State v. Marsden

528 P.2d 1066, 19 Or. App. 742, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 845
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 9, 1974
Docket43429
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 528 P.2d 1066 (State v. Marsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Marsden, 528 P.2d 1066, 19 Or. App. 742, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 845 (Or. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

LANGTRY, J.

The state appeals from an order suppressing evidence consisting of a revolver and ammunition, narcotics paraphernalia, marihuana and a large quantity of amphetamine pills which were seized by the police. ORS 138.060 (3). This case has been consolidated for briefing and argument on appeal with State v. Behrens, Yeaman, 19 Or App 759, 528 P2d 1069 (1974). The facts in evidence upon which the order was based are:

On January 27, 1974 state police in Roseburg communicated with police in Albany that a green Toyota fastback sedan with damage to the right rear fender had been reported to them by an anonymous caller in Roseburg as being en route from Roseburg to Albany on Highway 1-5. The caller had stated that the vehicle had three male occupants, the two passengers being a Marsden and a Cassidy; that Cassidy had a .38 caliber pistol; that the vehicle would exit 1-5 at Highway 20 and proceed to a location in Albany unknown to the caller where purchases of marihuana *744 and amphetamines would he made and that the vehicle would then return to Roseburg by the same route. The caller had stated that the vehicle should arrive at Albany about 6 p.m.

An Oregon state policeman on 1-5 at about the indicated time radioed that an automobile exactly answering the caller’s description was en route on Highway 1-5 toward Albany, and that its license number checked out as a Roseburg vehicle. Police stationed at Highway 20 observed the vehicle exit and proceed into Albany. It stopped first at a small grocery store where the driver and one passenger went inside for about five minutes and then came back out of the market without packages. The vehicle proceeded to a residence at 1590 South Sherman Street in Albany and all three subjects went into the residence where they stayed for about 45 minutes and then emerged and proceeded away in the Toyota by the same route on which they had come. While the suspects were inside, the police ran a quick check on the residence and learned it was occupied by a Kathy Behrens who had previously been convicted of criminal activity in drugs, and was presently on probation therefor.

Police stopped the Toyota short of the return entrance onto Highway 1-5. They surrounded it with drawn guns and ordered the occupants out with their hands over their heads. The Toyota’s doors were left open as the occupants exited and a police officer observed a pistol on the floor in the right front passenger area. This officer went to the vehicle, picked up the weapon and saw that it was a .38 caliber revolver. Because he had observed one of the occupants make a movement toward the floor under the front seat as the vehicle was being stopped, the officer believed another *745 weapon might have been secreted there and thus made a check which resulted in the discovery of not a weapon but amphetamines. He saw a “hash” pipe below the glove compartment. Both marihuana and amphetamine tablets were also seen in an open box on the rear seat of the car. Further search turned up more narcotics and narcotics paraphernalia, all of which were seized.

The trial court sustained the motion to suppress upon the reasoning of State v. Leo, 4 Or App 543, 480 P2d 456 (1971). In that case an anonymous informant called to say that Cal Leo had marihuana at a given address in Corvallis and that he was cutting it at that time in the kitchen. A check of the address by the police showed that, although the residence was listed in the city directory to another name, a vehicle registered to Carl H. Leo was parked in front of it. A cheek of student registrations showed Carl H. Leo to be a student at Oregon State University. The question in Leo was whether there had been sufficient corroboration of the anonymous information to indicate it was reliable and thus a basis for the probable cause needed to support the issuance of a warrant for the search. We held that there was not in fact enough corroboration in that case.

State v. Penney, 242 Or 470, 410 P2d 226 (1966), was a case where police had been watching a house for over a month and had known that narcotics users frequented the place. An informant told them that defendant, living therein, had narcotics in his possession and would be leaving the house to make a delivery. Police watched the premises after this information was received and observed defendant come out of the house with a brown paper sack in his hand, *746 glance up and down the street, put the sack inside his shirt, get into an automobile and drive away. They stopped him and seized the sack, which contained narcotics. In the course of the court’s opinion it said:

“* * * While the officers testified they made the arrest at the time that they did because of a tip from an informer, the arrest was not made until by their own observance they determined that in all probability the informer’s information was reliable * * *.
“* * * [S]hould it be necessary to ground this opinion on the basis that the officers did not have ‘probable cause’ or ‘reasonable grounds’ for the arrest and search without the informer’s tip, then it is clear that the officers prior to the arrest and search corroborated the veracity of the informer through their own observance of the actions of the defendant.” 242 Or at 475-77.

We consider the case at bar on its facts to be much closer to Penney than it is to Leo because the police had more corroborating facts within their knowledge in this case, like in Penney, than was the case in Leo. In Leo only one fact was really corroborated: A vehicle in front of the suspected house was registered to a Leo, with a similar but not the same first name. In the case at bar, as in Penney, there was substantially more corroboration. First, the anonymous informant in Eoseburg accurately described an automobile, and its occupants, which was already en route from Eoseburg to Albany and which checked out when observed en route by a police officer who relayed that information to the waiting officers. Second, the subject vehicle exited at exactly the place where the informant said it would. Third, although it stopped momentarily at a small grocery store, it made a stop *747 which lasted long enough to make the kind of purchase about which the informant was talking before it started back by exactly the same route, as the informer said it would. Fourth, a check of the last address at which it stopped disclosed that to be the address of a known drug user.

Each case must be decided upon its own facts. We think the facts at bar were such as would convince any reasonable thinking person that the information from the anonymous informant was accurate. That being so, there was then probable cause for a reasonable thinking person to believe that narcotics would be in the possession of the defendants when the police arrested them.

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Related

State v. Wilson
571 P.2d 554 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1977)
State v. Delker
552 P.2d 1313 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1976)
People v. San Agustin
1 Guam 317 (Superior Court of Guam, 1976)
State v. Caproni
529 P.2d 974 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1974)
State v. Behrens
528 P.2d 1069 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
528 P.2d 1066, 19 Or. App. 742, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marsden-orctapp-1974.