Gardner v. State
Decision Date | 22 May 2002 |
Docket Number | No. A02A0283.,A02A0283. |
Citation | 255 Ga. App. 489,566 S.E.2d 329 |
Parties | GARDNER v. The STATE. |
Court | Georgia Court of Appeals |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Gilbert J. Murrah, Bainbridge, for appellant.
J. Brown Moseley, Dist. Atty., Ronald R. Parker, Asst. Dist. Atty., for appellee.
Following a bench trial in the Superior Court of Decatur County, Christopher D. Gardner was found guilty of manufacturing marijuana and sentenced to ten years probation.1 He appeals his conviction and claims that (1) the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because investigating officers improperly intruded on his property without a warrant; and (2) the trial court improperly found that refusing to consent to a search of one's property may be used as a factor in establishing probable cause for a search warrant to issue. Upon review, we affirm.
In reviewing a motion to suppress, we construe the evidence most favorably to uphold the findings and judgment of the trial court, and the trial court's findings on disputed facts and credibility must be accepted unless clearly erroneous.2 "Furthermore, in considering the denial of a motion to suppress, we consider all the evidence of record, including evidence introduced at trial."3
The ground team drove up the Gardners' driveway in order to access the marijuana located in an open field approximately 200 feet immediately behind the residence and outside their property; the Gardners' residence was the only one close to the marijuana plants. Karen Gardner was standing in the driveway. Three members of the team exited their vehicle and walked the 200 feet through the back of the Gardners' property in order to reach the marijuana plants, which plants were specifically located via the air team's radioed directions. Ultimately, fourteen marijuana plants were found; several of the plants were still in five-gallon black plastic pots awaiting planting.
While other members of the ground team located the marijuana, Deputy Willis stayed behind and approached Mrs. Gardner, who was visibly upset.
I wanted to explain to her what was going on, what the situation was, and I explained to her she was not under arrest although I did want her to stay there at the residence until we found out what was going on. I advised Mrs. Gardner that the helicopter flying overhead had found some marijuana plants, what we believed from the air to be marijuana plants, growing behind her residence and that was our whole reason for being there and that was what we were investigating.
After talking with Karen Gardner, Deputy Willis attempted to join the rest of the team in the open field behind the Gardners' residence:
I began walking towards where the other ground crew members had gone to where the plants were located. And as I started walking down, they were already heading back, this being Jennings White, Mike Murphy, and one or two other gentlemen that I don't remember their names, but they were coming back. I specifically remember Mike walking back up towards the residence and instructing me that he had already photographed the plants and they had them in a paper sack and they had already bagged them up.
While walking back from the field behind the Gardners' residence, Deputy Willis saw in plain view a black plastic pot with a marijuana plant growing in it. The pot was in a shed, completely open on two sides, which was attached to a wooden deck connected to the back of the Gardners' mobile home. Deputy Willis testified at the motion hearing that A photograph of the open shed was introduced at trial, and the deputy testified that "it was sitting right there (indicating [picture of open shed taken from backyard]) on the beams that extend from the shed." The deputy also observed in the open shed numerous gardening tools, five-gallon black plastic pots, and a fifty-pound bag of fertilizer.
Shortly thereafter, Christopher Gardner drove up to the residence. Both Gardners refused consent to search their residence. Christopher Gardner was subsequently arrested for possession of marijuana.4 Deputy Willis then sought and obtained a search warrant for the Gardners' mobile home based on: the marijuana plant observed in plain view in the open shed; the nexus between the black plastic pots in the field and the black plastic pots in the shed; the proximity between the residence and the marijuana plants found in the open field 200 feet immediately behind the house and contiguous thereto; and the Gardners' refusal to permit a consent search of their residence. Recovered during the search were marijuana, marijuana seeds, and books on growing marijuana.5
Held:
1. Gardner contends that the ground team's entry onto his property was a warrantless intrusion unsupported by probable cause and in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights; thus, Deputy Willis was not legally on the property in order to observe the marijuana plant in plain view in the shed. We disagree.
No Fourth Amendment interests were triggered simply because the ground team entered onto Gardner's property.6 "The officers needed no warrant to approach the appellants' house to make investigative inquires."7 In this case, the ground team had reasonable suspicion—if not probable cause, itself—to perform an investigation of the suspected marijuana plants discovered in an open field immediately behind and contiguous to Gardner's property. Gardner does not claim that the open field was part of his curtilage, and thus, no search warrant was necessary therefor. Gardner's property simply provided ground access to the open field in furtherance of a legitimate investigation based on reasonable articulable suspicion of a crime being committed in the officers' presence, i.e., manufacturing marijuana.8
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