Thе defendant, Brian P. Blinn, appeals from a judgment of conviction by a jury of six in the Salem Division of the District Court. The defendant was found guilty of violating G. L. c. 140, § 27 (1984 ed.), 1 for refusing to produce *127 a motel registеr when requested to do so by a State trooper. The defendant now argues that G. L. c. 140, § 27 (1984 ed.), violates the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 14 of the Declaration of Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution. 2 We allowed the defendant’s petition for direct appellate review. We disagree and affirm the сonviction.
The facts are not in dispute. On September 21, 1984, Massachusetts State Trooper Robert Smith went to the Howard Johnson Motor Lodge in Danvers. Trooper Smith asked the defendant, the manager of the motel, to produce the motel’s guest register for inspection. The defendant refused to allow Trooper Smith to see the register unless Trooper Smith obtained a search warrant. Trooper Smith left the motel and returned with a copy of G. L. c. 140, § 27, and again demanded to see the register. Even though the statute required the defendant to show the register to the police, the defendant refused to do so because thе State trooper did not have a search warrant. The trooper again left the motel and returned with two other troopers about an hour and a hаlf later. At this time, the defendant produced the register, but he was subsequently charged with violating G. L. c. 140, § 27, for failing to produce the register for inspection when first requested to do so. At no time did Trooper Smith obtain a search warrant requiring the defendant to produce the guest register for inspection.
Our inquiry begins by examining whether the conduct of the trooper constituted a search in the Fourth Amendment sense. The Fourth Amendment does not prohibit all searches per se, but it does bar police intrusions into areas where a defendant has a “legitimate expectation of privacy in the particular circumstances.”
Commonwealth
v.
Podgurski,
The United States Supreme Court has held that the government “has ‘greater latitude to conduct warrantless inspections of commercial prоperty’ because ‘the expectation of privacy that the owner of commercial property enjoys in such property differs significantly from thе sanctity accorded an individual’s home.’”
Dow Chemical Co.
v.
United States,
476 U.S.
221,
237-238 (1986), quoting
Donovan v. Dewey,
Based on the facts presented at the defendant’s trial, we conclude that the defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the motel’s guest register. In reaching this conclusion, we rely on several factors. First, as noted above, in business premises a person enjoys less of an expectation of privacy than in a home. Second, the guest register at issue was required to be kept by statute, thereby placing the defendant on notiсe that the register was subject to police inspection. The fact that a statute gives advance notice of warrantless inspections, though not determinative, is a factor to be considered in determining whether a defendant’s expectation of privacy is legitimate.
United States
v.
Biswell,
Finally, it is important to note that thе defendant was not the target of a criminal investigation by the State police. Had the police sought the register for the purpose of obtaining evidеnce against the defendant in a criminal proceeding, the defendant arguably may have had an expectation of privacy in the register. However, where, as here, the police are seeking the register to ascertain whether a criminal suspect is registered at the hotel, the hotel managеr’s expectation of privacy in the register is significantly diminished, if it exists at all. The record indicates that the defendant did not know that he was not a criminal suspeсt, but this fact alone is not sufficient to warrant reversal. The fact that the defendant was not the target of a criminal investigation, when combined with the other threе factors discussed above, indicates that the defendant had no legitimate expectation of privacy in the motel register in the circumstances of this case. Accord
King
v.
Tulsa,
The defendant argues that the State trooper’s request to view the register is an administrative search which must meet the standards we set out in
Commonwealth
v.
Lipomi,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
General Laws c. 140, § 27 (1984 ed.), in pertinent part, provides: “Every innholder . . . shall keep or cause to bе kept, in permanent form, a register in which shall be recorded the true name or name in ordinary use and the residence of every person engaging or occupying a private room .... Such register shall be retained by the holder of the license for a period of at least one year after the datе of the last entry therein, and shall be open to the inspection of the licensing authorities, their agents and the police. Whoever *127 violates any provision of this section shall be punished by a fine of not less than one hundred nor more than five hundred dollars or by imprisonment for not more than three months, or both.”
The defendant did not make his State constitutional claim at trial and it cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.
Commonwealth
v.
Cote,
