IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE FILED
SEPTEMBER 1997 SESSION
March 24, 1998
Cecil Crowson, Jr.
Appellate C ourt Clerk
STATE OF TENNESSEE )
) NO. 03C01-9703-CR-00085
Appellee, )
) CLAIBORNE COUNTY
v. )
) HON. LEE ASBURY
CHARLES E. LAKINS )
) (Poss. Cocaine w/ Int. to Sell)
Appellant )
)
For the Appellant For the Appellee
Michael G. Hatmaker John Knox Walkup
571 Main Street Attorney General & Reporter
P.O. Drawer 417
Jacksboro, TN. 37757 Timothy F. Behan
Assistant Attorney General
2nd Floor Cordell Hull Building
425 Fifth Avenue North
Nashville, TN. 37243-0493
William Paul Phillips
District Attorney General
E. Shayne Sexton
Assistant District Attorney General
P.O. Box 323
Jacksboro, TN. 37757
Michael O. Ripley
Assistant District Attorney General
P.O. Box 323
Jacksboro, TN. 37757
OPINION FILED:_____________________
AFFIRMED
WILLIAM M. BARKER, JUDGE
OPINION
The appellant, Charles E. Lakins, appeals as of right the convictions and
sentences he received in the Criminal Court of Claiborne County. After a trial by jury,
the appellant was convicted of possession with intent to sell a Schedule II controlled
substance, to wit: cocaine, in an amount in excess of twenty six (26) grams, a Class B
felony; and possession with intent to deliver drug paraphernalia, to wit: inosital, a
Class E felony. The trial court sentenced the appellant as a Range I standard
offender to ten (10) years for possession of cocaine with intent to sell and to one (1)
year for possession of drug paraphernalia with intent to deliver. The sentences were
ordered to run concurrently for a total effective sentence of ten (10) years in the
Tennessee Department of Correction.
On appeal, the appellant contends that: (1) The trial court erred by failing to
suppress physical evidence taken from appellant’s residence and inculpatory
statements made by the appellant on the date of arrest; (2) The trial court erred by
excluding witness testimony and audio taped evidence pertaining to the pre-trial
statements of Walter Ingle; (3) The trial court erred by restricting the examination of
Walter Ingle in the presence of the jury; and (4) The appellant was convicted by a jury
that was comprised in violation of the Tennessee and United States Constitutions.
After a review of the record, we find no reversible error and affirm the judgment
of the trial court.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The events preceding the appellant’s arrest on September 16, 1994, are
undisputed. Chief Deputy Kelly Anders and Lieutenant Ben Evans of the Claiborne
County Sheriff’s Department went to the appellant’s residence during the late
afternoon of that day to assist one Charles LeFevers in the recovery of a red pick-up
truck. Mr. LeFevers claimed that his red truck had been taken from him in Kentucky
by one Sillus Lankford and thereafter had been delivered to the appellant’s residence
2
as collateral for a cocaine deal. Mr. LeFevers had driven by the appellant’s residence
earlier in the day and had seen the truck parked in the driveway. He requested
assistance from the Claiborne County Sheriff’s Department because he had observed
several men armed with guns on appellant’s property.
Deputy Anders and Lieutenant Evans drove separately from Mr. LeFevers and
followed him out to the appellant’s home. Within a few miles of appellant’s residence,
Deputy Anders drove behind and eventually passed a red pick-up truck that was
occupied by two men. He testified that he drove past the truck and continued on to
the appellant’s home because he was not sure if the truck was the vehicle in
question.1 Upon arrival at the appellant’s residence, Anders overheard Mr. LeFevers
tell Lieutenant Evans that the red truck they had passed was in fact the missing truck.
Thereafter, Anders and Lieutenant Evans entered upon the appellant’s property to
question appellant about the truck.
Deputy Anders and Lieutenant Evans left their vehicle parked in front of
appellant’s house and walked up the driveway and sidewalk leading to the front porch.
With their guns still fastened in their holsters, the two men climbed the stairs onto the
porch and walked across to the front door. Deputy Anders testified that the front door
was standing wide open during their approach. Looking in, Anders immediately
observed the appellant sitting on a couch with a plastic bag in one hand and a spoon
in the other. He noticed that the plastic bag contained a white powder-like substance
and he noticed a digital scale and beer can laying in a chair beside the appellant.
Anders, thereafter, drew his gun and entered the room to arrest the appellant.
After Deputy Anders and Lieutenant Evans secured the room, they found in
open view a plastic bag and beer can containing a white powder-like substance and a
bottle of inosital sitting on a television set. The appellant spoke first and admitted that
1
Deputy Anders testified that Mr. LeFevers’ truck had not been reported stolen and that the
occupants of the red truck did not violate any traffic laws. Therefore, Anders claimed that he did not
have grounds to conduct a traffic stop.
3
he was caught in the act of “cutting” cocaine for resale.2 He consented to a police
search of his residence which revealed over twenty six (26) grams of cocaine, the
bottle of inosital, the digital scale, a shotgun, and several plastic bags.
Based upon that evidence, the appellant was charged and convicted of
possessing cocaine and drug paraphernalia with intent to sell. On appeal, the
appellant challenges both his convictions and sentences.
ANALYSIS
The appellant first contends that the trial court erred in failing to suppress
physical evidence obtained during the police entry and search of his residence. He
further contends that his incriminating statements made before the arrest were
inadmissible as fruit of the unlawful search and seizure.
This issue is without merit.
At the suppression hearing, the appellant argued that Deputy Anders and
Lieutenant Evans acted unlawfully when they came upon his property and approached
his front door without a warrant. He contended that any evidence obtained during
and subsequent to the illegal entry, even if in plain view, was inadmissible at trial. The
trial court found that the officers lawfully entered appellant’s property and used the
walkway to approach the front door. The court, therefore, ruled that the cocaine and
paraphernalia evidence observed in the officers’ plain view was properly seized and
admissible at trial. In addition, the trial court ruled that the appellant’s unsolicited,
inculpatory statements were also admissible.
We find no evidence to disturb the ruling of the trial court. The record supports
a finding that Deputy Anders and Lieutenant Evans lawfully entered the appellant’s
property solely to question him about Mr. LeFever’s missing truck. In conducting their
2
Before his arres t, the appe llant told Dep uty Ander s:
I can’t believe after all the years I do something so stupid - Get caught in the act of
selling cocaine - Sit right in the open and do it. It’s nobody’s fault but my own - Get
cau ght w ith the s___ in m y hand . You’r e the luck iest p erso n I’ve e ver k now n jus t walk
right in on me cutting the s___. I can’t believe this happened. I can’t deny this, caught
red han ded, right in th e act.
4
official police business, the officers used the open pathways from the road to the front
door and made no attempts to deviate from that course or to peer into appellant’s
windows. Moreover, the facts demonstrate that Deputy Anders inadvertently
discovered the appellant’s possession of cocaine after he approached the open
doorway.
When pursuing legitimate business objectives, police officers have a right to
use the sidewalks, pathways, or similar passageways leading from a public roadway to
the front door of a dwelling. 3 That area represents an implied invitation to the general
public and is not within the zone of privacy protected by either the Fourth Amendment
or our state constitution. See State v. Harris, 919 S.W.2d at 623-24. Therefore,
Deputy Anders and Lieutenant Evans were lawfully present on appellant’s property
when they observed the white powder-like substance and the drug paraphernalia.
Moreover, the appellant concedes that the cocaine and the drug paraphernalia
were in plain view when the officers stepped onto his front porch. The front door was
standing wide open when the appellant was observed in the act of preparing cocaine
for resale. We conclude that there was no illegal entry or search which would warrant
suppression of the physical evidence obtained at appellant’s residence. Furthermore,
having found the officers’ conduct to be valid under the Fourth Amendment and Article
I, section 7 of the Tennessee Constitution, we conclude that the appellant’s unsolicited
statements made before his arrest were also admissible at trial.
II.
The appellant next contends that the trial court erred in excluding witness
testimony and audio taped evidence pertaining to the pre-trial statements of Walter
Ingle. He argues that Mr. Ingle should have been declared “unavailable” after he
invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege and that his statements should have been
3
See State v. Ha rris, 919 S.W .2d 619, 623-24 (Tenn . Crim. App. 1995); State v. Ma rcus Ellis,
No. 01C 01-900 1-CR -00021 (Tenn . Crim. A pp. at Na shville, Dec . 12, 1990 ).
5
admitted as statements against interest under Rule 804(b)(3) of the Tennessee Rules
of Evidence.
Although we find that Mr. Ingle was “unavailable” after he invoked his Fifth
Amendment privilege, we conclude that any error concerning the exclusion of his
statements was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
At trial, the appellant called Walter Ingle to testify concerning Ingle’s pre-trial
statements in which he alluded to planting cocaine at the appellant’s residence. The
statements were surreptitiously recorded by Mr. Ingle’s brother before appellant’s trial
and were heard on the record at a jury-out hearing. 4 On the tape, Mr. Ingle made
statements suggesting that he had left cocaine at appellant’s home the night before
the arrest and that he had planned to contact the police concerning appellant’s
unlawful possession. Mr. Ingle, however, indicated on tape that the cocaine was not
his and that he never called the police.
The trial court reviewed the statements in question and determined that Mr.
Ingle would invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege if called to testify. The trial court
thereafter ruled that Mr. Ingle was not “unavailable” for the purposes of Rule 804 of
the Tennessee Rules of Evidence and that any evidence concerning the recorded
statements was inadmissible hearsay.
We find that Mr. Ingle should have been declared “unavailable” under Rule
804(a)(1) of the Tennessee Rules of Evidence.5 Having invoked his privilege under
the Fifth Amendment, Mr. Ingle received an exemption from testifying concerning the
content of his recorded statements. Nevertheless, although “unavailable,” his
4
The state me nts in ques tion w ere re cord ed du ring a conv ersa tion b etwe en M r. Ingle and h is
brother, Lonnie DeWayne Ingle. The recording was made a few days after the appellant’s arrest when
Lonnie Ingle visited Walter Ingle at the latter’s home to elicit information concerning the alleged cocaine
“frame up.”
5
Rule 804(a)(1) provides that a declarant witness is “unavailable” when he “is exempted by
ruling of the court on the grounds of privilege from testifying concerning the subject matter of the
declara nt’s statem ent.”
6
statements in their entirety were not admissible as statements against interest. Rule
804(b)(3) provides that a statement is admissible if:
at the time of its making [the statement was] so far contrary to the
declarant’s pecuniary or proprietary interest, or so far tended to subject
the declarant to civil or criminal liability or to render invalid a claim by the
declarant against another, that a reasonable person in the declarant’s
position would not have made the statement unless believing it to be
true.
We have carefully reviewed Mr. Ingles’ statements contained in the tape
recording and find that many of them do not qualify as statements against interest
under Rule 804(b)(3). Although Mr. Ingle suggested that he left cocaine at the
appellant’s home, there are inconsistencies as to whether Mr. Ingle left the cocaine by
accident or whether he intended to plant evidence. Moreover, in the course of the
recorded conversation, Mr. Ingle asserted that he did not own the cocaine and that the
cocaine was left by another person as part of a drug sale.
Furthermore, other evidence in the record suggests that the recorded
statements were fabricated and unreliable. At the hearing on the motion for a new
trial, both Lonnie Ingle and Walter Ingle testified that the tape recording was a
fabrication and that the appellant had paid Walter Ingle two thousand ($2,000) dollars
to make the recorded statements. In denying the motion for a new trial, the trial court
stated that the recording and the alleged “frame up” were mere attempts to commit
fraud upon the court.
We conclude that although certain statements were admissible as being
against Mr. Ingle’s penal interest, the trial court’s error in excluding them was of little
significance in light of the convicting evidence. Based upon the overwhelming proof
against the appellant, any error involving the exclusion of Mr. Ingle’s statements was
harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See Tenn. R. App. P. 36(b).
III.
The appellant next contends that the trial court erred by restricting the
examination of Mr. Ingle in the presence of the jury. He argues that the trial court
7
should have allowed him to question Mr. Ingle as to whether Ingle planted evidence or
made statements about planting evidence at the appellant’s home.
This issue is without merit.
Appellant’s counsel examined Mr. Ingle at a jury-out hearing concerning Ingle’s
recorded statements and his alleged involvement in appellant’s case. Mr. Ingle
declined to answer under the Fifth Amendment and further indicated that he would
assert his privilege if called to testify in the presence of the jury. The trial court
thereafter ruled that Mr. Ingle could not be examined in front of the jury concerning his
recorded statements or whether he planted evidence at the appellant’s home. The
appellant, however, was permitted to examine Mr. Ingle as to whether Ingle would
answer any questions pertaining to the subject matter of appellant’s case.
The appellant argues that the trial court’s restriction violated his right to a fair
trial. We disagree. Our supreme court has previously held that the calling and
examination of a witness who refuses to testify does not fulfill the purpose of
compulsory process. See State v. Dicks, 615 S.W.2d 126, 129 (Tenn. 1981).
Moreover, even if the appellant had been allowed to fully examine Mr. Ingle, the jury
would have been instructed to disregard any evidence or inference from Ingles’
decision to invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege. See id. We, therefore, conclude
that the trial court exercised proper discretion to limit the examination of Mr. Ingle in
the presence of the jury.
IV.
The appellant next contends he was convicted by a jury that was comprised in
violation of the Tennessee and United States Constitutions. He argues that Jury
Foreperson Bill Powers was not a resident of Claiborne County, Tennessee, as
required by Tennessee Code Annotated Section 22-1-101 (1994). Because of this
disqualification, the appellant claims that he was convicted by a constitutionally invalid
jury. The appellant has waived any such challenge to Powers’ qualification.
8
Tennessee courts recognize two classifications of jury challenges, propter
defectum, “on account of defect,” and propter affectum, “for or on account of some
affection or prejudice.” See State v. Brock, 940 S.W.2d 577, 579 (Tenn. Crim. App.
1996) (citation omitted). Objections based upon general disqualifications, such as
age, residence, relationship, feeble mindedness and the like are within the propter
defectum class and, as such, are considered waived if not made prior to the verdict.
Durham v. State, 188 S.W.2d 555, 557 (Tenn. 1945). However,
. . . where some particular disqualification of a juror was unknown to the
defendant and his attorney at the time of the jury’s selection, objection
may properly be heard even after verdict, but . . . in such instances the
objection allowed to be made after impaneling of the jury touched the
objectionable juror’s partiality and was not merely propter defectum.
Id. (quoting Monday v. State, 160 Tenn. 258, 265, 23 S.W .2d 656, 658 (1930)).
There is no indication from the facts contained in the record that Powers’
disqualification affected his partiality in the case. The juror’s address and telephone
number were provided on his juror questionnaire. The record does not indicate that
the residency qualification was specifically posed to the venire during voir dire. In the
absence of questions to provide specific answers, the appellant cannot now object to
the juror’s failure to volunteer such information. See Clariday v. State, 552 S.W.2d
759, 771 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1976), perm. To appeal denied, Tenn. 1977). Moreover
there is no indication that the objection could not have been discovered with the
exercise of due diligence before the verdict was reached just as easily as it was
discovered after trial. Notwithstanding waiver of this issue, mere statutory ineligibility
does not render a juror incapable of making an intelligent and impartial verdict.
Accordingly, this issue is without merit.
Based upon the foregoing, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
____________________________
WILLIAM M. BARKER, JUDGE
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CONCUR:
__________________________
JOHN H. PEAY, JUDGE
__________________________
DAVID G. HAYES, JUDGE
10