Plaintiff-appellant, Ohio Department of Liquor Control, now Ohio Department of Public Safety, appeals from a judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas in favor of defendant-appellee, Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie 2293. Plaintiff assigns a single error:
“The lower court erred to the prejudice of plaintiff/аppellant in denying the petition of forfeiture in ruling that the liquor agent entered the licensed permit premises without the consent of a club trustee.”
On May 25, 1994, Ohio Dеpartment of Public Safety agent James Nerswick went to defendant’s premises to investigate illegal gambling and liquor permit violations. Generally, entrance tо defendant’s premises involved going through one unlocked door to a locked door with a buzzer. Because Nerswick was not a club member, before attеmpting to enter he ran a check on a license tag from a car in the parking area and identified its owner. After obtaining the car owner’s name, Nerswick entered the unlocked door, pushed the buzzer, and asked for the car owner by name. The doorkeeper responded that the person was at the bar and permitted Nerswick to enter. Once inside, Nerswick went to the person and spoke briefly to him; at that time he observed in plain view seven illegal oрerable electronic gambling devices and tip tickets, visible only from inside the premises. Because gambling at defendant’s premises violated its liquor permit сonditions, *97 plaintiffs agents seized the gambling devices, tip tickets, 1 $543 in cash, two stamp machines, two pocket watches, and two pocket knives.
On July 6, 1994, plaintiff filed an R.C. 2933.43 petition for forfeiture of the seized items. Defеndant responded with two motions: a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction and a motion challenging the constitutionality of Nerswick’s search and seizure. Although the trial court initially denied both motions, it granted defendant’s motion for rehearing. On rehearing, the magistrate decided that both motions should be denied. Sustaining defendant’s objeсtions to the magistrate’s decision, the trial court suppressed all seized evidence plaintiff used to support its petition, dismissed plaintiffs forfeiture petitiоn, entered judgment for defendant, and directed that all property seized be returned to defendant. Plaintiff appeals, asserting that the trial court improperly suppressed the evidence seized at defendant’s premises.
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Section 14, Article I, Ohio Constitution, proteсt against unreasonable searches and seizures. Where persons hold a subjective expectation of privacy, a valid warrantless search must fall within a judicially recognized exception to the warrant requirement.
Katz v. United States
(1967),
As a result, the warrantless search plaintiff conducted here is reasonable, and thus permissible, only if it satisfies one of the only two exceptions potentially applicable, the consent and plain-view exceptions. 3 In an effort to come within one of those exceptions, plaintiff asserts that after thе doorkeeper consented to Nerswick’s entering the premises, the gambling devices came within Nerswick’s plain view.
Pursuant to the plain-view exceptiоn, state actors may seize items in plain view, discovered and recognized during the course of lawful activity.
BPOE Lodge 0170 Gallipolis v. Ohio Liquor Control Comm.
(1991),
To satisfy the consent exception, the state must demonstrate that the doorkeeper freely and voluntarily consented to the entry. See
State v. Posey
(1988),
However, if the agent or officer affirmatively misrepresents his or her identity or lies аbout his or her intentions, the doorkeeper’s consent is considered coerced, involuntary and invalid.
Id.
at 219,
The distinction between
Posey
and
Pi Kappa Alpha
concerns the purpose for which an agent or officer is permitted entry. When consent to enter in effect invites an agent or officer to observe and engage in illegal activity, the consent remains voluntary.
Posey, supra,
Herе, based upon Nerswick’s affirmative misrepresentation as to his purpose, the doorkeeper allowed him to enter for a purely legal transaсtion, talking to a person inside. The doorkeeper did not permit entry for observing and engaging in illegal gambling activity, and Nerswick did not pose as a particiрant in the illegal activities investigated. See
Posey, supra,
Without valid consent from the doorkeeper, plaintiff cannot satisfy the consent exception and cannot demonstrate for purposes of the plain-view exception that Nerswick was in a lеgal and authorized position when he observed the gambling paraphernalia. Accordingly, appellant’s assignment of error is overruled, and the judgment of thе trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed:
Notes
. Tip tickets are "gambling devices which when opened may reveal a symbol indicating that the purchaser has won money.”
Columbus v. I.O.R.M., Sioux Tribe-Redman Club
(1993),
. The consent and plain-view exceptions to the warrant requirement are the only exceptions pertinent to these facts. In
Penn,
the Supreme Court recognized the wаrrant requirement exceptions as "(a) * * * search incident to a lawful arrest; (b) consent signifying waiver of constitutional rights; (c) the stop-and-frisk doctrine; (d) hot pursuit; (e) рrobable cause to search, and the presence of exigent circumstances; or (f) the plain view doctrine.”
Id.,
. When Nerswick tried to obtain entry to defendant's premises, he had no search warrant and did not seek one. Plaintiff admits that based only upon a tip, Nerswick did not have probable cause to search defendant's premises.
