Filed 3/19/14 P. v. Boyd CA1/2
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
A140106
v.
MARVIN BRUCE BOYD, (Sonoma County
Super. Ct. No. SCR-623002)
Defendant and Appellant.
I. INTRODUCTION
After entering a no contest plea to two counts of an information charging unlawful
possession and transportation of marijuana (Health & Saf. Code, §§ 11359; 11360),
appellant was given a suspended sentence and placed on 36 months probation. He then
filed a timely notice of appeal from the trial court’s earlier order denying his motion to
suppress, brought under Penal Code section 1538.5 (section 1538.5). He also filed a brief
pursuant to People v. Wende (1979) 25 Cal.3d 436, asking this court to review the record
below and determine if there are any issues deserving of further briefing and then review
by this court. We have done so, but have found no such issues and hence affirm the
judgment of the superior court, including the sentence imposed.
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II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
At approximately 8:00 or 9:00 p.m. on August 7, 2012,1 Petaluma Police Officer
Jason Jucutan was driving his patrol car southbound on U.S. Highway 101 just south of
Corona Road in Petaluma. At that time and place, he saw a black Ford Taurus driving in
the fast lane at “an abnormally slow speed,” i.e., “approximately 45 miles per hour,”
although the posted speed limit at that location was 55 miles per hour. Soon thereafter,
the posted speed limit on southbound U.S. 101 increased to 65 miles per hour but the
Taurus stayed in the fast lane and did not speed up, thus—according to Officer Jucutan—
impeding the traffic of six other vehicles. Because that slow speed was a Vehicle Code
violation, the officer conducted a traffic stop, and the Taurus moved off the highway.
When Officer Jucutan approached the driver’s side of the Taurus, he noticed “that
there was odor of unburnt marijuana coming from within the vehicle.” The odor was,
according to his testimony, “strong.” There were three people in the car, including
appellant who was in the left rear passenger seat; all three were asked to show their
identity, and did. The officer then asked the driver “how much marijuana was in the
vehicle,” and Boyd replied that “there’s a few loose marijuana buds, and he showed them
to me,” having removed them from the center console in the rear passenger seat.
Appellant also had a marijuana cigarette in his right ear.
Officer Jucutan then asked if any of the occupants of the car had a medical
marijuana recommendation, and appellant said that he did. The officer then ordered all
three men out of the car so he could search it; he did so based on the unburnt marijuana
odor he smelled coming from the car, and the amount of marijuana that appellant had
shown him. Included in his search was the trunk of the car, where he found two large
garbage bags; when he opened them, he found that they contained what was later
measured to be “32 pounds of marijuana, separated in one-pound bags.” He also found a
1
The exact hour is unclear from the record. In his testimony at the section 1538.5
hearing, the officer stated that the time was “approximately 8:03 p.m.,” although the
District Attorney’s brief in opposition to that motion states that the time was an hour
later.
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suitcase containing $13,330 in cash. He then arrested all three of the occupants of the
car.
Appellant told Officer Jucutan that he was a “medical marijuana patient,” and a
member of “a group of people that grew marijuana” and had found that he had “an
excess of marijuana” and intended to distribute it to others both in and outside of his
group.
Appellant also testified at the section 1538.5 motion hearing. He purported to
provide an explanation of why the car in which he was a passenger had been travelling so
slowly in the fast lane of Highway 101, i.e., that they had pulled into the fast lane
thinking the officer was going to pull over a different car, and that they were going
slowly because they intended to use a nearby exit.
After hearing this testimony and argument by counsel, the court found that the
traffic stop was based on the “uncontroverted testimony of the officer” that the Taurus
“was doing at least 10 miles an hour below the posted speed limit, and then [entered] into
the 65-mile-per-hour zone, remaining doing 45 . . . .” The stop was, therefore, “justified”
and once the officer smelled “the marijuana immediately through the open window, it
gives the officer probable cause to search.” It concluded by noting that, per our Supreme
Court, possession is permitted of only “those amounts [of marijuana] that are
necessary . . . for the treatment of that individual patient, or patients” and not the multiple
pounds of marijuana appellant possessed in the trunk of the car. Further, the fact that
appellant may have had a medical marijuana recommendation was “irrelevant” because
the substantial smell gave the officer probable cause to search the vehicle.
Accordingly, on March 25, 2013, the trial court denied the motion to suppress.
The following month, appellant filed a peremptory challenge of the judge who
presided over the suppression hearing and had denied his motion to suppress. That
challenge was also denied.
On August 30, 2013, appellant formally waived his rights and entered a no contest
plea to both counts of the information. On October 8, 2013, imposition of a sentence was
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suspended and appellant was placed on 36 months probation, with conditions including
200 hours of community service and various fines and fees.
After his sentencing, appellant filed a timely notice of appeal from the judgment
because of the trial court’s earlier denial of his section 1538.5 motion.
III. DISCUSSION
We have carefully examined the record in this case, especially that pertaining to
appellant’s section 1538.5 motion, the argument before the trial court regarding it, and
that court’s ruling thereon. Under well-established law, a trial court’s denial of a motion
to suppress may, under section 1538.5, subdivision (m), be reviewed on appeal even after
a defendant’s no contest plea and conviction. (See, e.g., People v. Panizzon (1996) 13
Cal.4th 68, 74-75; People v. Acevedo (2012) 209 Cal.App.4th 1040, 1051-1052.)
Curiously, however, the clerk’s transcript provided us does not contain any section
1538.5 motion filed by appellant or his counsel, only an opposition thereto. That
opposition recites that appellant had filed “a Wilder[2] motion asserting it is the People’s
burden to justify the warrantless search and seizure,” but no such motion appears in the
clerk’s transcript or, per the Sonoma County Clerk of the Court, in its files. Wende
counsel for appellant has also advised this court that she has no copy of any such
pleading in her files. However, the argument of appellant’s counsel, a deputy public
defender, at the section 1538.5 hearing rather clearly addressed the points appellant
wanted to make regarding that motion, i.e., regarding the lawfulness of Officer Jucutan’s
search of the vehicle.
We find no issues regarding that ruling deserving of further briefing.
2
Wilder v. Superior Court (1979) 92 Cal.App.3d 90.
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IV. DISPOSITION
The judgment, including the sentence imposed, is affirmed.
_________________________
Haerle, J.
We concur:
_________________________
Kline, P.J.
_________________________
Richman, J.
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