On Pеtition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 49A02-1408-CR-534
Both the Federal and State Constitutions protect Hoosiers’ private property from unreasonable State intrusion. And so, every inquiry into a warrantless im-poundment and inventory search of a vehicle — like any other warrantless search or seizure — ultimately depends on whether those measures were reasonable based oh the surrounding facts.
Here, police impounded Defendant’s ear from a parking lot because he was arrested for driving while suspended, the registered owner (his sister) was not present, and the car’s windshield and bumper were damaged. Police then begаn to inventory the car and found a handgun inside, resulting in Defendant being charged with, and ultimately convicted of, carrying a handgun without a license.
Although such discretionary impounds may be permissible as part of law enforcement’s eommunity-caretaking function, they require proof of, among other things, an established departmentаl procedure that authorized the impoundment.
Fair v. State,
Facts and Procedural History
While driving through northwest Indianapolis, Lamont Wilford, Jr. was pulled over by Officer Eli Raisovich of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department (“IMPD”) because the vehicle exhibited “multiple equipment problems” — namely, a damaged rear end, a broken tail light, and a cracked windshield. The car Wilford was driving belonged to his sister, who had lent it to Wilford’s father, who had, in turn, lent it to him shortly before the traffic stop. Wilford pulled into the parking lot of a Planet Fitness gym, stopped the car, and produced an Indiana identification card.
Upon learning Wilford’s license was suspended, Officer Raisovich (who was accompanied by a TV news film crew and оn-air personality) radioed for backup, handcuffed Wilford, and placed him in the rear of a police cruiser. The officer then decided to impound the car “because of the *374 unsafe condition of it and the fact that ... Wilford was being arrested and he was not the owner of the vehicle.” He further explained, “[W]ith our procedures in that situation, we towed the vehicle.” Prior to towing, police searched the vehicle and found a handgun, which Wilford was not licensed to carry. The record does not show whether police made any effort to contact Wilford’s sister to retrieve her car, nor was any inventory sheet admittеd into evidence.
At a bench trial, the court admitted the handgun over Wilford’s objections and convicted him of carrying a handgun without a license and driving while suspended with a prior suspension — both as Class A misdemeanors. He was sentenced to 365 days, with 357 days suspended to probation, and a $100.00 fíne. The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding the impoundment and inventory search satisfied
Fair’s
requirements because the damaged, unsafe car posed a threat to the community or itself and the testimony from the impounding officer (a twenty-three-year IMPD veteran) sufficed as evidence of departmental procedures.
Wilford v. State,
Standard of Review
Although Fourth Amendment and Article 1, Section 11 questions require independent analyses, their answers turn on the same factor — reasonableness. The State bears the burden of proving war-rantless impoundments and inventory searches are reasonable under both the Fourth Amendment and Article 1, Section 11.
Fair,
Discussion and Decision
I. Vehicle Impoundment, Like Any Seizure of Property, Must Be Reasonable.
Both the Fourth Amendment and Article 1, Section 11 protect “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects” against unreasonable searches and seizures. U.S. Const, amend. IV; Ind. Const, art. 1, § 11. Automobiles are among the “effects” protected by these provisions.
Brown v. State,
The inventory search is one such exception since it serves an administrative, not investigatory, purpose — because when police lawfully impound a vehicle, they must also perform an administrative inventory search to document the vehicle’s contents to preserve them for the owner and protect themselves against claims of lost or stolen property.
Id.
at 330-31. Consequently, proper impoundment is the “threshold question” to valid inventory searсh.
Fair,
*375
Impoundment is reasonable if it is authorized either by statute or the police’s discretionary community-caretaking function.
Id.
at 431-32. Impoundment pursuant to a statute is necessarily reasonable because the Legislature has deemed that citizens’ privacy interests in their cars yield to State interests in those circumstances, making police inventorying a necessary collateral administrative function. Discretionary impoundment, by contrast, is an exercise of the police community-caretaking function in order to protect the car and community from hazards. Discretionary impoundments, too, may be reasonable — but as we recognized in
Fair,
and more recently in
Taylor,
they are vulnerable to constitutional reasonableness challenges because of their potential for misuse as pretext for warrantless investigative searches under the guise of invеntory.
See Fair,
Here, we must decide whether impounding Wilford’s vehicle was reasonable — and because we find no statute specifically authorizing this impoundment, 1 we focus on the community-caretaking function.
II. Impounding a Vehiclе Under the Community-Caretaking Function Requires Proof of an Established Routine or Regulation Authorizing the Impound.
Community safety often requires police to impound vehicles because they are abandoned and obstruct traffic, create a nuisance, or invite thieves and vandals.
See Fair,
We have said that “police may discharge their caretaking function whenever circumstances compel it,”
Fair,
In view of that potential for pretext, Fair set forth a strict two-prong standard for proving that the decision to impound a *376 person’s vehicle without a warrant was reasonable:
(1) Consistеnt with objective standards of sound policing, an officer must believe the vehicle poses a threat of harm to the community or is itself imperiled; and
(2) The officer’s decision to impound adhered to established departmental routine or regulation.
Id.
at 433. The State must satisfy both elements — so if it cannot meet one, we neеd not consider the other.
Taylor,
.We have held impoundments to be unreasonable under similar circumstances in
Fair
and its progeny. In
Fair,
police arrested the defendant for public intoxication and decided to impound his car, even though it was legally parked on private property and did not impedé traffic. We held the impoundment and subsequent inventory unreasonable because, in “the absence of evidence about any departmental procedures,” we could hot discern whether ‘ impoundment was a legitimate discretionary impound under the community-caretaking function or mere pretext for an investigatory search.
Fair,
III. The Officer’s Generalized Reference to “Our Procedures” Failed to Prove the “Particulars” of Those Procedures as Fair Requires. •
Here, then, the question is how the State must prove such an “established departmental routine or regulation.” Fair did not expressly state what .evidence-written policies or., officer testimony— would prove established policy. The State contends Officer Raisovich’s testimony alone satisfied its burden of proving that impoundment was pursuant to established departmental procedure and therefore reasonable. While the State is correct that we do not require evidence of written procedures, we do require more than conclu-sory testimony from officers. Specifically, Fair rejected “an officer’s generalized assertion” as аdequate evidence of established procedures because such evidence could not eliminate pretextual impoundment and inventory. Id. at 435. ' But we see no reason why, in lieu of a written policy, specific officer testimony cannot also demonstrate established departmental routine or regulаtion.
That conclusion is consistent with the vast majority of other jurisdictions that
*377
have considered the question. At least nineteen states do not require proof of a written departmental policy for impoundment or inventorying, but rather will allow officer testimony to show established departmental routine or regulation.
2
Only Massаchusetts specifically requires the prosecution to introduce the written policy justifying a community-caretaking im-poundment and inventory.
Commonwealth v. Bishop,
Officer testimony provides adequate evidence of departmental impound policy if it outlines the department’s standard impound рrocedure and specifically describes how the decision to impound adhered to departmental policy or procedure — as opposed to “an officer’s generalized assertion” as Fair held insufficient. Here, Officer Raisovich’s testimony provided several reasons why he decided to tow Wilford’s car, but he failed to specify how his decision conformed to an established departmental impound policy:
Q. Tell me why this vehicle was being inventoried? - ⅛-
A. Uh, because it was being towed because of the unsafe condition of it and the fact that uh, that Mr., uh, uh, Wilford was being arrested and he was not the owner of the vehicle. * * ⅜
Q. Tell me, yeah, tell me again?
A. The condition of the vehicle. I don’t believe it was safe to operate on the street because there was uh, you know, danger from the rear window breaks and like I said being in a rear end collision uh, the totality of the thing, he didn’t own the vehicle uh, he was being placed under arrest. So uh, with our procedures in that situation, we towed the vehicle.
Simply put, that passing rеference to “our procedures in that situation” fails to “provide[ ] the particulars of the policy” as
Fair
requires.
Our conclusion that this impoundment was unreasonable applies under the Indiana Constitution as well. Article 1, Section 11 involves independent analysis, requiring this Court to determine whether impoundment and inventоry are reasonable under the totality of the circumstances.
Taylor,
Conclusion
We reiterate our holding in Fair — im-poundment under the community-caretak-ing function is reasonable only pursuant to established police routine or regulations, and generalized assertions about such a policy are inadequate to make that showing. Since the State failed to prove an established police routine or regulation supporting impoundment under these circumstances, the impoundment and subsequent inventory were unreasonable. We therefore reverse Wilford’s conviction for carrying a handgun without a license.
Notes
. The State argues in passing that this impound was authorized by Indiana Code section 9-21-7-1 (2010 Repl.), which prohibits operation of an unsafe vehicle. But the State’s reliance is misplaced, because that statute does not confer any specific impoundment authority in case of violations. The State also argues that impound was required under Indiana Code section 9-22-1-5 (Supp. 2013) because Wilford did not own the car and could not "establish [his] right to possession of” it. We disagree, because nothing in the record suggests that police ever doubted that Wilford's possession was authorized.
. See Ex parte Boyd,
