I. Nature of the Case
In this сonsolidated appeal, John and Jane Doe challenge the statutory and constitutional authority of the magistrate judge to require them to undergo random drug urinalysis testing as a condition of their minor daughter’s formal probation.
II. Factual and Procedural Background
On September 26, 2005, John and Jane Doe, Appellants, appeared without an attorney in magistrate court with their minor daughter, who, with the consent of her parents, signed a written admission to two counts of petit theft. At the disposition hearing the following month, the magistrate found the Does’ daughter to be under the purview of the Juvenile Corrections Act (“JCA”) and imposed informal probation on her for her offenses. Because a social investigation revealed that the Does had a history of drug abuse and that Jane was on probation for possession of marijuana drug paraphernalia, the magistrate questioned the Does about their use of controlled substances. Jane admitted to the magistrate that she used methamphetamine before having her children and had continued to smoke marijuana until she was caught with paraphernalia sometime prior to the events in this ease. The magistrate consequently required both John and Jane to undergo random drug urinalyses as a term of their daughter’s probation.
John subsequently signed two written admissions to smoking marijuana on separate occasions shortly after the probation terms were imposed. Jane signed a similar written admission to using marijuana after the terms had been imposed. Both of the Does also submitted urine samples that tested positive for THC. 1 Additionally, the Does’ daughter was found to have violated the terms of her probation for various reasons. The Does obtained counsel for the Order to Show Cause Hearing to determine whethеr to revoke their daughter’s informal probation and to hold them in contempt for their drug use. Although the Does both tested positive for THC at the Order to Show Cause Hearing, the State moved to withdraw the contempt action because the Does were complying with the order to submit to urinalysis testing.
At the Disposition Hearing, the magistrate placed the Does’ daughter on formal probation and imposed terms requiring the Does to submit to randоm urine testing and not to violate controlled-substance laws. The disposition order admonished the Does that they could be subject to contempt proceedings if they disobeyed the order. 2 The Does refused to sign the order. Based in part on the juvenile probation officer’s report that the Does were using marijuana in front of their daughter, the magistrate also expanded the JCA proceedings into a Child Protection Act рroceeding. These proceedings were ultimately dismissed based on contradictory evidence.
The Does appealed their probation terms to the district court, arguing that the magistrate lacked statutory authority under I.C. § 20-520(1)© to require them to submit to random urinalyses and that, even if statutory authority existed, such terms violated the
III. Issues on Appeal
1. Whether the magistrate could, under I.C. § 20 — 520(l)(i), require the Does to involuntarily submit to random urinalysis drug tests as a condition of their daughter’s probation.
2. Whether the magistrate could order such tests under the Fourth Amendment.
IV. Standard op Review
The Does appealed to the district court a term of then* daughter’s probation pursuant to I.C.R. 54.1(f), which permits appeal from a magistrate’s order “affecting the substantial rights of the defendant or the state.” Where this Court reviews an appeal of an order from the magistrate judge, it does so independently of the district court.
State v. Anderson,
Y. Analysis
A. The Magistrate Had Authority to Order Random Urinalysis Testing Under I.C. § 20-520
The Does contend that, under the JCA, the magistrate could not compel them to undergo random drug tests without their consent.
If such a probation term was imposed pursuant to I.C. § 20-522, the Does would be correct that their consent is necessary. That section convеys authority to the magistrate “to have the juvenile and the juvenile’s parentis) ... sign a probationary contract with the court containing terms and conditions that the juvenile and the juvenile’s parent(s) ... must adhere to as a condition of the juvenile’s probation.” I.C. § 20-522. This Court has previously held that, since the parties would be entering a contract, the probation terms would only be valid if the parents gave consent.
State v. Watkins,
The magistrate, howevеr, imposed the urinalysis requirement under I.C. § 20-520, a provision that permits compulsory probation orders on juveniles. “In support of an order under the provisions of this section, the court may make an additional order setting forth reasonable conditions to be complied with by the parents, the juvenile, his legal guardian or custodian____” I.C. § 20-520(l)(i). Since § 20 — 520(l)(i) permits probation terms to be imposed on the juvenile’s parents in an order, rather than a contract, the parents’ consent is not necessary.
Watkins,
Of course, when determining what “reasonable conditions” a magistrate may impose on parents under the JCA, the Court’s objective is to give effect to legislative intent.
State v. Yzaguirre,
Since the express legislative goal here is to rehabilitate minors and to “assist the juvenile in developing skills to become a contributing member of a diverse community,” I.C. § 20-501, the legislature gave magistrates the discretion to require drug testing for parents, at least where it is apparent that drug use is a feature of home life. Drug use by a minor’s parents could reasonably detract from the minor’s education and rehabilitation.
The statute specifically applicable to the magistrate’s order in this case also demonstrates the legislature’s intent to allow parental urinalysis testing. Idaho Code § 20-520(l)(j) permits the court to “make any other reasonable order which is in the best interest of the juvenile or is required for the proteсtion of the public.” Similarly, § 20-520(l)(i) specifically states that the court may restrict parents’ visitation with children, again evincing the legislature’s goal of pretecting children from damaging contact with their parents. Since the statute permits the magistrate to impose requirements that ultimately serve the juvenile’s best interests, including restricting the Does’ contact with their child, it therefore enables the court to require the Does to take urinalysеs if drug use may be occurring in front of the child.
B. The Probation Order Violated the Fourth Amendment by Requiring Random Urinalysis Testing as a Condition of the Does’ Daughter’s Probation
Because it intrudes on bodily privacy, requiring parents to provide urine samples is a search within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
Skinner v. Ry. Labor Executives’ Ass’n,
The first step is to gauge the weight and nature of the privacy interest at stake.
Bd. of Edue. v. Earls,
It goes without saying that since the Does are adults, the State has no stewardship over them that would justify asserting a grеater scope of authority. They have not voluntarily submitted to the State’s custody or oversight. Similarly, the Does are not seeking any benefit, such as employment, that would ordinarily subject them to enhanced government oversight. Although the State has a compelling interest in ensuring the well-being of Idaho’s children, the Does themselves are not subject to lesser Fourth Amendment protections in their persons merely by virtue of the fact that their dаughter has committed a crime.
More relevant here is that those who have been convicted of a criminal offense, such as parolees and prison inmates, can also be subject to greater levels of State intrusion.
See Hudson v. Palmer,
Although the Does’ daughter is on probation, it does not necessarily follow that they themselves are subject to a diminished expectation of privacy in their bodily fluids. Parolees, probationers, and indeed all criminal offenders are on a “continuum of state-imposed punishments.”
Samson v. California,
The next step is to measure the intrusiveness of the search at issue.
Earls,
536 U.S.
Last, the Court must determine whether the State has a sufficient reason to require the urine tests. Where the test subject has a full expectation of Fourth Amendment privacy, as do the Does in this case, “the proffered special need for drug testing must be substantial — important enough to override the individual’s acknowledged privacy interest, sufficiently vital to suppress the Fourth Amendment’s normal requirement of individualized suspicion.”
Chandler v. Miller,
Here, neither party disputes the fact that protecting the welfare of children and rehabilitating child offenders are among the most laudatory of State interests. Moreover, “voluntary involvement of a parent in the rehabilitation of his or her child likely has a salutary effect.”
State v. Watkins,
However, even where a substantial State interest exists, this Court will not uphold a search “whose primary purpose is ultimately indistinguishable from the general interest in crime control.”
City of Indianapolis v. Edmond,
Just like the testing program in Ferguson, testing in this case is characterized by a general interest in lаw enforcement. The magistrate imposed the urinalysis requirement during juvenile delinquency proceedings under the JCA, which are quasi-criminal in nature. See I.C. § 20-508 (allowing courts to waive jurisdiction under the JCA so that the juvenile may be transferred to “adult criminal proceedings”). The magistrate’s order requires the Does to report to their daughter’s probation officer, who is an officer of the county required by law to “enforce probation conditions.” Id. §§ 20-529, - 533(3). Nothing prevented the probation officer from conveying the Does’ test results to law enforcement. Their failure to comply could result in contempt sanctions, which would be brought and pursued by the prosecuting attorney. Indeed, the juvenile probation officer in this case reported the parents’ positive urinalysis results to the prosecutor. It also appears that such evidence could be used to obtain search warrants against the Does and would be admissible against the Does in further criminal proceedings for encouraging their daughter’s delinquency. See id. § 20-526 (punishing anyone “who by any act or neglect encourages, aids or causes a juvenile to come within the purview or jurisdiction of [the JCA]”).
While the ultimate goal of the program may well have been to get the women in question into substance abuse treatment and off of drugs, the immediate objective of the searches was to generate evidence for law enforcement purposes in order to reach that goal____ Because law enforcement involvement always serves some broader social purpose or objective, under [the State’s] view, virtually any nonconsensual suspicionless search could be immunized under the special needs doctrine by defining the search solely in terms of its ultimate, rather than immediate, purpose.
Ferguson,
In response, the State also argues that the urine testing does not further the interests of law enforcement because the Does would only be held in contempt of court for refusing to comply. The State reasons, without authority, that contempt is not a criminal sanction, but rather is merely a civil power exercised by the judiciary.
It is, of course, true that the judiciary’s power to hold individuals in contempt flows from its inherent authority and is not conveyed by statute.
McDougall v. Sheridan,
In summary, the magistrate’s order requiring the Does to undergo urinalysis testing constituted a search under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution that is presumptively invalid absent a warrant. The intrusion is nоt extraordinarily invasive, but the Does do not have a diminished expectation of privacy in their bodies simply because their daughter is on juvenile probation. The search is therefore unconstitutional because it primarily furthers the State’s interest in law enforcement.
VI. Conclusion
Although the magistrate had the statutory power to require the Does to undergo urinalysis testing as a condition of their daughter’s juvenile probation, such a term is unconstitutiоnal under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The district court’s decision affirming the magistrate is reversed and the probation order is vacated.
Notes
. THC is an abbreviation for tetrahydrocannabinol, the active compound in marijuana. cluded it had jurisdiction, and the Does do not challenge jurisdiction on this ground.
. The order stated:
NOTICE TO PARENT, GUARDIAN OR CUSTODIAN: The parent, guardian or custodian shall assist in the compliance with the terms herein and shall immediately notify the Probation Department of any violation© of this order. Any parent, guardian or custodian violating any order of the Court under the provisions of the Juvenile Corrections Act shall be subject to contempt proceedings.
. John also argues that, unless the magistrate finds that the Does’ possible drug use contributed directly to their daughter's criminal activity, the magistrate lacks jurisdiction to require them to take urine tests. Since he cites no legal authority, this argument would ordinarily be waived, State v.
Zichko, 129
Idaho 259, 263,
Idaho Code § 20-510 confers jurisdiction over the parent if the prosecuting attorney serves the juvenile petition upon him or her. There is no additional requirement that probation conditions on parents may only prohibit conduct that directly caused the juvenile's criminal actions. See I.C. § 20-520(l)(i) (empowering the court to impose "reasonable conditions"). The record does not indicate whether the Does received service of the petition, but the magistrate court twice con-
. Because the search at issue here is of the Does' persons, specifically their bodily fluids, this opinion does not address situations in which police search an area controlled in common by a probationer and others not under the State's supervision.
See State v. Barker,
