*1 Before WILKINSON, Chief Judge, WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge, and FRIEDMAN, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation. _________________________________________________________________ *2 Affirmed by published opinion. Chief Judge Wilkinson wrote the opinion, in which Judge Williams and Judge Friedman joined. _________________________________________________________________ COUNSEL
ARGUED: Patrick Joseph Smith, PATRICK J. SMITH & ASSO- CIATES, Rockville, Maryland, for Appellants. Karen Federman Henry, Principal Counsel for Appeals, Rockville, Maryland, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Bernadette Sweeney, PATRICK J. SMITH & ASSOCIATES, Rockville, Maryland, for Appellants. Charles W. Thompson, Jr., County Attorney, Linda B. Thall, Chief Counsel, Division of Special Projects, Rockville, Maryland, for Appellees. _________________________________________________________________ OPINION
WILKINSON, Chief Judge:
This appeal involves constitutional and state law claims by Everett, Tammy, and Marc Alvarez against several police officers employed by Montgomery County, Maryland. The Alvarezes argue principally that the officers' warrantless entry into the backyard of their home violated the Fourth Amendment. We disagree. The Fourth Amend- ment does not prohibit police, attempting to speak with a homeowner, from entering the backyard when circumstances indicate they might find him there; thus we conclude the district court properly granted summary judgment on the constitutional claim. We also hold that the district court properly granted summary judgment on plaintiffs' state claims.
I.
On June 24, 1995, Everett and Tammy Alvarez held a party at their home to celebrate the twenty-first birthday of their son, Marc. Marc invited approximately seventy to seventy-five people to the party. The family provided food and refreshments, including several kegs of beer. During the party, the kegs were left unattended on the back *3 patio. Guests congregated on the back patio and in an adjacent recre- ation room. During the evening, the Montgomery County police received a complaint of an underage drinking party in the neighborhood. The 911 call was announced over the police radio. Responding to the call, Officer John P. Romack, a member of the Department's Alcohol Enforcement Unit, met several other officers and drove toward the area. As he proceeded down Sunrise Drive, Officer Romack noticed multiple alcohol containers in front of the Alvarezes' home and sev- eral cars parked there in an "odd" fashion. Suspecting that they had located the underage drinking party, the officers exited their cruisers. While the other officers waited by the driveway, Officer Romack approached the front door intending to notify the Alvarezes of the complaint and to request that no one drive away from the party while intoxicated. When Officer Romack reached the front stoop, another officer noticed a sign indicating the party was around back and informed Officer Romack about it. The sign, affixed to a lamppost in the front driveway, read "Party In Back"; an arrow on the sign pointed toward the backyard. As it had rained earlier in the day, Everett Alvarez had posted the sign so guests would go around back rather than track mud through the house. With- out knocking, Officer Romack walked away from the front door, read the sign, then entered the backyard with the other officers. Once in the backyard, the officers saw several guests, and Officer Romack asked to speak with the party's host or the homeowner.
While waiting, he observed Ashley Manning, who appeared to be underage, drinking what he believed to be beer from a cup. Officer Romack asked Ashley her age; she responded that she was twenty- one years old. Officer Romack then asked to see her identification; Ashley produced a driver's license which Officer Romack immedi- ately suspected to be fictitious. At this point, Marc Alvarez confronted Officer Romack, identify- ing himself as the party's host and demanding to know why the offi- cers were at the house. Officer Romack explained that they were responding to a complaint of underage drinking and that Ashley had just given him a false identification. Marc swore at Officer Romack, *4 so the officers returned to the front of the home with Ashley to verify whether her license was fictitious. In front of the Alvarezes' home, Ashley admitted that she was only nineteen years old and that Marc, knowing her age, had invited her to the party. Everett Alvarez then came to the front of the house, and Officer Romack told him that he wished to speak to his son. Everett went inside and explained to Marc that the officers wanted to talk to him. Finding the situation "ridiculous," Marc initially was reluctant to go, but his father soon persuaded him to return outside. Once outside, Marc admitted that he knew Ashley. Officer Romack then issued Marc a citation for furnishing an alcoholic beverage to a person under twenty-one years of age. See Md. Ann. Code art. 27, § 401A. At a trial on the citation, a judge granted Marc's motion for judgment of acquittal and entered a verdict of not guilty.
Marc and his parents subsequently sued Montgomery County, county officials, and several police officers, alleging constitutional violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and raising pendent state claims. The district court dismissed the claims. On appeal, the Alvarezes argue only that the officers' warrantless entry into their backyard vio- lated the Fourth Amendment; Marc Alvarez also presses several Maryland tort claims.
II.
We first address the Alvarezes' constitutional claim. They maintain that the officers' warrantless entry into their backyard constituted an unreasonable search. The district court found that the officers did not violate the Fourth Amendment and, alternatively, that they were enti- tled to qualified immunity.
A.
Not every police encounter with a person or approach to a building
implicates the Fourth Amendment. For example, police may question
a person without committing a seizure where "a reasonable person
would feel free to decline the officers' requests or otherwise terminate
the encounter." Florida v. Bostick,
In line with this reasonableness approach, this circuit has permitted
law enforcement officers to enter a person's backyard without a war-
rant when they have a legitimate law enforcement purpose for doing
so. In United States v. Bradshaw, for example, we held that federal
agents were "clearly entitled" to go onto a defendant's premises in
order to talk to him.
Other circuits likewise have found that the Fourth Amendment
does not invariably forbid an officer's warrantless entry into the area
*6
surrounding a residential dwelling even when the officer has not first
knocked at the front door. For example, in United States v. Daoust,
the First Circuit held that police officers, who found the front door of
the defendant's house inaccessible, did not violate the Fourth Amend-
ment when they went around to the back.
Applying these principles, we conclude that the officers did not violate the Fourth Amendment. Their initial entry into the backyard was not unreasonable. And the officers' conduct after they entered the backyard did not exceed their legitimate purpose for being there.
The officers' entry into the backyard satisfied the Fourth Amend-
ment's reasonableness requirement. They were responding to a 911
call about an underage drinking party and, based on the alcohol con-
tainers and the awkwardly parked cars, believed they had found the
party. They entered the Alvarezes' property simply to notify the
homeowner or the party's host about the complaint and to ask that no
one drive while intoxicated. Thus, like the agents in Bradshaw, the
officers in this case had a "legitimate reason" for entering the Alva-
rezes' property "unconnected with a search of such premises . . . ."
We turn next to Marc Alvarez's tort claims under Maryland law. These include trespass, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecu- tion. The district court granted the officers summary judgment on these claims.
Marc argues that the officers' unauthorized entry into the backyard
constituted a trespass under Maryland law. We disagree. "It is not a
_________________________________________________________________
*Because we conclude that the officers did not violate the Fourth
Amendment, we need not address their claim of qualified immunity.
*8
trespass for an officer of the law to go upon another's premises in the
line of his duty . . . ." Heinze v. Murphy ,
Q. Did you ever touch or come into physical contact with any of the defendants?
A. No.
Furthermore, the encounter between the officers and Marc was con-
sensual. Marc went outside at the request of his father, not in response
to an officer's show of authority. As Everett Alvarez explained,
"[Marc is] respectful, he does basically what I tell him." Marc's
response to his father's request does not render his decision to go out-
side nonconsensual. Moreover, Officer Romack clearly had legal jus-
tification to request to speak with Marc, the party's host, for he had
observed a nineteen year-old consuming a beverage at Marc's party.
See Ashton v. Brown,
Finally, Marc contends that issuing the citation constituted a mali-
cious prosecution. We disagree. "One of the elements of malicious
*9
prosecution which a plaintiff has the burden of proving is the absence
of probable cause for the underlying criminal proceeding." Palmer
Ford, Inc. v. Wood,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED
