COMMONWEALTH vs. JAMIL J. CAMPBELL
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
September 30, 2016
475 Mass. 611 (2016)
Suffolk. February 10, 2016. - September 30, 2016. Present: GANTS, C.J., SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, DUFFLY, & LENK, JJ.
A judge in the Boston Municipal Court properly allowed the criminal defendant‘s motion to suppress evidence that a State police trooper discovered during an inventory search of the motor vehicle that the defendant was driving, in preparation for impoundment, where the trooper lacked probable cause to believe that the defendant was operating the vehicle without authority based solely on the absence of the defendant‘s name on the rental agreement that the defendant produced and the fact that the agreement stated explicitly that no other drivers were permitted besides the listed renter, in that authorization to use a rental vehicle may be provided by renters as well as by the rental company in at least some circumstances and punishing a person who uses a vehicle with the permission of someone who is in lawful possession of the vehicle (such as a renter) does not advance the purpose behind
COMPLAINT received and sworn to in the Roxbury Division of the Boston Municipal Court Department on August 19, 2013.
After transfer to the Central Division, a pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Charles R. Johnson, J.
An application for leave to prosecute an interlocutory appeal was allowed by Lenk, J., in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk, and the case was reported by her to the Appeals Court. The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for direct appellate review.
1Justices Spina, Cordy, and Duffly participated in the deliberation on this case prior to their retirements.
Rebecca A. Jacobstein, Committee for Public Counsel Services (Aditi Goel, Committee for Public Counsel Services, also present) for the defendant.
LENK, J. On August 17, 2013, at approximately 4:30 P.M., Trooper Thomas Hannon of the State police stopped a vehicle driven by the defendant for failing to stop at a stop sign. The vehicle had been rented by the defendant‘s mother, who has a last name that is different from the defendant‘s. Upon request, the defendant provided Hannon with a valid driver‘s license and the rental agreement. The agreement listed only the mother as the renter and stated, “[N]o other drivers permitted.” Hannon concluded that the defendant was using the vehicle without authority, in violation of
This case is before us on the Commonwealth‘s interlocutory appeal from a Boston Municipal Court judge‘s order allowing the defendant‘s motion to suppress the handgun, the ammunition, and statements he made to police. We conclude that the inventory search was unlawful under the circumstances and, therefore, affirm the allowance of the motion to suppress.
Background and prior proceedings. The defendant was arrested on August 17, 2013, and charged with unlawful possession of a firearm,
Hannon testified as follows. On the day of the seizure, he was monitoring the flow of traffic at the Heath Street rotary in the Roxbury section of Boston. He explained that there had been sev-
Hannon did not remember asking the defendant during the traffic stop whether he knew the person whose name was on the rental agreement, or if that person had given him permission to drive the vehicle. Hannon stated that he did not attempt to contact the rental car company to determine whether the defendant was authorized to drive the vehicle, and did not recall whether a civilian dispatcher had telephoned on his behalf. Nonetheless, because the defendant‘s name was not on the rental agreement, Hannon informed the defendant that the vehicle was going to be impounded for unauthorized use. Although Hannon had not yet decided whether he would place the defendant under arrest, he placed the defendant in the rear passenger seat of his police cruiser, uncuffed, and initiated an inventory search of the rental vehicle.
Hannon further testified that he found the handgun in the center console during that search. At that point, he informed the defendant of the Miranda rights and asked whether the defendant had a license to carry the weapon. According to Hannon, the defendant then stated, “No. I got problems with some dudes and bought the gun on the street for my protection.” Hannon also said that, at some point during the stop, he learned from a police dispatcher that there was a default warrant for the defendant for failing to appear for jury duty.
McCarthy testified that he arrived at the scene after hearing a request for assistance on his police radio, and saw the defendant
The defendant, on the other hand, testified that he told Hannon that his mother had rented the vehicle and had given him permission to use it. The defendant also testified that Hannon had spoken with the defendant‘s mother on the telephone during the traffic stop, and that the defendant‘s mother told the trooper that the defendant had permission to drive the vehicle. The defendant denied knowing that there was a firearm in the vehicle, and stated that he did not recall what he had said to police during the stop. The defendant also denied that he had been informed of the Miranda rights until he was under arrest and being driven to the State police barracks. He testified that he said nothing to police after being informed of those rights.
The motion judge allowed the defendant‘s motion to suppress in a handwritten, signed order that was dated July 1, 2014. The judge wrote,
“Allowed: Trooper Hannon lawfully stopped [the defendant‘s] vehicle for failure to stop it at a posted stop sign as required by law. However, the absence of [the defendant‘s] name on the [rental] agreement without more is not sufficient justification under the circumstances presented for the arrest of [the defendant] ‘for [u]se without authority’ or any of the other consequences which befell [the defendant] as a result of the traffic stop by [the trooper]. The gun, ammunition and the statements made by [the defendant] should be suppressed and not admitted at trial.”
On July 5, 2014, the motion judge retired, and the case was assigned to another judge for trial. The motion judge‘s suppression order was entered on July 11, 2014.
On July 18, 2014, the Commonwealth filed a motion to vacate the suppression order on the ground that the order was entered after the motion judge‘s retirement. On August 4, 2014, the Commonwealth filed an application in the county court for leave to
Discussion. In reviewing an order allowing a motion to suppress, we consider “the facts found or implicitly credited by the motion judge, supplemented by additional undisputed facts where they do not detract from the judge‘s ultimate findings.” Commonwealth v. Jessup, 471 Mass. 121, 127-128 (2015). We accept the judge‘s subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error, “but conduct an independent review of [the judge‘s] ultimate findings and conclusions of law.” Id. at 129, quoting Commonwealth v. Scott, 440 Mass. 642, 646 (2004). “[O]ur duty is to make an independent determination of the correctness of the judge‘s application of constitutional principles to the facts as found.” Commonwealth v. Mercado, 422 Mass. 367, 369 (1996).
The Commonwealth contests the motion judge‘s conclusion that the inventory search of the vehicle was unlawful. Whether an inventory search is lawful “is contingent on the propriety of the impoundment of the [vehicle].” Commonwealth v. Oliveira, 474 Mass. 10, 13 (2016), quoting Commonwealth v. Brinson, 440 Mass. 609, 612 (2003). The appropriateness of impoundment, in turn, is guided by a “touchstone of reasonableness.” Commonwealth v. Eddington, 459 Mass. 102, 109 n.12 (2011).4 Where police have probable cause to believe that a vehicle is being operated illegally, impoundment may be appropriate in some circumstances even if the driver is not under arrest. See Commonwealth v. Daley, 423 Mass. 747, 750 (1996) (“Here, the fact that the defendant was not under arrest is irrelevant to the propriety of the impoundment because the vehicle at issue was unregistered, uninsured, and had attached plates belonging to another vehicle“).5 Even so, “an inventory search must not be a ruse for a general rummaging in order to discover incriminating
The Commonwealth argues that impoundment was appropriate here because Hannon had probable cause to believe that the defendant was using the vehicle without authority, in violation of
1. Use without authority. Although there was conflicting testimony at the motion hearing regarding the extent to which Hannon investigated the defendant‘s authority to drive the vehicle at the time of the stop, we infer from the written order that the judge found that the trooper decided to impound the vehicle based solely on the absence of the defendant‘s name on the rental agreement and the fact that the agreement stated explicitly that no other drivers were permitted besides the listed renter. Given the testimony described above, that finding was not clearly erroneous. Accordingly, we consider whether that information on its own supplied probable cause to believe that the defendant was using the vehicle without authority, in violation of
a. Statutory construction.
This court has not yet considered what constitutes use of a rental vehicle “without authority” pursuant to
In accordance with these definitions, we previously have noted that the “authority” described in
We think it plain that authorization to use a rental vehicle may be provided by renters as well as by the rental company in at least some circumstances. Under standard rental agreements like the one in this case, the renter, not the rental company, legally possesses the right of control of the vehicle, at least during the rental period. The renter may, for example, decide when to use the vehicle, where to drive it, and whom to invite along for the ride.12 Nonetheless, the Commonwealth argues that a renter‘s right of control is limited by the terms of the rental agreement. In its view, if the rental agreement prohibits use of the vehicle by those whom the agreement has not authorized explicitly, knowing use of this sort violates
Our understanding of “without authority” in the rental context is shaped by “the aims and remedies intended to be advanced by the Legislature . . . as evidenced by other parts of the statute as well.” Quincy City Hosp. v. Rate Setting Comm‘n, 406 Mass. 431, 442 (1990). The other crimes enumerated in
Furthermore, we previously have described
The Commonwealth argues that we should apply the definition of “authorized driver” under
By its own terms, however, the definition in
A renter‘s decision to allow a person who is not a permitted driver according to the rental agreement to drive a rental vehicle may be a breach of that agreement, but it does not also result in
b. Probable cause. Based on our construction of
On the facts of this case, Hannon‘s determination that the defendant violated
2. Inevitable discovery. The Commonwealth argues in the alternative that the motion to suppress should have been denied because the defendant could have been arrested on the default warrant for failure to appear for jury duty and the vehicle impounded on that basis, resulting in a lawful inventory search. “Under the inevitable discovery doctrine, evidence may be admissible as long as the Commonwealth can demonstrate that discovery of the evidence by lawful means was certain as a practical matter, ‘the officers did not act in bad faith to accelerate the discovery of evidence, and the particular constitutional violation is not so severe as to require suppression.’ ” Commonwealth v. Hernandez, 473 Mass. 379, 386 (2015), quoting Commonwealth v. Sbordone, 424 Mass. 802, 810 (1997). In addition, the discovery must have been inevitable under the “circumstances existing at the time of the unlawful seizure” (citation omitted). Commonwealth v. Perrot, 407 Mass. 539, 548 (1990).
Discovery on the basis of the default warrant for failing to appear for jury duty would have required police both to execute the warrant and to impound the rental vehicle after that arrest. Yet neither trooper testified at the suppression hearing that they had intended to take these steps at the time of the illegal seizure, and the record does not make clear whether the troopers had even learned of the existence of the default warrant before the seizure occurred. Thus, the Commonwealth has not shown that it is “certain as a practical matter” that the seized evidence would have been discovered but for the impoundment of the defendant‘s vehicle based on unauthorized use. See Commonwealth v. Barros,
Conclusion. The impoundment of the rental vehicle was not proper, because the police did not have probable cause to believe that the defendant was operating it in violation of
Order allowing motion to suppress affirmed.
Notes
R.M. Perkins & R.N. Boyce, Criminal Law 333 (3d ed. 1982).“The social problem back of this legislation is well known. When the automobile began to appear and was limited to the possession of a few of the more fortunate members of the community, many persons who ordinarily respected the property rights of others, yielded to the temptation to drive one of these new contrivances without the consent of the owner. This became so common that the term ‘joyrider’ was coined to refer to the person who indulged in such unpermitted use of another‘s car. . . . The chief harm was due to the fact that the ‘joyrider’ was frequently not a skillful driver, and sometimes unintentionally damaged the car while using it.”
