Defendant Fitzwilliam May appeals his conviction by the Superior Court (Knox County, Silsby, J.), on his conditional guilty plea, of unlawful possession of a scheduled drug, 17-A M.R.S.A. § 1107 (Supp.1991). The sole issue on appeal is whether the District Court (Rockland, Wescott, J.) erred in denying defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence obtained when, after defendant’s release from custody, the arresting officer searched defendant’s wallet that another officer had found in the back seat of the police cruiser in which defendant had been transported. Because the District Court’s factual findings do not support its conclusions of law, we vacate its order and remand the matter to the Superior Court with instructions to suppress the evidence found as a result of the officer’s search.
In the early morning of November 5, 1989, a Rockland police officer arrested defendant for operating a vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor. The officer transported defendant by police cruiser to the Knox County Sheriff’s Office to be processed. Although the arresting officer had earlier seen defendant take his license out of a wallet, on patting him down at the stationhouse, he found no wallet. The officer at that time mentioned to defendant the absence of the wallet, but defendant merely shrugged his shoulders. Shortly thereafter defendant was released from custody. At the change of shifts, another officer discovered defendant’s wallet in the back of the cruiser and brought it into the stationhouse. The arresting officer at that time searched the wallet and found a packet of cocaine.
The State filed a criminal complaint in the District Court (Rockland) charging defendant with the unlawful possession of a scheduled drug. Defendant filed a motion to suppress all evidence obtained when the arresting officer searched his wallet. After a hearing the District Court (Westcott, J.) denied defendant’s motion. Defendant moved for reconsideration of the order denying his motion to suppress, and the District Court denied that motion concluding that the warrantless search of defendant’s wallet was valid as a search incident to his arrest and, alternatively, because at the time of the search he no longer had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the wallet. Following transfer from the District Court, the Superior Court accepted defendant’s conditional guilty plea, entered pursuant to M.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2), and *774 found defendant guilty. This appeal followed.
Contrary to the District Court’s conclusion, the fact that the officer searched defendant’s wallet after he had been released from custody prevents the search from qualifying as a search incident to a lawful arrest.
See United States v. Edwards,
We traditionally review a suppression order, including the court’s determination as to abandonment, a mixed question of law and fact, only for clear error,
see State v. Enggass,
By definition, abandoned property is property in which one has by his conduct relinquished any expectation of privacy that he may have had in the property.
See Abel v. United States,
Upon its initial consideration of defendant’s motion to suppress, the District Court found defendant not to have abandoned his wallet:
I find that there was no abandonment because I can’t find any proof of a voluntary relinquishment of the owner. This is just as consistent with a loss of a license from the back of his pants, as it is with trying to secrete the wallet. There’s no suggestion that it was pushed down underneath the seat.
Upon reconsideration, the court in its written order noted its earlier determination of “no abandonment” and left undisturbed its *775 factual findings that defendant did not discard his wallet intentionally. It nonetheless held that defendant had no expectation of privacy in the wallet at the time it was searched. 1 It appears that the court in reconsideration concluded that although defendant did not intentionally discard his wallet when it was left in the police cruiser, he later relinquished his expectation of privacy through his subsequent actions at the stationhouse. Given the court’s factual findings, we agree that defendant did not abandon his wallet when he unintentionally lost it in the back of the cruiser, and we hold that he did not subsequently abandon the wallet by failing to secure it or to acknowledge his ownership when informed by the police that it was not on his person.
In
State v. Philbrick,
we explained that “[a]bandonment is primarily a question of intent, and intent may be inferred from words spoken, acts done, and other objective facts_ [t]he typical abandonment case is one where the defendant purposefully discards weapons or contraband while police are approaching or are in hot pursuit.”
Id.
at 854-55.
2
Here the district court determined that the circumstances of the present case are consistent with defendant’s wallet merely falling out of his pocket, with no indication that he had voluntarily discarded it. It would certainly have buttressed the District Court’s finding that defendant merely lost his wallet if, upon discovering it was not on his person, he had actively sought to find it.
See State v. Pidcock,
DO] We disagree with the District Court’s conclusion that at the time defendant learned his wallet was not on his person, by merely shrugging his shoulders and not taking steps to secure his wallet defendant relinquished his expectation of privacy in the wallet. Although a number of courts have held that abandonment may arise out of an express disclaimer of ownership,
see, e.g., United States v. Lee,
Thus, we conclude that at no time prior to the officer’s search of defendant’s wallet did he abandon his expectation of privacy therein. There being no applicable exception to the Fourth Amendment, that search was unlawful and the evidence it produced must be suppressed.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
The entry is:
Judgment vacated. Case remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with the opinion herein.
All concurring.
Notes
. The court stated:
The Defendant did not exhibit an actual subjective expectation of privacy and, even if he had, such an expectation is not one that society is prepared to recognize as "reasonable.” ...
When asked by the officer where his wallet was, the Defendant merely shrugged his shoulders. The Defendant failed to take any step to secure his wallet. Finally the Defendant lost the wallet, in a police cruiser. Under these circumstances defendant could have no reasonable expectation of privacy.
. A commentator on the law of search and seizure, assails our holding in
State
v.
Philbrick,
. In
State
v.
Pidcock,
