State v. Ricky Wright (073137)

114 A.3d 340, 221 N.J. 456, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 549
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 19, 2015
DocketA-64-13
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 114 A.3d 340 (State v. Ricky Wright (073137)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ricky Wright (073137), 114 A.3d 340, 221 N.J. 456, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 549 (N.J. 2015).

Opinion

Chief Justice RABNER

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case, we consider whether the “third-party intervention” or “private search” doctrine applies to a warrantless search of a home.

The doctrine originally addressed situations like the following: Private actors search an item, discover contraband, and notify law enforcement officers or present the item to them. The police, in turn, replicate the search without first getting a warrant. See, e.g., United States v. Jacobsen, 466 U.S. 109, 104 S.Ct. 1652, 80 L.Ed.2d 85 (1984). Because the original search is carried out by private actors, it does not implicate the Fourth Amendment. And if the officers’ search of the item does not exceed the scope of the private search, the police have not invaded a defendant’s protected privacy interest and do not need a warrant.

The State now seeks to expand the doctrine to a very different setting: the search of a private home. In this case, a resident reported a leak in her apartment to her landlord, who showed up the following day with a plumber. The landlord and plumber entered the apartment while no one was home, spotted the leak in the kitchen, and checked elsewhere for additional leaks. In the rear bedroom, the plumber saw drugs on top of a nightstand and inside an open drawer. He and the landlord notified the police.

*460 Instead of using that information to apply for a search warrant, an officer walked into the apartment and looked around the kitchen and bedroom area. He, too, noticed the drugs and found a scale as well. The police conducted a full search moments later, with the resident’s consent, and found other contraband.

The Federal and State Constitutions both recognize the sanctity and privacy of a person’s home. The United States Supreme Court and this Court have repeatedly emphasized that a person’s home is entitled to the highest form of protection against warrant-less searches. The police, therefore, must get a warrant before they may search a home, unless an exception to the warrant requirement applies.

We do not find that the third-party intervention doctrine qualifies as an exception here. The United States Supreme Court has not applied the private search doctrine to private dwellings, and we decline to extend the doctrine in that way under the State Constitution. Homes are filled with intimate, private details about peoples’ lives that are ordinarily free from government scrutiny. An officer’s entry into a home is a far greater intrusion than a search of a package presented to the police. Also, inviting a plumber or dinner guest into a private home does not carry with it an invitation to the police.

Residents of course run the risk that any private actor they invite into their home may tell the police what they have seen. And the police, in turn, can use that information to apply for a search warrant. In this case, because the police did not obtain a warrant before first entering defendant’s apartment, the officer’s original search did not comply with the State Constitution. The State does not rely on exigent circumstances here. When those circumstances are present, a warrant is not required. State v. Earls, 214 N.J. 564, 569, 70 A.3d 630 (2013).

We therefore reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division, which affirmed the trial court and upheld the search. We also *461 remand the matter to the trial court to determine whether the initial unlawful search tainted the later consent search.

I.

The following facts are taken from testimony presented at a pretrial suppression hearing. Three police officers and co-defendant Evangeline James testified; the trial court credited the officers’ testimony and found that James was not credible.

James and her three young children lived in an apartment on the first floor of a two-family home in Asbury Park. Defendant Ricky Wright, James’s boyfriend and the father of her youngest child, stayed at the apartment about three to four nights per week.

On Sunday evening, March 29, 2009, James called her landlord, Alfred Santillo, and reported a “major water leak” in the kitchen ceiling. Santillo told James to shut off the main water valve and said that he would stop by with a plumber the next morning to fix the leak.

Santillo and the plumber, Nicholas Alexo, arrived at the apartment before noon on Monday. Because no one was home, Santillo called James, who did not answer her phone. After waiting about a half hour, Santillo let himself into the apartment, as he had done on prior occasions.

Santillo and Alexo saw water and sewage leaking from the kitchen ceiling. Because the water pipes in the kitchen led to the back of the apartment, Alexo went to the rear bedroom to check for other leaks. Alexo saw a small bag of marijuana on top of a nightstand. Inside an open drawer of the nightstand, he also saw a small box that he believed contained powder or crack cocaine. Alexo called Santillo into the bedroom and showed him the items. They then called the police.

Officer Carl Christie responded shortly before 1 p.m. He spoke with Santillo and Alexo, who explained what happened and what they had seen. Christie entered the apartment without a search warrant. Along with Santillo and Alexo, he saw the leak in the *462 kitchen and then went to the rear bedroom. Christie noticed a small nightstand with marijuana on it and, in an open drawer of the nightstand, he saw an open cardboard box with bags of cocaine inside. Christie also spotted a small scale in the same drawer. Neither Santillo nor Alexo had told him about the scale.

Christie then called for back-up while Alexo and Santillo tried to repair the leak. A number of officers responded, including Officer Lorenzo Pettway of the narcotics unit. At this point, six officers were on the scene.

Christie briefed Pettway and told him about the drugs in the bedroom. Santillo and Alexo also told Pettway what had taken place. Pettway got James’s phone number from Santillo and called her. He relayed that James’s landlord had found “some items” in her apartment and asked her to return so that he could retrieve them. James arrived about fifteen to twenty minutes later.

Pettway and James then spoke outside the apartment. Pettway explained that drugs had been found inside and asked for consent to remove them and search the apartment for additional narcotics. Pettway testified that James agreed and signed a consent to search form.

During the search that followed, the officers found the following items in addition to the drugs and scale that Christie had observed: a handgun loaded with hollow-point bullets — inside a partially opened red and black book bag; a little less than one hundred bullets of different caliber sizes — inside a black camera bag; a box of baking soda and sandwich bags, commonly used to cut and package cocaine; and a Pyrex plate and measuring cup, both of which had some powder residue that appeared to be cocaine.

After the search, the police arrested James. Defendant Wright arrived as they were leaving the apartment, and the police arrested him as well.

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Bluebook (online)
114 A.3d 340, 221 N.J. 456, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ricky-wright-073137-nj-2015.