State v. Petko

581 P.2d 425, 177 Mont. 229, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 580
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1978
Docket13887
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 581 P.2d 425 (State v. Petko) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Petko, 581 P.2d 425, 177 Mont. 229, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 580 (Mo. 1978).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On January 6, 1977 defendant Terrance Alan Petko was arrested and subsequently charged in the District Court, Deer Lodge County, with two counts: Felony possession of marijuana and possession *231 with intent to sell. The second count was subsequently dropped during trial. The case was tried to a jury', defendant was found guilty and given a deferred imposition of sentence under the condition that he pay $500 within six months. From this sentence defendent appeals and alleges six specifications of error:

1. Whether the warrantless arrest of defendant was lawful?

2. Whether the conviction should be reversed because evidence which was viewed by the jury and commented on by witnesses was subsequently suppressed by the trial judge?

3. Whether the fact that defendant never entered a formal plea of not guilty is a jurisdictional defect warranting a new trial?

4. Whether the state’s expert could properly testify that the evidence seized was marijuana?

5. Whether it was error for the District Court to refuse to give defendant’s proposed instructions 7 and 19?

6. Whether a fine of $500 payable within six months is a proper condition pursuant to a deferred imposition of sentence?

The events leading to .the warrantless arrest of defendant Petko, were:

Officers Bernard May and Richard Ivankovich were driving south on Maple Street in Anaconda at approximately 11:30 p.m., January 6, 1977. Maple Street was well lit by street lights. The officers were traveling at approximately 10 to 15 miles per hour. In front of 508 Maple the officers observed two persons approaching a blue Rambler automobile. One person was tall, slender, had shoulder length hair and was wearing a dark blue coat. The other person was shorter and wore a lighter colored coat. The shorter of the individuals was carrying a large grocery sack and acted nervous and peculiar as the officers drove by. The officers continued to observe the two and saw the shorter man place the grocery sack in the street behind the wheel of a truck parked on Maple Street. Then both individuals hurriedly got into a Rambler automobile and left in a northerly direction at a high rate of speed.

The officers retrieved the abandoned sack. Inside the sack they found 21 cellophane bags containing a substance which appeared *232 to be marijuana and a metric scale. The officers then attempted to find the Rambler automobile but were unsuccessful. After radioing the city police and the highway patrol for assistance the officers returned to the vicinity of 508 Maple and parked near the alley between Maple and Elm. Approximately fifteen or twenty minutes after the initial encounter with the two individuals, the officers observed defendant coming down the alley behind 508 Maple carrying a large grocery sack. Defendant was tall, had a slender build and was wearing the same color coat as the person seen in front of 508 Maple. The officers believed him to be the same person they had seen when the first sack of marijuana was abandoned on Maple Street.

When the officers entered the alley defendant started to run, jumped a fence and ran across Elm Street. As the officers pursued they identified themselves and Officer Ivankovich fired a warning shot in the air. Defendant slipped, fell to the ground and was apprehended by Officer May. The sack found in the possession of defendant at the time of his arrest revealed 24 cellophane bags and one large plastic sack which contained a substance that appeared to be marijuana.

Chemical analysis subsequently disclosed the first grocery sack contained 530 grams of marijuana and the second grocery sack found in possession of defendant contained 858 grams of marijuana.

A search was conducted of defendant’s car and his house at 508 Maple but the evidence seized therein was suppressed on motion of defendant.

Defendant was charged with two counts:

1. Felony possession of dangerous drugs under section 54-133, R.C.M.1947.

2. Criminal possession of dangerous drugs with intent to sell pursuant to section 54-133.1, R.C.M.1947.

Following the District Court’s suppression of the marijuana contained in the first grocery sack found in the street the prosecution dismissed the second count since section 54-133.1 required one *233 kilogram or more. Thereafter the jury was admonished to disregard the first grocery sack of marijuana and to consider only the first count of felony possession, based upon the second grocery sack of marijuana found in the possession of defendant.

Defendant’s conviction for possession of the second grocery sack containing 858 grams of marijuana which was taken from defendant’s possession at the time of his arrest is the subject of this appeal.

In Issue No. 1 defendant contends the arrest was illegal and therefore the search and seizure incident to the arrest was also illegal and the admission of the fruits of the search at trial constituted reversible error.

The criteria for testing the sufficiency of a warrantless arrest, as in this case, was recently stated by this Court in State v. Lenon, (1977), 174 Mont. 264, 570 P.2d 901, quoting from State v. Hill, (1976), 170 Mont. 71, 550 P.2d 390:

‘“Probable cause to arrest without a warrant exists where the facts and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge and of which he had reasonably trustworthy information are sufficient in themselve to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that an offense has been or is being committed.’”

The facts and circumstances within the officers’ personal knowledge at the time of defendant’s arrest were:

a) Two individuals were seen emerging from 508 Maple Street at 11:30 p.m.;

b) Maple Street was illuminated by street lights;

c) The two individuals were one tall man, with a slender build, shoulder length hair and a dark blue coat, and a shorter man with a light colored coat;

d) The two men acted nervous and suspicious when the officers drove by, and the shorter man hurriedly placed a grocery bag which he was carrying behind the wheel of a Datsun pickup,-and both men jumped into a Rambler automobile and left at a high rate of speed;

3) The officers retrieved the abandoned grocery bag and found *234 21 cellophane bags containing a substance believed to be marijuana and a metric scale;

f) Both officers were experienced and trained in the detection of marijuana;

g) After an unsuccessful search for the Rambler automobile the' officers returned to the vicinity of 508 Maple and fifteen or twenty minutes aftér their first encounter, they saw defendant walking down the alley behind 508 Maple, carrying a grocery bag similar to the one previously abandoned on Maple Street;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
581 P.2d 425, 177 Mont. 229, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-petko-mont-1978.