State v. Kluss

867 P.2d 247, 125 Idaho 14, 1993 Ida. App. LEXIS 205
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 27, 1993
Docket19835
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 867 P.2d 247 (State v. Kluss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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. Kluss, 867 P.2d 247, 125 Idaho 14, 1993 Ida. App. LEXIS 205 (Idaho Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

ROGER SWANSTROM, J. Pro Tern.

A jury found Robert Pete Kluss guilty of manufacturing a controlled substance (growing and processing marijuana), I.C. § 37-2732(a)(1)(B); possession of a controlled substance (marijuana) with the intent to deliver, I.C. § 37-2732(a)(l)(B); and possession of marijuana without a tax stamp, I.C. § 63-4207(2). Kluss appeals contending (1) that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence obtained through a search of his house, (2) that the court committed fundamental error by not instructing the jury that the crime of possession with intent to deliver is an included offense of the crime of possession of a controlled substance without a tax stamp; (3) that, when sentencing, the district court improperly considered Kluss’s failure to rebut implications made about his apparent source of income; (4) that, in violation of I.C. § 18-301, he was sentenced for two crimes arising from the same acts; (5) that the court abused its sentencing discretion by requiring the three sentences to be served consecutively. For reasons given below, we affirm the conviction and sentences for manufacturing marijuana and possession of marijuana without a tax stamp, but in order to avoid double punishment for the same acts, we vacate the conviction for possession with intent to deliver.

I. The Factual Background

In April and May 1991, an anonymous informant made a series of phone calls to Walt Richard, a peace officer employed by the Idaho Bureau of Narcotics, Department of Law Enforcement. The caller told officer Richard that Robert Peter Kluss, a resident of Coeur d’Alene, had been growing and selling marijuana for about eight years. The *17 caller related that he had been in Kluss’s house in 1990 where he smelled marijuana, and he believed that Kluss was still growing marijuana plants in the basement using high energy grow lights. The caller admitted that he did not see the grow operation, but he did see Kluss with two pounds of marijuana in 1990 at Kluss’s home and that Kluss had told him he made $150,000 in 1990 from the sale of marijuana. The caller said that Kluss had no legitimate employment from which he could have earned such an income.

The caller named two associates of Kluss, saying they were also involved with Kluss in raising or selling marijuana. He said that Kluss had recently helped one of his associates dig a trench between a house and the barn on the associate’s property to bury an electric cable which would provide power to an underground “grow room.”

The caller said that Kluss was moving part of his growing operation to a rural site Kluss owned where marijuana would be grown in a room beneath a building that Kluss had recently constructed. The caller said that Kluss expected to divert attention from his use of a high amount of electricity at the site by his statements that he was using an arc welder, electric heat and a jacuzzi.

In the course of several calls, the caller gave Richard detailed information about Kluss and his associates, their backgrounds, their vehicles, the location of their properties, and other information which Richard found to be accurate. However, for the most part, the imparted information was available, and was verifiable by Richard, from public records, utility companies, phone directories and his own observations. Therefore, while the imparted information proved to be accurate and useful in Richard’s investigation, it was mostly innocuous and contained no inherent verification of the caller’s statements about the illegal marijuana growing operations allegedly being conducted by Kluss and his associates. We will discuss later officer Richard’s attempts to verify the incriminating statements given by the caller.

Eventually, beginning on June 20, 1991, Richard presented the information he had obtained from the caller and from other sources to a magistrate in Kootenai County who issued a warrant to search Kluss’s residence for evidence of an illegal marijuana growing operation. The officers who executed the warrant for Kluss’s residence found a hidden “sophisticated grow room” in the basement containing several high energy grow lights, numerous drying marijuana plants, processed marijuana, leaves and stalks, weighing scales and other drug-related items which were seized by the officers.

II. Motion To Suppress

Kluss moved to suppress all of the evidence seized from his residence. The district court denied the motion. Kluss contends that for several reasons the ruling must be reversed on appeal. Kluss’s arguments may be summarized as follows; (1) Officer Richard violated statutory and constitutional provisions in obtaining the records of a utility company showing the monthly power consumption at Kluss’s residence and at his rural property; (2) Richard deliberately or recklessly misrepresented the substance of the utility records and other information he presented to the magistrate in obtaining the search warrant; (3) Richard omitted certain information which was material to the magistrate’s determination of whether probable cause existed for a search warrant; (4) the information supplied by the anonymous informant was inherently unreliable; (5) the totality of admissible information given to the magistrate was not sufficient to provide probable cause for issuance of the search warrant. The facts relative to these issues and our discussion of them are as follows.

Sometime in April or early May, 1991, Officer Richard called the local office of the utility company (hereinafter WWP) which furnished power to the Kluss residence in an attempt to verify information given to him by the anonymous informant about Kluss using high energy grow lights in his basement grow room. He was told what Kluss’s monthly power consumption figures had been. He also learned, in a similar manner, about the monthly power use of the person who had occupied the residence before it was purchased by Kluss. From a comparison of these figures Richard concluded that Kluss’s consumption of power was high. He ob *18 tained a subpoena prepared by the prosecuting attorney’s office, had it issued by a clerk of the district court and served on WWP to obtain a written record of Kluss’s consumption rates at his residence.

When Officer Richard applied for a search warrant, using this information, he informed the magistrate that Kluss’s consumption of power was usually double or triple that of the previous occupant. Richard stated that from his own inquiries and observations he could not determine any apparent reason for the high consumption rate other than that given by the anonymous informant.

a. Noncompliance with I.C.R. 17(b) and I.C. § 37-2741A

Kluss first contends that the state violated I.C.R. 17(b) and I.C. § 37-2741A in obtaining power records from WWP. The subpoena prepared by the prosecuting attorney’s office so that Richard could obtain a written copy of Kluss’s power usage record from WWP recited that it was being issued under I.C.R. 17(b). The Rule provides that a subpoena may be issued by the clerk to a “party” for use in obtaining documentary evidence. The state readily conceded in district court that the Rule did not authorize the issuance of the subpoena before a criminal action had been instituted.

The district court held that violation of the Rule did not, per se, require suppression of the information Richard had acquired from WWP.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
867 P.2d 247, 125 Idaho 14, 1993 Ida. App. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kluss-idahoctapp-1993.