State v. Stites

2009 Ark. 154, 300 S.W.3d 103, 2009 Ark. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 19, 2009
DocketCR 08-1186
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2009 Ark. 154 (State v. Stites) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Stites, 2009 Ark. 154, 300 S.W.3d 103, 2009 Ark. LEXIS 120 (Ark. 2009).

Opinion

ANNABELLE CLINTON IMBER, Justice.

[ i This interlocutory appeal by the State arises from an order entered by the Sebastian County Circuit Court granting Appel-lee Shane Patton Stites’s motion to suppress evidence discovered inside a locked safe during the execution of a search warrant at Appellee’s residence. For the reasons stated below, we reverse and remand.

According to testimony elicited at the suppression hearing, Detective Wayne Barnett of the Fort Smith Police Department received information from a confidential informant that Appellee was involved in the use and sale of methamphetamine at his home. The informant agreed to cooperate with police by making a controlled buy from Appellee. When the informant went to Appellee’s house, however, Appellee told him to leave and come back later. The informant reported to Detective Barnett that, while inside Appellee’s | chouse, he saw a glass pipe with burnt residue, which is commonly used to smoke methamphetamine, and two small caliber handguns under the coffee table in the living room. Detective Barnett then obtained a search warrant to search Appellee’s home for “drug paraphernalia, methamphetamine and firearms.”

The police promptly executed the warrant and found twenty-one pieces of evidence, including a revolver, drugs, drug paraphernalia, and $435 in cash on Appel-lee’s person. The second handgun mentioned by the informant was never found. During the search, the police discovered a locked safe inside a small closet in the entry hall by the front door and adjacent to the living room. The informant had not reported seeing a safe in the house, and the officers did not know there was a safe until it was discovered during the search. The safe was twelve-by-eighteen inches and large enough to contain drugs, drug paraphernalia and firearms. A locksmith was summoned to the scene to open the safe. Once the safe was opened, the officers discovered crystalline substance, methamphetamine, and a Honeywell lock box that contained a crystalline and vegetable residue.

Appellee was charged with possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver, possession of marijuana with intent to deliver, possession of drug paraphernalia, simultaneous possession of drugs and firearms, and maintaining a premises for drug activities. He then filed a motion to suppress, asserting, among other things, that the evidence seized from the locked safe found inside his residence should be suppressed because neither the affidavit for the search warrant nor the warrant itself mentioned a safe, and thus, the search |sof the safe exceeded the scope of the search authorized by the warrant. Detective Barnett testified during the suppression hearing that he thought the warrant to search the house authorized him to open the safe if it was capable of holding the items that were the subject of the search warrant; and, had he thought that he did not have authority to open the safe, he would have seized the safe and procured a second warrant to open it, albeit with the same information used to obtain the first one.

The circuit court issued an order granting Appellee’s motion to suppress the evidence discovered inside the locked safe.

The State filed this interlocutory appeal pursuant to Ark. R. App. P.-Crim. 3(a) (2008). Rule 3 provides in pertinent part:

(a) An interlocutory appeal on behalf of the state may be taken only from a pretrial order in a felony prosecution which (1) grants a motion under Ark. R.Crim. P 16.2 to suppress seized evidence, (2) suppresses a defendant’s confession, or (3) grants a motion under Ark.Code Ann. § 16-42-101(c) to allow evidence of the victim’s prior sexual conduct. The prosecuting attorney shall file, within ten (10) days after the entering of the order, a notice of appeal together with a certificate that the appeal is not taken for the purposes of delay and that the order substantially prejudices the prosecution of the case. Further proceedings in the trial court shall be stayed pending determination of the appeal.
(c) When a notice of appeal is filed pursuant to either subsection (a) or (b) of this rule, the clerk of the court in which the prosecution sought to be appealed took place shall immediately cause a transcript of the trial record to be made and transmitted to the attorney general, or delivered to the prosecuting attorney, to be by him delivered to the attorney general. If the attorney general, on inspecting the trial record, is satisfied that error has been committed to the prejudice of the state, and that the correct and uniform administration of the criminal law requires review by the Supreme Court, he may take the appeal by filing the transcript of the trial record with the clerk |4of the Supreme Court within sixty (60) days after the filing of the notice of appeal.

Ark. R. App. P.-Crim. 3(a) and (c) (2008). Pursuant to Ark. R. App. P.-Crim. 3(c), the Attorney General certified that he was satisfied that error had been committed to the prejudice of the State. The transcript of the trial was filed on October 8, 2008, within the sixty-day requirement of Rule 3(c).

Under Ark. R. App. P.-Crim. 3, when the State files an interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s grant of a defendant’s motion to suppress evidence under Rule 16.2, an initial inquiry by this court must be whether the appeal involves the correct and uniform administration of justice and of the criminal law. State v. Howard, 341 Ark. 640, 19 S.W.3d 4 (2000). Section (a) of the rule outlines the permissive grounds for State interlocutory appeals in criminal cases. Id. We have many times stated that the State’s ability to appeal is not a matter of right but limited to those cases described under Rule 3. Id. We accept appeals by the State when our holding would be important to the correct and uniform administration of the criminal law. Id. As a matter of practice, our court has only taken appeals that are narrow in scope and involve the interpretation of law. Id. When an appeal does not present an issue of interpretation of the criminal rules with widespread ramifications, this court has held that such an appeal does not involve the correct and uniform administration of the law. Id. Appeals are not allowed merely to demonstrate the fact that the trial court erred. Id. Therefore, where the resolution of the State’s attempted appeal turns on the facts of the case and would not require interpretation of our criminal |firules with widespread ramifications, acceptance of the State’s appeal is not allowed under Rule 3. Id. An appeal that raises the issue of application, not interpretation, of a statutory provision does not involve the correct and uniform administration of justice or the criminal law. Id. Where the trial court acts within its discretion after making an evidentiary decision based on the facts on hand or even a mixed question of law and fact, this court will not accept an appeal under Ark. R. App. P.-Crim. 3(c). Id.

The State argues that the issue to be decided is whether Ark. R.Crim. P. 13.3(d) authorizes officers to open a closed container, in this case a safe, during the execution of a search warrant when the container is capable of holding the items that are the subject of the warrant. Appellee, on the other hand, argues that this appeal involves only the application of Rule 13.3(d) to the particular and discrete facts in the instant case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Casaccio v. Curtiss
718 S.E.2d 506 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2011)
State v. A.G.
2011 Ark. 244 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2011)
Ingle v. State
379 S.W.3d 32 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 Ark. 154, 300 S.W.3d 103, 2009 Ark. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stites-ark-2009.