The defendant Robert Settle appeals a jury conviction for felony possession of a Schedule II narcotic, hydromorphone, in violation of § 195.200.1(1) RSMo.1978. He received a sentence of seven years imprisonment. This opinion will first address the defendant’s challenge to the admission into evidence, over his motion to suppress, of evidence claimed to be the fruit of an illegal stop and illegal search of the defendant’s car.
Both parties rely upon the evidence adduced at the suppression hearing as well as that developed at trial.
See State v.
Lane,
On May 22, 1981 Sergeant Joseph McHa-le of the Kansas City, Missouri Police Department drove the night shift patrol in north Kansas City. He wore a uniform and carried a gun. He drove alone in an unmarked Plymouth police car having no emergency lights, sirens or markings identifying it as a Kansas City police car other than a spotlight on the driver’s side.
Close to 2:00 a.m. McHale patroled through a Quik Trip parking lot, a convenience store that remained open at that *314 hour, on Highway 169 and Englewood Road in Clay County. He spotted a vehicle with Missouri license plates occupied by two women who appeared to be in their twenties. Another car, with Wyandotte County, Kansas plates, also drove into the lot. From the vantage point of a bank parking lot, McHale saw the two women leave their car and walk over to talk to the driver of the second car, defendant Settle, who appeared to be in his forties. The age difference between the two women and Settle, as well as the second car’s out-of-state license plate, caught the officer’s attention.
McHale watched as the two women walked over to Settle’s car and then “promptly turned back around, got in their car, and proceeded to leave” without going into the store. He considered their behavior “strange.” On cross-examination, he stated there- could have been laughter exchanged. McHale also did not think at this time that Settle was drunk nor did he see him drink anything.
The two women proceeded onto Broadway in their car, Settle followed, and McHale followed behind both of the two cars. After leaving the corporate limits of Kansas City and after having entered into the city of Gladstone, McHale observed Settle’s car “[leave] the roadway on the shoulder going off the road” at one point on the 5700 block of North Broadway. He stated Settle’s rear wheel went onto the road’s shoulder. He considered this “to be an indication that [the defendant] possibly was driving under the influence” and notified his Kansas City dispatcher to request assistance from the Gladstone police. He did not state what facts, if any, were related to the dispatcher. Officer Coup of the Gladstone Police Department testified he had been dispatched “to back a Kansas City police officer on a car check, traffic violation_” McHale stated on cross-examination that the lack of any emergency equipment on his car prevented him from stopping Settle’s car on Broadway.
McHale continued following the two cars into the North Star Apartments. McHale stated on cross-examination that the defendant had not committed any misdemean- or or felony, but believed a traffic violation in Gladstone had occurred. He had also checked Settle’s license plate for wants or warrants before stopping. He stated he wished to talk to the defendant because he “felt him running off the road would give [him] probable cause to question him as to his sobriety ... during that time of the morning.” Although his testimony states, “The vehicle was finally stopped at 6321 North Wyandotte,” the only inference drawn from the evidence was the defendant stopped the car on his own, with McHa-le following shortly afterwards. When McHale was asked who was at the scene when the vehicle was stopped, he responded, “I requested Gladstone and Gladstone responded.” The only inference to be drawn from the testimony, however, was that some interval of time transpired between his arrival'and the arrival of two Gladstone officers, Coup and Toman. McHale did not testify on direct examination regarding what specific actions he took before the arrival of the Gladstone officers. He did state no arrest occurred, and refers to having taken identification from the two women, running a computer check on them, and allowing them to leave before the arrival of the Gladstone officers. He does not specifically refer to having taken identification from the defendant, although he refers to running a computer check using the defendant’s identification upon the arrival of the Gladstone officers. On cross-examination, McHale stated he had walked up to the defendant and received identification from all three persons. He had told the two women “to come back to him.”
McHale testified Officer Coup arrived in “just a matter of minutes ... in ... a minute, maybe two minutes afterwards. That’s an estimation.” Officer Toman arrived in a separate car after Officer Coup. At McHale’s direction, Officer Coup stood watching Settle while McHale continued cheeking Settle’s identification, although problems -with the computer had arisen. McHale did not state on direct what facts, if any, he related to the Gladstone officers regarding his reasons for stopping Settle. *315 On cross-examination, McHale stated, "I believe I told [the Gladstone officers] that [the defendant] had gone off the road” in Gladstone. Neither McHale or Coup related any observations of the defendant supporting McHale’s suspicion that Settle had been drinking alcohol or was intoxicated.
Officer Coup continued to watch Settle, who stood carrying a can of pop in one hand. Coup then saw Settle reach into his pocket with his other hand and pull out some object he could not identify. Settle then threw the can of pop, along with the unidentified object, into a grassy area. Coup asked the other two officers to watch Settle while he retrieved whatever had just been thrown by the defendant. Coup looked and less than a foot away from the can of pop, found a prescription vial containing small yellow tablets and small plastic bags containing a white powdery substance. Trial testimony identified two of the yellow tablets as hydromorphone.
The defendant was then placed under arrest, frisked, and his car opened and searched. A search of the car produced a handgun lying on the floorboard of the car, a brown sack containing additional white plastic bags of white powdery substances, some syringes, and some black pills. The plastic bags appeared similar to those found in the prescription vial. A search of the defendant’s person produced another plastic bag holding a white powdery substance. Except for the gun, which was not allowed into evidence, all of the seized items were entered into evidence over the defendant’s objections. Only the small yellow tablets in the prescription vial thrown by Settle were found to be controlled substances. The contents of the vial formed the basis of the charge for which Settle was convicted. At trial the powdery substance was identified as “kiddie dope,” a non-eontrolled substance.
At the Gladstone Police Headquarters, Officer Coup administered a breathalyzer test to the defendant after completing paperwork. The test came out as .01, well below the level considered as legally intoxicated. The officers issued a citation for careless and imprudent driving. Trial testimony indicated the citation was dismissed.
According to the defendant at the suppression hearing, on the evening in question Settle drove out to visit the women. One of the women, Brenda Langston, who testified on his behalf, had known Settle, through her husband, for approximately two years. She and her friend agreed to meet Settle at the Quik Trip parking lot after Settle telephoned to say he could hot find her apartment using her directions. Settle denied going off the road with his car. The defendant testified that the car driven by the two women pulled into the North Star Apartments, in Gladstone, on the left side of a driveway leading into a yard area of the apartment complex. Settle pulled his car behind the first, and walked toward the two women before remembering his car was unlocked. He walked back and locked his car, and had returned to the first car when Officer McHale’s car then pulled in on the left side of the driveway, next to Settle’s. The defendant testified that McHale “pulled up and put a light in my face and said do you have some identification. I said yes, sir, I do. He said I want it.” He also requested identification from the two women. When Brenda told him she did not have identification on her person but could obtain it from her apartment, McHale refused to allow her to get the identification and instead asked for and received her name and birth-date. McHale then called into his dispatcher with the names. The defendant stated he did not attempt to walk away from the area because McHale “was a policeman. He had a gun.” Other than requesting the identification, McHale did not command him to halt or to freeze. Nor was he advised that he was being charged with anything. The two women were allowed to leave after having been checked out on the computer. The defendant testified he asked McHale why he had been stopped, and McHale responded, “for drunk driving.” When the defendant protested, McHale said, “[Y]eah, you shut up and I’ll ask the questions.” According to the defendant, after the women left, McHale *316 asked Settle whether the two girls were prostitutes. He replied McHale should have asked the girls that when they were there. McHale denied asking the question about the girls being prostitutes.
It was at approximately this point, according to Settle’s testimony, when the two Gladstone police officers, Coup and Toman, arrived in two marked vehicles. McHale stated that Officer Coup stood by to watch the defendant while McHale ran a computer check from his ear. The two women had already departed. Computer problems had arisen before the defendant’s name could be run through.
Settle admitted throwing the can of pop but denied any knowledge or possession of the prescription vial containing hydromor-phone. He claimed that the syringes and non-controlled drugs in his car were used as sedatives for his German Shepherd dogs.
Settle attacks the denial of his motion to suppress by arguing that Sergeant McHale lacked the authority to arrest or to conduct an investigatory stop outside his territorial jurisdiction of Kansas City, Missouri. He also argues that McHale lacked probable cause or any articulable suspicion to stop Settle, violating the Fourth Amendment’s 1 proscription against unreasonable searches and seizures, as well as Article I, Section 15 of the Missouri Constitution. 2 All of the seized evidence, he argues, is the fruit of the illegal stop.
The parties’ initial dispute concerns whether or not McHale actually “seized” the person of the appellant so as to raise any Fourth Amendment concerns. A seizure of a person occurs whenever an officer by physical force or through a show of authority imposes an involuntary restraint upon an individual’s liberty.
Terry v. Ohio,
The next issues surround the undisputed fact of McHale leaving his territorial jurisdiction of Kansas City to follow the defendant. The parties differ as to the effect of the Kansas City officer’s lack of statutory authority in Gladstone and the applicable standard that would render the officer’s extraterritorial stop or arrest of the defendant as unreasonable.
The statutory authority of Kansas City police officers extends only to the corporate boundaries and to municipal property located beyond city limits. Section 84.420 RSMo.1978 and Cumm.Supp. 1983. Kansas City police officers, are both municipal and state officers, and are empowered to arrest for both ordinance and state violations “within the city or on public property of the city beyond the corporate limits thereof_” Section 84.710 RSMo. 1978 and Cumm.Supp.1983. The status of “state officers” statutorily conferred upon Kansas City police officers subjects them to legislative control.
See American Fire Alarm Co. v. Board of Police Commissioners,
No argument can be made that McHale was in “hot pursuit” of Settle, since neither a chase nor the commission of a felony within McHale’s territorial jurisdiction occurred.
See State v. Keeny,
“In Missouri, a private citizen may make an arrest on a showing of commission of a felony and reasonable grounds to suspect the arrested party.”
State v. Fritz,
Although the respondent attempts to justify McHale’s actions as a valid citizen’s arrest, neither its evidence at trial or at the hearing, or its brief ever points to any misdemeanor offense that Settle was supposed to have violated. To the contrary, the radio dispatch to Gladstone mentioned only a traffic offense. McHale conceded on cross-examination no misdemean- or or felony had occurred, nor did he ever think one had occurred at the time he stopped Settle.
Respondent cites
State v. Rue,
The second ingredient necessary to the common law privilege of arrest by a private citizen, i.e. probable cause, is also missing in the present case. In State v. Fritz, supra, a federal treasury agent who had no local law enforcement jurisdiction assisted the Kansas City police department on local calls. After hearing a police call alerting officers to prowlers inside a residence, the agent sighted a man running across the front yard of a home on the same block. The defendant’s arrest by the agent was not tainted by the agent’s lack of authority since his actions did not exceed those of a private citizen. A felony had been committed and reasonable grounds existed to suspect the arrested person.
In
State v. Gay, supra,
a University City Police officer followed into St. Louis (outside his statutory jurisdiction), a car whose passengers matched the description of two men believed to have burglarized a store in University City. Citing to
Fritz,
the court in upholding the arrests relied upon the fact a felony had been committed and that reasonable grounds existed to suspect the arrested persons. Under those circumstances even private citizens could have arrested the defendants.
While an early morning perambulation along a public highway may not be a legal right usually exercised by the public in general, we are not wont to say that the mere discovery of a person so engaged, especially if he be otherwise unknown to the observer, constitutes probable cause or reasonably trustworthy information sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing the pedestrian is guilty of having committed a felony. * * * “[T]he mere presence of an individual unknown to the police, in a suspicious place, can raise merely a suspicion that he has violated the law or committed a crime.” (Citations omitted).
In contrast to Fritz, Gay, and Goodman, Sergeant McHale did not have knowledge of the commission of any offense when he left the territorial jurisdiction of Kansas City. He left his jurisdiction armed with bare suspicions tied to age differences, an out-of-state license plate and behavior he considered “strange” but lacking the necessary ingredient of probable cause. One isolated instance of the rear wheel leaving the road during the course of several blocks does not rise to the level of probable cause that the driver was intoxicated, especially when McHale’s prior firsthand observations failed to support such a suspicion. Neither did any observations of the defendant at the North Star Apartments indicate he was intoxicated. McHale’s actions contradict the motives claimed to underlie his actions, affirming the conclusion that his suspicions served merely as a pretext to proceed on a nocturnal fishing expedition outside of his jurisdiction. State v. Goodman, supra, at 660. McHale also claimed to have legitimate concerns for the safety of the two women. His actions uncovered different concerns. He abandoned the opportunity at the Quik Trip to simply ask the women whether they were all right in favor of stalking the entire scenario. At the North Star Apartments, he demanded identification not only from the defendant but from the supposed potential victims, and asked whether they were prostitutes. Although his ’ car was equipped with a spotlight, he made no attempt to stop the car claimed to be operating dangerously. When the car stopped at the apartments, he demanded identification not only from the driver of the car believed to have committed the traffic offense, but also from the driver and passenger of the other ear he followed.
Relying upon
People v. Hamilton,
The state further argues that because the illegal contraband was undiscovered until after the arrival of the Gladstone officers, this court should conclude the discovery resulted from a second lawful stop, not the first. They argue any prior illegal stop by McHale should not taint the second lawful stop.
In
Wong Sun v. United States,
Under the present circumstances, the continuation of the defendant’s detention by the Gladstone officers did not purge the illegality of the detention by McHale. The discovery of the evidence resulted from an exploitation of an illegal detention unsupported by probable cause. Unlike
United States v. Walker,
Inextricably tied to the facts and issue here is the question of whether an abandonment occurred when Settle threw the prescription vial. An abandonment brings the right of privacy to an end, removing any Fourth Amendment complaint about the seizure and introduction in evidence of the abandoned property. “In short the theory of abandonment is that no search is presented in such a situation, and the property so abandoned may be seized without probable cause.” Mascólo, The Rule of Abandonment in the Law of Search and Seizure: An Application of Misdirected Emphasis, 20 Buff.L.Rev. 399, 400-01 (1971).
The issue common to the validity of the arrest and any theory of abandonment is that of the requirement of probable cause. An officer, without probable cause and acting strictly on a hunch or suspicion, who hounds an individual and harasses him into discarding contraband brings to the fore a constitutional question. The police by coercion (overbearing conduct without probable cause) cannot force an individual
*321
to abandon his right to privacy and use the evidence against him. This would allow the police to do indirectly what could not be accomplished directly.
Mascolo, supra,
at 416-17; LaFave, Search and Seizure, Vol. 1, 373-74 (1978). Property thrown away due to the unlawful activities of police officers is not to be considered abandoned.
State v. Reed,
Here there was a uniformed policeman out of his jurisdiction acting like a policeman but having only the arrest powers of a private citizen. As stated earlier he had no probable cause that
any
crime had been committed.
State v. Cuezze,
Although involving police activity within their jurisdiction, the rationale in
United States v. Beck, supra,
applies to this case. There the police on routine patrol saw two men sitting in a car in a high crime area. The officers questioned the men and pulled their car closer to get out to question further. Contraband was then discarded. The court held the police had effectively restrained the defendant: he was not free to ignore the officer and in the totality of the circumstances had been stopped. Such a stop opined the court could only be lawful if based on reasonable suspicion.
In a letter filed after argument the state presented several theories to uphold the conviction. With citations of authority the state raised the abandonment theory and several others for the first time, not having mentioned or discussed them in respondent’s brief. This prompted the appellant to counteract with a three page letter replete with authority. This is precisely what this court decried in
State v. Taylor,
The Motion to Suppress the evidence for which the defendant was charged should have been sustained. The admission of the hydromorphone into evidence was prejudicial error. The defendant was charged with no other crime—this evidence cannot be used against him causing the judgment to be reversed and the defendant ordered discharged.
Kansas City v. Butters,
All concur.
Notes
. U.S. Const. Amend. IV.
. "That the people shall be secure in their persons, papers, homes and effects, from unreasonable searches and seizures; and no warrant to search any place, or seize any person or thing, shall issue without describing the place to be searched, or the person or thing to be seized, as nearly as may be; nor without probable cause, supported by written oath or affirmation.” Mo. Const. Art. I § 15.
. "The Common Law further qualifies the authority of both the officer and the private citizen in misdemeanor arrests: the arrestee's conduct must constitute a breach of peace or present an apparent immediate threat thereof.” Scurlock, *318 Arrest in Missouri, 29 K.C.L.R. 115, 176-177 (1961).
. In State v. Rue, supra, the court held that the jurisdiction of justices of the peace to hear cases involving breaches of the peace extends to offenses for driving while intoxicated. Both City of Troy v. Cummins, supra and State v. Jennings, supra, involved the issue whether operation of a motor vehicle fell within a statutory exception to privilege—from—arrest statutes. The courts both held that operating a motor vehicle fell within the exception for breaches of the peace.
