Eriе K. Gibson appeals from his judgment of conviction following a conditional guilty plea to possession of a controlled substance, reserving the right to appeal the district court’s order denying his motion to suppress evidence. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the order denying Gibson’s motion to suppress and vacate Gibson’s judgment of conviction.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
In February 2003, at 2:49 in the morning, an officer with the Twin Falls Sheriffs Office observed a vehicle traveling approximately 33 mph on the right shoulder of the road. The officer watched as the vehicle stopped and the driver and passenger switched places. The officer activated his overhead lights and called for backup. When the officer made contact with the vehicle, he identified Gibson as the occupant who had moved to the driver’s seat. The other occupant, who had been operating the vehicle when the officer first observed it, was a fourteen-year-old boy. A second officer arrived on the scene with a certified drug dog. The dog was walked around the outside of the vehicle while Gibson and the passenger were still inside. The dog alerted on the passenger-side door. Following the dog’s indication that it detected the odor of controlled substances, Gibson and the lad were removed from the vehicle and patted down for weapons. Gibson appeared agitated and excited. The officers removed items from Gibson’s jacket, including his wallet, and placed them in a paper bag. The search of the vehicle did not uncover any drugs. The officers then searched Gibson’s wallet and discovered a small baggie containing methamphetamine. Gibson was arrested and charged with possession of a controlled substance. I.C. § 37-2732(c)(1).
Gibson filed a motion to suppress the methamphetamine arguing that, by searching his wallet, the officer impermissibly expanded the automobile search to a search of his person. The district court denied Gibson’s motion, finding that the dog’s alert gave the officers probable cause to suspect that there were drugs either in the vehicle or on its occupants. Therefore, the district court found that, once a search of the vehicle failed to disclose any contraband, the officers had probable cause to search Gibson. Gibson entered a conditional plea of guilty, reserving his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress.
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ANALYSIS
The standard of review of a suppression motion is bifurcated. When a decision on a motion to suppress is challenged, we accept the trial court’s findings of fact that are supported by substantial evidence, but we freely review the application of constitutional principles to the facts as found.
State v. Atkinson,
On appeal, Gibson argues that probable cause to search his vehicle could not extend to authorization to search belongings found on his person. The state contends that, when the search of the vehicle failed to disclose any controlled substances, the officers had probable cause to believe that the drugs the dog detected were on Gibson’s person. Accordingly, the state asserts that the officers had probable cause to arrest Gibson for possession of a controlled substance and that the search of his wallet was lawful as a search incident to that arrest. Gibson argues that the officers did not have probable cause to arrest him. Thus, Gibson contends that the search of his wallet was unconstitutional and that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress.
A. Search of Wallet
Under the automobile exception, police may search an automobile and the containers within it when they have probable cause to believe that the automobile contains contraband or evidence of a crime.
State v. Gallegos,
The district court held that, once the officers failed to find controlled substances in Gibson’s vehicle, the justification to search the vehicle extended to authorization to search Gibson. We disagree with the district court’s determination.
The automobile exception is based both upon the automobile’s ready mobility, which is deemed an exigency sufficient to
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excuse the warrant requirement once probable cause for the search is clear, and upon the lesser expectation of privacy in an automobile as compared to the privacy interest in a home.
California v. Carney,
Accordingly, the district court erred in concluding that the automobile exception to the warrant requirement justified the warrantless search of Gibson following the dog’s alert and the fruitless search of his vehicle. However, where a ruling in a criminal case is correct, though based upon an incorrect reason, it still may be sustained upon the proper legal theory.
State v. Pierce,
B. Probable Cause for Arrest
The state concedes that the automobile exception did not provide a basis to search Gibson but, instead, urges that probable cause existed to arrest Gibson for possession of a controlled substance prior to the search of his wallet. Therefore, the state alleges that the search of Gibson’s wallet was a valid as a search incident to arrest. The state points out that, sp long as a search and arrest are substantially contemporaneous, and there is probable cause to arrest without depending on the fruits of the search, a valid search incident to arrest may precede the actual arrest.
See State v. Johnson,
A peace officer may-make a warrantless arrest when a person has committed a public offense in the presence of the peace officer. I.C. § 19-603(1). Probable cause is “the possession of information that would lead a person of ordinary care and prudence to believe or entertain an honest and strong presumption that such person is guilty.”
State v. Julian,
The state argues that the canine alert that supplied probable cause to search Gibson’s vehicle provided probable cause to believe Gibson was in possession of a controlled substance. Although Idaho courts have held that the canine alert provides probable cause to search an automobile, whether that probable cause gives police authority to execute a warrantless arrest of an occupant of that vehicle, has not been addressed.
See e.g., State v. Tucker,
The standard of probable cause involves the same quantum of evidence regardless of whether an arrest or a search is involved.
United States v. Humphries,
A person’s mere proximity to people who are suspected of criminal activity, or presence in a location where a search has been authorized by warrant, does not give probable cause to search that person.
Ybarra v. Illinois,
Although a drug’s odor detected by a dog alerting on a vehicle provides probable cause to believe that the drug is present and authorizes the search of the vehicle, the mere existence of the drug in an automobilе does not of itself authorize the police either to search any other place or provide probable cause to arrest any person in the vicinity.
Humphries,
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Whether there is probable cause to arrest an individual depends on the totality of the circumstances and the assessment of probabilities in particular factual contexts.
Pringle,
• In
United States v. Haggard,
The alert of a drug dog on a car seat where an occupant had previously been seated does not, standing alone, give police probable cause to believe that the occupant had drugs on his or her person.
Cady v. State,
The state asserts that, because the search of Gibson’s vehicle did not uncover any drugs, the occupants of the car must have been the source of the dog’s alert. The dog’s detection of the odor of drugs did not automatically justify probable cause to arrest Gibson unless there were additional factors to connect that odor with him.
See Humphries,
Unlike Humphries or Haggard where the police possessed additional information such as the defendant’s еvasive conduct, presence in a high crime area or suspected involvement in drug trafficking, here there is no evidence that the officers possessed additional facts that connected Gibson to illicit drugs. Also, unlike Pringle and Haggard, the absence of drugs in Gibson’s vehicle precluded the officer from associating the drug’s odor with Gibson on the basis of his proximity to the controlled substance. The record reveals that the dog was walked around the outside of Gibson’s car and alerted to the passenger side, where Gibson was no longer seated. These facts fail to provide a basis from which the officer could reasonably entertain an honest and strong presumption that Gibson possessed drugs that were detected by the dog.
The state also contends that Gibson’s agitated and excited demeanor, and the style of his jacket, provided the officer with sufficient additional facts to suspect that Gibson was guilty of possession. However, Gibson’s nervous demeanor does little to support the state’s argument. Gibson had been stopped by police after allowing a fourteen-year-old to drive his vehicle in the middle of the night. Gibson thus had reasons to fear repеrcussions for this conduct with a minor quite apart from speculative apprehension that the officers would discover drugs. Further, because it is common for people to exhibit signs of nervousness when confronted with law enforcement regardless of criminal activity, a
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person’s nervous demeanor during such an encounter is of limited significance in establishing the presence of reasonable suspicion.
Brent v. Ashley,
The state also asserts that the style of Gibson’s jacket, which had several zippered pockets that were filled with items, increased the probability that Gibson was in pоssession of narcotics. However, Gibson was stopped in the middle of the night in February, so wearing a jacket was not suspicious. The number of pockets on Gibson’s jacket, the fact that the pockets had zippers, or that Gibson had placed his belongings in those pockets, fails to make it any more probable that Gibson was in possession of controlled substances.
The state cites to several cases from other jurisdictions to support its proposition that a drug dog’s alert on a vehicle can provide probable cause to arrest an occupant once a search of that vehicle fails to turn up any controlled substances. We note that most of those cases involved dogs’ alerts to items of luggage that were connected with a specific individual. Further, in several of those cases the courts relied on a drug dog’s alert in combination with other factors in order to conclude that the totality of the circumstances established probable cause to believe a person possessed drugs. The state relies heavily on
United States v. Anchondo,
In the instant case, the dog’s alert provided probable cause to believe that a place, Gibson’s vehicle, may have contained controlled substances.
See Tucker,
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CONCLUSION
The district court erred when it found that the officers could lawfully search Gibson. The district court’s order denying Gibson’s motion to suppress is therefore reversеd, and Gibson’s judgment of conviction is vacated.
Notes
. The United States Supreme Court has recently held that any intrusion that results from the well-trained dog’s sniff of the exterior of a lawfully stopped vehicle does not rise to the level of a constitutionally cognizable infringement of a privacy interest.
See Illinois v. Caballes,
- U.S. -, -,
. At the hearing held on Gibson's motion to suppress, Gibson stipulated that the dog involved in his case was certified for drug searches and had an excellent accuracy record. Thus, we do not address whether a sufficient foundation had been laid to establish that the dog’s alert in this case
ipso facto
established probable cause to conduct a warrantless search under the automobile exception.
See United States v. Lingenfelter,
. On this point, it is instructive to consider that conditioning and certification programs for drug-deteсtion dogs vary widely in their methods and elements.
See Matheson,
. As an alternate basis to deny Gibson's motion to suppress, the district court found that an exception to the exclusionary rule, the inevitable discovery doctrine, applied.
See Nix v. Williams,
