State v. Haynes

430 P.3d 68
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 16, 2018
DocketNo. 118,195
StatusPublished

This text of 430 P.3d 68 (State v. Haynes) 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. Haynes, 430 P.3d 68 (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

We affirm Michael Dean Haynes' convictions for possession of drugs and paraphernalia and transporting an open container of alcohol because the district court did not err when it admitted his statements to the arresting officer and the contraband in his pickup. Haynes' frank conversation with the officer occurred during an investigatory detention that does not require a Miranda warning. The physical exhibits from the truck were in plain view and lawfully seized by the officer while he was checking the pickup for more open cans of beer.

Haynes' lights were not on.

Around midnight one morning of August 2015, a Hays Police officer stopped Haynes because his truck's taillights were not turned on. Haynes admitted that he forgot to turn them on and told the officer that he had just finished a double shift at work. The officer noted that Haynes mumbled and slurred his words. He asked Haynes if he had consumed any alcoholic beverages. Haynes said that he had one beer. When he heard this, and considered Haynes' slurred speech, and the time of night, the officer asked Haynes to perform some field sobriety tests. Haynes said he would and got out of his pickup.

When Haynes stepped out, the officer spotted a beer can sitting directly behind the driver's seat. He grabbed the can. It felt cold, was about half full, and still had condensation on it. The officer asked Haynes if the one beer he said he drank was the beer he just found behind the seat, and Haynes said it was. At this point, the officer stated he had intended to place Haynes in his patrol car, write him a citation for transporting an open container, and then release him. In that department this is called a "cite and release" procedure. As events unfolded, the officer's intent soon changed.

First, the officer asked Haynes if he had any weapons. Haynes produced a sheathed pocket knife, which the officer did not take. The officer then set the open beer can in the back of the pickup and directed Haynes to the rear of the truck to do some field sobriety tests. The officer noted five out of eight clues of impairment on the walk-and-turn test and one out of four clues of impairment on the one-legged stand.

At this point, the officer asked Haynes to take a preliminary breath test. Haynes agreed, telling the officer to "get the balloon out" so they could get the test over with. The officer advised Haynes that they needed to wait 15 minutes before they could proceed with the PBT. While they waited, the ensuing frank discussion between the officer and Haynes led to the filing of this case.

The officer said later that he doubted whether the PBT would show Haynes was under the influence of alcohol, in spite of the clues from the coordination tests and the other observed indicators. Simply put, Haynes did not have the "pungent" smell of alcohol emanating from him that the officer expected of someone under the influence of alcohol.

Widening his investigation, the officer wondered what else could affect Haynes as does alcohol. "So I started investigating further as to okay, is this going to be a DUI alcohol, or DUI drugs, or is this just in fact we've been awake for 18 hours and old age is kicking in so to speak." Over the next six to seven minutes, the officer questioned Haynes about what else could have been influencing his behavior and speech. He explored his possible drug use.

He asked Haynes if he used illegal drugs. Haynes replied, "Every chance I get." When the officer asked him when he last used marijuana, Haynes replied he had not smoked marijuana regularly since 1991. But he did still use it sometimes, but had not on that day. The officer then asked Haynes when his last use of methamphetamine was, and Haynes replied, "Last time I had some." The officer first thought this reply was in jest. Then Haynes volunteered that his last use was about one week earlier. Haynes explained that he did not snort it because he had had a broken nose.

Based on Haynes' statements, the officer radioed a request for assistance from a drug-use recognition expert. But no expert was available to come to the scene.

Once he learned that no expert was available, the officer again asked about Haynes' last use of methamphetamine. The officer asked Haynes to be honest with him because-based on the way Haynes' eyes appeared-he believed Haynes' drug use was more recent than he stated. Haynes replied his last use of methamphetamine was five or six days earlier. The officer then asked if Haynes used the drug to stay awake. Haynes replied that he did and if some were around, then that would be great.

Haynes then asked the officer if he had any methamphetamine. The officer told him that he did not and then asked Haynes if he used a pipe to smoke methamphetamine. Haynes said he did. The officer asked if he had the pipe in his truck. Haynes said no, the pipe was at his house. Haynes said that if he had some methamphetamine, he would have it with him, but it was at his house. When the officer asked what kind of pipe Haynes had and if it was a glass or clear pipe, Haynes replied, "C'mon, now, you know the drill."

The officer administered the PBT. While waiting for the results, he asked Haynes how much methamphetamine he kept at his house. Haynes replied he kept a gram or two, but he suggested that if he had a gram, he would smoke it. The officer then asked him how much a gram cost. Haynes answered that a gram of methamphetamine used to cost $40 and cocaine was $120, but the costs were now the opposite.

The results of the PBT were 0.012, well within the legal blood-alcohol limit. The officer then decided not to arrest Haynes for DUI. He did, however, tell Haynes that they still had to deal with the transporting an open container of alcohol. He told Haynes that he was going to be placed under arrest and he would have to sit in the patrol car while the officer "addressed that situation." Haynes asked if he could have a cigarette. The officer allowed Haynes to smoke while another officer waited with Haynes outside the car.

When the officer went back to the pickup he wanted to check for any more open containers as additional evidence on the transporting an open container offense. Mindful that this was a "cite and release" procedure, the officer wanted to make sure there were no other open containers in the pickup before releasing Haynes to drive again. He discovered more than beer.

When the officer opened the door to the pickup and shone his flashlight into the cab, he saw a brown pouch in the cut-out cubby of the console below the radio. The brown pouch was angled outward and sticking out of the pouch was what appeared to be a round glass pipe with a white residue inside it. He pulled the pouch from the cubby and then removed a glass pipe out of the pouch. Also in the cubby was a small plastic bag with a small amount of crystal substance in it.

Based on his training and experience, the officer believed the pipe was used for smoking methamphetamine and that the crystal substance was methamphetamine. In the seat of the pickup, he found a cooler filled with ice and more cans of beer. None were open. The officer collected the open beer can, the pipe, and the suspected methamphetamine. The field test of the crystal substance was positive for methamphetamine.

At that point, the police placed Haynes in handcuffs and transported him to the law enforcement center. At no time before the arrest did the officer give Haynes a Miranda rights advisory.

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384 U.S. 436 (Supreme Court, 1966)
State v. Sanchez-Loredo
272 P.3d 34 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2012)
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14 P.3d 409 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2000)
State v. Fisher
154 P.3d 455 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2007)
State v. Hill
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321 P.3d 754 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 P.3d 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haynes-kanctapp-2018.