Lead Opinion
Mayolo Cruz Míreles pled guilty to felony driving under the influence of alcohol, I.C. §§ 18-8004, 18-8005(5). On appeal from the judgment of conviction, he argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence obtained after Canyon County Sheriffs Deputy Hulse stopped his patrol car, turned on his emergency lights and contacted Mireles to see if he was alright after observing Mireles abruptly pull his Ford Bronco to the shoulder of the road and park it partly in the traffic lane. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On May 6, 1998, Canyon County Sheriffs Deputy Hulse was radioed about suspicious activity involving a vehicle, a two-toned Ford Bronco, on Rose Lane at 1:22 a.m. There had been several calls about a vehicle that did not belong in that neighborhood and had stopped several times with a person getting out and then going back inside. About ten minutes later, Hulse located and followed the Bronco for a quarter of a mile. The Bronco abruptly pulled over to the shoulder of the road, stopping with half of the vehicle still in the traffic lane. Hulse also pulled his patrol car over to the side of the road and then activated his emergency lights, intending to find out whether the motorist needed assistance.
Hulse approached to see whether the driver was alright, and upon looking inside the Bronco, saw six open beer bottles and six full bottles scattered about the passenger compartment. Suspecting that the driver might be under the influence of alcohol, and being unsuccessful in his attempts to have the driver roll down the window, Hulse opened the passenger side door and immediately smelled alcohol. The driver, whose Idaho ID card identified him as Mireles, admitted to being intoxicated and not possessing a valid driver’s license. Mireles was then arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI).
Mireles was charged with felony DUI, I.C. §§ 18-8004, 18-8005(5). He filed a motion to suppress, asserting that Hulse lacked reasonable suspicion to stop his vehicle, and further argued that if Hulse stopped to assist him, then Hulse acted improperly by turning on his emergency lights instead of his hazard lights. The state responded that turning on the emergency lights was necessary to protect the officer from other drivers on the road.
The district court denied the suppression motion, explaining that Mireles had pulled over and stopped his car, that the stop had been voluntary and that Mireles had not been detained by Hulse. Thereafter, Mireles pled guilty to felony DUI, preserving his right to appeal the order denying his motion to suppress. We affirm.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. Standard Of Review
Ordinarily, in reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we
B. Deputy Hulse’s Use Of Emergency Lights Constituted A Technical Detention, But Was Reasonable Under The Circumstances And Did Not Amount To An Illegal Detention Under The Community Caretaking Function.
Míreles argues that he was seized without reasonable suspicion when Hulse stopped behind him and turned on the patrol car’s emergency lights. He asserts that I.C. § 49-1404 prohibits a motorist from driving away from a police officer who has given a visual signal to stop by use of the police car’s emergency lights. The district court, analogizing this case to State v. Pick,
However, in Pick, this Court considered whether a seizure occurred when an officer, under circumstances similar to those presented here, had stopped to investigate and turned on the patrol car’s amber lights. The officer had observed a truck weaving within its own lane. After following the truck through a parking lot and onto Highway 95, the truck pulled to the side of the road, where the officer pulled over behind the truck, activated the rear amber flashing lights, left the patrol car and spoke with Pick. As a result of that contact, Pick was arrested for DUI. Reviewing the denial of Pick’s motion to suppress, we held that no seizure occurred when the officer activated the patrol car’s amber flashers because, by doing so, the officer showed no sign of authority or force restricting Pick’s freedom of movement other than the fact that the officer was in uniform and that he wanted to speak with Pick.
Here by contrast, Hulse’s act of turning on the overhead lights, although not necessarily intended to create a detention, did constitute a technical, de facto detention commanding Míreles to remain stopped pursuant to I.C. § 49-625. A person is seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment if, in view of all the circumstances, a reasonable person would have believed he or she was no longer free to leave. State v. Waldie,
Because Míreles was technically detained, it was incumbent upon the state to prove a proper justification for the detention. State v. Sevy,
The community caretaking function involves the duty of police officers to help citizens an officer reasonably believes may be in need of assistance. In re Clayton,
Local police officers, unlike federal officers, frequently investigate vehicle accidentsin which there is no claim of criminal liability and engage in what, for want of a better term, may be described as community caretaking functions, totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition of evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute.
Regardless of which justification is used, the Constitution requires that the intrusive action of the police be reasonable in view of all the surrounding circumstances. Waldie,
The trial court viewed Hulse’s conduct as consistent with the community caretaker function. In determining the scope of the community caretaking function, Idaho courts have adopted a totality of the circumstances test. State v. Wixom,
We note that jurisdictions have split on when the use of emergency lights incident to the officer’s community caretaking function is reasonable. Compare, e.g., Ellenbecker,
Of the two perspectives illustrated above, the rationale for the limited intrusion in Ellenbecker is persuasive and appropriate in the present case. Hulse’s activation of the patrol car’s emergency lights was merely technical and momentary. Given his observation of the Bronco abruptly pulling over to the shoulder of the road and stopping partly in the traffic lane,
Prohibiting the use of emergency lights in these situations would require an officer to approach a stopped car at night without an immediate means of conveying that he presents no threat to the occupant of the car. Under these circumstances, the flashing emergency lights identify the officerjust as Ms uniform and marked patrol ear do. We are loathe to discourage community caretaker stops or to make them hazardous for motorists or the police.
State v. Walters,
III.
CONCLUSION
The district court correctly denied Mireles’s motion to suppress, but erroneously concluded that Míreles was not detained when Hulse activated Ms emergency lights. Where a trial court reaches the correct result but does so upon an erroneous theory, we will affirm upon the correct theory. State v. Wemeth,
Notes
. The state argues that because Míreles stopped his vehicle with half of it extending into the traffic lane, a traffic stop was reasonable because the officer had witnessed a violation of I.C. § 49-659, which is an infraction pursuant to I.C. § 49-236(3). Idaho Code § 49-662 authorizes an officer who finds a vehicle in violation of § 49-659 to "move the vehicle or require the driver of other person in charge of the vehicle to move it to a position off the roadway.” We do not need to reach the merits of this argument, because it is equally compatible with the state’s community caretaking function theory of the case.
Concurrence Opinion
Specially Concurring.
I concur m the foregoing opinion, but write separately to stress the narrowness of our holdmg, which is confined to the particular circumstances presented here. We have held that the officer’s use of his emergency lights, which effectuated a seizure in the course of a community caretaking task, was reasonable for safety purposes and because the emergency lights served the further purpose of informing Míreles that the veMcle that had stopped behind him late at a night was a police vehicle. We might reach a different conclusion if this stop had occurred during the daytime when use of the patrol car’s amber caution lights alone might be sufficient to alert oncoming motorists and when Míreles would have been able to see from the patrol car’s marMngs that it was a police vehicle.
