State v. Jernigan

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 13, 2019
Docket1807016722
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Jernigan, (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE, : : ID No. 1807016722 v. : In and For Kent County : CHRISTOPHER JERNIGAN, : : Defendant. :

OPINION

Submitted: May 14, 2019 Decided: June 13, 2019

Lindsay A. Taylor, Esquire, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Dover, Delaware, for the State.

Adam D. Windett, Esquire, HOPKINS & WINDETT, LLC, Dover, Delaware, for the Defendant.

Clark, J. Defendant Christopher Jernigan1 moves to suppress evidence seized during a warrantless vehicle search. His motion raises two issues of first impression in Delaware. The first issue involves the application of the automobile exception to the warrant requirement when the police base a search upon the odor of raw marijuana emanating from a vehicle. He argues that because he holds a medical marijuana card, the police did not have probable cause to arrest him or search his vehicle simply because an officer could smell raw marijuana in his car. Mr. Jernigan correctly recognizes that a registered qualifying patient who possesses marijuana and otherwise complies with Delaware’s Medical Marijuana Act2 (hereinafter “DMMA” or the “Act”) is not engaged in illegal activity. Nor is less than six ounces of marijuana considered contraband when possessed consistently with the requirements of that Act.3 As a result, the Court, under certain circumstances, must consider the fact that a person possessed a valid medical marijuana card in its probable cause analysis. Second, the motion raises the issue of whether the Court should consider facts readily available to an officer, though not known to the officer, when performing its probable cause analysis. In this case, the searching officer did not know Mr. Jernigan had a registry identification card. Mr. Jernigan’s status, however, was readily available in the Delaware Criminal Justice System (“DELJIS”). The officers on scene did not view the screen in DELJIS containing this status, but under the circumstances of this case, they should have. For that reason, the Court must consider Mr. Jernigan’s DMMA status in the totality of the circumstances. When

1 At the hearing, Mr. Jernigan identified himself as Christopher Brewer, The Court will refer to him in this opinion as he is identified in the caption. 2 16 Del. C. §§ 4901A-4928A. 3 See 16 Del. C. § 4903A(a) (defining possession of less than six ounces to be in compliance with DMMA). 2 doing so, the police did not have probable cause to search Mr. Jernigan’s vehicle. His motion to suppress must therefore be GRANTED.

FACTUAL FINDINGS FROM THE SUPPRESION HEARING

The following facts are those found by the Court after the suppression hearing held on May 14, 2019. The State presented one witness, Patrolman Spicer from the Dover Police Department. The Court finds him to be a credible witness and accepts his testimony for purposes of its findings. The Court also bases its findings, in part, upon the testimony of the Defense witnesses. On July 24, 2018, Mr. Jernigan and Ms. Deanem Moore drove a car to Cherry Street, in Dover. Ms. Moore initially drove the car and stopped it in the middle of the street in a high crime area. At that point, she and Mr. Jernigan exited the car to speak with bystanders. Patrolman Spicer and Patrolman First Class Wood, also from the Dover Police Department, noticed the illegally stopped vehicle and decided to investigate it. As they approached, Mr. Jernigan reentered the driver’s side door of the car and placed it in reverse to remove it from the middle of the road. While doing so, the car window remained down. At that point, the officers activated their patrol vehicle’s emergency equipment. Patrolman Spicer then exited his vehicle. As the officer approached the other car, Mr. Jernigan began raising his front driver’s side window until the officer instructed him to lower it. Patrolman Spicer first smelled an odor of raw marijuana while he was four to six feet from the car. When he stood next to Mr. Jernigan, with the window again rolled down, the odor of raw marijuana intensified. Patrolman Spicer could not identify the quantity of marijuana in the car by smell. Nevertheless, at that point, the officers immediately handcuffed Mr. Jernigan and began searching his vehicle.

3 Pursuant to his search, Patrolman Spicer found a firearm in the vehicle. The search also netted .1 grams of marijuana, ammunition, and a digital scale. Mr. Jernigan held a valid DMMA card and was a registered qualifying patient as defined by the Act. He did not disclose that fact to the officers, however, at any time prior to his arrest or the search of his vehicle. The arresting officers had the capacity to verify his status as a DMMA registry cardholder through DELJIS before they conducted the search. Nevertheless, Patrolman Spicer did not learn Mr. Jernigan’s status prior to the search. He testified that Private First Class Wood conducted the DELJIS inquiries, but could not be certain when PFC Wood conducted those inquiries. At some point, some officer on site conducted the inquiries and learned that Mr. Jernigan had a revoked license. The officers did not, however, verify in DELJIS whether Mr. Jernigan held a DMMA card. Multiple officers secured the site and detained Mr. Jernigan in the rear of the patrol vehicle before the officers began the search. A motor vehicle recording (“MVR”) demonstrates that there was no sense of urgency or exigent circumstances present on the scene prior to the search.

ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTIES

Mr. Jernigan does not dispute the lawfulness of the initial traffic stop because he drove a vehicle that the police observed illegally stopped in the middle of a public roadway. He argues, however, that the police did not have probable cause to arrest him and search his vehicle. His arguments are appropriately summarized in two parts. First, and primarily, he argues that DMMA completely decriminalizes marijuana possession when one possesses it in a manner that complies with the Act. Accordingly, he emphasizes that such possession in no way amounts to a crime or a

4 civil violation. He also argues that the marijuana was not contraband because he legally possessed it.4 Second, he argues that the officer’s detection of raw marijuana gave him no basis to suspect that the car housed more than six ounces of marijuana or that Mr. Jernigan consumed it. According to Mr. Jernigan, the officers should have taken reasonable efforts to verify Mr. Jernigan’s DMMA status. In so arguing, Mr. Jernigan emphasizes that verification was only a walk to the patrol car and a DELJIS check away. The State counters broadly by arguing that DMMA is irrelevant in search and seizure analysis. According to the State, notwithstanding the Act, police have automatic authority to search motor vehicles if they detect the smell of burnt or raw marijuana. In this regard, the State asserts that DMMA merely provides an affirmative defense to criminal and civil liability. In support of its argument, the State cites recent Delaware Supreme Court authority confirming, as a general rule, that when an officer smells marijuana from within a vehicle, the officer may lawfully search the vehicle. Second, the State argues that the totality of the circumstances in this case included the following: Mr. Jernigan’s motor vehicle violation; the high crime area at issue; Mr. Jernigan’s suspicious behavior in rolling up his window as an officer approached; and, the smell of raw marijuana. These facts combined, the State argues, demonstrate the probable cause necessary to justify the vehicle search. The State argues that relevant circumstances do not include Mr. Jernigan’s DMMA status.

4 At the hearing, the Court queried whether marijuana remains contraband pursuant to federal law, and if on that basis, state law enforcement officers have grounds to search a car on that basis.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Jernigan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jernigan-delsuperct-2019.