Walter Charles Cupe v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 19, 2014
DocketA14A0289
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Walter Charles Cupe v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION PHIPPS, C. J., ELLINGTON, P. J., and MCMILLIAN, J.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

June 19, 2014

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A14A0289. CUPE v. THE STATE.

PHIPPS, Chief Judge.

Following a jury trial, a Troup County jury found Walter Charles Cupe guilty

of robbery and burglary. On appeal from the judgment of conviction and the denial

of his motion for new trial, Cupe claims that the trial court erred in (i) denying his

motion to suppress; (ii) denying his motion to sever; and (iii) failing to properly

charge the jury. For the reasons set forth below, we find no error and affirm.

Viewed in a light most favorable to the jury’s verdict,1 the evidence showed

that on August 15, 2003, Angel Fowler, who was visiting a mall in LaGrange, stepped

outside the back entrance of a store as she was talking on the phone. Shortly

thereafter a man, whom Fowler identified as Cupe at trial, came up from behind her

1 See Drammeh v. State, 285 Ga. App. 545, 546 (1) (646 SE2d 742) (2007). and began “pulling on” her pocketbook. Fowler fought back, but Cupe hit her

repeatedly and eventually grabbed her pocketbook and ran.

On the evening of Thanksgiving Day, November 27, 2003, Cupe, a regular

customer, came into George Joseph’s convenience store and gas station in

Hogansville to buy cigarettes. Cupe did not have enough money to complete the

purchase, but Joseph told his wife to “let him go,” so she gave Cupe the cigarettes.

After Cupe left, Joseph came out from behind the counter four times to observe Cupe

standing outside the store. It was a rainy day and Cupe’s body was wet. The fifth time

Joseph checked, he did not see Cupe. Joseph lived next door to the store, and Cupe

lived two houses down from Joseph’s residence.

Joseph closed the store at 7:00 p.m. and went home. When Joseph opened the

door he heard a loud sound from the back of the house, and he went to the kitchen

and saw that the deadbolt on the back door was “gone” and that there were leaves and

water on the floor. In the bedroom, the bed had been pushed to the side, and a cabinet

was open. Missing from the home was, according to Joseph, “$15,000 Indian

currency,” an indeterminate amount of U. S. currency, his wallet, a briefcase

containing legal documents, a video camera, and jewelry which he valued at over

$12,300.

2 During officers’ investigation of the crime, Joseph named Cupe as a possible

burglar “because the way [Cupe] was acting.” The day after the burglary, after dusting

Joseph’s home for prints, the Chief of the Hogansville Police Department and two

officers walked down a path which led from Joseph’s home to the back of Cupe’s

house with the intent of performing a “knock and talk.” Parked in Cupe’s back yard

between where the police were walking and Cupe’s back door was a Buick

automobile in which an officer saw two brown briefcases and a piece of paper with

Joseph’s name printed on it. After speaking with Cupe, the Chief informed him that

he was going to go and obtain a search warrant for the car and warned him not to

approach the vehicle because there was evidence inside. An officer remained at the

scene and shortly thereafter placed Cupe under arrest after Cupe grabbed a set of keys

and a large garbage bag and then touched the car. After being transported to the

police station, Cupe told an officer that he does his “burglaries in the rain because .

. . police won’t come out of their cars and get wet,” and that “if you said I done this

burglary; I done this burglary.”

After police obtained a search warrant for Cupe’s home and the car, they

recovered two briefcases from the car. They contained personal effects of Joseph and

his wife. Police also recovered a bag which contained Fowler’s checkbook, her gym

3 membership card, her daughter’s social security card, and Joseph’s identification

documents. Police found cash in Cupe’s house and returned $6,000 to Joseph, who

identified the currency by the bands he used to bundle the money together.

At Cupe’s trial, Officer Michael Smith of the Hogansville Police Department

testified that on November 28, 2003, after Cupe had been transported to the police

station and he was filling out the warrants for the burglary, Cupe told Smith that he

“would find out where [Smith] lived and come to [his] house and tie [his] wife to the

bed and **** her brains out.”

In a three-count indictment, Cupe was charged with the crime of burglary by

entering Joseph’s home with intent to commit theft, robbery by taking Fowler’s purse

and other property by the use of force, and terroristic threats by threatening to rape

and falsely imprison Officer Smith’s wife. Cupe filed pre-trial motions to suppress

the evidence seized from Cupe’s car and residence and to sever the three counts for

purposes of trial. The trial court denied the motions.

Following a trial, the jury found Cupe guilty of burglary and robbery, and the

trial court sentenced him to serve 20 years on each count to run concurrently. The jury

4 found Cupe not guilty of terroristic threats. The trial court later denied Cupe’s motion

for new trial, and Cupe appeals.2

1. Cupe claims that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress. We

disagree.

In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, the appellate court

must follow three principles:

First, when a motion to suppress is heard by the trial judge, that judge sits as the trier of facts. The trial judge hears the evidence, and his findings based upon conflicting evidence are analogous to the verdict of a jury and should not be disturbed by a reviewing court if there is any evidence to support them. Second, the trial court’s decision with regard to questions of fact and credibility must be accepted unless clearly erroneous. Third, the reviewing court must construe the evidence most favorably to the upholding of the trial court’s findings and judgment. These principles apply equally whether the trial court ruled in favor of the State or the defendant.3

2 Cupe filed a timely motion for new trial on July 9, 2004, but the trial court took no action on the motion until after Cupe filed an amended motion for new trial on February 13, 2013, after which the trial court denied the motion in an order filed May 9, 2013. 3 Brown v. State, 293 Ga. 787, 802-803 (3) (b) (2) (750 SE2d 148) (2013) (citations and punctuation omitted).

5 To the extent that “the evidence at a suppression hearing is uncontroverted and the

credibility of witnesses is not in question, we conduct a de novo review of the trial

court’s application of the law to the undisputed facts.”4

Cupe contends that the police officers were not authorized to be on his property

when they approached his house without a warrant and saw the two briefcases inside

the Buick. Therefore, he argues, the police discovered the incriminating evidence

during an illegal search and the evidence seized from the car should have been

suppressed. The State responds that the briefcases were in the plain view of officers

and were not found by police during a search.

Construed most favorably to support the trial court’s findings and judgment,

the evidence showed the following. After Joseph identified Cupe as the person he

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