We granted the petition of the state to review the 4-3 decision of the Court of Appeals in
State v. Davis,
At 2:12 a.m. on Saturday, April 6, 1985, St. Paul Police Officer John Cannefax was stopped on eastbound 11th Street at the intersection with Jackson waiting for the light to change. A vehicle southbound on Jackson — i.e., coming from the officer’s left — slowed down and a female passenger leaned out the passenger door window and shouted, “The car behind us just ran the red light!” As she said this, she motioned toward a red Ford Maverick, the only car in view at that time. Officer Cannefax followed the Maverick and eventually stopped it. He did not observe any erratic driving before he stopped the car. Once he stopped the car he made observations which gave him probable cause to believe that Davis, the driver, was under the influence of alcohol. Davis submitted to a breath test, which showed he had a blood alcohol concentration of .19.
The trial court denied a motion to suppress on fourth amendment grounds. Davis then stipulated to the above facts and waived his right to a jury trial. The trial court found Davis guilty of DWI.
The Court of Appeals, in a 4-3 decision, reversed the trial court on the ground that the stop was illegal. The court ruled that our decision in
Olson v. Commissioner of Public Safety,
In
Marben,
a trooper parked on 1-94 near an intersection in Steams County received a CB radio report from an unidentified person who said that he was a trucker and that he could see the trooper’s car. The caller said that a motorist had been tailgating him for 60 to 70 miles. We held that there was no problem with the caller’s basis of knowledge. We also reasoned that the trucker could be believed because he
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apparently was a private citizen and because “due to the trucker’s reference to the location of * * * [the trooper’s] squad car and the vehicle in question, the trooper was able to verify that the trucker was in the area, and in close proximity to the subject car.”
In Olson, the officer on patrol received a dispatch that an anonymous person had called in and reported “possibly a drunken driver” driving westbound on Highway 55 from County Road 116 in a white Datsun with Minnesota license number EMN 880. The officer located the car, going eastbound on Highway 55, and followed it into a bar parking lot, then westbound onto Highway 55. He observed no erratic driving before stopping the car. We distinguished the case from Marben on the ground that nothing was known about the informant or about what led him to believe that the driver was “possibly” drunk. In other words, for all that the police knew, they were being asked to stop a car on the whim of an anonymous caller.
We conclude that the stop in this case was legal. Indeed, we think that this is an even stronger case for upholding the stop than
Mo,rben
was because here there was, however brief, a face-to-face confrontation between the tipster and the officer. As stated in
United States v. Sierra-Hernandez,
Reversed and judgment of conviction reinstated.
Notes
.
Cf., State v. Lindquist,
