ON PETITION FOR TRANSFER FROM THE INDIANA COURT OF APPEALS, NO. 20A083-0810-CR-00898.
The defendant, James Thomas Myers, challenges the admission of evidence resulting from a warrantless search of his car based on a police canine sniff sweep of the car following a routine traffic stop. He was convicted of possession of methamphetamine in excess of three grams with intent to deliver, a Class A felony. The Court of Appeals affirmed. Myers v. State,
Separately claiming violation of both the federal and state constitutional prohibitions against unreasonable search and seizure, the defendant's appeal contends (a) that the warrantless canine sniff test of his vehicle was impermissible because it was not done until after the stop had been completed; (b) that, even if the canine sweep occurred before the traffic stop concluded, there was no probable cause to authorize either the exterior vehicle canine sniff or the resulting interior search; and (c) that because his vehicle was not mobile, the warrantless search of the interior of the defendant's vehicle was not justified by the automobile exception to the warrant requirement.
This case arises from the following events. About 1:00 am. on March 14, 2002, in Goshen, Indiana, police officer Shawn Turner noticed the defendant's vehicle because as it was driving towards him, it was passing two other vehicles that were also driving towards him, and its еngine was "roaring" above the engines of the other two vehicles. Appellant's App'x 127. Officer Turner then observed the vehicle turn onto a street without signaling. Because of the failure to signal and the "speed contest," id. at 128, 149, Officer Turner activated his emergency lights and followed the defendant who proceeded into the driveway of his residential mobile home, stopped, and began to exit his car. The officer pulled into the driveway, stopping the police vеhicle about fifteen to twenty feet behind the defendant's car. Officer Turner then ordered the defendant back to his car and requested his driver's license and registration. Officer Turner walked up to the defendant's car and observed a mist and a strong seent of cologne in the passenger compartment. As the defendant handed Officer Turner his driver's license and registration, the defendant's hands were shaky, and he appeared very nervous, talking very fast and excitedly, and exhibiting constricted pupils. Upon identifying the defendant, Officer Turner became more suspicious because the Goshen Drug Unit had previously informed members of the police department that the defendant was suspected of drug activity. Officer Turner was aware that cologne was often used to mask lingering odor of contraband and that people influenced by certain types of drugs have constricted pupils even in the darkness. Id. at 130-31, 155. Officer Turner returned to his patrol car, radioed for license and registration verification, requested a canine unit to assist with the stop, and began filling out a traffic violation warning ticket. Id. at 182-83. At 1:82 a.m., about thirteen minutes after the traffic stop began, Deputy Mike McHenry, a canine officer, arrived with his narcotics detection dog. The parties dispute whether the canine sniff search of the vehicle's exterior occurred before the traffic stop concluded. Officer Turner testified that he called thе defendant out of the car and was discussing the *1149 violation and warning ticket with him and "where we were going to go from there" while Deputy McHenry's canine was conducting an exterior sniff of the vehicle, which Deputy McHenry reported took about a minute to a minute and a half. Id. at 188, 159. When the dog reacted to the exterior passenger side of the vehicle, the officers opened the door and had the dog sniff the interior of the vehicle, again reacting and leading the officers to the trunk. The officers then performed their own warrantless search of the inside of the car, discovering cologne in the console; methamphetamine in the glove compartment; and marijuana, methamphetamine, a ledger, and scales in the trunk. Id. at 134-385. Officer Turner testified that he placed the defendant in handcuffs "when we first started discovering evidence within the vehicle." Id. at 145.
The defendant's motion to suppress the items found in the vehicle was overruled, and hе objected to their admission at trial.
I. Fourth Amendment Claim
A. Propriety of Vehicle Dog Sniff Following Traffic Stop
The defendant does not dispute the propriety of the traffic stop but argues that the traffic stop was completed before any reasonable suspicion arose, and that the police therefore lacked any valid basis to conduct the dog sniff of his vehicle.
The use of narcotics sniffing dogs by police has recently been addressed by the United States Supreme Court. Deciding "[wlhether the Fourth Amendment requires reasonаble, articulable suspicion to justify using a drug-detention dog to sniff a vehicle during a legitimate traffic stop," the Court declared that the use of a narcotics-detection dog "generally does not implicate legitimate privacy interests." I-linois v. Caballes,
The defendant does not contend that the canine sniff prolonged his own detention by the police. Rather, his claim is that, once the stop was complete, his Fourth Amendment rights were violated by the police thereafter conducting the canine sweep of his vehicle. This claim fails for two independent reasons. First, as explained in Caballes, a canine sweep of the exterior of a vehicle does not intrude upon a Fourth Amendment privacy interest. Second, the trial court properly determined that the canine sweep was conducted before the traffic stop was completed.
Noting that "[this short time period [from the commencement of the traffic stop at 1:19 a.m. to the canine sniff beginning at 1:82 a.m.] did not reflect any delay on the part of Sgt. Turner and supports *1150 the State's contention that the traffic stop was ongoing," the trial court also found that "at the time the canine was performing its sniff of the exterior of the vehicle, Sgt. Turner was engaged in the process of explaining the traffic citation to the Defendant" and that Officer Turner "had not completed the traffic stop prior to the time of the canine sweep of the vehiclе." Appellant's App'x 76-77.
While the determination of reasonable suspicion and probable cause requires de novo review on appeal, a trial court's determination of historical fact is entitled to deferential review. Ornelas v. United States,
B. Canine Sniff Test and Probable Cause
The defendant next contends that, even if conducted in the course of the traffic stop, the canine sniff search and the ensuing search of the vehicle's interior were constitutionally improper because of the absence of probable cause. As noted above, however, the United States Supreme Court has determined that the use of such narcotics-detection dogs to sniff the exterior of an automobile does not implicate Fourth Amendment privacy interests. Probable cause is thus not a prerequisite to the use of this police investigative technique.
We are persuaded that the positive reaction of the nareоtics-detection dog to the exterior of the defendant's vehicle, however, especially in light of the defendant's dilated pupils, his extreme nervousness, and the presence of heavy cologne mist, constituted probable cause for further police investigation regarding the contents of the vehicle's interior.
C. Vehicle Mobility and Warrantless Vehicle Search
The defendant also urges that because his vehicle was not mobile, the war-rantless search of the interior of his vehicle was not justified by the automоbile exception to the warrant requirement. He argues that the automobile exception is inapplicable to this case because there was no probable cause and because his vehicle was not readily mobile As discussed above, we have determined that probable cause did exist. We thus turn our attention to the issue of mobility. The defendant argues there was no ready mobility because the police officer pulled up behind his parked сar so that the defendant could not move his vehicle.
As a general rule, the Fourth Amendment prohibits warrantless searches, but there are exceptions to the warrant requirement. Black v. State, 810 N.E2d 713, 715 (Ind.2004). In this case, the trial court denied the defendant's motion to suppress evidence resulting from the war-rantless search based on the automobile exception to the warrant requirement.
The automobile exception was first applied in Carroll v. United States,
In Dyson, the United States Supreme Court held that police need not obtain a search warrant before searching a vehicle that they have probablе cause to believe contains illegal drugs. The Court emphasized that the automobile exception "does not have a separate exigency requirement," id.,
Unfortunately, the adjective "readily" is subject to differing interpretations, and there has been disagreement regarding the meaning of "readily mobile." Decisions of the Indiana Court of Appeals are not consistent regarding whether automobiles under police observation or control are readily mobile so as to be subject to warrantless search under the automobile exception. E.g., compare, v. State, T5 N.E.2d 1207, 1211 (Ind.Ct.App.2002) (legally parked automobile surrounded by police officers held not inherently mobile to qualify for automobile exeeption), transfer deniеd, and Edwards v. State,
Some cases from other courts have declined to apply the automobile exception where the automobile is entirely immobile or is not situated for transportation. See, e.g., State v. Kypreos,
But several other courts have found that vehicles temporarily in police control or otherwise not at risk of being driven away may still be considered readily mobile, so as to qualify for the automobile exception. These cases base ready mobility not on the immediate capabilities of an automobilе but rather its inherent capabilities Seq, e.g., United States v. Watts,
In light of the Supreme Court's recent emphatiс statement in Dyson that the automobile exception "does not have a separate exigency requirement,"
In the present case, the defendant's car was readily mobile and thus eligible for the automobile exception regardless of the fact that it may have been temporarily confined by physical cireumstances including the position of Officer Turner's police vehicle blocking it from the rear. Because the positive narcotics dog response provided probable cause to search the readily mobile vehicle, the warrantless search of it was justified under the automobile exeeption.
II. Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution
The defendant separately claims that the warrantless search of his automobile violated Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution, our state Search and Seizure clause. 1 He argues that "[the *1153 totality of cireumstances surrounding the search and seizure exemplify the unreasonableness of the police activities." Appellant's Br. at 17.
While almost identical in wording to the federal Fоurth Amendment, the Indiana Constitution's Search and Seizure clause is given an independent interpretation and application. Mitchell v. State,
In sum, although we recognize there may well be other relevant considerations under the cireumstances, we have explained reasonableness of a search or seizure as turning on a balance of: 1) the degree of concern, suspicion, or knowledge that a violation has occurred, 2) thе degree of intrusion the method of the search or seizure imposes on the citizens' ordinary activities, and 3) the extent of law enforcement needs.
Id. at 361.
In Brown v. State,
In the present case, the State at trial presented evidence that the defendant displayed behavior that made the initial stopping officer suspicious and that a narcot-ies-detecting dog alerted upon a sweep of the exterior of the defendant's car. The defendant argues that this evidence does not support a finding that the search of his car was reasonable under the totality of the circumstances emphasizing primarily that his car was parked on private property in the driveway to his residence, despite acknowledging that the officer noted the seent of cologne in the defendant's vehicle, observed the defendant's nervousness, had previously received information concerning *1154 the defendant's possible drug activity, and considered that the nareoties-detecting dog alerted upon sniffing the automobile. .
Our reversal upon a finding of unreasonableness in Brown noted several factors also presеnt here. Both cases involved police automobile searches without a warrant, vehicles not obstructing traffic or otherwise warranting removal, and the presence of police cars making it appear unlikely that the car would be moved. But there are' differences as well. Unlike Brown, where the vehicle was unoccupied, the defendant here was present, not under arrest at the time the interior search was commenced, and free to drive his vеhicle away and dispose of the contraband contained within. The Brown search was done at mid-day, whereas the present search occurred after midnight, making prompt access to a magistrate more difficult. The vehicle in Brown was but a possible match to one seen leaving a scene of a robbery a day earlier. Whether it contained contraband was a matter of speculation and conjecture until after it was searched. In the presеnt case, the searched vehicle was unquestionably the one driven by the defendant, who exhibited suspicious behavior during a traffic stop, and the very one positively identified by a police canine sniff test for the presence of drugs. f
Considering and balancing the non-exclusive factors identified in Litchfield, we conclude that the interior search of the defendant's car was reasonable under the cireumstances. First, there was a significant "degree of concern, susрicion, or knowledge that a violation has occurred." Litchfield,
Conclusion
We conclude that the warrantless search of the defendant's vеhicle did not violate the search and seizure provisions of either the federal Fourth Amendment or Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. This provision states: "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, *1153 papers, and effects, against unreasonable search or seizure, shall not be violated; and no warrant shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the person or thing to be seized."
