In the Matter of D.H., Appellant.
Court of Appeals of Texas, Austin.
*956 Tоria J. Finch, Juvenile Public Defender, Austin, TX, for appellant.
Holly Taylor, Assistant District Attorney, Travis County, Austin, TX, for appellee.
Before Justices PATTERSON, PURYEAR and HENSON.
OPINION
DAVID PURYEAR, Justice.
Appellant D.H. was charged with possession of marihuana in a drug-free zone. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. §§ 481.121, .134 (West Supp.2009). She filed a pre-trial motion to suppress, which the trial court overruled. D.H. then pled true pursuant to a plea agreement, and the trial court adjudicated her delinquent and placed her on probation for eight months. On appeal, D.H. complains that the evidence was obtained in violation of her Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable search and seizure. See U.S. Const. amend. IV (barring unreasonable searches and seizures of person or effects). We affirm the trial court's judgment.
Factual Background
In October 2006, officers from the Austin Police Department arrived at Reagan *957 High School to conduct a canine search of the school.[1] D.H., who was sixteen at the time, was a student at the school. Assistant Principal Mike Perez led the officers through the school, allowing the dog to sniff several classrooms on each floor of each building. For every inspection, Perez entеred the classroom and informed the teacher of the sweep. The students were then instructed to leave their property in the classroom and wait in the hall, and the police entered and allowed the dog to sniff the items left in the room. The students wеre not allowed to refuse the instructions or to take their items with them. When the officers searched D.H.'s classroom, the dog reacted to her backpack. The officers called D.H. into the classroom, read D.H. her rights, and searched her bag, wherе they found a small bag of marihuana.
On appeal, D.H. contends that (1) her backpack was seized for Fourth Amendment purposes when she was required to leave it behind in her classroom while she went into the hallway as instructed, and (2) because neither the sсhool nor the officers had reason to believe she was engaged in criminal activity or in violation of school rules, they lacked reasonable suspicion to seize her bag. For those reasons, she argues that the seizure of her backpack was a violation of her constitutional rights and that the marihuana, as the fruit of an improper seizure, should have been suppressed. See Mapp v. Ohio,
Standard of Review
In reviewing a trial court's decision on a motion to suppress, we apply a bifurcated standard of review, giving almost total deference to the trial court's determination of the historical facts but reviewing the court's application of the law to those facts de novo. Maxwell v. State,
Search and Seizure in Schools
There being little or no Fourth Amendment authority directly addressing the question of when a public-school student's property may lawfully be seized by school authorities or the police, we instead look for guidance to opinions related to student searches. Although probаble cause and a warrant are generally required before law enforcement may conduct a search, Board of Educ. of Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 92 v. Earls,
Although students in public schools "do not `shed their constitutional rights ... at the schoolhouse gate,'" their constitutional rights are not "`automatically coextеnsive with the rights of adults in other settings,'" and must be considered in view of the school environment. Morse v. Frederick,
Discussion
D.H. does not contend that the dog's inspection of her bag was a search for Fourth Amendment purposes. Instead, she argues that requiring her to leave hеr backpack in the classroom while she left the room was an unconstitutional seizure of her property and that she otherwise would have carried it on her person, where the dog would not have been permitted to sniff it under Horton v. Goose Creek Independent School District,
*959 Keeping in mind that the Supreme Court has expressly refused to impose a requirement of "individualized reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing" on schools' attempts to prеvent student drug use, Earls,
We turn first to the privaсy interest that was impaired by the alleged seizure. See id. at 830,
We next consider the nature of the alleged infringement on her privacy interests. On the day in question, before the police officers and drug dog entered the classroom, Perez went in, spoke to the teacher, and asked the students to step into the hallway. The students waited outside the classroom while the canine inspection took place, and there was no risk that anоther student might steal anything from or rummage through D.H.'s bag. The students themselves were not sniffed and they were not in the room while the dog sniffed their belongings. Only Perez, the dog, and the two officers were present when the dog alerted on D.H.'s backpack. Thus, D.H. was not exposed to embarrassment or scrutiny by her classmates while the inspection was taking place. She was not required to open her bag in front of anyone until after the dog alerted, and then the contents of the bag were only seen by Perez and the police оfficers. Given the method employed in conducting the canine inspection and the minimally intrusive nature of the inspection, we hold that the invasion of D.H.'s privacy was not significant. See id. at 834,
Finally, we must weigh the invasion of D.H.'s rights against "the nature and immediacy of the government's concerns and the efficacy" of the seizure in meeting those concerns, keeping in mind the context in which the seizure took place. See id. There is an important "governmental concern in preventing drug use by schoolchildren," and the drug problem seems to be worsening. Id. The Supreme Court has held that "deterring drug use by schoolchildren is an `important-indeed, perhaps compelling' interest," Morse,
Assistant Principal Perez testified that he and the other administrators knew there was a drug problem at the school and that "students have reported and we have found that there is enough Marijuana being sold, used or kids coming back from lunch under the influence that it is something we are alwаys on the lookout for." He said that student drug use can lead to belligerent behavior or dangerous physical reactions, saying, "It becomes a serious safety issue for us at that point and the drug question becomes secondary, because we have tо deal with the student's safety first." Perez testified that the school has written policies prohibiting drug possession on school grounds: the school district's code of conduct, which states that drugs are not permitted on school property; and the campus handbook, which reiterates the district's policy and specifies that marihuana is not permitted. Students are given the handbook at the beginning of the year and are instructed to bring it to their parents, who are asked to review the handbook, sign the back page, аnd return the signed page to the school. Considering the low level of intrusion on D.H.'s limited privacy rights and the evidence about the drug problem at Reagan High, we hold that the seizure effectively addressed the problem of student drug use and served the important govеrnmental interest in protecting the students' safety and health. See id. at 834-88,
Conclusion
D.H. brought her backpack into a public school, where she was required to temporarily surrender its possession and leave it in the classroom to be sniffed by a dog. Given D.H.'s reduced expectation of privacy, the low level of intrusion involved in the dog's inspection of the airspace surrounding her backpack, the limited information gathered, Reagan High's interest in combating drug abuse, and its tutelary and custodial responsibilities for its students, we hold that the dеtention of her backpack was reasonable and thus constitutionally permissible. See Jacobsen,
NOTES
Notes
[1] There was conflicting testimony related to whether the school requested the search or the police asked to field test or train a drug dog. Although Assistant Principal Mike Perez testified that the arrival of the canine unit was unexpected, he also testified that the school principal had told the police that he would not object to the school being used for training рurposes. Whether the canine inspection was initiated by the school or the police officers does not impact our analysis.
[2] Horton held that allowing a dog to sniff student lockers located in a school's public hallways and automobiles parkеd in the school's parking lot did not constitute a search under the Fourth Amendment. Horton v. Goose Creek Indep. Sch. Dist.,
[3] See also Louisiana v. Barrett,
