Lead Opinion
I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the trial court's legal conclusions for legal error. State v. Bean ,
II. FACTS
While on patrol one night, Officer Delepine of the Hillsboro Police Department saw defendant driving with an expired registration tag on her license plate. Delepine activated his overhead lights to initiate a traffic stop, and defendant pulled to the side of the road. Delepine approached defendant and advised her of the reason for the stop. When Delepine asked her for her driver's license and proof of insurance, defendant admitted that her registration was expired, that her driver's license was suspended, and that she did not have insurance. Delepine used his in-vehicle computer to confirm that information. He then began writing a citation.
Delepine was still writing the citation when the second officer, Weed, arrived. After telling Weed that he intended to impound defendant's car, Delepine approached defendant, who was still in the car. Delepine told her in a conversational tone that he "was going to be impounding her vehicle for the reasons of her license being suspended, no insurance, and it being a hazard." (Delepine considered the car to be a hazard because it was blocking the bike lane.) Weed stood by the passenger door as Delepine spoke to defendant on the driver's side. Delepine asked defendant "to step out of the vehicle so that Officer Weed [could] conduct an inventory." He "asked her" and "didn't order her," although defendant did not have the option to stay in the car. Delepine did not say anything to defendant about taking items out of the car-he did not tell her to take items with her, nor did he tell her to leave items in the car. Delepine explained, "Generally, I just have them get out of the car. Most of the time after I tell someone that I'm towing their car, they grab * * * those things that they want."
Defendant got out of the car. She brought her cell phone and a pack of cigarettes with her. Defendant left her purse on the passenger seat, and she did not ask to remove the purse or any other property from the car. Once out of the car, defendant stood with Delepine near the hood of his vehicle. Delepine
Meanwhile, Weed had begun the inventory of defendant's car. He conducted the inventory in accordance with the Hillsboro Police Department's inventory policy. Upon taking "constructive custody of a vehicle prior to impoundment," the policy requires an officer to inventory, among other things, "all personal property and the contents of open containers found" in the vehicle's passenger compartment. The policy does not allow the opening of "closed containers," but it expressly excludes "item[s] designed for carrying
In this case, the first item that Weed examined during the inventory was defendant's purse, which was on the passenger seat. "[I]t was the first thing that [he] looked in because it was right there." Inside a wallet in the purse, Weed found needles and a small bag of methamphetamine. Weed directed Delepine to arrest defendant, and Delepine did so. Defendant then admitted to Delepine that she had "dirty rigs" (which Weed understood to mean used needles) and that she was a methamphetamine user.
The state charged defendant with one count of unlawful possession of methamphetamine. Defendant moved to suppress the evidence from her purse and any derivative evidence, arguing, among other things, that the officers had unlawfully seized her purse because they "did not give [her] an opportunity to take her belongings" from her car before the inventory began. After a hearing at which Delepine, Weed, and defendant testified, the trial court denied defendant's motion. The court concluded that the stop had been lawful, that the decision to impound the car had been lawful, and that the inventory had been lawfully conducted in accordance with the department's policy. As for defendant's purse, the court found that defendant had never asked to remove it and that, although the officers could have said something as a "courtesy," they were not legally required to ask defendant whether she wanted to take items with her. After the denial of her motion to suppress, defendant was tried and convicted.
III. ANALYSIS
In her sole assignment of error on appeal, defendant challenges the denial of her motion to suppress. Defendant
We begin our analysis with a brief overview of the law relating to police inventories of impounded vehicles. We then address each of defendant's arguments in turn, beginning with the second argument because of how it relates to the first.
A. Overview of Law on Police Inventories
" Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution establishes a right of the people 'to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable search, or seizure.' " State v. Rodgers/Kirkeby ,
The administrative seizure exception to the warrant requirement "recognizes that police have occasions to take custody of personal property," including vehicles, "for reasons that are unrelated to any criminal investigation." Lambert ,
An inventory search is a concept "related, but distinct" from an administrative seizure. Lambert ,
In Atkinson , the Supreme Court stated that responsible policy makers may rely on "protective reasons" of the foregoing nature to adopt "prescribed procedures for inventorying the contents of an impounded vehicle." Id . at 8,
It is important to keep in mind that an inventory search is noninvestigatory in nature. Thus, an officer may not order someone to leave items in a vehicle that is being impounded in order to inventory them, nor may an officer "inventory" items that an occupant has removed from the vehicle.
With that basic framework in mind, we turn to defendant's two arguments.
B. Defendant's "Affirmative Duty" Argument
It is undisputed that, if defendant had taken her purse with her or asked to take it with her when she got out of the car, the officers could not have ordered her to leave it in the car or searched it as part of the inventory.
Defendant's proposed rule is not without appeal. We have previously recognized that the purposes of an inventory are "served by encouraging occupants to remove small containers" from vehicles prior to impoundment. Sparks ,
Requiring officers to advise occupants that they may remove personal items before a vehicle is impounded also would help alleviate concerns among some members of the public that inventories are little more than warrantless investigatory searches in disguise. See, e.g. , Atkinson ,
The question before us, however, is not whether it is a good policy for law enforcement officers to ask vehicle occupants whether they want to remove personal items from a vehicle before it is impounded. Indeed, the state essentially concedes that it is. Rather,
Several other states have grappled with similar issues in interpreting their state constitutions. See Atkinson ,
Those out-of-state decisions raise important and interesting issues about whether the typical justifications for inventory policies are actually compelling enough to render the automatic warrantless search of every administratively seized vehicle reasonable, or, more precisely, not "unreasonable" for purposes of Article I, section 9. No matter how important and interesting those issues are, however, we are
Of course, if an inventory policy contained an unconstitutional provision-such as providing for the search of closed opaque containers-we would recognize that provision as unconstitutional, notwithstanding that the vehicle was lawfully in police custody, that the inventory policy was duly authorized, and that an officer had followed the policy. In that sense, the dissent is perhaps correct to say that Atkinson does not truly control the question before us. See
C. Defendant's "Reasonable Person" Argument
We turn then to defendant's other argument-that her purse was unlawfully seized because, under the totality of the circumstances, a reasonable person in defendant's position would believe "that she was to exit the car immediately and that she was not free to reach around the car to retrieve her personal items." In other words, defendant argues that, by getting her out of the car in the manner that they did, the officers interfered with her possessory interests in the items in the car so as to constitute an unlawful seizure of those items before the administrative seizure took place.
"Property is 'seized,' for purposes of Article I, section 9, when there is a significant interference, even a temporary one, with a person's possessory or ownership interests in the property." State v. Juarez-Godinez ,
The moment when an officer informs a person who is not under arrest that a vehicle is going to be impounded and asks, directs, or otherwise causes the person to exit the vehicle has not been the subject of much case law. Generally speaking, we agree with defendant that, in that moment, an officer could engage in conduct that would unlawfully interfere with the person's right to remove personal belongings from the vehicle, so as to constitute a seizure of those items distinct from the administrative seizure of the vehicle. See
Whether property has been seized by a law enforcement officer is a fact-specific inquiry. See Juarez-Godinez ,
Defendant points to her being "surrounded" by Delepine and Weed as evidence of a show of authority. That characterization, however, takes the officers' positions out of context. Delepine told defendant that Weed was there to conduct the inventory, which explained why Weed was standing there, and Weed did not say or do anything. Other than the physical location of the officers, the only "circumstances" that defendant identifies as relevant to what a reasonable person would believe about her ability to remove items from the car are that she was asked to step
If we had concluded that Article I, section 9, requires law enforcement officers to give an advice-of-rights regarding inventory searches, the lack of such an advisement might be relevant in assessing what an objectively reasonably person would believe. We did not so conclude, however, so there would have to be some other basis to say that an objectively reasonable person in defendant's circumstances would have believed that she could not remove personal items from the vehicle.
With respect to seizures of persons, the Supreme Court has made clear that an officer's inherent authority is not enough to effectuate a seizure but, rather, that physical restraint or a show of authority that significantly restricts a person's freedom is necessary. See State v. Anderson ,
IV. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we conclude that the officers did not violate defendant's rights under Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution, and that the trial court did not err in denying defendant's motion to suppress the evidence found in her purse.
Affirmed.
Notes
That policy is consistent with our case law. See State v. Mundt/Fincher ,
Defendant asserts briefly that the inventory policy "says nothing about the seizure of portable containers within [a] vehicle." It is unclear what defendant means. The inventory policy allows for the inventory of closed containers generally (without regard to their portability) and allows for the inventory of the contents of certain containers, including purses and wallets, which are the only possible "portable containers" at issue in this case. In any event, any argument on this point is undeveloped, and we, like the state, do not understand defendant to be asserting any violation of the inventory policy.
Similarly, the dissent focuses its energies on distinguishing Atkinson and on challenging the historical justifications for inventory policies, but it does not explain-or at least does not explain to our satisfaction-how it would fit into existing case law regarding Article I, section 9, and the Oregon Constitution generally, to require law enforcement officers to give advice-of-rights to owners in advance of administrative seizure of vehicles. See
We note that the traffic stop was ongoing when Delepine asked defendant to step out of the car, so defendant's person was still temporarily seized at that time. See Rodgers/Kirkeby ,
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion
The majority holds that, because of the Supreme Court's opinion in Atkinson , an officer does not violate Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution when, in the course of impounding a vehicle, the officer fails to ask the driver, who is still present at the scene, whether she would like to remove items from the vehicle.
To begin, the majority correctly states that there are three principal justifications often put forth to support governmental policies of inventorying impounded personal property. However, in quickly assuming that these justifications remain valid, the majority ignores the fact that each has been questioned. Indeed, Justice Roberts' dissent in Atkinson itself noted that "[i]nventory searches of automobiles for non[ ]investigatory reasons are not new" and that "the justifications upon which [they are] premised have been criticized often." Atkinson ,
The first justification is that inventories supposedly "protect the owner's property while in police custody."
The second justification is that inventories "reduce the risk of and tend to prevent the assertion of false claims against police."
The final justification is that, in some circumstances, inventories "reduce physical danger to police officers and others."
Moreover, I note that Atkinson was far from a full-fledged endorsement of these justifications.
I also disagree with the majority's conclusion that, in describing three conditions for an inventory policy, the Supreme Court authorized any inventory so long as those three conditions are met.
First, the Supreme Court was not focused on the reasonableness of conducting an inventory. Rather, the court's discussion centered on how to determine if an inventory policy was reasonable under Article I, section 9. See Atkinson ,
The majority ultimately reaches its holding by concluding that defendant's purse was not "seized" and that therefore, officers did not violate defendant's right to be free from warrantless search and seizure. In doing so, the majority applies our case law from when a person is "seized" and thus fails to take into account the complicated moment when a driver is asked to exit a vehicle that police intend to impound and inventory. The majority acknowledges that at the moment when defendant was instructed to exit her car, she had the right to take her purse with her.
The majority acknowledges that the rule defendant requests-that in the course of
I respectfully dissent.
