OPINION
Justin Allеn Kilmer appeals from a DWI conviction, arguing that because the arresting officer’s only reason for stopping him was that he entered an intersection while the controlling traffic light was yellow, that officеr lacked articulable suspicion of criminal activity justifying the stop. The district court held that Minnesota law prohibits drivers from entering an intersection when a traffic light is yellow, and on this basis found the officer’s stop was legal. Because we conclude that the district court erred in its reading of the applicable statute, we reverse.
FACTS
In reviewing appellant Justin Allen Kil-mer’s convictions of driving while impaired and test refusal aftеr a Lothenbach trial, we are asked to determine whether entering an intersection on a yellow traffic signal provides a proper legal basis for a police officer to stop a motor vehicle.
The officer stopped Kilmer and noticed that he smelled strongly of alcohol. After Kilmer failed several field-sobriety tests and a preliminary breath test, the officer arrested him for driving while impaired and charged him with that offense. When Kilmer refused to submit to further testing, he was charged with that offense as well.
The district court rejectеd Kilmer’s challenge of the legality of the stop, concluding that the officer “had probable cause to detain [Kilmer] because [Kilmer] had committed a traffic violation.” Relying on a traffic statute and a state supreme court case, the court ruled that Kilmer “could not have entered the intersection lawfully if evidence indicates that he entered the intersection under the yellow warning light.”
Kilmer contends thаt the court’s conclusion of law is erroneous because it is not illegal to enter an intersection on a yellow warning light.
ISSUE
Did the district court err by ruling that a police officer had a legally sufficient basis for stoрping appellant’s motor vehicle when the sole driving conduct the officer observed was appellant’s entry into an intersection controlled by traffic semaphores while the signal for appellant’s direction of travel was a steady yellow?
ANALYSIS
A law-enforcement officer is permitted to conduct a limited investigatory stop of a motor vehicle if the officer has an objectively reasonаble and articulable basis for suspecting the motorist of criminal activity.
Berge v. Comm’r of Pub. Safety,
When a stop is premised on an ostensible violation of a traffic law, a mistaken interpretation of that law cannot provide the requisite objective basis for suspecting the motorist of criminal activity, as the Minnesota Supreme Court has held: “Therefore, we hold that an officer’s mistaken interpretation of a statute may not form the particularized and objective basis for suspecting criminal activity to justify a traffic stop.”
State v. Anderson,
We review the district court’s determination of the legality of a traffic stop de novo.
State v. Britton,
The statute on whiсh the district court relied in concluding that Kilmer violated a traffic law when he entered the intersection on a yellow light is Minn.Stat. § 169.06, subd. 5(a)(2)(i) (Supp.2005), which provides that “[vehicular traffic facing a circular yellow signal is thereby warned that the related green movement is being terminated or that a red indication will be exhibited immediately thereafter when vehicular traffic must not enter the intersection.... ”
Subdivision 5(a)(2)® is one of three directly rеlevant “traffic-control signal” laws,
In concluding thаt Kilmer violated a traffic law by entering the intersection on a yellow light, the district court erred in two respects. First, the court relied on a case that applied a “yellow-light” statute in effect in 1944, but not in effect at the time of Kilmer’s arrest. The court relied on
Flitton v. Daleki,
Subdivision 5(b)(1) was amended during the 1947 legislative session, and codified in 1949, to delete the mandate that traffic shall not enter an intersection on a yellow light and to replace it as follows: “Vehicular traffic facing the signal is thereby warned that the red or ‘Stop’ signal will be exhibited immediately thereafter and such vehicular traffic shall not enter or be crоssing the intersection when the red or ‘Stop’ signal is exhibited.” Minn.Stat. § 169.06, subd. 5(b)(1) (1949).
The subdivision has been amended three more times since 1947. A 1963 amendment, which was codified in the 1965 Minnesota Statutes, contained warning language that “[v]ehicular trаffic facing a steady yellow signal is thereby warned that the related green movement is being terminated or that a red indication will be exhibited immediately thereafter when vehicular traffic shall not enter the intersection.” Id. (1965). Unlike the 1949 version, the 1965 version did not prohibit “crossing the intersection when the red or ‘Stop’ signal is exhibited.” Id. (1949). In 1969, an amendment retained the language of the 1963 amendment regarding the warning nature of a yellow light but added an exception for proceeding on a red light when a green arrow is exhibited. Id. (1969). Finally, in 2005, the legislature amended the subdivision again but retained all of the language of the 1969 version, except the word “shall” in the phrase “traffic shall not enter the intersection” on a red light was replaced by the word “must.” Minn.Stat. § 169.06, subd. 5(a)(2)© (Supp.2005).
Thus, the yellow-light statute in effect when Kilmer was arrested, and which is currently in effect, contains no prohibition agаinst entering an intersection on a yellow light but rather discloses the meaning and the advisory-warning nature of that signal.
When a court is called upon to apply a statute to facts, the court must, of course, determine what the statute means. In doing so, the court must simply apply the statute as written when its meaning is plain and clear and free from ambiguity. Minn.Stat. § 645.16 (2006);
U.S. Specialty Ins. Co. v. James Courtney Law Office, P.A.,
It is true that subdivision 5(a)(2)®, the yellow-light law, does not indicate expressly whether motorists must stop when a yellow signal is displayed or may continue into an intersection in the face of a yellow-light display. But that omission does not make the subdivision ambiguous, particularly when it is read in the context of its companion green-light and red-light laws. Those laws give the rules for the privilege of proceeding into an intersection and the mandаte of stopping before entering the intersection. The yellow-light law is merely advisory, explaining the warning nature of that display. Subject to exceptions provided in the respective subdivisions, motorists can go on green and must not go on red and will receive a warning that a transition from the privilege to go to the mandate to stop is imminent. We find no ambiguity whatsoever in subdivision 5(a)(2)(i), and courts are not permitted to read аmbiguities into laws in pursuit of a suggested spirit of the law. Minn.Stat. § 645.16;
Mattice v. Minn. Prop. Ins. Placement,
Even if subdivision 5(a)(2)(i) might be viewed as ambiguous, making interpretation necessary and appropriate, the task then is to ascertain the legislative intent of the law. Minn.Stаt. § 645.16;
Conaway v. St. Louis County,
We do not intend to suggest that motorists in all circumstances have a carte blanche privilege to enter an intersection on a yellow light or that there might not be circumstances in which such entry could become illegal. The yellow-light law does not operate in isolation from other traffic laws regarding speed, vehicle control, caution with rеgard to weather and visibility, following other vehicles, lookout, attention, and numerous other traffic statutes and ordinances. The officer here cited no other driving conduct than Kilmer’s entry of
DECISION
Because we conclude that Minn.Stat. § 169.06, subd. 5(a)(2)© (Supp.2005), does not prohibit a driver’s entry into an intersection on a steady yellow traffic light, we reverse the district court’s determination that a police officer who stopped a car solely on that basis had a legally sufficient reason to make the stop, and we reverse the convictions resulting from the evidence obtained as a result of the stop.
Reversed.
