In two counts of a four-count indictment, Lowe and Gaskins were charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, and Lowe was charged with obstruction of an officer. The State *229 appeals from the trial court’s grant of Lowe’s motion to suppress marijuana found during an inventory search of his car.
In support of the ruling, the evidence showed the following. Gas-kins was the subject of outstanding arrest warrants. The Narcotics Unit of the Bibb County Sheriff’s Office received notice from the Fugitive Warrants Unit that Gaskins and an unknown individual were using a U-Haul truck to move out of a certain apartment in Macon. When narcotics officers arrived at the apartment around noon, they observed Lowe walking toward the truck and Gaskins standing in the doorway of the apartment. An officer stopped Lowe, informed him that he was there to serve warrants on Gaskins, and asked if the individual in the doorway was Gaskins. He said no. Shortly thereafter, Gaskins identified himself, and Lowe admitted he was aware of Gaskins’ identity. As a result, Lowe was arrested for obstruction of a police officer, and Gaskins was arrested on the outstanding warrants.
A car owned by Lowe and bearing an Atlanta license plate was found next to the U-Haul truck. The car was legally parked, but the windows were partially down and the doors were unlocked. The officers immediately impounded the car and conducted the inventory search, during which they found marijuana and a gun. The officers testified that the car was impounded because it is department policy to do so unless a reliable driver is available to take charge of the vehicle. One of the officers testified that an arrestee’s vehicle is never left where it is parked because of potential departmental liability. Because it is also department policy to relinquish possession of a commercial vehicle to the owner, the U-Haul truck was not impounded. Instead, the officers called the U-Haul company and asked that the truck be retrieved.
“In the interests of public safety and as part of what the Court has called ‘community caretaking functions,’ [cit.], automobiles are frequently taken into police custody.”
South Dakota v. Opperman,
“ ‘Impoundment of a vehicle is valid only if there is some necessity for the police to take charge of the property. [Cit.]’ [Cit.]”
Martin,
*230
supra. “In each instance, the ultimate test for the validity of the police’s conduct is whether, under the circumstances then confronting the police, their conduct was reasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.” (Emphasis omitted.)
Jones v. State,
In
Dunkum,
supra, disapproved in part in
Mooney v. State,
In
State v. Creel,
“This court has previously adopted the view that when a driver is arrested and a reliable friend is present who may be authorized and capable of removing the vehicle, or where the arrestee expresses some preference for a private towing service, the rationale for impoundment does not exist. [Cits.]”
Strobhert,
supra; see
State v. King,
Conversely, we have found impoundment of a car authorized where the sole occupant was arrested for driving with a suspended or invalid license, and he had no companion or other person capable of removing the car in a timely manner,
Pierce v. State,
In
Mitchell v. State,
The trial court granted Lowe’s motion to suppress after finding that the misdemeanor offense for which he was arrested was in no way related to the vehicle; the vehicle was legally parked in a safe and secure place on private property; the owner of the private property did not request that the vehicle be removed; and Lowe was not asked if there was anyone who could retrieve the vehicle. Based on these findings, the court concluded that the impoundment and inventory search of the car were pretextual and improper. Applying cases such as Mitchell, supra, and Creel, supra, to the evidence, the trial court was authorized though not required to reach this conclusion.
Judgment affirmed.
