Legal Research AI

Gee v. State

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2004-06-17
Citations: 810 N.E.2d 338
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Attorney for Appellant                       Attorneys for Appellee
Teresa D. Harper                                   Steve Carter
Bloomington, Indiana                               Attorney General of
Indiana

                                             Nandita G. Shepherd
                                             Deputy Attorney General
                                             Indianapolis, Indiana


____________________________________________________________________________
__


                                   In the
                            Indiana Supreme Court
                      _________________________________


                            No. 49S05-0406-CR-271

Gary D. Gee,
                                             APPELLANT (DEFENDANT BELOW),

                                     v.

State of Indiana,
                                             Appellee (Plaintiff below).
                      _________________________________

       Appeal from the Marion Superior Court, No. 49G20-0007-CF-119343
                    The Honorable William E. Young, Judge
                      _________________________________

 On Petition To Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 49A05-0109-
                                   CR-413
                      _________________________________

                                June 17, 2004

Rucker, Justice.

      Gary D. Gee was convicted of several drug related offenses as a result
of contraband found in a house he  shared  with  a  relative.   Because  the
evidence was not sufficient to demonstrate that Gee knew of  the  nature  of
the contraband and its presence in the house, we reverse his conviction.



                        Facts and Procedural History


      In July 1999, an  anonymous  tip  led  officers  of  the  Indianapolis
Police Department (“IPD”) to suspect that drug activity was occurring  at  a
home located on Mutz Court  in  Indianapolis.   Prompted  by  the  tip,  IPD
officers kept the house  under  surveillance  periodically  for  two  weeks.
However they saw no one entering or  exiting  the  residence.   Sometime  in
August 1999, officers confiscated a bag of trash  sitting  on  the  curb  in
front of the Mutz Court residence.  Several items  were  discovered  in  the
trash, some of which were covered  with  a  white  powdery  substance  later
identified as cocaine.  Officers also discovered mail addressed to a  person
by the name of “Lewis R. Gee.”  The record later revealed that Lewis R.  Gee
is the cousin of Gary D. Gee.[1]  The record also  revealed  that  both  men
leased the residence, but  Gee  stayed  there  only  occasionally.   In  any
event, as a result of the items found in the discarded trash,  IPD  officers
obtained a warrant to search the house.   When  the  warrant  was  executed,
only two small children were present.

      Searching the home officers seized among other things over  126  grams
of cocaine and cocaine residue, over  273  grams  of  marijuana,  $5,000  in
cash, and a set of digital scales.  Because the location of the  confiscated
items, along with the circumstances of their discovery, is critical  to  our
analysis we discuss these matters in greater detail below.  For the  moment,
however, suffice it to say that Gee was charged with dealing in cocaine,  as
a Class A felony; possession of cocaine, as a Class C felony; possession  of
cocaine and a firearm, a Class C felony; dealing in marijuana, as a Class  D
felony; and possession of marijuana, as a Class D felony.   Except  for  the
possession of cocaine and a firearm charge,  for  which  he  was  found  not
guilty, after a jury trial Gee  was  convicted  as  charged  and  ultimately
sentenced to a total  executed  term  of  twenty  years’  imprisonment.   On
review, Gee challenged the sufficiency of the  evidence.   In  a  Memorandum
Decision the Court of Appeals affirmed the  judgment  of  the  trial  court.
See Gee v. State, No. 49A05-0109-CR-413 (Ind. Ct. App. Sept. 3,  2002).   We
now grant transfer and reverse the trial court’s judgment.

                                 Discussion

      Actual possession of  contraband  occurs  when  a  person  has  direct
physical control over the item.  Walker v. State, 631 N.E.2d 1, 2 (Ind.  Ct.
App. 1994).  In this case Gee was not present when police seized  the  drugs
and other contraband and thus he was not found to be  in  actual  possession
of drugs.  As a result, the State prosecuted its case against Gee under  the
theory of constructive possession.   A  defendant  is  in  the  constructive
possession of drugs when the State shows that the  defendant  has  both  (i)
the intent to maintain dominion and control over  the  drugs  and  (ii)  the
capability to maintain dominion and control over  the  drugs.   Lampkins  v.
State, 682 N.E.2d 1268, 1275 (Ind. 1997), on reh’g,  685  N.E.2d  698  (Ind.
1997).  The proof of a possessory interest in the premises on which  illegal
drugs are found is adequate to show the capability to maintain dominion  and
control over the items in question.  Davenport v. State,  464  N.E.2d  1302,
1307 (Ind. 1984).  In essence the law infers that the  party  in  possession
of the premises is capable of  exercising  dominion  and  control  over  all
items on the premises.  See id.; Martin v. State, 175  Ind.  App.  503,  372
N.E.2d 1194, 1197 (1978) (“[A] house or apartment used  as  a  residence  is
controlled by the person who lives in it and that person  may  be  found  in
control of any drugs discovered therein, whether he is  the  owner,  tenant,
or merely an invitee.”).  And this is so whether possession of the  premises
is exclusive or not.


      However, the law takes a different view when applying the intent prong
of constructive possession.  When a defendant’s possession of  the  premises
on which drugs are found is not exclusive, then the inference of  intent  to
maintain  dominion  and  control  over  the  drugs  “must  be  supported  by
additional circumstances  pointing  to  the  defendant’s  knowledge  of  the
nature of the controlled substances  and  their  presence.”   Lampkins,  682
N.E.2d at 1275.  The “additional circumstances” have been shown  by  various
means: (1) incriminating statements made by  the  defendant,  (2)  attempted
flight or furtive  gestures,  (3)  location  of  substances  like  drugs  in
settings that suggest manufacturing, (4) proximity of the contraband to  the
defendant, (5) location of  the  contraband  within  the  defendant’s  plain
view, and (6) the mingling of the contraband with other items owned  by  the
defendant.  Henderson v. State, 715 N.E.2d 833, 836 (Ind. 1999).

      In this case Gee does not contest that he held a  possessory  interest
in the Mutz Court residence.  Thus he does not challenge the inference  that
he had the capability to maintain dominion and control of  the  drugs  found
in the home.  He argues however that there were no additional  circumstances
demonstrating that he had knowledge of the drugs  or  their  presence.   The
Court of Appeals disagreed noting that the drugs were located  in  a  common
area of the home that Gee shared  with  his  cousin  Lewis  and  that  Gee’s
personal effects were in close proximity to the drugs.  The court  concluded
that “[c]ontraband being in plain view  and  in  close  proximity  to  other
items associated with the defendant are two  ‘additional  circumstances’  by
which  constructive  possession  of  contraband  may  be  proven  where  the
defendant’s control over the premises on which the contraband  is  found  is
non-exclusive.”  Slip op. at 4-5.  We have  no  quarrel  with  this  general
proposition of law.  However  we  disagree  with  our  colleagues  that  the
proposition is applicable to the facts of this case.

                          Contraband in plain view?

      We first observe that the plain  view  doctrine  is  not  actually  at
issue in this case.  An exception to  the  warrant  requirement,  the  plain
view doctrine is applicable when  police  are  not  searching  for  evidence
against   the   accused,   but   nonetheless   inadvertently   come   across
incriminating items.  Warner v. State, 773 N.E.2d 239, 245 (Ind. 2002);  see
also Sloane v. State, 686 N.E.2d 1287, 1291 (Ind.  Ct.  App.  1997)  (noting
that the plain view doctrine “stands for the premise that objects which  are
in plain view of an officer who rightfully occupies  a  particular  location
can be seized without a warrant and are  admissible  as  evidence”),  trans.
denied.  Here, pursuant to a warrant, officers seized  the  very  contraband
for which they were specifically searching.   And  at  trial  there  was  no
challenge made to the contraband’s admissibility.  In essence  an  exception
to the warrant requirement is not at issue here.   Rather  the  term  “plain
view” in the context of this case is used in a more generic  sense,  namely:
the contraband is in a location where it can be “plainly  viewed”  and  “the
incriminating character of  the  evidence  is  immediately  apparent.”   See
Houser v. State, 678 N.E.2d 95, 101 (Ind. 1997).

      The record shows that the  drugs  in  this  case  were  found  in  the
basement laundry room of the Mutz Court residence in “cabinets and cans  and
closed stuff.”  R. at 117, 159.  More specifically Jeffrey  Krider,  one  of
the officers on the scene who testified at trial, said  that  in  conducting
the search he first went to the “laundry room area” to a  “corner  cabinet.”
Id. at 74. The following exchange then occurred:

      [Deputy Prosecutor]:   And did you open the cabinet door?


      [Officer Krider]:      Yes.


      [Deputy Prosecutor]:   What did you see when you  opened  the  cabinet
      door?


      [Officer Krider]:      There was a cigar box,  a  couple  of  bags  of
      baggies, I think a can of tar remover.


      [Deputy Prosecutor]:    Did you take anything out?


      [Officer Krider]:      The cigar box.


      [Deputy Prosecutor]:   Did you open it?


      [Officer Krider]:      Yes I did.


      [Deputy Prosecutor]:   And what did you observe inside of it?


      [Officer Krider]:      There was a baggie containing a  white  powdery
      substance.


      [Deputy Prosecutor]:   What did you believe that to be at the time?


      [Officer Krider]:      Based on my training and experience as a Police
      Officer Cocaine.


Id. at 75.  The other on-the-scene officer testifying at trial,  Sgt.  Brian
Roach, also began his search “[i]n the laundry room, which is just  off  the
basement.”  Id. at 159.  Sgt. Roach testified that  Officer  Krider  pointed
out to him the cabinet and  cigar  box  which  he  removed.   The  following
relevant exchange occurred:

      [Deputy Prosecutor]:   Once you removed the cigar box  what  else  did
      you find?


      [Sgt. Roach]:          It was a tin can, maybe a fifty can, [that] you
      see during  Christmas season, it  was  underneath  the  cigar  box,  I
      opened it up and found digital scales then there was also  a  sandwich
      bag, and inside the sandwich bag was a  yellowish  rocklike  substance
      which I thought was Crack Cocaine.


Id. at 162-63.  Sgt. Roach also testified that the scales were concealed  in
a “black folded leather case.”  Id.  After Sgt. Roach  testified  about  his
search of the cabinets, the following exchange occurred:

      [Deputy Prosecutor]:   All right where did you move to next?


      [Sgt. Roach]:          I don’t know specifically next, but  eventually
      I found my way to below the cabinets,  there  were  some  five  gallon
      buckets like paint buckets stacked, the one on top was either  red  or
      orange, I opened it up and inside it  was  a  larger  bag  of  what  I
      believed to be marijuana a green leafy substance.


Id. at 165-66.  When asked what else he found in the basement laundry  room,
Sgt. Roach testified, “[O]n top of those same cabinets was  a  gray  plastic
bag upon opening it, there were a glass jar, measuring cup, a  spoon  and  a
pots [sic].  They  all  had  a  white  powdery  residue.   Those  items  are
commonly used to turn powdered cocaine or cocaine hydrochloride  into  Crack
cocaine, or Cocaine base.”  Id. at 168.

      The record makes clear  that  none  of  the  drugs  and  paraphernalia
seized by the officers  was  in  a  location  where  it  could  be  “plainly
viewed.”  With the exception of  the  cookware  with  cocaine  residue,  all
items were hidden out of view inside of closed containers.   And  even  with
respect to the cookware, it was found inside a bag which an  officer  opened
to determine the contents.  Further,  the  incriminating  character  of  the
contraband was not immediately apparent.  See Lampkins, 685  N.E.2d  at  700
(noting that the  principle  of  plain  view  is  invoked  “only  where  the
incriminating character of  the  contraband  is  immediately  apparent”  and
declaring that a “closed Tylenol bottle does not  constitute  contraband  in
plain view”).


      We also observe that  the  “plain  view”  additional  circumstance  is
generally applicable where the defendant is physically present  at  or  near
the location where the contraband is  found.   See,  e.g.,  id.  at  699-700
(defendant in automobile where  contraband  found);  Person  v.  State,  764
N.E.2d 743, 751 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002) (defendant  exited  bedroom  where  gun
was found), trans. denied; Conrad v. State, 747 N.E.2d 575,  583  (Ind.  Ct.
App. 2001) (defendant asleep in  bedroom  where  contraband  found),  trans.
denied; Tardy v. State, 728 N.E.2d 904, 908 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000)  (defendant
found in bathroom where cocaine was located behind the toilet),  trans.  not
sought; contra Ladd v. State, 710 N.E.2d  188,  191  (Ind.  Ct.  App.  1999)
(defendant not present when drugs found in his home but holding  that  drugs
were in plain view and in close proximity  to  items  owned  by  defendant),
trans. not sought.


      When contraband is found in  plain  view  on  premises  that  are  not
possessed exclusively by the defendant and the defendant is  nowhere  around
we fail to see how, without  more,  an  inference  can  be  drawn  that  the
defendant knows of the presence of drugs.  Indeed  we  have  said  that  the
plain view additional  circumstance  means  “within  the  defendant’s  plain
view.”  Henderson, 715 N.E.2d at 836.  Here, not only  were  the  contraband
items not plainly viewable even by the officers conducting the  search,  but
also Gee was not present when the items were seized.  In  sum,  evidence  of
the plain view additional circumstance was insufficient  to  show  that  Gee
had the intent to maintain dominion and control over the contraband.

 Contraband in close proximity to other items associated with the defendant?

      As an additional circumstance supporting the claim that Gee was  aware
of the presence and character of the seized contraband, the State relies  on
supposed trial court testimony that several personal  effects  belonging  to
Gee were found in close proximity  to  the  drugs.   It  is  true  that  the
mingling of the contraband with other items owned by  the  defendant  is  an
additional circumstance demonstrating the  probability  that  the  defendant
knew of the presence and character of the controlled  substance.   Id.;  see
also Allen v. State, 798 N.E.2d 490, 501-02 (Ind.  Ct.  App.  2003)  (noting
that the “[l]ocation of the drugs in close proximity to items owned  by  the
defendant” is an additional circumstance tending to  buttress  an  inference
that the defendant intended  to  maintain  dominion  and  control  over  the
contraband), trans. not sought.


      The record shows that  several  receipts  and  invoices  from  various
businesses, all of which bore Gee’s name, were found  in  a  drawer  in  the
kitchen  of  the  house.   R.  at  79-85.   However,  no   drugs   or   drug
paraphernalia  were  discovered  in  the  kitchen.   Other  personal   items
belonging to Gee, a social security card,  and  a  birth  certificate,  were
located in an upstairs bedroom that Gee  occupied,  but  no  drugs  or  drug
paraphernalia were found  anywhere  in  the  vicinity.   By  contrast  in  a
bedroom occupied by Lewis, officers found a lock box under a bed  containing
$5000 in $20 bills.  Id. at 89-90,  92-93.   According  to  Officer  Krider,
this particular dollar denomination is common in illegal  drug  sales.   Id.
at 120.  The record shows that  the  only  personal  items  found  near  the
contraband were several photographs in which Gee appeared  with  his  cousin
Lewis along with  other  people.   The  photographs  were  located  “in  the
cabinet underneath  the  shelf.”   Id.  at  186.   However  when  asked  the
question, “You don’t know who own [sic] those pictures,  whether  they  were
[Lewis’] pictures or [Gee’s] pictures, you  don’t  know  do  you?”   Officer
Krider answered, “[C]orrect.”  Id. at 120.


      It is clear that  the  photographs  are  the  only  items  that  could
plausibly qualify  as  having  been  mingled  with  the  confiscated  drugs.
However absent any evidence of who owned the photographs we cannot  say  the
location of the drugs was somehow associated with Gee’s  personal  property.
See, e.g., Davenport, 464 N.E.2d at 1307 (Ind. 1984) (describing that  in  a
house occupied by the defendant and his girlfriend, drugs were  found  in  a
dresser drawer along with a man’s watch and several  syringes  in  the  only
bedroom in the residence).

                    Any other “additional circumstances”?


      The listed additional circumstances identified in  Henderson  are  not
exclusive.  Rather, the State is required to show that  whatever  factor  or
set  of  factors  it  relies  upon  in  support  of  the  intent  prong   of
constructive possession, those factors or set of  factors  must  demonstrate
the probability that  the  defendant  was  aware  of  the  presence  of  the
contraband and its illegal character.  In this case the  State  argues  that
the drugs were found in “a common area, the cabinets of the laundry  [room]”
to support its view that Gee had constructive possession of the cocaine  and
marijuana.  Br. of Appellee at 6.  “[T]he  place  where  the  contraband  is
found” has been identified as an additional circumstance from which a  trier
of fact could conclude that the defendant had the requisite intent in a non-
exclusive constructive possession case.  Carnes v. State,  480  N.E.2d  581,
586 (Ind. Ct. App. 1985), trans. not sought.  In Carnes police discovered  a
large bag of marijuana in the kitchen  refrigerator.   The  court  observed,
“Human experience tells us that adult members of a household are in and  out
[of] a kitchen refrigerator as a matter of course. . . . [I]t  is  factually
unlikely  that  a  large  container  of  marijuana  located  in  a   kitchen
refrigerator in  the  residence  of  adults  would  go  unnoticed  by  those
adults.”  Id. at 587.   Here,  by  contrast,  the  drugs  were  found  in  a
basement laundry room.  Unlike a kitchen, which in  many  households  serves
as a gathering place for social and familial interaction, a laundry room  is
usually frequented only  by  whomever  has  the  task  of  washing  clothes.
Similarly, unlike a refrigerator nothing in human experience tells  us  that
anyone in particular, as a matter of course, is in and out of  laundry  room
cabinets.  In essence, although the place where the contraband is found  may
serve as  an  additional  circumstance  to  support  the  inference  that  a
defendant knew of the presence of the contraband and its illegal  character,
the location of the contraband in this case supports no such inference.   In
sum, the evidence was not sufficient to show that Gee  was  in  constructive
possession of the marijuana and cocaine found in the Mutz  Court  residence.
We therefore reverse his convictions.



                                 Conclusion


      The judgment of the trial court is reversed.

Shepard, C.J., and Dickson, Sullivan and Boehm, JJ., concur.

-----------------------
1 Gary D. Gee and Lewis R. Gee were scheduled to be  tried  as  codefendants
in this case.  However, Lewis R. Gee did not appear for trial and was  tried
in absentia.  In any event he is not a  party  to  this  appeal.   To  avoid
confusion we refer to  Lewis  R.  Gee  as  “Lewis,”  and  we  refer  to  the
defendant Gary D. Gee as “Gee.”