State v. Kermoade

105 P.3d 730, 33 Kan. App. 2d 573, 2005 Kan. App. LEXIS 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 11, 2005
Docket92,307
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 P.3d 730 (State v. Kermoade) 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. Kermoade, 105 P.3d 730, 33 Kan. App. 2d 573, 2005 Kan. App. LEXIS 120 (kanctapp 2005).

Opinions

Larson, J.:

In this interlocutory appeal, tire State appeals the trial court’s granting of Angela C. Kermoade’s and George Geffrey Moyer, Jr.’s joint motion to suppress evidence obtained from a search of their residence. We agree with and affirm the trial court.

This appeal, like all involving suppression issues, is fact sensitive, and we first set forth in detail the facts as developed by the suppression hearing.

In December 2002, Officer Donald VanHoose and Detective Jess Rollwagon seized marijuana plants and equipment from the home of Randall Sandusky. Sandusky agreed to be an informant and told the officers he believed there was marijuana growing in a house across the street that belonged to “Angie” and “Geff.” He also said Brian Spradling was growing marijuana in the same house. Neither Spradling nor the defendants herein had been under in[575]*575vestigation. Testimony at the suppression hearing showed the officers considered Sandusky to be unreliable.

Later the same night the two officers and Sergeant Brian Wessling, all dressed in plain clothes, went to the defendants’ home. VanHoose’s badge was worn around his neck and was visible. VanHoose and Rollwagon went to the porch and Wessling was at the comer of the house. There were no visibly marked patrol cars. It was cold.

VanHoose knocked on the door. Kermoade answered and opened the door only slightly. VanHoose explained why they were there and asked for permission to come in. Kermoade said no. In response, VanHoose asked her to step outside to talk to them. Kermoade complied with the request and stepped outside on the porch but shut the door behind her. According to Rollwagon, Kermoade “acted like she didn’t want to come out the door.”

VanHoose told Kermoade they were investigating her neighbor, Spradling, and they believed he was growing marijuana in her home. He told her he was there to “get” her consent to search her home. According to VanHoose, “[s]he obviously had some questions about that. She was not comfortable with that.” Kermoade made it clear she did not want the officers to enter her home.

The officers then explained that if she did not consent they would apply for a search warrant and it would be up to the judge to grant or deny the request. Kermoade was told that the officers would “secure” the residence and although people would be free to leave, those remaining would have to be in the presence of an officer.

Kermoade told the officers she wanted to talk to her husband, Moyer, as she had questions about her decision. She went back inside her home but in doing so, the front door remained cracked open as much as 6 inches. Kermoade went downstairs out of the officers’ view in the split level home.

According to the officers, they did not attempt to enter the house without permission. After Kermoade was inside for several minutes, the officers became concerned because they did not know what was going on in the home. The officers testified they did not have concerns for their safety. Rollwagon thought the residents [576]*576might destroy evidence, but drey did not hear a shredder, a toilet flush, or a garbage disposal run. The officers said drey believed they smelled fresh marijuana while standing on the porch. For these reasons, Rollwagon yelled for Geff and Angie to come to the front door. Rollwagon said he did not push open the door when calling for defendants, although VanHoose acknowledged that at the preliminaiy hearing he had said that Rollwagon had swung the front door open.

The defendants came up the stairs. The officers said they were let in. There was testimony they were already inside the home. The officers did not perform a protective sweep of . the home or look for otiier people in the home. The officers and defendants sat down in the living room and had an extended conversation. The search warrant process was explained again and the officers did not express an opinion as to whether they could obtain a warrant. Roll-wagon reminded die defendants that decision would be up to a judge. Defendants inquired whether they had a right to refuse to give consent and the officers explained that the defendants did have the right to refuse.

The living room conversation lasted approximately 30 minutes. The defendants were not threatened, yelled at, or told they had to consent. At some point, the officers obtained the names of two other people in the house and allowed them to leave. At the end of the conversation, Kermoade asked Moyer, “What do you think?” Moyer responded that he thought they should cooperate. Defendants gave the officers consent to search the home, both verbally and in writing.

Defendants escorted the officers to the basement where marijuana plants and equipment to facilitate their growth was found. Defendants agreed to talk to die officers and disclosed information about the growing operation and Spradling.

Kermoade and Moyer were charged with cultivating marijuana in violation of K.S.A. 65-4105(d)(16) and K.S.A. 65-4163(a) and possession of drug paraphernalia in violation of K.S.A. 65-4152. Defendants moved to suppress, claiming the consent was not voluntarily given but coerced following the officers’ unlawful intrusion into their home. In response, the State maintained the encounter [577]*577was consensual, did not constitute a seizure, and the consents were voluntary.

The testimony at the suppression hearing from tire three officers was similar to the facts previously set forth. VanHoose testified the defendants were free to leave during the hving room conversation. Rollwagon said he would have complied if the defendants had asked him to leave. VanHoose did concede that his impression of Sandusky was that “he was not the most rehable individual.” He said he would not have based a search warrant application solely on Sandusky's information. It was for that reason the officers knocked on the defendants’ door.

Neither defendant testified, but the defense called Tindaro Nioci to testify regarding the officers’ actions. He was visiting the defendants’ home during tire events in question and was one of the two individuals later allowed to leave. Nioci testified that as he came up from the lower level and walked to the kitchen to get a drink of water, he passed Kermoade while she was headed downstairs. At that time, he did not see anyone near the door. But, when he left the kitchen to go back downstairs, he saw three men standing inside the front door.

Ruling of the trial court

The trial court granted the defendants’ motion to suppress. The court characterized the encounter as a “knock and talk” fishing expedition that is frequently fruitful. With the admission that the informant was not trusted, the trial court said no disinterested, detached magistrate would give a search warrant.

Kermoade was characterized as exhibiting a fair amount of legal acumen and did not want the officers in the home and said, “there was a denial of the consent search from the git-go.” When a citizen is asked to come out on the front porch after denying entry one has to wonder how freely and voluntary that was.

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Related

State v. Tatum
196 P.3d 441 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2008)
State v. Thompson
155 P.3d 724 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2007)
State v. Parker
147 P.3d 115 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2006)
State v. Gonzales
141 P.3d 501 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2006)
State v. Kermoade
105 P.3d 730 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 P.3d 730, 33 Kan. App. 2d 573, 2005 Kan. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kermoade-kanctapp-2005.