Abоut ten days before the start of the defendant’s trial on indictments for rape, armed assault with intent to murder, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, two police officers took the victim onto private property, owned by the defendant’s mother-in-law, to view a motor vehicle that was parked near the driveway.
Not more than thirty minutes before the commencement of the trial, the assistant district attorney told defense counsel of the victim’s out-of-court identification of the motor vehicle. Defense counsel moved for a continuance in order to prepare and present approрriate motions. He argued that the recent inspection of the motor vehicle violated his client’s constitutional rights and so tainted the victim’s identification testimony that it should be excluded.
The judge denied the motion for a continuance, no voir dire hearing was held on the admissibility of the identification evidence, and the case went to trial. Because of the suddenness with which the identification issue was presented to defense counsel, in fairness we treat the defendant’s objections as presenting both a request for a continuance and a request for a voir dire hearing on the impermissible suggestiveness of the identification procedure and on the claimed unreasonable search of the motor vehicle.
Although a voir dire is not constitutionally required in all instances in which the admissibility of identification evidencе is challenged, the better course would have been to have conducted a voir dire on the admissibility of the victim’s identification of the motor vehicle. See
Watkins
v.
Sowders,
We are not certain, however, that the intrusion on private property to view the motor vehicle was not a violation of the defendant’s constitutional right against unreasonable searches. We reject any suggestion that, if there was a constitutional violation, the admission of the victim’s testimony of her out-of-court identification of the motor vehicle was harmless error. The defendant was not in a position to present evidence on the warrantless search issue on the day trial started. Therefore, we remand the case for a hearing on this point. If there was а violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights, there will have to be a new trial.
Before stating the reasons for our conclusions, we summarize the case presented against the defendant. On a Friday evening, in October, 1977, between 7 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., the victim was walking on a public way in Hyannis and planning to hitchhike to her home. A man driving a light blue Mustang stopped and offered her a ride. She noted that the car had bucket seаts, a floor shift, a glove compartment, dents on its black dashboard, and wires hanging down from the radio. The driver of the car took her to a somewhat secluded spot. When she rejected his offer to have sexual intercourse, he stabbed her with a knife,
At trial, the victim identified the defendant as her attacker. There was police testimony that the victim made two photographic identifications of the defendant within two days of the incident in circumstances the defendant does not now challenge. On redirect examination, the victim testified that nine days before trial she had seen the same motor vehicle as that operated by hеr assailant, a blue Mustang. At the request of and in the company of two detectives she went to see the vehicle. She recognized the front seats and the dents on the dashboard and also the wires hanging out of the radio in front of the dashboard. On recross-examination, she testified that the car was parked in a private yard. No one opened the car door but she looked in through the passenger window. Thеre was police testimony that the motor vehicle was the same one that the defendant had been seen driving the night of the crimes.
A Barnstable police officer testified that, when questioned at a hospital shortly after the incident, the victim, who was in pain and incoherent, stated that her attacker’s vehicle was “a small vehicle, a Volkswagen-type of vehicle.” She mentioned additionally the buckеt seats, the floor shift, and that there were wires hanging down from the radio. It was the victim’s reference to her attacker’s vehicle as a Volkswagen-type of vehicle that prompted the assistant district attorney to be concerned about her ability to identify the vehicle.
The defendant was found guilty of each of the three crimes. We granted his motion for direct appellate review of his appеal.
1. We consider first the defendant’s contention that the circumstances in which the victim viewed the defendant’s motor vehicle denied him due process of law and a fair trial because it was an impermissibly suggestive confrontation. Relying on
United States
v.
Wade,
No court to our knowledge has applied principles applicable to pretrial identifications of suspects to pretrial identifications of inanimate objects. Those few opinions that have dealt with this issue are unsupportive of the defendant’s argument. In
Inge
v.
Commonwealth,
A Pennsylvania court upheld the admission of identification testimony of a bag and a barrel of a gun which the police showed the witness shortly after the commission of a
Although we are aware of no case in which due process considerations have led to the suppression of an out-of-court identification of an inanimate object, we recognize that, in an extreme case, the degree of suggestiveness of an identification procedure concerning an inanimate object might rise to the level of a denial of due process. Even if constitutional considerations did not apply, an appropriate rule of evidence might require that an identification of an inanimate
The victim’s identification of the defendant’s motor vehicle was not unfairly prejudicial to him. In a,case such as this, the circumstances of the identification were properly submitted to the jury. Defense counsel forcefully cross-examined the victim, pointing out potential weaknesses in her identification. At his request, the jury viewed the Mustang, and counsel pointed to salient features of the motor vehicle not identified by the victim. He argued to the jury that there was а rapist, somewhere at large. The question was appropriately one for the jury, including the suggestiveness of the “confrontation” and the availability of fairer identification procedures (such as a lineup).
Commonwealth
v.
Rodriguez,
2. We deal next with the defendant’s argument that the victim’s viewing of his motor vehicle, shortly before trial in the company of two police officers, was a warrantless, unreasonable search in violation of his constitutional rights. The constitutional protection against unreаsonable searches extends to people and not to places.
Katz
v.
United States,
There is not enough evidence in this record to pass judgment on the Fourth Amendment issue of the admissibility of the identification, even if we were inclined to reach conclusions in the absence of findings by the judge. It seems agreеd that the Mustang was stored on property owned by the defendant’s mother-in-law. The defendant’s wife testified that she had the.use of the Mustang and did use it after the defendant’s pretrial incarceration until she had the Mustang towed to her mother’s property when it became inoperable at another location. There was testimony that the motor vehicle was parked approximately forty feet from a public way, and visible from the public way. It was said to have been parked “near the driveway.” Despite this evidence, we are not aware of certain possibly important facts, such as where the motor vehicle was in relation to the
.
The case is remanded to the Superior Court where a hearing should be held on the reasonableness of the search. The need to remand the case is unfortunate because it could have been avoided had the assistant district attorney obtained a search warrant or had the judge granted the defendant’s request for a hearing on his claim that there had been an unreasonable search. If the judge hearing the matter should conclude that the testimony concerning the victim’s identification of the blue Mustang on the property of the defendant’s mother-in-law must be suppressed, a new
The case is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
It would not have been an abuse of discretion if the judge had denied the request for a continuance and had held a voir dire immediately on the claimed due process violation. The defendant makes no claim that he would have had evidence to present bearing on the suggestivеness of the motor vehicle identification, except through cross-examination of the Commonwealth’s witnesses.
The cited opinions, other than that of the Virginia court discussed above, are less in point.
Buchanan
v.
State,
The other two cases involved “lineups” of personal property. In
Klase
v.
State,
The
Coston
case involved a lineup of motor vehicles.
People
v.
Coston,
Often it would be desirable to conduct a voir dire on a challenge based on a claimed suggestive “confrontation” in the identification of an inanimate object. If an identification was unfairly suggestive, tainted perhaps by what the victim was told or by the circumstances of the “confrontation,” the question would then arise whether the victim should be allowed nevertheless to give an in-court identification of the object because (a) the Commonwealth had shown that the in-court identification had a sourсe independent of the unfair procedures (see
Commonwealth
v.
Jackson,
Because we conclude that there should be a hearing to determine the reasonableness of the search, we decline to speculate on the result of that hearing. We do note two opinions dealing with warrantless searches of driveways that may be instructive. In
United States
v.
Humphries,
In
United States
v.
Magana,
