Opinion
Jоseph Patrick Arnold appeals from his conviction for receiving stolen property in violation of Code § 18.2-108. This stolen property was discovered in his possession when a car in which he was a passenger was stopped for failure to display proper license tags. On appeal, he argues (1) that he had standing to object to the search of the vehicle and shopping bag, and (2) that the trial court erred in concluding that the search of the shopping bag was a valid inventory search rather than a pretext for an investigatory search, thereby denying his motion to suppress. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm appellant’s conviction.
On April 25, 1992, Officer Craig stopped the car in which appellant and two others were traveling because the car displayed no rеar license tags. At Craig’s request, the driver produced a rental agreement which showed that the car had been rented the previous day in Georgia, but he produced no driver’s license, stating that his license had expired. Although Craig requested it, the passengers produced no identification. Craig also testified that the two people who had signed the rental agreement were not in the car, but he did not explain how he arrived at this conclusion. The record contains no affirmative evidence that appellant and the оther occupants unlawfully possessed the car. Craig testified that, based on the information available to him at that time, he decided to arrest the driver and impound the vehicle be cause it was obstructing traffic and neither of the car’s passengers had produced a driver’s license entitling him to move the car to another location.
Craig then asked the driver if the car contained any contraband, drugs, or stolen property. The driver responded that Craig would have to ask appellant. Appellant said Craig would havе to ask the driver. During that time, while checking the car’s vehicle identification number, Craig noticed a plastic Hecht’s shopping bag in the rear passenger seat next to appellant. Based on the manner in which the bag was folded and his experience in retail security, Craig concluded that the bag might be lined with foil, a method used by shoplifters to disable the anti-theft tags commonly placed on clothing. Craig testified that, in his experience, “a plastic . . . bag,” after being folded down or rolled up, “will tend to open back up on its own.” If a bag is foil-lined, by contrast, “it’s as if you fold up a piece of foil, tin foil, into a roll, it stays that way. It . . . keeps its rigidity. It doesn’t open back up.” Craig also knew that possession of such a device is a Class 3 misdemeanor in Virginia. Craig then touched the bag, which “felt like it was lined with some type оf rigid material.” Upon searching the bag, Craig found that it contained six dresses still on the hangers with security tags on them. During the subsequent inventory search, Craig found other stolen items and related paraphernalia in the vehicle. Although Craig asserted that the search at the scene was an inventory search, he admitted that he did not actually prepare a written inventory at the scene. Craig learned later that the vehicle’s license tags were valid under Georgia law.
Based on Officer Craig’s testimony (neither of the defendants testified), the trial сourt concluded that the search was proper as an inventory search. The Commonwealth never challenged the motion based on lack of standing, and the trial court did not discuss standing in ruling on the motion. Appellant then entered a plea of guilty conditioned on the preservation of his right to appeal the denial of the motion to suppress. Neither the parties nor the court specifically addressed the issue of standing at the trial level.
We consider first whether appellant had standing to contest the search оf the vehicle and shopping bag. This Court has not had occasion to consider this precise issue before. In
Josephs
v.
Commonwealth,
We conclude that appellant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the shopping bag located at his feet and, therefore, under the test enunciated above, had standing to contest Officer Craig’s search of the bag. Contrary to the Commonwealth’s assertions, the Supreme Court’s holding in
Rakas
v.
Illinois,
In this case, by contrast, appellant was present in the car at the time of the search, and the bag was clearly within his reach. The issue here is not so much appellant’s legitimate exрectation of privacy in the vehicle itself as it is in the closed shopping bag and its contents.
See
LaFave,
supra,
§ 11.3(e), at 331. This is precisely the issue addressed by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in
United States
v.
Salazar,
Although the Commonwealth cites
United States v. Hargrove,
II.
Appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress on the ground that the search of the shopping bag violated his fourth amendment rights. On appeal, the burden is on appellant to show, considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, that the denial of the motion to suppress constituted reversible error.
See Fore v. Commonwealth,
The оfficer’s actions were supported by probable cause developed pursuant to the plain view exception to the warrant requirement.
The theory of the plain view doctrine is that an individual has no reasonable expectation of privaсy in items that are in plain view.
Horton v. California,
This case is controlled by the reasoning of
Texas
v.
Brown,
We applied this same reasoning in
Carson
to uphold the seizure of a cut-off straw seen between a motorist’s legs.
Theuniqueness of the straw’s size distinguishes it from straws one would usually encounter for legitimate purposes.
Although possible, it is highly unlikely that a straw this size would have a legitimate use. Even assuming a legitimate use exists . . ., probable cause to believе the straw is evidence of a crime may nonetheless be established. Even the uninflated, tied-off balloon in Texas v. Brown may have been simply a remnant of a birthday party and not an item used for carrying narcotics. However, an investigating officer does not have to “deal with hard certainties, but with probabilities,” and is permitted to make “common-sense conclusions about human behavior” in assessing a situation.
Id.
The holding in
Harris v. Commonwealth,
in which the Virginia Supreme Court held that the officer did not have probable cause to believe that the object detected was “evidence of a crime, contraband or otherwise subject to seizure,” does not require a different result. In
Harris,
a police officer conducting a lawful patdown search detected a film canister in the motorist’s pocket.
It is true that [the officer] knew from his personal experience . . . that certain people kept their narcotics аnd drugs in film canisters and “things of that nature.” However, law-abiding citizens, on a daily basis, also use film canisters to store film, which is a legitimate use. At best, [the officer] had a “hunch” and a report from an [unreliable] informant.
Id.
at 154,
Although none of the aforementioned cases is precisely оn point, we think the information available to Officer Craig was sufficient to provide him with probable cause to believe that the shopping bag was evidence of a crime, contraband or otherwise subject to seizure. Although as in Harris, the shopping bag in this case was оf the sort that law-abiding citizens put to legitimate use on a daily basis, Officer Craig testified that the manner in which the bag was folded led him to suspect, based on his training and experience, that it was lined with aluminum foil for use as a shoplifting aid. We hold therefore, under the reasoning of Brown and Carson, that the seizure and search of appellant’s bag did not violate the fourth amendment.
Affirmed.
Moon, C.J., and Duff, S.J., * concurred.
Notes
The United States Supreme Court has held that
a constitutional distinction between “worthy” and “unworthy” containers would be improper. Even though such a distinction perhaps could evolve in a series of cases in which papеr bags, locked trunks, lunch buckets, and orange crates were placed on one side of the line or the other, the central purpose of the Fourth Amendment forecloses such a distinction.
United States v. Ross,
Judge Charles H. Duff was appointed Senior Judge effective July 1, 1993, pursuant to Code § 17-116.01:1.
