State v. Rome

2000 WI App 243, 620 N.W.2d 225, 239 Wis. 2d 491, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1018
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 18, 2000
Docket00-0796-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2000 WI App 243 (State v. Rome) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Rome, 2000 WI App 243, 620 N.W.2d 225, 239 Wis. 2d 491, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1018 (Wis. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

SNYDER, J.

¶ 1. Rick R. Rome appeals from a judgment of conviction for manufacturing marijuana. Rome asserts that the trial court erred when it denied his motion to suppress evidence found in his closet. Rome argues that the police entry into his home and closet was not justified by emergency circumstances because the police officer was not solely motivated by a perceived need to render immediate aid or assistance. We conclude that the police entry into both the home and the closet was justified by emergency circumstances and affirm the judgment of conviction.

*494 FACTS

¶ 2. On December 1,1998, at approximately 2:00 a.m., Officers Emmett Grissom and E.A. Sutherland of the Village of Grafton Police Department saw a woman walking on the street carrying a baby. The woman was crying and very upset. Because it was December and the weather was cold and windy, Grissom stopped his patrol car and asked the woman why she was crying and why she was out in those conditions late at night. The woman stated that she had had an argument with her husband and was walking to her brother-in-law's home. The woman insisted that she did not want any police assistance in the matter.

¶ 3. Grissom gave the woman and the baby a ride to her brother-in-law's home. During the ride, the woman identified her husband as Rome. The woman stated that Rome was at their home and had been drinking. The woman reported that Rome had been yelling and threatening her during an argument about the children, and that at one point Rome had grabbed her hair. The woman insisted that Rome would never hit her and that she did not want any police involvement. When Grissom informed her that he needed to talk to Rome about this incident, she stated that Rome was at home, intoxicated, with her two-year-old daughter. The woman insisted that the child had been fine, asleep in her bedroom, when she had left the house only ten or fifteen minutes earlier. Nevertheless, she did acknowledge that she was concerned about the child's welfare because Rome was drunk and probably did not know that she had left the house; she asked the police to go to her house and check on her daughter. However, the woman did not give the police permission to enter her home.

*495 ¶ 4. Grissom and Sutherland then went to the Rome home, where they met with two other police officers. The officers rang the doorbell for one or two minutes but received no response. The officers then knocked on the outer door of the house, which swung open by itself into an enclosed porch. The officers noticed an interior door down the hallway which led inside the house. When the officers approached the interior doorway, they noticed that the door was open a few inches. The officers swung the interior door open and called out for Rome to come and talk with them. Although the officers shouted "at the top of [their] lungs" for "well over 10 minutes," no one responded and they heard no noise from elsewhere in the house. The officers asked the police dispatcher to call the Rome residence on the phone to see if someone would come to the door, but the dispatcher informed the officers that the phone had been disconnected.

¶ 5. The officers then entered the kitchen area of the house and continued to call out for another five minutes but without response. While Grissom waited in the kitchen to keep an eye on the basement stairs, Sergeant Dennis Kasprzak and Sutherland went to the base of the stairs going upstairs and shouted for another minute or so. Kasprzak and Sutherland then went upstairs.

¶ 6. Upstairs, Kasprzak and Sutherland found Rome asleep on a bed in one of the bedrooms; they called out his name and startled him. While Kasprzak and Sutherland placed Rome in handcuffs for safety reasons, Kasprzak noticed a light flickering beneath the closed closet door. Kasprzak believed that the two-year-old child might be hiding in the closet because of the excessive shouting by the police officers. Kasprzak *496 opened the closet door and found, instead of the child, a makeshift greenhouse and a marijuana plant.

¶ 7. At the same time, after hearing that Kas-przak and Sutherland had found Rome, Grissom went upstairs and saw Kasprzak and Sutherland handcuffing Rome. He then went to look in other rooms for the two-year-old child and found her asleep in a bedroom. When Grissom returned to the bedroom where Kas-przak and Sutherland were with Rome, Kasprzak showed him the marijuana plant in the closet.

¶ 8. Rome was charged with one count of manufacturing marijuana. The criminal complaint alleged that Rome had grown less than 500 grams of marijuana in a bedroom closet. Rome filed a pretrial motion to suppress the evidence obtained as a result of the search of his home, claiming that the marijuana found in his closet was obtained through an unlawful war-rantless search of his home.

¶ 9. An evidentiary hearing was held on Rome's suppression motion. The trial court denied the suppression motion, finding that the officers did not have consent to enter the premises but that their entry and search of the bedroom closet were justified by the "exigencies" related to the safety of the two-year-old child. Rome then pled no contest to the charge. Rome appeals the trial court's denial of his suppression motion.

DISCUSSION

¶ 10. The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides:

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no *497 Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

U.S. Const. amend. IV. The Wisconsin Constitution is essentially the same. See Wis. Const. art. I, § 11. War-rantless searches "are per se unreasonable under the fourth amendment, subject to a few carefully delineated exceptions" that are "jealously and carefully drawn." State v. Boggess, 115 Wis. 2d 443, 449, 340 N.W.2d 516 (1983) (citation omitted).

¶ 11. The list of carefully drawn exceptions has expanded over time and presently there are at least ten exceptions under which warrantless searches and seizures may be valid: (1) when the evidence seized is in plain view; (2) when consent is freely and voluntarily given; (3) as incident to a lawful arrest; (4) while authorities are in hot pursuit or during emergency situations; (5) during stop-and-frisk situations; (6) while authorities are engaged in their community caretaker function; (7) where exigent circumstances exist; (8) pursuant to the open fields doctrine; (9) during inventory searches of impounded vehicles; and (10) during border and customs searches. See State v. Milashoski, 159 Wis. 2d 99, 111-12, 464 N.W.2d 21 (Ct. App. 1990). These exceptions are not inherently different in nature but instead each "presents a means by which the reasonableness of a given search and seizure may be assessed and described." Id. at 112.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 WI App 243, 620 N.W.2d 225, 239 Wis. 2d 491, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rome-wisctapp-2000.