the morning in question, Officers Michael Siebers and Don Poor of the Lenexa Police Department were on patrol in the vicinity of the Days Inn Motel at 95th Street and 1-35 in Lenexa. Officer Siebers was particularly skilled in drug enforcement, and, on the night in question, his job was to conduct drug investigations in motels and hotels.

At about 1:00 a.m,, the officers observed an individual knocking on the door of room 139 at the Days Inn Motel. At that time, they were in their police vehicle, patrolling the area. They noted there had been problems at this particular motel in the past with drunks trying to get into the wrong rooms. Taking into consideration the hour of the morning, the two officers suspected that the individual knocking at room 139 might become a nuisance to the motel residents and decided to check out the situation. As they pulled into the motel parking lot, they observed that this individual had gotten no response from room 139 and had crossed to the other side of the motel and was now starting to knock on the door of room 136.

Officer Siebers left the patrol vehicle and walked to room 136.-When he arrived at room 136, he found the defendant standing in the open doorway of the motel room. The defendant had' apparently opened the door in response to the knocking from the individual observed by the police officers. Officer Siebers first *827 approached the individual who had been knocking at the door and obtained his driver’s license, which identified him as Ernest Bjorgaard, Jr. Officer Siebers indicated that he recognized' Bjorgaard’s name as someone who was reputed to be in tire business of selling illegal drugs. After a time, Bjorgaard was removed from the front of room 136 by Officer Poor and is no longer a part of the narrative.

Officer Siebers then turned his attention to the defendant, who had opened the door to room 136. He told the defendant that he was wondering what the other man was doing knocking at the door at such a late hour. He also inquired whether the defendant knew Bjorgaard. The defendant replied, “No, I don’t know him.” Later, the defendant recanted this statement and said, “Well, yeah, I do recognize him. That’s Ernie from the Red Balloon.”

Officer Siebers stood in front of the defendant’s motel room door in uniform and fully armed. .After Officer Poor removed Bjorgaard from the vicinity, Officer Siebers asked the defendant for some identification. The defendant first denied that he had any identification but, under further prodding from the police officer, produced a driver’s license identifying him as Austin Garza. The driver’s license listed a nonexistent address.

As the officer conversed with Garza, he saw that two other people were in room 136. One was a Hispanic male who was asleep on one of the beds, and the other was a female. The officer asked the defendant who the other male was, and the defendant told him it was his cousin. When the officer asked for the name of the defendant’s cousin, the defendant replied, “I don’t know. We’re distant cousins.”

Officer Siebers also inquired about the female in the room. After talking to her for a short time, she produced a Kansas driver’s license which identified her as Christy Sue Irwin.

The conversation between Officer Siebers and the defendant lasted for approximately five minutes. During this period of time, the officer stood on the public walkway in front of the motel room. The record indicates that at no time did the police officer breach the threshold of the motel room door. By and large, the conversation between the officer and the defendant appears to have been polite and brief. No threats of arrest or other police action were made. The defendant terminated the conversation by *828 saying, “I know what you are doing, and if you don’t have a search warrant, I’m closing the door.” Officer Siebers replied, “I don’t have a warrant.” The defendant abruptly terminated the encounter by shutting the motel room door in the officer’s face.

During his conversation with the defendant, Officer Siebers noted a number of things he considered to be suspicious. Among these were the defendant’s denial, and later admission, that he had an identification card, his contradictory statements about knowing Bjorgaard, and his reference to the other male as a “distant cousin.” The officer also observed a towel lying along the bottom of the motel room door. This towel, accompanied by the presence of Bjorgaard, made the officer somewhat suspicious that illicit drugs may have been used in the room. After the defendant shut the door in Officer ’Siebers’ face, the officer stepped aside and heard the toilet flush three or four times. This indicated, he testified, that if there were drugs in the room, they were being rapidly disposed of.

Officer Siebers then proceeded to check to determine whether there were any wants or warrants outstanding on the defendant. The computer check indicated that there was a failure to appear warrant issued for Austin Garza by the Kansas City, Kansas, authorities. After determining this was still an active warrant and that the Kansas City authorities were still seeking Garza, the officer then knocked, for the first time, on the door to room 136. The defendant answered the knock and was shortly thereafter arrested on the outstanding warrant.

After Garza had been arrested, room 136 was searched. The drugs in question were found by the use of a police dog and were found not in the motel room but in the automobile of Christy Sue Irwin.

The defendant has no ownership or other possessory interest in the automobile of Christy Sue Irwin. However, the trial court apparently concluded that the detention of the defendant prior to his arrest led to the discovery of the drugs. Those drugs were determined by the trial court to be “fruit of the poisonous tree” and were suppressed. The essential question is whether the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights were violated by the conversation between the defendant and Officer Siebers, which took place prior to the defendant’s arrest. If those rights were violated, *829 the motion to suppress was correctly decided; if not, the trial court erred in suppressing the evidence.

WAS THE DEFENDANT SEIZED BY THE AUTHORITIES?

The trial court made no findings of fact in resolving the motion to suppress. The only indication we have of the trial court’s reasoning is in' its journal entry of October 28, 1993, in which it held:

"Thereupon, the Court, having heard evidence on the defendant’s motion to suppress and arguments of counsel, finds that the defendant’s motion to suppress should be sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
877 P.2d 451, 19 Kan. App. 2d 825, 1994 Kan. App. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-garza-kanctapp-1994.