This case arises from the warrantless search of a vehicle incident to the driver’s arrest for driving without a valid driver’s license (her license having expired). During the search, controlled substances were found, and the passenger, who was also the owner of the automobile, was chargеd with possession of a controlled substance. This appeal presents issues as to whether the passenger/owner has standing to challenge the search of the vehicle and, if so, whether the search was impermissible because the arrest upon which it was based was unlawful.
FACTS
A рolice officer for the city of Emmett stopped a vehicle for speeding. The automobile was being driven by Yvonne Holloway but was owned by Michael F. Foldesi, who was also a passenger in the car. Upon learning that Holloway’s driver’s license had expired, the officer arrested her for operating a motor vehicle without valid license, I.C. §§ 49-301, handcuffed her and put her in his patrol car. The officer then returned to the Foldesi automobile and asked Foldesi to step out of the car so the officer could search it. Foldesi initially refused. After several requests from the officer, Foldesi finally exited the vehicle but, as he did so, locked the doors. When the officer requested the key so he could unlock the car and conduct the search, Foldesi declined to relinquish the keys. The officer, tiring of Foldesi’s recalcitrance, рlaced him under arrest for obstructing and delaying an officer, I.C. § 18-705. He then took the keys from Foldesi, unlocked the car, and searched the passenger compartment. During this search, the officer found a leather bag containing a white substance which, upon testing, proved to be methamphetamine. Drug paraphernalia was also found. Foldesi was subsequently charged with felony possession of a controlled substance, I.C. § 37-2732(c)(l), misdemeanor possession with intent to use drug paraphernalia, I.C. § 37-2734A, and obstructing and delaying a law enforcement officer.
Foldesi filed a motion to suppress the evidence found in the search of his automobile, alleging that the search was unlawful under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Art. I, § 17 of the Idaho Constitution on the theory that the driver’s arrest, which served as the predicate for the search incident tо arrest, was illegal. The district court denied the motion, and Foldesi proceeded to a jury trial. He was found guilty of all charges. On appeal, Foldesi asserts error in the denial of his suppression motion.
ANALYSIS
In reviewing the disposition of the suppression motion, we defer to the trial court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous, but we independently determine whether, on the facts found, constitutional standards have been satisfied.
State v. Luna,
Warrantless searches of automobiles are violative of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Art. I, § 17 of the Idaho Constitution unless a recognized exception to the warrant requirement applies.
State v. Weaver,
The State responds that the Court should not address Foldesi’s аrgument that Holloway’s arrest was unlawful because the argument was not presented in a pretrial suppression motion. The record shows the State’s argument to be incorrect. Although Foldesi did not raise this issue on his first motion to suppress evidence, after changing attorneys he filed a sеcond suppression motion. The second motion presented the same ground for suppression that is now urged on appeal. The record does not indicate that the prosecutor objected to this second motion as being untimely or otherwise procedurally improper. Therefore, we deem the issue to be properly before us for disposition.
A. Foldesi Has Standing to Contest Search of His Vehicle
It appears that the district court’s rejection of Foldesi’s motion was based, in part, upon the court’s doubt that Foldesi had standing to raise the issue because his objection was based upon the illegality of the arrest of a third party. Therefore, our threshold inquiry is whether Foldesi has standing to raise this challenge to evidence found in the search of his vehicle.
It is well established that the Fourth Amendment’s protection is a personal right which may not be vicariously asserted; it may be еnforced by the exclusion of illegally acquired evidence only at the behest of one whose rights were infringed by the government.
Rakas v. Illinois,
Although a property interest in the thing searched is an important factor, ownership
Other cases, however, hold that еven an absent owner or renter has standing to question the lawfulness of a search where the circumstances show that the owner/renter retained a subjective and reasonable expectation of privacy in the searched vehicle.
United States v. Kye Soo Lee,
In the case before us, Foldesi had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his own automobile. He had not relinquished possession or control to a third party but was occupying the vehicle when it was stopped. The mere fact that he was allowing someone else to drive did not extinguish his legitimate privacy interest.
Of course, the arrest of Holloway, even if unlawful, did not directly infringe a constitutional right of Foldesi; but when that arrest was used as the predicate for a search of his vehicle, Foldesi’s own Fourth Amendment rights were implicated. A warrantless search incident to an arrest is permissible only if the arrest was lawful.
Belton, supra; State v. Pannell,
B. Arrest for Driving Without a Valid License Was Illegal
We turn, then, to the merits оf Foldesi’s argument that the officer exceeded the bounds of his authority when he placed Holloway under arrest. Foldesi contends that Idaho statutes prohibit arrests for the misdemeanor offense of driving with an expired license and that the officer should have issued a citation to Holloway instead of arresting her. 3
Operating a motor vehicle in this state without a valid driver’s license is a misdemeanor. I.C. §§ 49-236, -301, -331(8). As a general proposition, a police officer may, without a warrant, make an arrest for a misdemeanor committed in the officer’s presencе. I.C. § 19-603(1). This general arrest authority is modified, however, with respect to misdemeanor violations of Title 49 of the Idaho Code, which regulates motor vehicles and their operation. Idaho Code § 49-1409 provides: “Whenever a person is halted by a peace officer for a misdemeanor traffic violation and is not taken before a magistrate as required or permitted by this title, the officer
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issue a citation as provided by section 19-3901, Idaho Code, and by rale of the supreme court.” (Emphasis added.) Thus,
No statute requires an arrest for the offense of driving with an expired license. The circumstances under which an arrest for this misdemeanor is permitted are specified in I.C. § 49-1407. 4 The relevant portion of that statute provides:
Whenеver any person is halted by a peace officer for any misdemeanor violation of the provisions of this title and is not required to be taken before a magistrate, the person shall, in the discretion of the officer, either be given a traffic citation or be taken without unnecessary delay before the proper magistrate as specified in section 49-1411, Idaho Code, in the following cases:
(1) When the person does not furnish satisfactory evidence of identity or when the officer has reasonable and probable grounds to believe the pеrson will disregard a written promise to appear in court.
The discretion conferred by this statute for an officer to take a traffic violator into custody is not applicable in this case, for the prosecution presented no evidence that Holloway was unable to furnish satisfactory evidence of identity or that she gave the officer reason to believe that she would fail to make a court appearance as directed in a citation. The driver’s license that she showed the officer was reasonable evidence of her identity even though it had expired, and nothing in the record indicates that Holloway had previously failed to appear at court proceedings or would be inclined to disregard a citation. We conclude, therefore, that under the governing statutes, the officer was limited to issuing Holloway a citation for driving without a valid license. 5
Because Holloway’s arrest was unlawful, the search of Foldesi’s automobile incident to that arrest violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Accordingly, the district court was in error in denying Foldesi’s motion to suppress evidence acquired through this searсh.
Foldesi’s judgment of conviction is vacated, the order denying his motion for suppression of evidence is reversed. This case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
. This appeal does not present an issue as to whether the search, which the officer was attempting to initiate before Foldesi was arrested, can be justified as a search incident to Foldesi's own arrest. The district court observed that if the prosecution was presenting this as a search incident to the arrest of Foldesi, the court would hold the search invalid because police should not be allowed to "lift themselves by their bootstraps” by demanding to search and, if the vehicle occupant says "no,” using that resistance as an excuse to arrest the occupant. On appeal, the State does not challenge this determination of the district court or otherwise argue that the search could properly be conducted pursuant to Foldesi’s own arrest.
. If the stop was illegal at the outset or later turned into an unlawfully extended detention, the passenger has standing to challenge evidence taken during a subsequеnt search because the passenger’s own freedom of movement has been infringed by the stop.
State v. Haworth,
. This is an issue which the Idaho Supreme Court touched upon in
State v. Headley,
. There are other statutes whiсh give officers authority to arrest for particular types of traffic offenses that are not at issue here. For example, I.C. § 49-1405 provides that the authority to make an arrest is the same as upon arrest for a felony when a person is being charged with certain delineated serious offenses, which do not include driving without a valid license; and I.C. § 49-1408 authorizes the arrest of a non-resident who is involved in ah accident when the officer has probable cause to believe that the person committed a traffic offense. Subsections (2) and (3) of § 49-1407 also provide for the arrest of persons charged with certain offenses related to vehicle inspection, testing and weight restrictions.
. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has also held that I.C. § 49-1407 (then codified as I.C. § 49-1 111) narrows the broader arrest authority conferred by I.C. § 19-603.
Tannery. Heise,
