STATE of Florida, Appellant,
v.
Noah DICKERSON, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*745 Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Ha T. Dao, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellant.
James Marion Moorman, Public Defender, and Joan Fowler, Assistant Public Defender, Bartow, for Appellee.
COVINGTON, Judge.
The State challenges a trial court order that dismisses a cocaine possession charge against the appellee, Noah Dickerson. We reverse.
On September 28, 2000, the State filed an information charging Dickerson with actual or constructive possession of cocaine in violation of section 893.13(6)(a), Florida Statutes (2000), and giving a false name while being detained or arrested in violation of section 901.36(1), Florida Statutes (2000). Dickerson pleaded guilty to giving a false name and was sentenced to time served. On February 23, 2001, however, pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.190(c)(4), he filed a motion to dismiss the cocaine possession charge. Dickerson alleged that based on the undisputed facts set forth in his motion, the State would be unable to establish a prima facie case for either actual or constructive possession.
In his motion to dismiss, Dickerson alleged that one evening in August 2000, the vehicle he was driving was pulled over for a traffic infraction. As the car was being pulled over, Dickerson's only passenger jumped out of the car and fled the scene. The officer who executed the stop thereafter discovered that Dickerson was driving with a suspended license and had an outstanding arrest warrant. In a search incident to Dickerson's immediate arrest, cocaine was discovered in the detained vehicle. However, no cocaine was seized from his person. Dickerson further asserted that "seized baggies, containing suspect cocaine, were never fingerprinted"; that the subject vehicle did not belong to him; and that the subject cocaine actually belonged to the vehicle's passenger. Dickerson submitted that the passenger, who subsequently fled the scene, revealed the existence of the contraband to Dickerson as the car was being stopped by law enforcement.
On February 27, 2001, the State filed a traverse. The traverse specifically denied certain factual assertions in the motion to dismiss, including Dickerson's claim that he was not in actual or constructive possession of the cocaine. The State alleged that at the time of the stop, Dickerson was found sitting directly upon a single piece of rock cocaine. In addition, the two baggies of cocaine "were found below the driver[']s seat and between the driver's seat and center console" of the subject vehicle. It was further alleged that those baggies were "well within the area of dominion and *746 control of [Dickerson]." The traverse indicated that during the stop, Dickerson gave a false name. Dickerson persisted in doing so until his identity was revealed by a backup officer who knew him. "[I]n a spontaneous statement" Dickerson also "admit[ted] to knowledge of cocaine in the car."
On March 6, 2001, immediately prior to the hearing on Dickerson's motion to dismiss, Dickerson filed a motion in limine. In that motion, he argued for the exclusion from evidence of the single piece of rock cocaine that purportedly was found on the driver's seat of his vehicle. Dickerson claimed that even though the confiscation of that single piece of cocaine was documented on the initial police report, there was no indication that the cocaine rock had ever been sent to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) for testing. In his motion in limine, Dickerson urged that:
In the absence of a proper FDLE scientifically-based, chemical analysis, the only alleged testing of the aforementioned rock is the field testing completed by Officer Larson. This is insufficient for purposes of establishing a predicate for, and subsequently introducing, testimony and evidence regarding a missing rock of suspected crack cocaine during the course of trial.
At the ensuing hearing, Dickerson stipulated to all of the facts set forth in the State's traverse. However, he argued that the traverse was procedurally deficient because it added nothing to the facts set forth in his motion to dismiss. As to Dickerson's motion in limine, the trial court questioned the prosecutor as to the whereabouts of the single piece of rock cocaine. The prosecutor ultimately explained that it was his understanding that the weight of the single cocaine rock simply had been included in the overall gram weight of all the cocaine seized from the vehicle.
The trial court concluded that there was no proof that the single piece of rock cocaine was placed into evidence or that the single cocaine rock was submitted to FDLE for testing. For those reasons, the trial court excluded from evidence the single piece of cocaine itself or any mention thereof. The trial court then determined that because of the exclusion of any evidence relating to the single cocaine rock, the State's traverse was procedurally deficient in that it failed to set forth any disputed issues of material fact that would enable the State to establish a prima facie case of actual or constructive possession.
On appeal, the State contends that the trial court erred in granting Dickerson's motion to dismiss and his motion in limine. The State argues that the allegations of the traverse were sufficient to overcome the motion to dismiss. It also argues that the trial court incorrectly concluded that the exclusion of the single cocaine rock was fatal to the State's case. We agree with both arguments.
The State's traverse to a defendant's motion to dismiss must either specifically dispute the defendant's material factual allegations or add material facts that meet the minimum requirement of a prima facie case. State v. Kalogeropolous,
"[I]n the case of a jointly-occupied vehicle, knowledge and ability to control the contraband may not be inferred, but must be established by independent proof." Downard v. State,
Because the foregoing factual allegations not only suggest that there is some independent proof of Dickerson's knowledge and ability to control the contraband but otherwise give rise to primary inferences of knowledge and ability to control, the State's traverse succeeded in setting forth additional facts that met the minimum requirements of a prima facie case of constructive possession. See Green v. State,
Further, "[i]n considering a(c)(4) motion[,] the trial judge may not try or determine factual issues nor consider the weight of conflicting evidence or the credibility of witnesses...." State v. Lewis,
As to the trial court's order in limine, the comprehensive exclusion of all evidence relating to the single cocaine rockincluding, presumably, prospective testimony regarding the officers' observations *748 of a rock-like substance on the driver's seat of Dickerson's vehicle at the time of the stopwas improper. Because officers may, at the very least, testify to their direct observations under circumstances such as those herein, the trial court's exclusion of all evidence relating to the single piece of rock cocaine was overbroad. For that reason, this court concludes that the trial court's exclusion of all evidence relating to the subject cocaine rock constituted an abuse of discretion.
Based on the foregoing, the trial court's order of dismissal and order in limine are reversed, and this cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
PARKER and ALTENBERND, JJ., Concur.
