712 N.E.2d 791 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1998
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *267 The state of Ohio appeals from the judgment of the trial court granting the motion to suppress filed by the defendant-appellee, Nathan Hill, in a prosecution for possession of drugs. We reverse that decision and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this decision.
Mathis and Woodard spotted Hill walking alone behind an apartment building. They cruised up and down the street several times, and each time they got near Hill, he ducked in behind the apartment building, out of the sight of the officers. Mathis and Woodard stated that they suspected that Hill was not a resident of the complex, and they decided to question him. They drove up near Hill and inquired whether they might ask him a few questions. Hill replied, "No," and started running away from the officers. Woodard got out of the car and started running after Hill. Mathis followed closely in the car. He saw that Hill was running back to the area where the officers had first seen him.
Woodard chased Hill toward the cruiser, and Mathis pulled the car in front of Hill. When he pulled in front of Hill, he told Hill that Hill was under arrest. Woodard stated that Hill stopped running, but that just before he did, he reached into his pocket, grabbed an object, and threw it away from him. *268
Woodard was behind Hill when Mathis pulled the car in front of him. Woodard stated that Hill stopped running when he saw that he was cut off by the police car, and that Hill then turned to look behind him. When he saw Woodard behind him, he reached into his pocket, grabbed an object, and threw it to the ground. No more than four or five feet separated Hill from either officer at that point.
Woodard and Mathis placed handcuffs on Hill, and Woodard then walked over to where Hill had thrown the object and retrieved a crumpled one-dollar bill. In the folds of the bill Woodard found a substance he recognized as crack cocaine. Hill was charged with possession of drugs.
Hill moved the court to suppress the evidence of the drugs. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Hill argued that he bad been seized, for purposes of Fourth Amendment analysis, when the officers began chasing him, and that he threw away the dollar bill only after the unlawful seizure. The state argued that he was not seized until he was physically restrained by Mathis and that Hill abandoned the property prior to being physically restrained.
The trial court granted the motion to suppress, indicating that Hill had been seized at the point when the officers began chasing him. According to the court, a reasonable person would not have felt free to go about his business with one officer running on foot behind him and another chasing him in a car.
In Xenia v. Wallace,4 the Ohio Supreme Court stated that "once a warrantless search is established, the burden of persuasion is on the state to show the validity of the search." Since it is undisputed that no warrant existed in *269 this case, the burden was therefore on the state to show the validity of the search by establishing the existence of one of the exceptions to the warrant requirement.
Here, the state claimed that Hill voluntarily abandoned the property before he was seized for purposes of Fourth Amendment analysis, and that, therefore, the evidence was not obtained as a result of unlawful police conduct. Hill claimed (a) that he was seized for Fourth Amendment purposes when the officers began chasing him, (b) that this seizure was unlawful, and (c) that the unlawful police conduct caused the involuntary abandonment. The trial court apparently agreed and granted Hill's motion to suppress.
On appeal, Hill continues to argue that he was seized at the moment the officers began chasing him, since a reasonable person would not have felt free to go about his business while being pursued by a patrol car and an officer on foot.9 *270 The trial court also indicated its conclusion that a reasonable person would not have felt free to go about his business under such circumstances. However, the United States Supreme Court inCalifornia v. Hodari D.10 clearly held that a showing that an officer's conduct caused a person to feel that he was not free to go about his business is not enough to establish that the person has been seized. It is a necessary consideration, but not a dispositive element in determining whether a person has been seized.11 Hodari D., like the case here, involved police pursuit of an individual who discarded an item from his person. In Hodari D., the suspect threw away the contraband before being tackled by the police. Hodari claimed that he had been seized at the moment the police started chasing him, and that since the state had conceded that there was no reasonable suspicion to justify the seizure, the abandonment was the product of unlawful police conduct.12
The Supreme Court rejected that claim, stating that a seizure of a person does not occur unless the person asserting the authority for the stop applies physical force, however slight, to make the stop, or unless the person being stopped complies or submits to the show of authority.13 This court has previously held that either physical contact or submission to authority is necessary to effect a seizure of a person.14
Hill began to run from the police when they asked him to talk to them, and the police chased him, blocked his path, and finally arrested him. The trial court erred as a matter of law when it held that Hill was seized when the police first began to chase him, since there was no physical contact, and Hill, in running away, cannot be said to have submitted to the officers' show of authority. The seizure did not occur until sometime later.
The state argues that the seizure did not occur until Woodard physically restrained Hill, and that the property had, by that point, been abandoned. However, Hodari D. holds that either physical force or the submission to an assertion of authority constitutes a seizure. There was evidence presented to the trial court that Mathis pulled his car in front of Hill to stop him from fleeing, that *271 he told Hill at that time that he was under arrest, and that Hill in fact stopped at that point. Therefore, the evidence would support a finding that Hill submitted to the show of authority and was thereby seized before or concurrent with the abandonment of the contraband.
On appeal, the state's only assignment of error is that the trial court erred in holding that appellant abandoned the property only after he was seized. The seizure, the state argues, did not occur until Woodard and Mathis physically restrained Hill. This proposition does not square completely with the law according to Hodari D., since there is evidence here to show that Hill might have been seized by submitting to the authority of the officers prior to the physical restraint. The evidence on this point, not to mention case law after Hod an D., is unclear.15 Mathis testified that Hill stopped when Mathis pulled the car in front of him, but also stated that Hill threw the item away before he stopped. Woodard testified that Hill had stopped fleeing upon being blocked by Mathis, that he turned his head and saw Woodard, and that only then did he throw away the dollar bill. The transcript of the hearing on the motion to suppress shows that the court believed that the arrest and the abandonment of the property occurred concurrently.
The trial court erred in holding that Hill was seized at the moment the officers began chasing him. Because of its erroneous ruling, the trial court did not make an appropriate factual finding regarding the point at which Hill was seized after *272 the police began chasing him or whether the seizure was, at that time, unreasonable. Since the trial court is the trier of fact and is in the best position to judge credibility and resolve any conflicts in the evidence, we remand the case for further proceedings on the motion to suppress in accordance with this decision.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
HILDEBRANDT, P.J., MARIANNA BROWN BETTMAN and PAINTER, JJ., concur.