Opinion
Introduction
This сase presents the following question: Is a suspect’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches violated when, after the suspect gives an officer consent to search the interior, glove compartment and trunk of his vehicle for drugs, the officer removes a screw from a plastic door vent and disengages the vent?
Before trial, the defendant moved to suppress contraband found in the door panel on the ground, inter alia, his consent to search the cаr did not extend to removing the screw and disengaging the vent from the door post. The trial court denied the motion. The court cited
Florida
v.
Jimeno
(1991)
This case began when, shortly after midnight on February 18, 1991, California Highway Patrol Officer Richard Randolph observed a 1981 Cadillac exit Highway 99 at the Avenue 280 exit in Tulare County. When the automobile failed to observe a stop sign at Avenue 280, Randolph activated his emergency lights and brought the vehicle to a stop. The 20-year-old driver, who identified himself as David Morgan (later charged by information as David Crenshaw), was the sole occupant of the vehicle. He produced a temporary vehicle registration in the name of David Morgan, but did not produce a driver’s license. The driver exited the vehicle and walked to where Randolph’s patrol car was parked while Randolph issued a traffic citation for failing to stop at the stop sign. The driver signed the citation in the name of David Morgan.
From the outset of the stop Randolph’s attention was drawn to the driver’s expensive dress and jewelry and the fact he was wearing a pager at his belt. Based upon Randolph’s training in the components of the drug courier profile, and the driver’s apparent lack of personal identification, Randolph suspected he might be transporting drugs. While writing the citation, Randolph “asked him directly” if he “had any drugs in the vehicle” and whether he could search the vehicle “for drugs.” He specifically asked if he could search the trunk as part of the search. The driver denied “carrying any drugs” and gave Randolph permission to “search his vehicle.”
Randolph and the driver walked to the automobile; the driver opened the driver’s side door to get the keys in order to open the trunk. When Randolph looked at the doorpost, he saw “the screw that was securing the plastic vent to the door post had striation marks, that in [his] opinion the screw had been worked and tampered with recently.” After the driver opened the trunk, Randolph and his partner, Officer Parrish, searched the trunk but did not find any contraband. After obtaining “cоnsent to check in the inside [of] the vehicle in the glove compartment,” Parrish searched the glove compartment and found letters bearing the name Crenshaw.
Parrish initiated a record and warrant check into the name Morgan and later, after the letters were discovered, into the name Crenshaw. The record check disclosed the driver, hereinafter referred to as Crenshaw, had a suspended operating license. A tow truck was then called to remove his
The interior door post, prеviously covered by the vent, contained a loaded, .38-caliber automatic weapon and a torn paper bag containing 49.3 grams of cocaine base packaged in aluminum foil and divided into 14 one-eighth-ounce plastic packages. Randolph could not see the drugs in the (louvered) vent door panel until he removed the vent.
Consent Under the Fourth Amendment
The touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness.
(Katz
v.
United States
(1967)
“The standard for measuring the scope of a suspect’s consent under the Fourth Amendment is that of ‘objective’ reasonableness—what would the typical reasonable person have understood by the exchange between the officer and the suspect? [Citations.]”
(Florida
v.
Jimeno, supra,
500 U.S. at pp. [
Crenshaw argues “the additional seаrch of the door post by dismantling and removing a screwed-on vent exceeded the scope of any consent. . . given to search the car.”
3
Crenshaw relies on
Florida
v.
Jimeno, supra,
In deciding
Jimeno,
the Supreme Court expressly distinguished Jimeno's facts from those in
State
v.
Wells
(Fla. 1989)
The United States Supreme Court in
Jimeno
said:
“Respondent granted Officer Trujillo permission to search his car, and did not place any explicit limitation on the scope of the search. Trujillo had informed respondent that he believed respondent was carrying narcotics, and that he would be looking for narcotics in the car. We think that it was objectively reasonable for the police to conclude that the general consent to search respondent’s car included consent to search containers within that car which might bear drugs. A reasonable person may be еxpected to know that narcotics are generally carried in some form of a container. ‘Contraband goods rarely are strewn across the trunk or floor of a car.’ [Citation.] The
Crenshaw maintains “[t]he dismantling of the automotive door post vent and search of [his] doorpost more closely approximates the prying open of a locked briefcase that was condemned in Wells than the opening [of] a brown paрer bag found on the floor of the car in Jimeno.”
The federal courts have dealt with the precise issue raised here—the removal of an automobile panel vent pursuant to general consent to search a vehicle for contraband—and prior to Florida v. Jimeno are divided. While neither the parties below nor counsel on appeal cite these cases, they are useful to our analysis.
Pre-Jimeno Cases Upholding Panel Searches as Within Scope of Consent
The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has consistently upheld such panel searches. In
United States
v.
Torres
(10th Cir. 1981)
In
United States
v.
Espinosa
(10th Cir. 1986)
In
U.S.
v.
Pena
(10th Cir. 1990)
After he exited the vehicle, the officer tapped the outer rear fender on the passenger side and heard a “solid thud” rather than the anticipated hollow sound. With a pen, he probed the vent opening in the rear quarter panel where the passenger door closed and struck a solid object which moved when he applied pressure to it. During this period Pena walked away from the vehicle and ignored the officer. The officer obtained a screwdriver from the patrol vehicle and removed the rear quarter panel vent and a piece of cardboard under it. He found several boxes containing cocaine. (
The court rejected Pena’s argument that the removal of the vent panel exceeded the scope of his consent to look inside the car. The court recounted Pena’s cooperation and lack of objection throughout the inspection of the car. “At no time did [Pena] object to or express any concern about the officer’s activities. He never attempted to limit or retract his consent.”
(U.S.
v.
Pena, supra,
“As the Espinosa court recognized, ‘[fjailure to object to the continuation of the search under these circumstances may be considered an indication that the search was within the scope of the consent,’782 F.2d at 892 . We will not attach an unduly restrictive meaning to the officer’s request to ‘look’ inside the vehicle. No evidence was presented by Pena that he at any timе objected to the search as it was conducted. The search was conducted within the general scope of the permission granted. Accordingly, we do not find clearly erroneous the trial court’s determination that the search was valid.” (920 F.2d at p. 1515 .)
Pre-Jimeno Case Not Upholding Panel Search as Within Scope of Consent
The court in
U.S.
v.
Garcia
(7th Cir. 1990)
The Garcia court disagreed with the trial court’s finding that the scope of the search did not exceed the consent given: “[The officer’s] request to search was directly linked to his inquiry regarding the presence of drugs or weaрons in the truck. Without more, police can only search areas these items may reasonably be expected to be found. The opening of door panels is not normally included in this set of areas to be searched. Such a search is inherently invasive, and extends beyond the consent given under these circumstances.” (897 F.2d at pp. 1419-1420.) Nevertheless, the Garcia court proceeded to uphold the search on the basis of probable cause, i.e., the ill-fitting and mismatched screws on the dоor panel, inter alia, led to a visual observation through the window opening of the packages in the door panel. (Id. at p. 1420.)
Discussion
Here we find the facts of the case before us are more akin to
Jimeno
than
Wells. Wells
and similar
prt-Jimeno
cases where courts have determined a search exceeded the reasonable bounds of the consent given are distinguishable.
5
As stated in
U.S.
v.
Strickland
(11th Cir. 1990)
Post-Jimeno Case
In a post-Jimeno case, a federal court impliedly distinguished the Wells situation while upholding a consent search for drugs where some further entry within the object of the consent search was required.
In
U.S.
v.
Springs
(D.C.Cir. 1991)
Search Here Survives Current Jimeno Test
The search of the door panel here survives the current
Jimeno
test of objective reasonableness.
6
Crenshaw separately consented to the search of the trunk, glove compartment and interior of the vehicle knowing that the object of the search was drugs. Crenshaw was described as very polite and cooperative the entire time; in fact, he retrieved the keys from the vehicle
Crenshaw knew the object of the officer’s search, to wit, drugs. No reasonable person would expect narcotics to be scattered loosely throughout the vehicle. “[N]arcotics are generally carried in some form of a container.”
(Florida
v.
Jimeno, supra,
500 U.S. at p__[
Unlike the situation in Wells, there is no evidence the door vent wаs mutilated, rendered useless or otherwise damaged during the process of removal, any more than the baby powder container in Springs suffered damage. The officer did not rip the vent from the door; he merely loosened a screw with a screwdriver and removed it. The trial court did not err.
While this holding is contrary to the result reached on the scope of the consent to search a vehicle in U.S. v. Garcia, supra, 897 F.2d at pages 1419-1420, it is not contrary to the reasoning of that court in light of Florida v. Jimeno, supra. The Garcia court stated when there is сonsent to search a vehicle for drugs and weapons, “police can only search areas these items may reasonably be expected to be found." (Id. at p. 1419.) The Supreme Court in Jimeno was in agreement with that basic proposition, but expanded the range of what could be considered a reasonable area to explore pursuant to a consent search of a vehicle for drugs.
Finally, respondent correctly concedes the abstract of judgment in case No. 29995 must be amended by striking а reference to a $2,000
Disposition
The judgment is modified by striking the reference to the $2,000 restitution fine allegedly imposed in Tulare County Superior Court action No. 29995, and as so amended the judgment is affirmed.
Martin, Acting P. J., and Thaxter, J., concurred.
Appellant’s рetition for review by the Supreme Court was denied December 31, 1992. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Retired Judge of the Kern Superior Court sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
Although Crenshaw notices his appeal to be “from the denial of his Motion to Suppress pursuant to Penal Code Section 1538.5,” his appeal is from the judgment. (Pen. Code, § 1237.) We review the denial of the motion to suppress. (Pen. Code, § 1538.5, subd. (m); see
People
v.
Camilleri
(1990)
The defendant based the motion in the trial cоurt on his points and authorities, the transcript of the preliminary examination and the evidence to be presented at the motion hearing. Both parties have incorporated facts from the preliminary and motion hearings.
As a threshold issue, Crenshaw argues his consent was not voluntary; rather it was a response to an assertion of authority. His counsel argued to the trial court there was no “real informed consent” to search the vehicle because Randolph asked for permission to search. Trial counsel characterized Crenshaw’s acquiescence to the search as “submission to authority.”
Appellant resurrects this argument here, this time citing to a portion of Randolph’s testimony wherein he stated he “directed” Crenshaw to open the trunk. The sole transcript reference is taken out of context; the officer immediately clarified his questions were couched in the form of a “request,” and this is supported by his testimony taken as a whole. Viewing the record in its entirety, we cannot state the trial court’s implied determination that Crenshaw’s consent was freely and voluntarily given is not supported by substantial evidence.
(People
v.
Bittaker
(1989)
The holding in
State
v.
Wells, supra,
See also
Cross
v.
State
(Fla. 1990)
People
v.
Cooney
(1991)
Officer Randolph joined the Highway Patrol more than 20 years prior to the search of Crenshaw’s vehicle and had participated in special drug interdiction training on the state and local levels.
