Lead Opinion
We granted James Heard’s application for interlocutory review of the trial court’s order denying his motion to suppress evidence found during a stop of his vehicle. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.
[I]n reviewing a trial court’s decision on a motion to suppress, we construe the evidence most favorably to uphold the findings and judgment, and the trial court’s findings on disputed facts and credibility of the witnesses are adopted unless they are clearly erroneous. Further, because the trial court is the trier of fact, its findings will not be disturbed if any evidence supports them; but the court’s application of the law to undisputed facts is reviewed de novo.1
So viewed, the evidence in this case showed that on July 24,2009, a police captain informed a patrol officer that he had received “some complaints about illegal narcotics,” and that the officer should be on the lookout for an “older model, two-wheel drive, blue Chevy S-10” vehicle; the captain gave the officer no additional information.
Later that evening, the patrol officer saw a vehicle matching that description and began following it. He noticed a 2007 registration decal on the license plate, but he saw no current (2009) decal. The officer initiated a traffic stop based on the suspected tag violation.
The patrol officer walked back to the patrol vehicle and, as he did so, he saw that Heard’s license plate had a current decal affixed; the officer testified that the plate was bent and the decal was “curled up” on the “wrong” or “left” side of the plate.
Upon returning Heard’s documents, the officer told Heard that he had stopped him because he had seen a 2007 decal on the license plate and that “normally, what you do is like when you get the new green tag, you put it on top.” The officer continued, “Now that I get up here, you’re pretty nervous.” The officer asked Heard if there was any reason he was so nervous. Heard replied that the blue lights and the traffic stop made him nervous. The officer asked Heard if he was nervous because he had illegal narcotics or weapons in the vehicle. Heard denied having such items.
The officer next asked Heard if he could search the vehicle. Heard replied that he did not want the vehicle searched, and then stepped out of the vehicle.
Heard moved to suppress the evidence seized from the vehicle, arguing that, among other things, the officer had prolonged the traffic stop without a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. The trial court denied the motion, finding that the stop was valid based on the suspected tag violation, that the detention had not been unreasonably long, and that Heard had consented to the search.
1. Heard does not dispute that the initial traffic stop for the suspected tag violation was valid.
Upon this Court’s review, it is appropriate to examine whether the police diligently pursued a means of investigation that was likely to confirm or dispel their suspicions quickly, during which time it was necessary to detain the defendant. A reasonable time to conduct a traffic stop includes the time necessary to verify the driver’s license, insurance, registration, and to complete any paperwork connected with the citation or a written warning. A reasonable time also includes the time necessary to run a computer check to determine whether there are any outstanding arrest warrants for the driver or the passengers.6
“Once the tasks related to the investigation of the traffic violation and processing of the traffic citation have been accomplished, an officer cannot continue to detain an individual without articulable suspicion.”
Here, the officer testified that the traffic investigation ended when he determined that the vehicle’s registration was valid and that, absent consent to search, Heard was “free to leave” when the officer returned his documents. In fact, the officer could lawfully verify the registration, driver’s license and insurance information, and check for outstanding warrants; but any subsequent interrogation or request for consent had to be supported by reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.
The officer expressly confirmed at the hearing that after his investigation of the suspected traffic violation had ended, he “extended the detention by asking Heard questions about his nervous behavior,” and that he was “then launching into a drug investigation.” The officer testified that he asked those questions because he thought there might be contraband in the vehicle; he said that his suspicion was based on Heard’s nervous behavior and the lookout information he (the officer) had received before the traffic stop.
In this case, the basis of the officer’s suspicion was insufficient to justify the continued or second detention.
Nervousness is not sufficient to justify an investigative detention.
The state asserts that “the stop was not unlawfully prolonged as ... no more than four minutes” elapsed from the time Heard stopped his vehicle until he consented to the search.
However, in assessing the reasonableness of an investigative stop, “[n]o ‘bright-line’ or rigid time limitation is imposed.”
Here, the purpose of the traffic stop had been effectuated, and no developments occurred after the vehicle was validly stopped which provided the officer with a reasonable basis to suspect that there were illegal drugs in the vehicle.
As discussed in Division l,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Lewis v. State,
See OCGA §§ 40-2-8 (b) (pertinently providing that any vehicle which is required to be registered and which does not have attached to the rear thereof a numbered license plate and current revalidation decal affixed to a corner or corners of the license plate as designated by the commissioner, if required, shall be stored at owner’s risk and expense); 40-2-8 (b) (2) (A)
Notably, in its brief the state has cited no law requiring the decal to be affixed to the right side of the license plate.
Heard did not testify at the hearing, and his reason for exiting the vehicle at that time is not clear from the hearing transcript. However, in the audio-videotape recording of the stop (which recording was admitted into evidence and played at the hearing), when the officer commented that Heard’s exit from the vehicle was a sign of his nervousness, Heard replied that he had exited the vehicle because the officer told him to do so; the officer responded that Heard had misunderstood him.
See generally Humphreys, supra at 366-367 (appellant’s motion to suppress based on lack of a basis to stop the vehicle was properly denied because officer was authorized to stop vehicle based on a perceived traffic violation).
Nash v. State,
Weems v. State,
Salmeron v. State,
See State v. Felton,
See Felton, supra; see generally Nash, supra.
See Register v. State,
See Tiller v. State,
See Slocum,
Dominguez, supra at 374-375.
See Register, supra; Dominguez, supra; Nunnally v. State,
Mallarino v. State,
Weems, supra at 751 (1) (citation and punctuation omitted); Nunnally, supra at 188 (2).
Nunnally, supra at 186 (2) (punctuation and footnote omitted).
See id. at 188-189 (2), n. 21.
See Weems, supraat752 (1);Register, supra;Nunnally, supraat 187 (2) (reversingdenial of motion to suppress; the fact that eight minutes elapsed from the time the officer lawfully stopped the suspect’s vehicle for a traffic violation until a drug dog arrived was not determinative of reasonableness, because there was no evidence that the detention lasted no longer than was necessary to effectuate the purpose of the stop and no evidence that the scope of the detention was carefully tailored to its underlying justification); Felton, supra.
Supra.
See Felton, supra; Connor, supra; Smith v. State,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The trial court did not clearly err when it concluded that the officer obtained consent to search Heard’s truck after returning his documents to him and that the brief conversation giving rise to the consent did not impermissibly extend the valid traffic stop at issue here. I therefore respectfully dissent.
As the majority concedes, the initial traffic stop, undertaken for the purpose of investigating the traffic violation of driving without a valid tag, was legal, and the officer returned Heard’s documents to him before seeking consent to search. See Humphreys v. State,
The videotape confirms the trial court’s finding, for example, that the entire encounter, from traffic stop to Heard’s arrest for possession of crack cocaine, lasted “five or six minutes,” and also supports the trial court’s determination that Heard was not being “detained” in the very short time — well under a minute — between the beginning of the officer’s explanation why Heard had been stopped (including why his registration was actually in order) and the
“While knowledge of the right to refuse consent is one factor to be taken into account, the government need not establish such knowledge as the sine qua non of an effective consent.” And just as it “would be thoroughly impractical to impose on the normal consent search the detailed requirements of an effective warning,” so too would it be unrealistic to require police officers to always inform detainees that they are free to go before a consent to search may be deemed voluntary.
Ohio v. Robinette,
The fact that the officer characterized the moments after returning the documents to Heard as a “detention” does not compel the legal conclusion that it was so. Indeed, this trial court explicitly declined to construe the officer’s testimony as showing that the second part of this encounter amounted to a “detention.” Because this conclusion was not clearly erroneous, and because it follows that Heard’s consent to search was not the product of an impermissible detention, we must affirm the denial of Heard’s motion to suppress. See Hayes v. State,
Because I believe that the trial court did not err when it denied Heard’s motion to suppress, I respectfully dissent.
I am authorized to state that Presiding Judge Andrews and Judge Ray join in this dissent.
