State v. Holmes

501 N.E.2d 629, 28 Ohio App. 3d 12, 28 Ohio B. 21, 1985 Ohio App. LEXIS 10361
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1985
DocketC-840644
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 501 N.E.2d 629 (State v. Holmes) 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. Holmes, 501 N.E.2d 629, 28 Ohio App. 3d 12, 28 Ohio B. 21, 1985 Ohio App. LEXIS 10361 (Ohio Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

Shannon, P.J.

In this appeal, the state of Ohio has invoked our jurisdiction pursuant to Crim. R. 12(J) for the purpose of contesting an order of the court of common pleas that suppressed evidence material to the charges lodged in a prosecution for trafficking in drugs and drug abuse. The primary issue posed by the only assignment of error *13 given to us for review is whether police officers had an appropriate constitutional justification for seizing the Schedule II controlled substance known as oxycodone without a warrant after they had stopped an automobile that contained two suspects who had earlier been seen smoking what appeared to be a marijuana cigarette. The judge presiding in the court below held that the evidence bore an unconstitutional taint because it was the product of an unlawful misdemeanor arrest, and for the following reasons, we conclude that his decision must be reversed.

On May 29,1984, a Cincinnati police officer assigned to the vice squad was conducting an undercover surveillance in an area of the city well known as a site routinely used for illicit dealings in drugs. As the officer stood alone near a street corner, his attention was drawn to a sequence of events involving two individuals later identified as the defendant-appellant, Pete J. Holmes, Jr., and one Ronald Harris. Harris was seen initially seated behind the steering wheel of a Buick Skylark and Holmes was standing several feet away from the vehicle engaged in conversation with a third individual who was unknown to the officer.

While the conversation progressed on the sidewalk, Harris reached into his pocket and removed a small manila envelope of the type commonly used as a repository for drugs. From his vantage point some twenty-five feet away, the officer was then able to observe Harris extract a greenish-brown leafy substance from the envelope and use it to roll what the officer’s training and experience told him was a handmade marijuana cigarette. After lighting the cigarette and taking “a couple hits off of it,” he handed it to Holmes, who had, at that point, joined Harris in the vehicle. The officer was further able to see Holmes smoke the cigarette before the vehicle pulled away from the curb and headed in a direction that was to take it into the path of two other officers who were participating in the surveillance.

As Harris and Holmes drove away in the vehicle, the officer who had seen them with the cigarette radioed his brother officers, who were then patrolling the area in an unmarked police cruiser. The information conveyed in the course of the transmission consisted of a general description of two black males seen smoking marijuana in a green Buick Skylark that was proceeding in a given direction toward a potential point of interception. It was also said to the officers on patrol that they ‘ ‘might want to stop [the vehicle] and investigate it.”

Shortly after receiving the broadcast, Officers Gene Hamann and Paul Klusmeier saw the described vehicle leaving the area where the first officer was stationed. When the car came to a stop at a traffic light, the officers approached it from the rear with their service revolvers drawn, shouted, “Freeze, police,” and took steps to remove Harris and Holmes from the passenger compartment. Because it appeared to Officer Klusmeier that Holmes had disposed of something on the floor of the vehicle, his partner, Hamann, walked over to the passenger side and opened the door. It was then that the officers discovered in a bag somewhere near the front seat the controlled substance that Holmes sought to suppress in the court below.

After taking possession of the evidence found in the vehicle, the officers issued a citation for the minor-misdemeanor offense of drug abuse to Harris and permitted him to leave the scene without further detention. The consequences for Holmes, however, were not nearly as favorable. Deciding that the controlled substance in the bag belonged to him, the officers informed him that he was under arrest, placed him in handcuffs and had him taken to a district station house for booking on *14 felony charges. He was later released from confinement pending the trial of the two charges against him, but only after posting bail in the amount of $1,000.

When called upon to issue a ruling on Holmes’s motion to suppress the evidence, the judge presiding in the court below found from the testimony adduced by the parties that Holmes had been arrested for a misdemeanor offense at the time the officers removed him from the vehicle driven by Harris. Finding further that the offense providing the justification for the arrest (the smoking of the marijuana cigarette) had taken place outside the presence of the arresting officers, he invoked the rule in Ohio that generally prohibits warrantless arrests for misdemeanors not observed by law enforcement authorities, and concluded, “lam satisfied that the officers had no authority to arrest [Holmes]. Everything else flowed from that arrest and, therefore, the evidence should be suppressed.”

A preliminary issue brought to our attention by the prosecution in its only assignment of error is one that was not addressed specifically by the trial judge in his ruling at the suppression hearing. It concerns the standing of Holmes under the Fourth Amendment to seek the exclusion of the evidence seized by the police officers. Relying primarily upon Rakas v. Illinois (1978), 439 U.S. 128, and two of its progeny, United States v. Salvucci (1980), 448 U.S. 83, and Rawlings v. Kentucky (1980), 448 U.S. 98, the prosecution reasons that Holmes lacked the necessary personal interest to assert a constitutional violation because the evidence adduced below demonstrated that he had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the automobile where the evidence was actually found.

We find the argument in this respect unpersuasive for two reasons. In the first place, the record demonstrates that the prosecutor assigned to the case in the court below failed to raise the question of standing when he otherwise had an ample opportunity to do so in advance of the judge’s ruling on Holmes’s motion. Whether the omission was intentional or accidental, it may now be said that the alleged error has not been preserved for review on appeal under the doctrine of waiver set forth in State v. Williams (1977), 51 Ohio St. 2d 112 [5 O.O.3d 98].

Even if we were to decide not to hold the prosecution to the effect of its waiver, we would not accept its argument on the merits. As we see it, it was unnecessary for Holmes to demonstrate a reasonable expectation of privacy in the vehicle from which he was removed because his theory for excluding the evidence ultimately seized by the police officers did not turn upon his Fourth Amendment right to be free from an unreasonable search of the car itself. The dispute centered instead upon the separate right to be free from an arrest or detention of the person unsupported by an appropriate constitutional justification.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Jones
2000 Ohio 374 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2000)
State v. Amburgy
701 N.E.2d 728 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1997)
State v. Smith
690 N.E.2d 567 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1996)
City of Hamilton v. Jacobs
654 N.E.2d 1057 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1995)
State v. Cook
605 N.E.2d 70 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1992)
State v. Franklin
841 S.W.2d 639 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1992)
State v. Ramsey
7 Ohio App. Unrep. 459 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1990)
State v. Phipps
5 Ohio App. Unrep. 386 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1990)
State v. Reymann
563 N.E.2d 749 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1989)
State v. Applebury
518 N.E.2d 977 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
501 N.E.2d 629, 28 Ohio App. 3d 12, 28 Ohio B. 21, 1985 Ohio App. LEXIS 10361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holmes-ohioctapp-1985.