[¶ 1.] State of South Dakota petitioned for an intermediate appeal from a trial court’s order suppressing certain statements made by Thomas Gesinger (Gesinger) both prior to and after his arrest for driving while under the influence of alcohol (DUI). We granted the State’s petition, and following review of the substantive issues raised, we reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
[¶ 2.] On November 15, 1994, at 10:45 p.m., a South Dakota Highway Patrolman Mark Nelson (Trooper Nelson) stopped a vehicle driven by Gesinger on U.S. Highway 212 in Potter County for speeding. Trooper Nelson’s radar clocked Gesinger traveling 73 miles per hour in a 55-mile per hour zone. Trooper Nelson approached the driver’s side of the vehicle and, while Gesinger was still sitting inside, Trooper Nelson detected the odor of alcohol. Trooper Nelson told Gesinger he was being stopped for speeding, asked to see his driver’s license, and asked Gesinger to have a seat in the patrol car. Gesinger obliged.
[¶ 3.] Trooper Nelson joined Gesinger in the patrol car and issued him a speeding ticket. At that time, Trooper Nelson detected a stronger odor of alcohol emanating from Gesinger and also noted Gesinger’s slurred speech. Trooper Nelson asked Gesinger “if he had anything to drink” and Gesinger replied he “had a couple of drinks.” Trooper *550 Nelson did not inform Gesinger of his Miranda rights at this time. He would later testify Gesinger was not free to leave the patrol car, although he did not communicate this to Gesinger.
[¶4.] After Gesinger failed several field sobriety tests, Trooper Nelson arrested him for DUI, and took him in handcuffs to the Potter County Jail. At the jail, Gesinger’s handcuffs were removed and he was informed of his Miranda rights for the first time. Gesinger waived his rights and agreed to speak with Trooper Nelson. When asked again by Trooper Nelson if he had been drinking, Gesinger replied in the affirmative. When asked what and how much he had had to drink, Gesinger replied “four or five ... Lords and 7s.” Gesinger’s statements made at this time, as well as his statements made to Trooper Nelson while sitting in the patrol car, are the subject of this appeal. The facts are not in dispute.
[¶5.] Gesinger moved for suppression of •these statements claiming they were involuntarily made and made during a custodial interrogation without his having been informed of his Miranda rights. He claimed his statements made after he had been Mir-andized were tainted under the “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine. Following a hearing, the trial court agreed and ordered both sets of statements suppressed, finding that Gesinger’s constitutional rights against self-incrimination had been violated.
[¶ 6.] State petitioned this Court for intermediate appeal of the trial court’s order. We granted the petition and State raises the following issues:
1. Whether the trial court erred in concluding Gesinger’s statements, given both before and after Miranda warnings were issued, were involuntary?
2. Whether the trial court erred in concluding that Gesinger was subjected to custodial interrogation while seated in the patrol car?
3. Whether the trial court erred in holding the statements given after Gesinger was Mirandized were tainted as “fruit of the poisonous tree?”
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[¶ 7.] In
Thompson v. Keohane,
— U.S. —, —,
[¶ 8.] We recently stated that we review a trial court’s decision on a suppression motion under an abuse of discretion standard of review.
State v. Ramirez,
[¶ 9.] We have also held that a finding of voluntariness by the trial court is binding upon this Court unless it is found to be clearly erroneous.
State v. DeNoyer,
[¶ 10.] We proceed to address the issues in the same order as presented to us by the State in its appeal.
ANALYSIS AND DECISION
[¶ 11.] 1. Whether the trial court erred in concluding Gesinger’s statements, given both before and after Miranda warnings were issued, were involuntary?
[¶ 12.] The test for determining vol-untariness of incriminating statements or confessions requires the trial court to consider the effect the totality of the circumstances had upon the will of the defendant and whether that will was overborne.
State v. Oltmanns,
[¶ 13.] We recently examined the factors the trial court must consider in determining whether the defendant’s will was overborne.
State v. Darby,
[¶ 14.] The trial court found that Gesinger’s “incriminating statement”
1
was not voluntarily made. We are bound by this finding unless it is clearly erroneous.
DeNoyer,
[¶ 15.] We cannot find, under the totality of the circumstances which must be considered, that Gesinger’s statements were the product of police coercion or that his will was overborne.
State v. Corder,
[¶ 16] 2. Whether the trial court erred in concluding that Gesinger was subjected to custodial interrogation while seated in the patrol car?
[¶ 17.] When analyzing whether an individual is “in custody” for purposes, of activating the need for
Miranda
warnings, “a court must examine all of the circumstances surrounding the interrogation,”
Stansbury v. California,
[¶ 18.] Trooper Nelson testified that Gesinger was not free to leave. However, we stated in
State v. Hall,
[¶ 19.] As noted above, the United States Supreme Court addressed this issue in 1984 and expressly declined to carve out an exception from
Miranda
for traffic offenses.
Berkemer,
We cannot agree [with petitioner, an Ohio county sheriff] that the dangers of police abuse are so slight in this context [stopped for a misdemeanor traffic offense]. For example, the offense of driving while intoxicated is increasingly regarded in many jurisdictions as a very serious matter. Especially when the intoxicant at issue is a narcotic drug rather than alcohol, the police sometimes have difficulty obtaining evidence of this crime. Under such circumstances, the incentive for the police to try to induce the defendant to incriminate himself may well be substantial. Similar incentives are likely to be present when a person is arrested for a minor offense but the police suspect that a more serious crime may have been committed.
Berkemer,
[¶ 20.] The second issue addressed by the
Berkemer
Court was: “whether the roadside questioning of a motorist detained pursuant to a routine traffic stop should be considered ‘custodial interrogation.’”
[¶21.] Both State and Gesinger rely on
Berkemer
to support their arguments to this Court. Gesinger relies on the first portion of the Supreme Court’s opinion holding that
*553
Miranda
requirements apply to all custodial interrogations, whether a result of a felony or a misdemeanor traffic offense.
[¶ 22.] Gesinger has failed to show that at any time between the stop and his arrest, his freedom of movement was restrained to a degree associated with a formal arrest, thus rendering him “in custody” for
Miranda
purposes. The period of elapsed time between the stop and the arrest was of a short duration. Trooper Nelson asked Gesinger only one question: have you had anything to drink, to which Gesinger answered that he had a couple of drinks. At that point, Trooper Nelson took Gesinger through some field sobriety testing in the patrol car. They then stepped out of the car where Trooper Nelson requested Gesinger perform several field sobriety tests which would have been in full view of any passing motorists. The
Berkemer
Court regarded these two features of the ordinary traffic stop as mitigating the danger that the person questioned would be induced “to speak where he would not otherwise do so freely:” 1) that traffic stops are presumptively temporary and brief; and 2) that traffic stops involve circumstances such that the motorist does not feel completely at the mercy of the police,
ie.,
they are conducted in public view, usually only one or two officers are involved, and the atmosphere is substantially less “police dominated” than in the eases applying
Miranda.
[¶23.] We hold the trial court erred in finding Gesinger was subjected to a custodial interrogation under the circumstances present and reverse on this issue.
[¶ 24.] 3. Whether the trial court erred in holding the statements given after *554 Gesinger was Mirandized were tainted as “fruit of the poisonous tree?”
[¶25.] The second set of incriminating statements was made at the jail, after Gesinger had been read his
Miranda
rights. The trial court claimed this to be a “classic case of the fruit-of-the-poisonous tree” doctrine in that these statements were an extension of Gesinger’s earlier involuntary statements made in the patrol ear, and could not be later cured by informing him of his constitutional rights.
Wong Sun v. United States,
CONCLUSION
[¶ 26.] We hold the trial court abused its discretion in granting Gesinger’s motion to suppress the statements he made in the patrol car and in jail regarding his alcohol consumption under the totality of the circumstances present. We reverse.
Notes
. While it is not necessary for disposition of this appeal to determine whether the statement made to the Trooper is incriminatory, we would note that driving after the consumption of an alcoholic beverage by a person over the age of 21, is not per se illegal in South Dakota. Possession of an unsealed alcoholic beverage in a motor vehicle is a crime, SDCL 35-1-9.1, as is driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or with .10 percent or more by weight of alcohol in the driver’s blood, SDCL 32-23-1. Here the Trooper, prior to the arrest, only asked Gesinger "if he had anything to drink?”
. The trial court's ruling from the bench focused on the custodial nature of the interrogation without a discussion of voluntariness. However, the court’s findings and conclusions reflect its conclusion that Gesinger’s statement made in the patrol car was not voluntary.
