Lead Opinion
[¶ 1] Anthony Charles Matthews appealed from a criminal judgment entered following conditional pleas of guilty for possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and possession of drug paraphernalia. We affirm the judgment of the trial court, concluding that under the
I
[¶ 2] In the early morning hours of October 24, 2001, a dispatcher at the Fargo Police Department received a 911 emergency call from a woman reporting that two men were being held at gunpoint at “some farm house on [sic] Horace.” The two men reported as being held in Horace by four or five individuals with guns were B. Murray and his boss, later identified as Anthony Matthews. The caller identified herself as Murray’s mother-in-law. The caller said Murray was crying and called her house because the gunmen were allowing him an opportunity to make one last phone call to say goodbye. The caller told the dispatcher that Murray’s boss was “in the garage ... with guns to his head.” The caller informed the dispatcher that Murray worked for a company called “Leak Seekers” and Murray and his boss “went to collect or something for a job.”
[¶ 3] The dispatcher called the telephone company to place a trace on the caller’s telephone in order to determine where Murray’s call had originated. While waiting for the phone company to trace the call, the dispatcher learned Leak Seekers was owned by Anthony Matthews. A description of the two cars registered to Matthews was relayed to the Cass County Sheriffs Department so deputies could begin looking for the cars in the Horace area. Fargo police officers were also dispatched to the location of Matthews’ business, which was at his home. When the police officers arrived at Matthews’ residence, they found neither of Matthews’ registered cars, but Murray’s girlfriend’s car was parked outside. Lights were on in the house, but no one answered the door when the officers knocked. Officers could hear Matthews’ telephone ringing inside when a dispatcher called to try to make contact, but no one answered the phone. The officers looked in Matthews’ garage and did not report anything suspicious to Sergeant Pallas, who was the shift commander that morning and was investigating the case at the police department. After the officers relayed to Sergeant Pallas what they observed at Matthews’ residence, they left the house.
[¶ 4] The phone company reported to the dispatcher that it was unable to trace the phone call from Murray. Sergeant Pallas decided the police had to enter the home to gain information or to check for possible victims. Three officers met Sergeant Pallas at Matthews’ house and entered the home without a search warrant, approximately 30 to 45 minutes after the dispatcher received the 911 call. Once inside the house, Sergeant Pallas started looking for business records that might show a client located in the Horace area. Sergeant Pallas directed the other officers to search the house to see whether either the victims or the gunmen were inside and to look for any business records that might identify the Horace location. In an upstairs bedroom located at the front of the house, an officer discovered marijuana in a clear plastic bag on a glass mirror on the floor. Lying next to it on the floor were a digital scale and plastic packaging for two or three marijuana bricks, which appeared to the officers to have recently contained marijuana. Another officer found a black plastic garbage bag containing 12 to 15 bundles of marijuana in the bedroom closet. Following these discoveries, the police secured a search warrant for the house. During the search, officers seized marijuana and other evidence of drug activity.
[¶ 5] Claiming an unlawful search, Matthews moved to suppress any evidence
[¶ 6] The district court had jurisdiction under N.D. Const, art. VI, § 8, and N.D.C.C. § 27-05-06. This Court has jurisdiction under N.D. Const, art. VI, § 6, and N.D.C.C. §§ 28-27-01 and 28-27-02.
II
[¶ 7] Matthews argues the evidence seized in his house should have been suppressed because the State did not meet its burden to prove the warrantless search was justified by an exception to the warrant requirement. Matthews contends the information provided by the 911 call and the details the officers discovered while investigating at Matthews’ residence indicated that no one was at the residence, and the officers did not have probable cause.
[¶ 8] When reviewing a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we defer to the district court’s findings of fact and resolve conflicts in testimony in favor of affirmance. City of Grand Forks v. Zejdlik,
[¶ 9] The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment, and Article I, section 8, of the North Dakota Constitution protect individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures. City of Jamestown v. Dardis,
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
U.S. Const. amend. IV. The United States Supreme Court has noted the plain language of the first clause of the Fourth Amendment condemns unreasonable searches or seizures conducted without a warrant. Payton v. New York,
[¶ 10] “[I]f an individual has a reasonable expectation of privacy in the area searched or the materials seized, then a search and seizure within the protection of the Fourth Amendment has been conducted.” Lubenow v. N.D. State Highway Comm’r,
[¶ 11] One such exception is that law enforcement officers may enter a home and conduct a warrantless search if both probable cause and exigent circumstances exist. Kirk v. Louisiana,
[¶ 12] This Court has said, “ ‘Probable cause exists when the facts and circumstances within a police officer’s knowledge and of which he has reasonably trustworthy information are sufficient to warrant a man of reasonable caution in believing that an offense has been or is being committed.’ ” State v. Kolb,
In emergencies, however, law enforcement officers are not motivated by an expectation of seizing evidence of a crime. Rather, the officers are compelled to search by a desire to locate victims and the need to ensure their own safety and that of the public. See generally Note, The Emergency Doctrine, Civil Search and Seizure, and the Fourth Amendment, 43 Fordham L.Rev. 571, 582 (1975) (“Generally it is not difficult to determine when the emergency doctrine is being applied. The police usually are acting to help a person in distress, not to find evidence of criminal acts.”). Thus, in an emergency, the probable cause element may be satisfied where officers reasonably believe a person is in danger. See Koch v. Town of Brattleboro,287 F.3d 162 (2d Cir.2002) (stating probable cause for forced entry in response to exigent circumstances requires probability a person is in danger); Tierney v. Davidson,133 F.3d 189 , 196—97 (2d Cir.1998) (holding police officers may enter dwelling without warrant if, based on objective standard, they reasonably believe individual is in distress); Root v. Gauper,438 F.2d 361 , 364-65 (8th Cir.1971) (holding warrantless search based on emergency requires assessment of whether officers reasonably believe such action is necessary).
In Holloway, at 1338, Koch, at 169, Tierney, at 197, and Root, at 363, the officers, without a warrant, entered the residence where the emergency was reported to have occurred or was occurring, and the searches were upheld under the emergency exception.
[¶ 13] “ ‘Unlike exigent circumstances, the emergency exception does not involve officers investigating a crime; rather, the officers are assisting citizens or protecting property as part of their general caretaking responsibilities to the public.’” State v. Muir, 67 WashApp. 149,
[¶ 14] This Court has defined “exigent circumstances as ‘an emergency situation requiring swift action to prevent imminent danger to life or serious damage to property, or to forestall the imminent escape of a suspect or destruction of evidence.’ ” City of Jamestown v. Dardis,
[¶ 15] This Court has also recognized the emergency doctrine, noting, in Lubenow v. N.D. State Highway Comm’r,
“The emergency doctrine had its origin in a dictum enunciated by Justice Jackson in Johnson v. United States,333 U.S. 10 , 14-15,68 S.Ct. 367 , 369,92 L.Ed. 436 (1948): ‘There are exceptional circumstances in which, on balancing the need for effective law enforcement against the right of privacy, it may be contended that a magistrate’s warrant for search may be dispensed with.’ The Supreme Court later suggested such a situation might occur ‘where the officers, passing by on the street, hear a shot and a cry for help and demand entrance in the name of the law.’ [Citations omitted]. The doctrine has been applied in many varying circumstances....
“For purposes of the instant case, the emergency or exigency doctrine may be stated as follows: police officers may enter a dwelling without a warrant to render emergency aid and assistance to a person whom they reasonably believe to be in distress and in need of that assistance. In applying this doctrine, two principles must be kept in mind. (1) Since the doctrine is an exception to the ordinary Fourth Amendment requirement of a warrant for entry into a home, the burden of proof is on the state to show that the warrantless entry fell within the exception. [Citations omitted]. (2) An objective standard as to the reasonableness of the officer’s belief must be applied.”
Lubenow, at 532 (quoting Root v. Gauper,
[¶ 16] We have set out our standard for reviewing a trial court’s determination of the existence of exigent circumstances, which equally applies to the emergency doctrine:
The district court’s findings of fact are reviewed giving “ ‘due weight to the inferences drawn from those facts by ... judges and law enforcement officers.’ ” United States v. Cooper,168 F.3d 336 , 338 (8th Cir.1999) (citing United States v. Ball,90 F.3d 260 , 262 (8th Cir.1996) (quoting Ornelas v. U.S.,517 U.S. 690 ,116 S.Ct. 1657 ,134 L.Ed.2d 911 (1996))). “A de novo standard of review is applied to the ultimate determination of whether the facts constitute exigent circumstances ....” Id. at 339. This is similar to our review of probable cause. See State v. Kitchen,1997 ND 241 , ¶¶ 12-13,572 N.W.2d 106 (we defer to a trial court’s findings of fact in the disposition of a motion to suppress, but whetherfindings of fact meet a legal standard is a question of law which is fully reviewable).
State v. DeCoteau,
[¶ 17] The trial court, in denying Matthews’ suppression motion, found an emergency was occurring and exigent circumstances existed to enter Matthews’ home without a warrant because “[t]he police were facing a situation where it was reasonable to assume that the two men could be killed at any minute” and “[t]he officers reasonably believed that the Matthewsf] residence, which coupled as the business address for Leak Seekers, might contain some kind of a record of the underlying debt that the men had gone to collect.” The trial court concluded the circumstances of this case fit the definition of exigent circumstances, stating:
The facts which undergird this conclusion include: (1) a reasonable belief that the two men were being held at gunpoint; (2) that the gunmen had threatened to kill the men in the immediate time frame; (3) that the telephone trace had come up empty; (4) that there were lights on in the residence but no one answered a knock on the door; (5) that there might be someone present on the premises who might know something of the affair; and (6) that unless swift action was take[n], there was a reasonable likelihood that Matthews and Murray would be killed.
[¶ 18] “[T]he Fourth Amendment does not bar police officers from making warrantless entries and searches when they reasonably believe that a person within is in need of immediate aid.” Mincey,
A 911 call is one of the most common— and universally recognized — means through which police and other emergency personnel learn that there is someone in a dangerous situation who urgently needs help. This fits neatly with a central purpose of the exigent circumstances (or emergency) exception to the warrant requirement, namely, to ensure that the police or other government agents are able to assist persons in danger or otherwise in need of assistance.
Richardson, at 630.
Ill
[¶ 19] Matthews argues the search should not be upheld because the search was conducted in Fargo and the emergency circumstances were occurring somewhere in Horace. The dissent argues the search was not justified because the officers were not under the belief that Matthews and Murray were inside the Matthews residence at the time of entry. The dissent cites no other jurisdiction holding that for the emergency doctrine to apply, a victim must be in danger within the dwelling to be searched. Instead, the general premise in federal case law is that “[t]he right of the police to enter and investigate in an emergency without the accompanying intent to either search or arrest is inherent in the very nature of their duties as peace officers.” United States v. Barone,
[¶ 20] In applying the emergency doctrine, jurisdictions have upheld a warrant-less search in circumstances in which the presence of a person inside the searched dwelling was unknown at the time of entry. Some jurisdictions have upheld a warrantless search of a dwelling under the emergency doctrine for the purpose of investigation when the primary intent of the investigation was to gather evidence to render aid or assistance to someone in a dangerous situation. Chaney v. State,
[¶ 21] In Chaney v. State,
[¶ 22] Later that evening, the kidnapper, calling a third time, accused the husband of failing to follow instructions and threatened to kill the man’s wife. This call was traced to a public telephone booth, and the defendant’s palm print was found on the telephone. It was at this point that officers entered the defendant’s house without a warrant. Id.
[¶ 23] Because an emergency existed, the court found that the officers acted correctly in organizing and carrying out the entry and arrest as quickly as possible. The court found, because of the immediate need to minimize any harm to the individuals being held hostage, it did not matter that the officers could have obtained a warrant between the first and third calls. Id. The court held that if the time required to secure a warrant could result in the loss of evidence, the escape of a suspect, or, above all, the death of a victim, then law enforcement officials may act without a warrant if probable cause exists. The court stated:
From the content of the third and last call, the police could justifiably believe that the kidnap victims were still alive, but that their deaths were imminent. Time was of the essence. We hold that the officers were justified in conducting a warrantless search for either the victims or evidence of their location.
Id. (emphasis added).
[¶ 24] The cases citing Chaney have held the emergency doctrine applies when “a risk of injury or death would likely be magnified if the search were delayed due to the time involved in obtaining a war
Given the information known to the police at the time and based on the above excerpts from the testimony of Captain Gomez at the suppression hearing, there was sufficient evidence for the trial court to find that the warrantless search of appellant’s residence was objectively reasonable under the Emergency Doctrine, the intent of the search being to locate complainant or, alternatively, to find evidence hopefully leading to the discovery of complainant at a different location.
Brimage, at 502-03.
[IT 25] In People v. Lucero,
[¶ 26] The sheriffs department set up a temporary command post almost directly across the street from the defendant’s house. About two hours later, a neighbor heard the defendant’s ear start up and drive down the street. Ten minutes later, she saw the car return to the defendant’s driveway. Three to five minutes later, she saw the defendant drive away in the car. Within minutes of the car’s second departure, she saw a fire in the rear portion of the defendant’s house. Firefighters arrived at the scene, and a sergeant from the sheriffs department informed the fire captain of the missing girls and asked that he direct his men to search the burning house. After the fire was contained, the firefighters alerted the sheriffs deputies to a large bloodstain on the carpet of the defendant’s living room. Several officers viewed the bloodstain. At about the time the deputies were examining the bloodstain, the bodies of the two girls were found in a nearby dumpster, wrapped in green trash bags. The defendant was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder and one count of arson.
[¶ 27] The court upheld the search of the defendant’s house under the emergency exception to the warrant requirement, stating:
A long-recognized exception to the warrant requirement exists when “exigent circumstances” make necessary the conduct of a warrantless search. “ ‘[E]xigent circumstances’ means an emergency situation requiring swift action to prevent imminent danger to life or serious damage to property, or to forestall the imminent escape of a suspect or destruction of evidence. There is no ready litmus test for determining whether such circumstances exist, and in each case the claim of an extraordinary situation must be measured by the facts known to the officers.”
We believe the search for the missing girls justified the officers’ brief entries into the house. We must consider the facts as known to the officers. Two young girls are missing. A fire of unknown origin ignites in a house directly across the street from the park where the girls had gone to play. The girls, their bodies, or clues to their location might be somewhere in the burning house. Thus, when the firefighters first arrived at the scene, Sergeant Anton advised Captain Bryant of the missing children and asked him to order his men into the burning house with oxygen equipment to look for the girls.
Lucero,
IV
[¶ 28] Most jurisdictions have not applied strict criteria to determine whether to uphold a warrantless search under the emergency exception to the warrant requirement under the Fourth Amendment; however, this Court, in Lubenow v. N.D. State Highway Comm’r,
“(1) The police must have reasonable grounds to believe that there is an emergency at hand and an immediate need for their assistance for the protection of life or property.
“(2) The search must not be primarily motivated by intent to arrest and seize evidence.
“(3) There must be some reasonable basis, approximating probable cause, to associate the emergency with the area or place to be searched.”
See also Gallmeyer v. State,
[¶ 29] In Mitchell, a maid had not been seen for hours and had not responded when summoned.
[¶ 30] The second requirement is that the motivation for the search must be the officers’ protection of human life or property in imminent danger, rather than a desire to apprehend a suspect or gather evidence for use in a criminal proceeding. Id. at 610. In Mitchell, the detective “testified at the suppression hearing that he had no reason to believe a crime was being committed in defendant’s room when he entered; the police report of the hotel’s call for assistance stated that a possible kidnapping had taken place.” Id. The judge at the suppression hearing made the express factual finding, affirmed by the appellate court, that “[a]t the time entry
[¶ 31] Under the third requirement, the court stated that the limited privilege afforded to “law enforcement officials by the emergency exception does not give them carte blanche to rummage for evidence if they believe a crime has been committed. There must be a direct relationship between the area to be searched and the emergency.” Id. For example, in United States v. Goldenstein,
[¶ 32] The court in Mitchell expressly stated it hastened to admonish that the limited privilege to investigate emergencies without a search warrant is subject to judicial scrutiny.
[¶ 33] Our case law has applied an objective standard as to the Mitchell reasonableness criteria of law enforcement officers’ actions. State v. Boyd,
“[I]n justifying the particular intrusion the police officer must be able to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion.... And in making that assessment it is imperative that the facts be judged against an objective standard: would the facts available to the officer at the moment of the seizure or the search ‘warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that the action taken was appropriate?”
Root,
[¶ 34] In People v. Bondi,
(1) that the fact that Genevieve Bondi was reported missing gave the authorities reasonable grounds to believe that she may be in imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm, (2) that as such the primary intent of the search of the premises was to locate her and provide assistance to her, not to seize evidence against the defendant, and (3) that her residence and the property surrounding it were the most likely places to search for evidence of the whereabouts of a missing occupant.
Bondi, at 736.
[¶ 35] In upholding that an emergency exception exists, some courts have limited
Law enforcement officers may enter private premises without either an arrest or a search warrant to preserve life or property, to render first aid and assistance, or to conduct a general inquiry into an unsolved crime, provided they have reasonable grounds to believe that there is an urgent need for such assistance and protective action, or to promptly launch a criminal investigation involving a substantial threat of imminent danger to either life, health, or property, and provided, further, that they do not enter with an accompanying intent to either arrest or search. If, while on the premises, they inadvertently discover incriminating evidence in plain view, or as a result of some activity on their part that bears a material relevance to the initial purpose for their entry, they may lawfully seize it without a warrant.
Geary v. State,
[¶ 36] In the case of a child kidnapping, it has been held that unlike some other emergency categories for which police officers must point to articulable facts beyond the initial report to make a showing of a reasonable need for immediate action, the very nature of a kidnapping presents “unusually compelling circumstances.” Oliver v. United States,
[¶ 37] The court articulated that it is unreasonable to expect police to leave the victim in the control of the captor while officers obtain a warrant. Id. This is true even if the victim apparently is being well-treated. Id. A kidnapping victim is placed in continuing danger of harm at the hands of his or her captor. Id. Police must not delay rescue to obtain a warrant if probable cause exists to believe that a kidnapping victim is being held, because in such circumstances, time is of the essence. Id.
[¶ 38] The guidelines in Mitchell, as well as the holdings announced in Chaney,
[¶ 39] The investigating officer, Sergeant Pallas, and the other officers had a justifiable reason to believe that an emergency existed. The district court found the evidence led to a reasonable assumption “that the two men could be killed at any minute, thus dire circumstances existed.” The district court’s findings were supported by sufficient and competent evidence. The officers’ beliefs were grounded in empirical facts. A 911 call informed them that Matthews and Murray were being held at gunpoint at an unknown location and were in need of police intervention or emergency first aid. Mitchell,
[¶ 40] At the suppression hearing, Sergeant Pallas testified that after the 911 call came in, law enforcement officers were dispatched to the Horace area and to the address of Leak Seekers, which was also the address of Matthews’ residence, in
[¶ 41] Sergeant Pallas testified he decided to enter Matthews’ residence when the phone call from Murray to his mother-in-law could not be traced, which was also a short time after the investigating officers communicated what they initially found at Matthews’ residence. Two officers and a trainee were dispatched back to the residence to meet Sergeant Pallas. When questioned during direct examination at the suppression hearing about what Sergeant Pallas thought he might find inside Matthews’ residence, Sergeant Pallas testified:
Information in relation to where this person was at. The defendant has a business “Leak Seekers”. The information that we received from the mother-in-law stated that he was going to go out and get payment or services rendered from a job. I was hoping to recover information as far as a[n] address or a receipt book or business ledger in this address.
When asked if he had any other reason, apart from looking for information, to enter Matthews’ residence, Sergeant Pallas stated: “Other than possibly if subjects were inside. The actual caller, being the vehicle was out front. There was always that possibility that they were calling from there and not the Horace area.” On cross-examination, Sergeant Pallas testified:
Q. Did you believe they were at the residence at 1335?
A. At that point I wasn’t sure if they were there or they were in Horace without knowing what was inside that home.
Q. Did you have any reason to believe anybody was at 1335?
A. Could of been. I guess without being able to trace where the phone call came from initially anything was possible.
[¶ 42] It is clear from the evidence that the officers had no intent to enter Matthews’ premises to arrest anyone or to search for criminal behavior; instead, the sole motive for entering was to offer aid or assistance to Matthews and Murray. The district court found the officers’ sole intent in entering Matthews’ residence was to look for Matthews and Murray or for information that might lead to their location. The officers did not enter the premises until they were told the phone call from Murray to his mother-in-law could not be traced. Then the officers believed an emergency existed and immediate action needed to be taken. Sergeant Pallas testified at the suppression hearing that the primary reason for entering Matthews’ residence was to offer assistance to the two men in danger and search for the men or information regarding the location in Horace where the men were being held, not to make an arrest or investigate a crime scene.
[¶ 43] They had a reasonable basis, approximating probable cause, for associating the emergency with the place to be searched. The officers were unable to trace where the phone call to Murray’s mother-in-law came from. It is reasonable the officers would have searched Matthews’ residence, which was also his place of business, Leak Seekers, because it was mentioned in the 911 call with Murray’s mother-in-law. It is reasonable to believe that the officers’ search would produce either Matthews or Murray or information leading to their location. In upholding the
[¶ 44] Applying the Mitchell principles to this case, the officers’ entry of Matthews’ house without a warrant was justified under the circumstances. All of these factors taken into account make it clear the district court did not err in concluding that the officers did not have an intent to arrest or to make an unreasonable search when they entered Matthews’ residence but had, in fact, one single interest — to provide Matthews and Murray with emergency aid. That action falls completely within the emergency doctrine exception to the Fourth Amendment prohibition against warrantless, nonconsensual searches. Chaney,
[¶45] Professor LaFave concludes his discourse on this topic by noting:
[I]f ... it is permissible to enter premises to rescue a threatened kidnap victim thought to be within, then surely it must likewise be permissible to make an immediate warrantless entry upon a reasonable belief that information therein will disclose where that victim is being held.
3 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 6.5(d) (3d ed.2002). His logic and reason are compelling.
V
[¶ 46] Under the circumstances in this case, the police officers’ actions fall within the emergency exception to the Fourth Amendment protections from unreasonable searches and seizures, justifying a warrantless entry into the Matthews residence. We affirm.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
[¶ 48] I respectfully dissent. I would reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the case to allow Matthews to withdraw his guilty pleas.
[¶ 49] A “basic principle of Fourth Amendment law” is that warrantless searches and seizures inside a home are presumptively unreasonable. Payton v. New York,
[¶ 50] The Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of searches inside a home without a warrant is not absolute; searches and sei
[¶ 51] The majority concludes law enforcement officers were able to enter Matthews’ residence and conduct a warrant-less search for information under the emergency doctrine. In my opinion, the emergency doctrine does not provide an exception to the warrant requirement under the facts of this case. The emergency was reported as occurring at a farmstead in or near Horace. The warrantless search was conducted at Matthews’ residence in Fargo. In upholding the search, the trial court stated, “[t]he officers reasonably believed that the Matthews[’] residence, which coupled as the business address for Leak Seekers, might contain some kind of a record of the underlying debt that the men had gone to collect.” The majority, at ¶ 43, contends the law enforcement officers could also have reasonably believed there remained a possibility that the men may have been inside the house. However, apart from Sergeant Pallas’ testimony alluding to the notion that “[t]here was always that possibility that [the men] were calling from [the residence],” there is nothing in the record to support the majority’s contention. The 911 caller reported that Matthews and Murray were at a farmstead in Horace and that Matthews was being held at gunpoint in the garage. The investigating officers looked in Matthews’ garage in Fargo and communicated to Sergeant Pallas nothing suspicious about the garage. No one answered the door when the officers knocked on it. There was no movement reported from inside the house. The officers left the residence after finding nothing suspicious to warrant an immediate entry.
[¶ 52] The State did not argue, as the majority relies for support, that Matthews and Murray could have been in the Fargo residence. In its brief the State argued “[t]he peace officers in this case weren’t sure where Matthews was, but they did not enter his residence principally because they believed he was in it, ... Rather the officers entered Matthews’ home because they hoped to. find some document leading them to where he and Murray were being held at gun point in rural Horace.” The State reemphasized at oral argument the warrantless search of Matthews’ residence was for information which might lead the officers to the location in Horace where the two men were being held; the officers did not search Matthews’ residence because they believed the two men were being held at gunpoint inside the residence.
[¶ 53] In this case, the officers believed an emergency existed elsewhere; their intent was to enter the premises for investigative purposes, in the mere hope of finding some information that could lead them to the location of the emergency. This Court, in Lubenow v. N.D. State Highway Comm’r,
[¶ 54] The majority, at ¶ 28, acknowledges the third prong of the Mitchell test. “There must be some reasonable basis, approximating probable cause, to associate the emergency with the area or place to be searched.” With respect to the search of Matthews’ house, the police had nothing more than the hope that the residence might contain information which might lead them to the location where they believe the two men were endangered. The place to be searched must have a “direct relationship” to the emergency. Lubenow, at 533. This prong is not satisfied when the police enter with the mere hope of finding information that might lead them to the location of the emergency.
[¶ 55] The trial court, in denying the suppression motion, reviewed the circumstances of both police visits to Matthews’ home. Regarding the first visit, the court noted the officers found nothing suggesting an emergency at that location: “Unable to make contact with anyone and not finding anything obviously amiss, the officers left the premises.” When the officers went back to Matthews’ home a second time, it was with an investigative purpose. The court found: “The officers reasonably believed that the Matthews[’] residence, which coupled as the business address for Leak Seekers, might contain some kind of a record of the underlying debt that the men had gone to collect.” The trial court did not find that the police believed there could be someone on the premises who needed the type of assistance which is contemplated by the emergency doctrine. Rather the trial court found, as one of the facts which supported the application of the exigent circumstances, “that there might be someone present on the premises who might know something of the affair.”
[¶ 56] In the cases cited by the majority in which the emergency doctrine has been applied and the location of a person associated with the searched dwelling was unknown at the time of entry, the officers who entered the premises without a warrant had an objectively reasonable belief that the premises searched were intimately connected with the emergency need for assistance. In Chaney v. State,
[¶ 57] The majority also cites Brimage v. State,
[¶ 58] Similarly, in People v. Lucero,
[¶ 59] In each of the cases cited by the majority, the courts found specific, articu-lable and objective facts that directly related the location searched to the emergency that was occurring. In this case, the entry into Matthews’ residence was based only on the hope that, because the residence was also the business location of Matthews, the officers might find some information about the debt Matthews and his companion had gone to collect. If law enforcement could enter without a warrant, solely for investigative purposes, merely hoping to find information which would lead them to the place that an emergency was believed to be occurring, the investigative purpose would swallow the warrant requirement.
[¶ 60] The situation appeared to the officers to be dire; they believed there was a real threat to Matthews and Murray. But all information known to the officers indicated the threat existed somewhere near Horace, not at Matthews’ residence. It is tempting to hold that with a threat so serious as the possible murder of two men, the warrant requirement should give way to the need to act quickly. But the United States Supreme Court has specifically stated the seriousness of the alleged incident that police are investigating is not a basis for finding exigent circumstances to justify a warrantless search. Mincey v. Arizona,
[¶ 61] The State failed to meet its burden to demonstrate an exception to the warrant requirement and overcome the presumption of unreasonableness which attaches to warrantless home entries. Under the circumstances in this case, without a reasonable belief someone was in danger inside the residence, or some other objective basis to directly relate Matthews’ house to the emergency, the officers’ war-rantless entry into Matthews’ home to search for information was unreasonable.
[¶ 62] Carol Ronning Kapsner
