State v. Yeargin-Charles

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 26, 2024
Docket125754
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Yeargin-Charles (State v. Yeargin-Charles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Yeargin-Charles, (kanctapp 2024).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 125,754

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

TASHARA D. YEARGIN-CHARLES, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Jackson District Court; NORBERT C. MAREK and MICHAEL E. WARD, judges. Submitted without oral argument. Opinion filed July 26, 2024. Affirmed.

Ryan J. Eddinger, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Kurtis K. Wiard, assistant solicitor general, and Kris W. Kobach, attorney general, for appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., ATCHESON and CLINE, JJ.

PER CURIAM: Passengers in automobiles have standing to judicially contest the admissibility of evidence seized by police from their personal belongings. Tashara D. Yeargin-Charles, a passenger in an automobile, asks us to overturn her criminal convictions because the district court denied her motion to suppress the contraband seized from her purse. She argues the contraband evidence found in her purse should have been suppressed because the law enforcement officers made an illegal traffic stop.

1 A flapping car tag leads to an early morning car stop.

In August 2021, Tashara D. Yeargin-Charles was a passenger in a car that was driving on a highway in Jackson County, Kansas, around 3:30 a.m. Deputy Justin Dobler and Sergeant Travis DeBarge observed the car's license plate "flapping in the wind." Deputy Dobler testified that the license plate was secured by one bolt and that he "clearly observed that the registration plate was not securely fastened and was actually hanging to the—slanting to the right, and it was visibly shaking while traveling down the road." Based on observing the car's violation of the statute requiring the proper "display of registration," the officers pulled the car over.

Deputy Dobler approached the passenger side of the car and Sergeant DeBarge approached the driver's side. There were three people in the car: the driver—Karen Nichols; the front seat passenger—Yeargin-Charles; and the rear seat passenger—Rico Taylor. Deputy Dobler had trouble talking to the passengers because the window was barely cracked and Yeargin-Charles was uncooperative—arguing with Deputy Dobler before finally rolling down the window. Throughout the interaction, Sergeant DeBarge primarily talked to Nichols and Taylor, while Deputy Dobler talked to Yeargin-Charles.

Shortly after approaching the car, Sergeant DeBarge saw an open container of alcohol in the back floorboard of the car and, as a result, instructed the three occupants to exit the car so the officers could search the car. Sergeant DeBarge focused his search in the driver's and rear seat passenger's areas of the car. He found a second open container of alcohol under the driver's seat and drug paraphernalia inside Nichols' purse. Deputy Dobler focused his search in and around Yeargin-Charles' seat and found a purse that he observed on Yeargin-Charles' lap when he initially approached the car. Inside the purse, Deputy Dobler found an open bottle of peach vodka, a marijuana cigarette, and a pipe with burnt residue inside—which later tested positive for methamphetamine.

2 Based on what Deputy Dobler found, he asked Yeargin-Charles for her name and date of birth. She replied that her name was Catrice Lanae Montgomery and that her date of birth was 02/04/1980. Deputy Dobler asked the dispatcher to verify her identity, which the dispatcher could not do. Deputy Dobler continued to search the purse; he found a wallet that contained credit cards and a driving license, both of which belonged to Tashara Yeargin-Charles, whose date of birth was 03/25/1978.

More dramatic events begin when her purse was searched.

While Deputy Dobler searched the purse, Yeargin-Charles suddenly dropped to the ground, claiming she was pregnant and that her water broke. Deputy Dobler requested emergency medical personnel to respond based on Yeargin-Charles' claim. As the medical staff arrived, Yeargin-Charles laid on the ground, "screaming, farting, and trying to force herself to throw up." She exclaimed that "her water was breaking. She was having pains towards the stomach and her butt. She was appearing to have dry heaving or almost throwing up-type with no liquid coming out. She was farting, and just doing the moaning and obvious sounds of pain." Though, Deputy Dobler testified that he did not see any indication that her water broke—noting there was no liquid on the ground.

She then told Sergeant DeBarge that she was a paranoid schizophrenic and later that she was sick with Covid. Sergeant DeBarge communicated with the dispatcher and informed dispatch of the name found on Yeargin-Charles driving license and credit cards, which was also confirmed by the other passengers. Additionally, Sergeant DeBarge had the dispatcher check for tattoos listed from Yeargin-Charles' previous jail sentence. Sergeant DeBarge learned that Yeargin-Charles had a tattoo of a rose and her daughter's name on her right arm, and he confirmed that these tattoos were on Yeargin-Charles.

3 Emergency medical personnel transported Yeargin-Charles to Stormont-Vail in Topeka, at her request. While at the hospital, medical staff reported to law enforcement that Yeargin-Charles was not pregnant and instead was under the influence of drugs.

Yeargin-Charles moves to suppress evidence.

The State charged Yeargin-Charles with (1) possession of methamphetamine, a severity level 5 drug nonperson felony; (2) interference with law enforcement—falsely reporting information, a severity level 9 nonperson felony; (3) possession of marijuana, a class B nonperson misdemeanor; (4) possession of drug paraphernalia, a class B nonperson misdemeanor; and (5) transportation of liquor in an open container, an unclassified misdemeanor.

Based on her claim that Deputy Dobler lacked reasonable suspicion to stop the car, Yeargin-Charles moved to suppress the evidence found in the search of her purse. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Deputy Dobler testified that he observed the car's registration plate flapping in the wind, and he believed that violated the statute requiring the proper display of registration. On cross-examination, Deputy Dobler admitted that he had no trouble reading the license plate; the license plate was not cluttered by debris, foreign objects, or anything of the sort; and the license plate was affixed in the area where license plates are required to be on a car. The district court also received the dash- cam video of the traffic stop as evidence.

The State argued that the dash-cam video shows "the bottom of the tag oscillating in the wind" and that "only one bolt" was fastened to the car. In response to the district court's questions about the standard number of bolts on a car, the State argued that the "size of the bolts that go into a license plate and the rigidity of the plate, if you screw those bolts in and securely fasten them, it won't go anywhere."

4 The district court also asked the State if there was a violation, given that the statute mainly seeks to make sure that license plates are readable, and Deputy Dobler's testified that he could read the plate. The State responded that the statute's purpose is (1) "to be clear of obstruction and debris, dirt and stuff like that, to be legible" and (2) "to securely fasten the part [would] honestly be a traffic safety matter."

Yeargin-Charles' argument began by stating, "I know we all grew up in a rural community. I have seen trailers where the license plates have been fixed vertically rather than horizontally to the side because that's the way they fit the trailer.

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State v. Yeargin-Charles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-yeargin-charles-kanctapp-2024.