[¶ 1] Dean Garrett appeals from orders denying his motions to suppress evidence pertaining to three alcohol-related charges from two separate incidents. All three cases were consolidated for this appeal. We affirm.
I.
[112] Late on March 28, 1997, Mercer County Sheriffs Deputy Steve Kilde was on routine patrol of the Hazen Bay Recreational Area. Noticing a bonfire and a group of people near the picnic arеa, Kilde drove closer to the area. As he approached, he saw five of the group throwing “alcohol receptacles” into the trees. Kilde recognized many of the group, including Garrett, whom he recalled was a minor. Kilde asked for identification, and as he began to separate the adults from the minors, Garrett ran from the area. Kilde did not run after Garrett, but returned to his squad car to radio for assistance.
[¶ 3] On his way to his squad car, Kilde walked past a Chevy Cavalier parked in the public parking area. Kilde identified the vehicle as one he had seen Garrett drive. As he approached the vehicle, somewhat illuminated by the bonfire and a nearby street light, Kilde saw an open beer box on the front passenger seat.
[¶4] Lieutenant Burling arrived to assist Kilde, and the two officers decided to impound Garrett’s vehicle “for evaluation as evidence.” The box of beer remained inside the vehicle, which was impounded and towed to the Sheriffs Department. Later that night, Kilde searched the vehicle and found seven full cans of beer inside the box on the passenger seat, and two empty beer cans and an empty .5 ml bottle of schnapps under the front seats.
[¶ 6] On April 4, 1997, Garrett was subsequently charged with violating N.D.C.C. § 5- *504 01-08, possession of an alcoholic beverage by a minor.
[¶ 6] On March 80,1997, Deputy Kilde was called to assist Officer Locke, of the Hazen Police Department, investigate a report of a fight at the Roughrider Mоtel in Hazen. Kilde was informed Garrett had been involved in the fight and could be found at the motel.
[¶ 7] At the motel, Kilde approached a Dodge Charger sitting in front of Locke’s patrol car. Kilde recognized Garrett as the driver of the vehicle. Kilde talked to Garrett, who told him he had just been in a fight, but did not want to press charges. During the conversation, Kilde observed “a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage emitting from his vehicle.” Officer Locke administered fiеld sobriety tests, which Garrett failed. Locke placed Garrett under arrest for violating N.D.C.C. § 39-08-01, driving under the influence, and gave the North Dakota implied consent advisory. At the Mercer County jail, Garrett was searched, and an “alcohol receptacle [was found on] Mr. Garrett’s person.”
[¶ 8] On April 2,1997, Garrett was charged with violating N.D.C.C. § 5-01-08, for the possession of the “alcohol receptacle” found on his person when he was arrested for driving under the influence.
[¶ 9] On June 12, 1997, Garrеtt brought three separate motions to suppress evidence relating to the three alcohol-related charges. First, Garrett moved for the suppression of all evidence gathered after the impoundment and search of his vehicle on March 28, 1997, on the grounds “the impoundment and search was illegal under Article I, Section 8 of the North Dakota Constitution and the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution.” 1 Second, Garrett moved for the suppression of thе DUI evidence, includ-mg lab reports and witness’ statements, on the grounds “there was no articulable and reasonable suspicion for the investigative stop” of his vehicle on March 30, 1997. Third, Garrett moved for the suppression of evidence relating to the minor in possession charge of March 30, 1997, also on the grounds “there was no articulable and reasonable suspicion for the investigative stop.”
[¶ 10] After a September 8,1997, evidentia-ry hearing on the motions, the trial court issued orders denying all three suppression motions on October 6, 1997. 2 On October 8, 1997, the trial court gave its memorandum opinion orally. On that same date, Garrett entered conditional pleas of guilty to all three charges • under N.D.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2). On October 16, 1997, Garrett filed a notice of appeal of the trial court’s orders denying his suppression motions.
[¶ 11] In
State v. Sabinash,
The triаl court’s disposition of a motion to suppress will not be reversed if, after conflicts in the testimony are resolved in favor of affirmance, there is sufficient competent evidence fairly capable of supporting the trial court’s findings, and the decision is not contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. That standard of review recognizes the importance of the trial court’s opportunity to observe the witnesses and assess their credibility, and wе “accord great deference to its decision in suppression matters.”
We have reviewed the records here, and conclude the trial court’s denial of the suppression motions is supported by competent *505 evidence and is not contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. We therefore affirm the trial court’s denial of Garrett’s suppression motions.
II.
[¶ 12] Garrett contends the beer found by Deputy Kilde during his warrant-less search of Garrett’s vehiсle on March 28, 1997, should have been suppressed. The State argues a warrant was not necessary for the search of Garrett’s vehicle, as “Kilde did not invade any constitutionally protected area of [Garrett’s] when he seized the beer and the automobile.”
[¶ 18] It is axiomatic that the Fourth Amendment’s protection from unlawful search and seizures is not triggered unless there has in fact been a “search” or “seizure” by the State. Our initial inquiry, therefore, is whether Deputy Kilde “searched” Garrett’s vehicle when he viewed the open beer box on the front seat of the vehicle. The question of whether a search rises to the level of Fourth Amendment activity is guided by what has become known as the “reasonable expectation of privacy” test.
Katz v. United States,
[¶ 14] We stated in
Planz,
however, “searches of vehicles may be made under circumstances where searches of buildings would not be allowed because of the ambulatory charactеr of automobiles, the lesser expectation of privacy as to automobiles, and the fact that automobiles are often within the plain view of officers.”
[¶ 15] Our inquiry, however, is not at an end here. “The search of an automobile, with or without a warrant, must be made upon probable cause, based upon a reasonable belief arising out of the circumstances known to the officer, that the automobile contains articles which are subject to seizure.”
State v. Meadows,
[¶ 16] Plain view alone, however,- is never enough to justify the warrantless search or seizure of evidence. It has been stated “that no amount of probable cause can justify a warrantlеss search or seizure absent ‘exigent circumstances.’ ”
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
[¶ 17] Yet, in
Planz
we found an exception to the exigent circumstances requirement wherе the evidence to be seized is “displayed in a manner that does not afford it a reasonable expectation of privacy and it is the instrumentality of the crime for which the defendant is arrested.”
State v. Gronlund,
[¶ 18] Accordingly, we consider whether the impoundment of Garrett’s vehicle “for evaluation as evidence” and subsequent search of the vehicle at the station was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. 3 More specifically, we must determine whether Deputy Kilde was required to obtain a warrant to seаrch Garrett’s vehicle once he impounded the vehicle to the station. Although we have not previously addressed this issue, we conclude that under a series of United States Supreme Court decisions, the answer to that question is no.
[¶ 19] In the 1970 decision,
Chambers v. Maroney,
the Supreme Court concluded, in circumstances where a vehicle “could have been searched on the spot when it was stopped,” it was not unreasonable to seize a vehicle and bring it to the station to search it there instead.
[¶20] The Court opined, “[f]or constitutional purposes, we see no difference between on the one hand seizing and holding a car before presenting the probable cause issue to a magistrate and on the other hand carrying out an immediate search without a warrant.”
Id.
at 52,
[¶ 21] The warrantless search in
Chambers
was apparently upheld because “once the car
*507
was legitimatеly at the station house a prompt [warrantless] search could be conducted.”
Texas v. White,
[¶ 22] Because of the majority’s reliance in Chambers on the “mobility” notion of the “automobile exception” and discussion of exigent circumstances in footnotе 10, the lower courts were unclear under what circumstances a warrant would be required to search a vehicle which had been seized and brought to the station. See generally 3 W. LaFave, Search and Seizure, § 7.2(a), at 461-66 (3d ed.1996). In the aftermath of Chambers, some courts required police to obtain a warrant to search a vehicle that had been impounded or taken to the station primarily because the “mobility” rationale of the automobile exception was not then implicated as the vehicle had essentially becomе “immobile” at the station.
[¶ 23] In
California v. Carney,
[¶ 24] Professor LaFave characterized the consequence of Carney ⅛ reliance upon the “reduced expectation of privacy” theory by stating “warrantless car searches are not likely to be jeopardized by delay in making the search.” 3 W. LaFave, supra § 7.2(b), at 476. “Indeed,” LaFave states, “any lingering doubts about the validity of delayed vehicle searches at the station have been dissipated by the Supreme Cоurt’s decision in United States v. Johns.” Id.
[IT 25] In
United States v. Johns,
police seized two vehicles, took them to the station, unloaded the packages found therein, and then searched those packages three days later.
[0]ur previous decisions indicate that the officers acted permissibly by waiting until they returned to [the station] before they searched the vehicles and removed their contents. There is no requirement that the warrantless search of a vehicle occur contemporaneously with its lawful seizure. The justification to conduct such a war-rantless search does nоt vanish once the car has been immobilized. A vehicle lawfully in police custody may be searched on the basis of probable cause to believe that it contains contraband, and there is no requirement of exigent circumstances to justify such a warrantless search.
Id.
at 484,
*508 [¶ 26] We believe Johns is correctly-premised on the notion that a subsequent search of a vehicle at the station is no greater intrusion on one’s privacy interests than a search of the vehiclе when it was initially seized. A later search of a vehicle at the station is permissible, we believe, because the police are only doing later what they could have done earlier. 5 We conclude Deputy Kilde’s impoundment and subsequent search of Garrett’s vehicle was not unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
[¶ 27] In his brief, Garrett makes an additional challenge to the search and seizure of his vehicle. He claims the seizure of his vehicle was impеrmissible because the impound inventory record lists “abandoned” as the reason for the impoundment, and his vehicle had not been abandoned under N.D.C.C. § 39-26-02 (remaining on public property parked illegally for more than forty-eight hours). The impound record, however, also lists “evaluation of evidence” as another reason for the impoundment. We conclude these notations on the vehicle impound record do not taint the propriety of the search and seizure of evidence in Garrett’s vehicle, because they were justified by the beer found in “plain sight” on the front seat of the vehicle.
III.
[¶28] Garrett alleges the trial court should have suppressed the evidence related to his March 30, 1997, DUI and minor in possession charges because Officer Locke and Deputy Kilde did not have a reasonable and articulable suspicion to make an investigative stop. 6 We disagree.
[¶ 29] As we stated in
State v. Kenner,
[¶ 30] As we noted in
Kenner,
[¶ 31] Garrett’s only challenge to the two charges from the March 30, 1997, incident is that there was no reasonable and articulable suspicion for the investigative stop. Because the record here indicates otherwise, we agree with the trial court that Kilde
did have a reasonable and articulable suspicion to stop Mr. Garrett and, after smelling the odor of alcoholic beverages on him, to further investigate and ultimately to arrest him for driving under the influence. At the station house and pursuant to arrest, the officer was entitled to search Mr. Garrett before placing him in the jail, or the jailers were, and the resulting disclosure or finding of the alcoholic beverage was lawful.
Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s dеnial of the suppression motions regarding the March 30,1997, incident.
[¶ 32] All three judgments of conviction entered in this matter on April 20, 1998, are affirmed.
Notes
. In
State v. Hensel,
. Here, the record on appeal does not include an order denying the suppression motion for case number 970328 (minor in possession charge from March 28, 1997). However, because the trial court transcripts reference orders denying the suppression motions in all three casеs, we will treat the suppression orders as though they apply to all three cases.
. We note the circumstances in this case do not fit the analysis used in our automobile inventory search cases.
E.g., State v. Kunkel,
. We recognize the majority of courts have inter- preted
Carney
and
Johns
as not requiring exigent
*508
circumstances of any kind to justify the tаking of a vehicle to the station after probable cause is established on the scene.
See
3 W. LaFave,
supra
§ 7.2(b), at 477-78 n. 76. We, of course, also recognize a state court, as a matter of state constitutional law, may require some degree of exigent circumstances.
See, e.g., People v. Edwards,
. Like the Court in
Johns,
we do not suggest here that the police are at liberty to indefinitely retain possession of a vehicle and its contents before they complete a vehicle search.
See Johns,
. Here, the record indicates Garrett's car was already stopped when Kilde approached it. It is not clear whether Locke had stopped the car or whether Garrett had remained parked as Kilde approached. In either event, we conclude Kilde's approach and questioning of Garrett inside his car was an investigatory "stop” as defined in
City of Fargo v. Sivertson,
