Dеfendant was convicted of delivery of a controlled substance, former ORS 475.992 (2003), renumbered as ORS 475.914 (2005). Although he pleaded guilty, the plea was conditional; as permitted by ORS 135.335(3), he reserved his right to appeal from the judgment in order to obtain appellate review of the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence. This is that appeal. Because we conclude that the trial court declined to resolve a conflict in the evidence that, had it been resolved in defendant’s favor, would have required suppression of the disputed evidence, we remand for further factfinding.
The relevant facts are few and, except as noted, undisputed. At approximately 10:20 p.m. on November 21, 2003, Jackson County Sheriffs Deputy Denton was driving pаst a small park called Gold Nugget Wayside. He had driven by the park earlier and had noticed a pickup truck and another vehicle in its small parking lot; when he saw that they were still thеre, he pulled his patrol car into the lot. According to his testimony, which the trial court found to be credible, he parked far enough behind the vehicles to allow both of them to рull away and leave the lot. According to the testimony of another witness, whom the trial court also found to be credible, the officer parked his patrol car so as to block the truck, in which defendant and the witness were sitting, thereby preventing it from leaving. In any event, the officer got out of his patrol car and walked toward defendant’s truck. As he apprоached, he saw something fall from the driver’s side window and smelled what he recognized to be burnt marijuana.
Denton then began to question defendant and his passenger. He asked them for idеntification.
Defendant’s argument is as follows: Denton stopped defendant, at the latest, when Denton pulled in behind defendant’s pickup truck and got out of his pаtrol car. The stop was unlawful because a stop must be justified by an officer’s reasonable suspicion of criminal activity and, at that time, Denton did not have such a suspicion. At mоst, he suspected that defendant was parked in a closed county park; in fact, the park was federally owned and not closed, and Denton’s belief to the contrary was not reasonable. All of the relevant evidence was derived from the unlawful stop and must be suppressed.
The state, for its part, contends that Denton did have a reasonable, аlbeit concededly erroneous, suspicion that defendant was committing criminal trespass, thereby rendering the stop lawful from its inception; and that, in any event, Denton did not block defendant’s truck, did not engage in any show of force, and did not stop defendant until after having smelled the marijuana, at which point he undeniably had a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.
To resolve this case, we must first determine whether the state is correct in asserting that the officer had reasonable suspicion when he first pulled into the parking lot. If he did, then, regardless of the precise moment that a stop thereafter occurred, it was lawful, ORS 131.615(1), and our inquiry would be at an end.
“Reasonable suspicion” has a subj ective and an obj ective component; a police officer .must subjectively believe that the stopped person committed or is about to commit a crime, and that belief must be objectively reasonable.
State v. Belt,
That conclusion compels us to detеrmine whether Denton stopped defendant immediately after pulling into the lot. If that act amounted to a stop, then it was unlawful, because, as we have demonstrated above, Denton did not have reasonable suspicion at the time. If the stop was unlawful, the ensuing conversation, consent, and search were also unlawful.
State v. Hall,
The question whether Denton stopped defendant upon first pulling into the parking lot depends, in turn, on whether Denton’s patrol car blocked defendant’s truck, preventing him from leaving the scene.
State v. Greer,
“The court finds that the testimony of Deputy Denton is truthful and reliable. The witness for the defense, Mr.Thomas Armstrong, also appeared to bе truthful in his testimony.”
The court continued:
“The court finds that although there is some dispute as to how close the officer’s vehicle was parked behind the defendant’s vehicle and whether that would have prevеnted the defendant from driving away, that issue is not controlling. The officer decided to contact the defendant because he believed, probably erroneously, that the pаrk was closed.”
As we reason above, however, the issue that the court declined to decide is controlling.
Had the court found that Armstrong’s testimony was more credible or that the evidencе was in equipoise, we would conclude that the state had not met its burden and dispose of the case by reversing and remanding. However, because the court erroneously beliеved that no resolution was necessary, we remand with instructions, to determine, if possible, whether Denton’s patrol car blocked defendant’s truck. If such a determination is not possible, or if it is possible and the court determines that the truck was blocked, then the court must allow defendant’s motion to suppress. If, on the other hand, the court can determine that defеndant’s truck was not blocked, then it shall reenter the original judgment.
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
The state contends in its brief that “the officer held defendant’s identification in his hand and ran a records check on it; he held the identification for no more than 30 seconds.” In support of that assertion, the state cites two pages from the transcript. Neither supports the state’s contention; in fact, they contradict it. One of the cited exchanges is as follows:
“Q [by defense attorney]: And did you ask for his driver’s license?
“A [by officer]: Yeah.
“Q: What did you do with it?
“A: Held it in my hand and ran it on the radio.
“Q: Held it in your hand. Did you give it back to him?
“A: No.”
The other cited exchange is as follows:
“Q [by prosecutor]: How long had you had his driver’s license in your hand when he аdmitted to you there was a loaded gun under the seat?
“A [by officer]: A couple seconds, thirty seconds at the max.
“Q: So you weren’t retaining his driver’s license?
“A: No, I wasn’t gonna keep it.
“[Prosecutor]: No further questions.
“Q [by defense attorney on re-cross examination]: You did keep it, though, didn’t you?
“A: (No audible response).
“Q: After you took it from him and asked him some questions, you kept his driver’s license?
“A: You’re right. I held it on my person.”
