This case is before us for the third time. In State v. Canfield,
We take the facts as set forth in Canfield I:
“An officer in a patrol car in Beaverton saw defendant walking down the street. After the officer drove by, defendant crossed the street and walked quickly toward a mall. The officer made a U-turn and followed defendant. Defendant walked into a parking lot and got into a parked car on the passenger side. The car traveled a short distance in the parking lot and then parked in the parking lot again. The driver of the car and defendant got out of the car and began walking toward a fast-food restaurant.
“The officer approached defendant and the driver and asked to speak with them. The officer told defendant that he saw defendant run across the street and that the officer thought it was strange that the car defendant was in had moved a short distance in the parking lot and then parked again. The officer asked defendant and the driver for identification, which they provided for him. The officer kept the identification long enough to write the numbers on*76 his hand — approximately 30 seconds — and then returned the identification to defendant and the driver. The officer noticed that defendant had a folding knife in the pocket of his pants. The officer asked defendant if he had any weapons or drugs. Defendant told the officer that he had a pipe, which the officer suspected was a marijuana pipe.
“The officer asked defendant and the driver if he could search them, and they both consented. The officer put defendant in a patdown or search position with his fingers interlaced behind his back. The officer told defendant that he was not under arrest, that the search position was how the officer conducted searches, and that defendant was free to leave. The officer testified that defendant indicated that he understood when the officer told defendant that he was free to go. During the search, the officer found defendant’s pipe and noticed the pipe contained a burnt residue that smelled like marijuana. The officer moved on to the car’s driver and repeated the same process. In addition, the officer asked the driver if there was any marijuana in the car and asked for consent to search the car. The driver told the officer that there was marijuana worth $20 in the car and consented to the search. The officer found the marijuana in the car. The driver told the officer that he had met with defendant to buy the marijuana from him. Defendant also made incriminating statements to the officer. The officer arrested defendant, who was charged with unlawful delivery of marijuana.”
The question before us on remand is whether defendant was unlawfully stopped. The parties acknowledge that, in these circumstances, the officer who approached defendant had neither reasonable suspicion nor probable cause to justify a stop. Thus, the sole question is whether defendant was, in fact, “stopped” for purposes of Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution at the time he consented to the search of his person.
The state asserts that, particularly in light of the application of that principle to the circumstances in Backstrand, Highley, and Anderson, the trial court correctly denied defendant’s motion to suppress because defendant had not been “stopped.” Defendant contends that our previous opinion was correct, because, under the circumstances described above, “a reasonable person [would] believe that a law enforcement officer intentionally and significantly restricted, interfered with, or otherwise deprived the individual of his or her liberty or freedom of movement.” Backstrand,
A review of the principles enunciated in Backstrand, Highley, and Anderson demonstrates why this was not a “stop” for constitutional purposes, but as the court in Backstrand acknowledged, “the line between a ‘mere encounter’ and something that rises to the level of a ‘seizure’ does not lend itself to easy demarcation.”
The court in Backstrand summarized its earlier case law in which it had concluded that no stop had occurred, including: Holmes,
With those cases in mind, the court turned to the issue presented in Backstrand, “whether an officer effectively seizes an individual simply by asking for an individual’s identification.” Id. at 409. The court indicated that “the request alone and nothing more” did not constitute a stop for purposes of Article I, section 9. Id. The court went on to note that, in some circumstances, requests for identification, when accompanied by other police conduct, could constitute a stop. For example, in State v. Warner,
The court contrasted those cases to the circumstances presented in Backstrand, where an officer had approached the defendant in a store that sold adult materials and checked his identification to ensure that he was old enough to be in the establishment. In doing so, the officer learned that the defendant’s driver’s license was suspended. The defendant left the store, and the officer later observed him driving and stopped him. Backstrand,
In Anderson, the court considered a different set of circumstances that also involved asking for identification. There, officers were carrying out a search of an apartment when the defendant and one of his friends drove up, parked, approached the apartment, then quickly returned to their car after seeing the police there.
“[T]he question is whether the content of the officers’ requests, the manner in which they were made, or the overall context of the contact elevated the encounter to the level*80 of a seizure by conveying to defendant and the driver that the officers would not allow them to leave. The record does not suggest, however, that the officers’ tone or manner were overbearing or controlling, such that what otherwise were mere verbal exchanges were, in fact, something more. Nor was the content of the brief exchange coercive. [The officer’s] explanation of the officers’ reasons for the contact and the officers’ requests for identification informed defendant and the driver that the officers were interested in why they had come to the apartment and what they knew about [the suspect’s] activities. That information objectively conveyed possible suspicion that the driver and defendant could be involved in criminal activity related to the apartment, but they equally conveyed that the officers were interested in whatever information the two might be able to provide. In all events, by those brief verbal exchanges and inquiries alone, the officers did not communicate an exercise of authority of the kind required for a seizure.”
Id. at 453 (emphasis added).
The court reached a similar conclusion in Highley. In that case, an officer approached a parked car, knowing that the driver had a suspended license, and spoke with the driver while the defendant and another passenger walked away. Highley,
With the circumstances of those cases in mind, we return to the facts here that defendant contends demonstrate that he was unlawfully stopped. An officer saw defendant cross the street, then saw defendant enter the passenger side of a car, then saw the car move to a different parking space in the parking lot. As defendant and the car’s driver walked toward a nearby restaurant, the officer approached and told defendant that he had seen defendant cross the street, said that he thought it was strange that they had moved the car, and asked them for identification. The officer retained their identification for only about 30 seconds. The officer asked defendant about drugs or weapons, and, after defendant acknowledged that he had a pipe, the officer asked for consent to search.
Defendant contends that, in those circumstances, the officer’s statements would convey to a reasonable person that he was not free to leave, as the officer was investigating a possible drug offense, or possibly an “unlawful street crossing.” The record does not indicate, however, that the officer was investigating any potential traffic-related offense. Rather, the record indicates — as did the officer’s words to defendant — that the officer approached defendant and his companion because he thought their behavior was “strange.” Additionally, we note, by the time the officer asked for consent to search, defendant had admitted he had a pipe on him. The officer, however, believed that defendant had a marijuana pipe, and did not suggest in any way to defendant that possession of such an item was a crime or that the officer was investigating.
These circumstances are, frankly, somewhat less compelling than those at issue in Anderson and Highley, which are factually the most comparable of the three cases
In the present case, unlike in Anderson, there was no indication at the time the officer spoke to defendant that the officer was investigating any crime. And unlike in Highley, there was no indication that the officer was investigating a potential probation violation. Additionally, there was no retention of identification as in Painter,
Affirmed.
Notes
The facts recited below from Canfield I are consistent with our analysis in Canfield II.
Defendant does not argue that an unlawful stop occurred after he consented to the search.
As noted, after defendant had acknowledged that he had a pipe, the officer had told defendant that he was free to leave. Canfield II,
