State v. Powell

306 S.W.3d 761, 2010 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 22, 2010 WL 715266
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 2010
DocketPD-1205-08
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 306 S.W.3d 761 (State v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Powell, 306 S.W.3d 761, 2010 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 22, 2010 WL 715266 (Tex. 2010).

Opinions

OPINION

HERVEY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

in which KELLER, P.J., MEYERS, KEASLER and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.

This case involves a lawful search of two safes preceded by a seizure of these safes. Appellee is charged with possession with intent to deliver more than 4 but less than 200 grams of methamphetamine. The events leading up to this charge began when the police received information that appellee was making forged checks in his home. The police obtained a warrant to search appellee’s home and to seize, among other things, “checks and materials to make forged checks.” While executing this search warrant at appellee’s home, the police found two safes which no one disputes' the police could have lawfully searched since the safes could have contained “checks and materials for making forged checks.”1 The police seized these two safes and took them to the police station where they searched them the next day and found in one of the safes the methamphetamine that is the subject of this prosecution. The trial court and the court of appeals decided that the seizure of these two safes violated appellee’s Fourth Amendment rights because these safes were not “particularly described” in the search warrant as items to be seized. Accordingly, the trial court and the court of appeals decided that the methamphetamine had to be suppressed. We will reverse.

The record reflects that Hurst Police officer James Hobbs developed information from a person named Lisa Lowery that appellee and another person named Leia McGee were making forged checks in a home where appellee and McGee lived with McGee’s 83-year-old grandmother (Roberta). Based primarily on information provided by Lowery, Hobbs prepared an affidavit in support of an application for [763]*763a warrant to search the home. Hobbs prepared this affidavit on January 29, 2004, and it recites: (1) that Lowery was at the home when appellee and McGee gave her forged checks to purchase various items, (2) that appellee and McGee had stolen some customer checks from Cingu-lar Wireless, (3) that appellee and McGee were making forged checks on a computer at the home where Lowery also saw drugs, guns and counterfeit money, (4) that Lowery had used forged checks furnished by appellee and McGee to buy a big-screen television at a Sam’s furniture store and a safe at a Home Depot, (5) that this big-screen television and this safe were in the home, (6) that appellee was “currently in custody at Tarrant County Jail and no longer” at the home, (7) that McGee “has been arrested for Theft and DWI,”2 and (8) that Roberta “was not involved.”

Another section of the search-warrant affidavit described “property concealed and kept [at the home] in violation of the laws of Texas” as follows:

THERE IS AT SAID SUSPECTED PLACE AND PREMISES PROPERTY CONCEALED AND KEPT IN VIOLATION OF THE LAWS OF TEXAS AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
Numerous customers’ checks stolen from Cingular Wireless.
Checks and materials to make forged checks.
Computers, printers and scanners for forging checks.
Big Screen JVC 32 inch flat screen Television Serial Number 16837227 JVC TV Stand model # RKC32DF4AS purchased with a counterfeit check Dated 01-22-04 for $974.15 From [sic] Sam’s Furniture.
Lexmark Print Trio color jet printer purchased on January 24, 2004 for $99.99 with counterfeit check #4957 from Express Computer Repair.3

On January 29, 2004, a magistrate issued a search warrant for the home “to there search for the property described in said Affidavit, and to seize the same.” That same day, Hobbs and other police officers executed the search warrant and searched the home. The police seized two safes that were somewhere in the home. They took these safes to the police station. The next day a locksmith “drilled out the safes.” The police found methamphetamine in one of the safes.

Appellee was charged with possession with intent to deliver more than 4 but less than 200 grams of methamphetamine. Ap-pellee filed a written motion to suppress. This motion stated that in “one of the safes [seized from the home] the methamphetamine made the basis of this case was found.” This motion further stated that “there was insufficient probable cause on the face of the affidavit to justify the search warrant and that the scope of the warrant was exceeded.”

The trial court held a suppression hearing at which the search warrant and Hobbs’ search-warrant affidavit were introduced into evidence. Hobbs, who was the only witness to testify at the suppression hearing, testified that Roberta was the only adult at the home when the police “originally arrived” to execute the search warrant.

[764]*764Q. [STATE]: And was there a grandparent that was staying there at the time?
A. [HOBBS]: Roberta McGee, the grandmother, was there when we arrived.
Q. Any other persons that were-well, was she the only owner of [the home] that was there at the time, the grandmother?
A. As far as we knew, when we originally arrived, she was the only one there, the adult there. She met us outside.

The suppression-hearing record is silent on why the police took the safes to the police station to search them there. This record is also silent on whether one of the two safes seized from the home was the safe that Lowery bought at a Home Depot with a forged check. This record is also silent on which safe contained the methamphetamine.4

Appellee claimed in final arguments to the trial court at the suppression hearing that the police exceeded the scope of the warrant when “they grabbed two safes, went back to Hurst, let them sit overnight, and then opened them....” The State responded that “[i]f they could have looked at it out there at the scene, they could have seized it and brought it back into the police department.”

[STATE]: Secondly, as far as the safe goes, I mean, this detective testified that’s where these people hide this stuff. They had a right to search wherever to find these sorts of things, whether it’s in a safe, a wall safe, a floor safe, or a safe that they removed. If they could have looked at it out there at the scene, they could have seized it and brought it back into the police department.
Additionally, the State would argue that’s stolen property, and that’s not an interest, a legitimate expectation of privacy that society is prepared to recognize.
[THE COURT]: You want one more time, too?
[DEFENSE]: Your Honor, there’s nothing in that affidavit that shows both of those safes were stolen property. They took two safes. They mention one, they took two, let them sit overnight and drilled them out.

The trial court subsequently signed an order granting appellee’s motion to suppress.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 S.W.3d 761, 2010 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 22, 2010 WL 715266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-powell-texcrimapp-2010.