State v. Nitcher

720 N.W.2d 547, 2006 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 102, 2006 WL 2323483
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 11, 2006
Docket05-0198
StatusPublished
Cited by194 cases

This text of 720 N.W.2d 547 (State v. Nitcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nitcher, 720 N.W.2d 547, 2006 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 102, 2006 WL 2323483 (iowa 2006).

Opinion

WIGGINS, Justice.

A jury found Jeffrey Nitcher guilty of aiding and abetting or conspiring to manufacture a controlled substance, possession of products with the intent to manufacture a controlled substance, and failure to affix a controlled substance tax stamp. On appeal, he claims his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge a warrant-less search of a residence where he was an overnight guest. Our review of the record indicates that his trial counsel was not ineffective because the officers conducted the warrantless search with probable cause and exigent circumstances. Nitcher also complains there was not sufficient evidence to support his convictions. Again, our review of the record indicates sufficient evidence supported Nitcher’s convic *550 tion on all three charges. We therefore affirm his convictions and sentences. .

Nitcher further asserts the district court used the sufficieney-of-the-evidence standard rather than the weight-of-the-evidence standard when it overruled Nitcher’s motion for new trial. Because the district court did use an incorrect standard, we reverse the district court’s ruling denying Nitcher’s motion for new trial and remand the case to the district court to rule on his motion for new trial under the correct weight-of-the-evidence standard.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

During the early morning hours of December 30, 2003, Cerro Gordo County deputy sheriff Ryan Carroll was patrolling an area known as Winnebago Heights when he detected the odor of ether in the air. He drove around the area, parked his car, and walked until he was able to determine that the odor was coming from a specific residence. Before entering the property, Carroll called his lieutenant, George Foun-tas, for assistance.

When Fountas arrived, he and Carroll approached the house and knocked on the east door. A person eventually came to the door, but did not open it. A male voice from within the residence asked who was there. Fountas informed the person they were from the sheriffs office. The officers then heard the person shuffle away from the door and heard noises that sounded like the person was running toward the garage. Fountas stayed at the door while Carroll walked around the garage toward the north and west side of- the residence in case someone attempted to leave. Carroll also called for backup. At some point, the officers called the fire department due to the potential fire hazard.

As Carroll walked toward the garage, he began -to detect a very strong odor of anhydrous ammonia. He also smelled a moderately strong odor of ether as he walked toward the north side of the building. When he arrived at the northwest corner of the residence, he noticed the west side of the building had several windows and a doorway that were boarded up. While standing in the northwest corner, Carroll continued to hear the shuffling of a person or persons in the garage.

After the backup officers arrived on the scene, Carroll and Fountas returned to the east door of the residence and knocked on the door again. Lloyd Pierce eventually opened the door. Pierce was wearing sleeping attire. The officers told Pierce they were at his door because of the chemical odors. Pierce told the officers he was the owner of the residence, he had been sleeping, and he was not aware of any chemical odors. Carroll observed that Pierce appeared to be very anxious. Fountas asked Pierce for consent to search the residence, which he gave and then withdrew. The officers led Pierce out of the residence.

Concerned for the safety of any other person inside the residence, the officers asked Pierce if there were others in the residence. Pierce told them his wife and children were inside. Because the officers felt the odor of ether in the entryway made it too dangerous to enter the residence, Carroll left the premises to retrieve air-purifying respirators so that they could enter the residence and look for anyone else inside. Fountas then yelled inside the residence for anybody there to come out and three individuals did so. The officers took Susan Payne, Larry Hull, and Nitcher into protective custody and placed them inside the entryway of the residence.

When Carroll returned with the respirators, he and Fountas put their respirators on and entered the residence. They testi *551 fied their purpose for entering the residence was to look for other people inside. They only looked in spaces big enough for a person to be in. When the officers opened the door to the garage, they immediately noticed a white cloud or haze and an odor of ether strong enough to overpower their respirators. They backed out of the garage for safety reasons and went outside the residence. They did not find any other persons in the residence.

An officer placed the four individuals in his patrol car and transported them to the station. While transporting these individuals to the station, the officer noticed a smell of ether and anhydrous ammonia in the vehicle. Before being processed at the station, the fire department decontaminated these four individuals.

While other officers secured the residence, Carroll and Cerro Gordo County chief deputy sheriff David Hepperly obtained a search warrant for the premises. Pursuant to the warrant, Carroll, Fountas, and other officers searched the exterior of the residence and property. Hepperly and Mason City police investigator David Tyler, who were state-certified for the investigation of methamphetamine labs, searched the interior of the residence wearing self-contained breathing apparatuses and fireproof suits. They entered the garage and opened the doors to ventilate the area. Eventually the other officers entered the house to participate in the search of the residence.

During the search of the garage area, officers found two glass pie plates containing red or pink and off-white powdery substances, a plastic container with an off-white powdery substance, and a white cloth shut under the lid of the container in the same area. The substance in the plastic container appeared moist. The room in which the officers found these items was separated from an attached shed to the garage by a sliding glass door that had been closed with a screw in the doorjamb. The room contained the odor of ether. Additionally, the officers observed moist off-white and pink or red substances between cracks in the floorboards and on the doorsill to the room. The officers found other items as well, including a foam plate with pink and white substances, a coffee filter with residue, a plastic pitcher with red residue, and plastic tubing with residue. The officers found no tax stamps for the substances in the plastic container or in the floorboards, which were later determined to contain methamphetamine.

In Pierce’s bedroom, the officers found a bottle of Heet and a nearly empty one-gallon container of acetone, common ingredients in the manufacture of methamphetamine. In another bedroom, officers found a pair of blue jeans, a sweatshirt, and coffee filters. The clothes smelled of ether and a pocket in the jeans contained an identification card issued to Nitcher. Nitcher had been staying at the residence for a few days because he had an argument with his girlfriend. The officers also found muriatic acid in a washroom.

Some of the items found outside the residence included a small propane tank with an altered fitting and a severed garden hose.

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Bluebook (online)
720 N.W.2d 547, 2006 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 102, 2006 WL 2323483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nitcher-iowa-2006.