State v. Myers-McNeil

822 S.E.2d 317, 262 N.C. App. 497
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 20, 2018
DocketCOA17-1404
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 822 S.E.2d 317 (State v. Myers-McNeil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Myers-McNeil, 822 S.E.2d 317, 262 N.C. App. 497 (N.C. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinions

ZACHARY, Judge.

*498Defendant Barbara Jean Myers McNeil argues that the superior court erred in denying her Motion to Suppress the evidence of her Driving While Impaired offense because it was obtained as a result of an officer's unlawful extension of the initial traffic stop, in violation of the Fourth Amendment. Because the record is devoid of the initial Driving While Impaired judgment in the district court and the notice of appeal to the superior court, the record fails to establish that the superior court had jurisdiction in the instant case. Nevertheless, we elect to treat Defendant's appeal as a petition for writ of certiorari, and affirm.

Background

On 18 May 2016, Officer Shaun Henry and Officer Lane of the Raleigh Police Department were on duty "in a stationary position in a marked patrol vehicle" running license tags of vehicles that passed. At one point, a vehicle drove past the officers and when they ran the vehicle's tag information through the DCI program, they learned that the registered owner of the vehicle was a male with a *320suspended license. The officers then stopped the vehicle based on their suspicion that it was being driven without a valid license. Officer Henry stated that he only intended to "[i]dentify the driver of the vehicle to see first if the owner was in the car, if they were driving, who the driver of the vehicle was."

As Officer Henry approached the vehicle, he "immediately" saw that Defendant, a female, was in the driver's seat and that there was a female passenger next to her. When Officer Henry reached the driver's window, Defendant did "not acknowledge [his] presence" or roll the window down, but was instead "fumbling through what appeared to be a wallet or a small clutch." Officer Henry testified that "[i]ndicators of impaired driving are inability to locate information pertinent to a traffic stop, looking through a wallet, passing over her driver's license or using-producing a debit card or credit card in place of a driver's license." Officer *499Henry "tapped on the window and asked if [Defendant] could roll the window down."

Defendant eventually rolled her window down, but only about two inches. Officer Henry testified that "it's kind of a red flag if a window is rolled down very minimally to the point where either words cannot be exchanged, you can barely hear what anyone is saying, or that someone is attempting to mask an odor coming from the vehicle." Officer Henry testified that he

asked [Defendant] if she could roll [the window] down all the way. She stated she could hear me just fine. I introduced myself[.] I explained to her that the registered owner of the vehicle did have a suspended driver's license. And she admitted that the car was not hers and made reference to it being ... her husband's and [that] she gets pulled over all the time for that same reason.

Officer Henry then asked Defendant "if she had her driver's license on her[,]" to which Defendant replied that she did. However, Officer Henry noticed that Defendant "kept fumbling through the same amount of cards over and over again inside that small wallet, mumbling that she did have a license and it was active."

In addition, Officer Henry "had to get inside th[e] [two inch window] crack in order to hear [Defendant] talking because she was looking down and mumbling down into, I guess, her lap where she was-so I could barely hear what she was saying." In doing so, he "began to observe the odor of alcohol coming from the vehicle" as well as "[a] slight slur to her speech." At that point, Officer Henry testified that his investigation changed "from a Chapter 20, or driving, to an impaired driving investigation based on that odor of alcohol and the slurred speech."

When Officer Henry confronted Defendant about the smell of alcohol, "her passenger interjected stating that she was drinking the alcohol and that was what I smelled." He asked Defendant to roll the window all the way down so that he could hear her. Defendant "muttered something else under her breath" and Officer Henry asked her to step out of the vehicle. Officer Henry instructed Defendant to exit the vehicle in order "to separate her from the odor of alcohol her passenger had admitted to consuming. I wanted to see if having her step out would separate her from that odor that I was detecting." Defendant was then subjected to sobriety tests and subsequently charged with Driving While Impaired. Dash-cam video shows that roughly two minutes and forty-six seconds had passed between the time Officer Henry initially approached the vehicle and the time that he asked Defendant to exit the vehicle.

*500Defendant filed a Motion to Suppress the evidence of the Driving While Impaired offense on the grounds that Officer Henry had unlawfully extended her roadside detention in violation of the Fourth Amendment. At the hearing, Defendant argued that Officer Henry was required to cease his investigation once he saw that the driver of the vehicle was Defendant-a woman-in that the sole "purpose for the stop [was] to address a male driver with a revoked license." The State countered that Officer Henry developed "reasonable articulable suspicion" to believe that Defendant was intoxicated during the initial stop, and that he was therefore permitted to extend the stop in order to investigate that suspicion.

*321The trial court orally denied Defendant's Motion to Suppress from the bench without making specific findings on the matter, or entering a written order. Defendant properly renewed her Fourth Amendment objection at the time the evidence was presented at trial, which the trial court again overruled. The jury thereafter found Defendant guilty of Driving While Impaired. Defendant timely appealed.

On appeal, Defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying her Motion to Suppress because "[o]nce the underlying reason for the stop of [Defendant] had been satisfied, the stop should not have been prolonged and became unlawful at that point." Accordingly, Defendant maintains that "all evidence obtained after that point should have been suppressed." We disagree.

Jurisdiction

We initially address whether this Court has jurisdiction over Defendant's appeal from the superior court's judgment of misdemeanor Driving While Impaired.

"The superior court has no jurisdiction to try a defendant on a warrant for a misdemeanor charge unless [she] is first tried, convicted and sentenced in district court and then appeals that judgment for a trial de novo in superior court." State v. Felmet , 302 N.C. 173, 175, 273 S.E.2d 708, 710 (1981) (citing State v. Hall , 240 N.C. 109,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
822 S.E.2d 317, 262 N.C. App. 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-myers-mcneil-ncctapp-2018.