Defendant appeals her conviction for unlawful possession of a controlled substance. ORS 475.992(4)(b). She assigns error to the denial of her motion to suppress evidence found in a cigarette case in her purse. We reverse.
The facts are undisputed. Defendant entered the New Oregon Motel in Eugene and approached the counter. A clerk asked her to wait until the clerk had finished other business. Defendant waited for a few minutes and then left, leaving her purse on the counter. The clerk saw the purse, opened it and found a cigarette case inside. She opened the case and found a syringe with liquid in it. She closed the case and the purse, put the purse in a back room, called the police and told them that a woman had left a purse that contained a syringe.
Two detectives came to the motel. Detective Myers opened the purse and found a Social Security card with the name “Joel Morton,” a record of birth for “Joe L. Morton,” a Department of Motor Vehicles memorandum addressed to “Joel Morton,” three hotel receipts for “Joe’ L Morton” and a family history document for “Joe‘ L. Morton.” He then opened the cigarette case and found a $20 bill, a syringe with liquid in it and three clear plastic baggies that contained a white powdery substance that he thought was methamphetamine. He seized the purse and its contents, including the cigarette case.
Myers waited one-half hour for defendant to return. When she did not, he instructed motel employees to call him if she did, and he left. Someone called fifteen minutes later to say that defendant was on her way back to the motel. Myers returned to the motel and posed as an employee. When defendant asked for her purse, he asked her to describe its contents. She did, and he arrested her.
The trial court found that defendant had temporarily lost or mislaid her purse but had not abandoned it.
1
It
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also found that it was expected that she would return to claim it and that, when Myers searched the purse and found the identification items, he believed that they were for a man and that he should search for something to identify a woman. There is evidence to support those findings.
Ball v. Gladden,
On appeal, defendant does not argue that the police could not look through her purse, but argues that opening the cigarette case was an unreasonable search, in violation of Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution. The state argues that the police had a right to look through the lost property, including the cigarette case, in order to identify its owner. In
State v. Pidcock,
Defendant argues that the holdings of
Pidcock
and
Belcher
are not applicable here, however, because the
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property was not abandoned. Defendant is correct that the property was not abandoned. As the trial court found, it was lost or mislaid. The holdings of
Pidcock
and
Belcher
are not limited to property that is abandoned. As stated in
Belcher:
“As we held this date in
State v. Pidcock, supra,
police may search abandoned or lost property for identification of the owner.”
Defendant also argues that, even if a search for identification was permissible to identify the owner of the purse, the cigarette case should not have been opened. The police officer had found sufficient identification in the purse before he opened the cigarette case; the identification that Myers found before opening the cigarette case showed the names Joe L. Morton, Joel Morton and Joe’ L Morton. The officer testified that he continued to look for identification, because he did not think that any of those was the name of the owner of the purse. He had been told by the motel employees that the purse was left by a woman, and he thought that the names on the identification were men’s names. However, Myers had found seven pieces of identification in the purse with the same name with minor variations. One document was a birth certificate that showed that “Joe L. Morton” was a female. In view of that information, it was not reasonable for Myers to open the cigarette case to look for identification.
Even though the state seeks to sustain the trial court’s ruling by arguing only that Myers was lawfully dealing with found property, we will address the trial court’s other reasons. First, Myers had no probable cause to conduct an investigative search of the cigarette case for contraband.
See State v. Pidcock, supra,
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Finally, we find it was also unreasonable to search the cigarette case to ascertain its contents for safekeeping. In a non-emergency, non-investigative situation, it is unreasonable for an officer to open any closed container.
State v. Rounds,
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
The trial court found:
“The Court makes a finding that leaving that purse there that purse and its contents were what might be called lost or mislaid property. There was no circumstance to indicate that she had severed any further interest in that purse or any of its contents and the Court finds that the more reasonable conclusion is *222 that she had left and could he expected to return to claim it. She had not abandoned it, but she was unaware for some reason that she had left it there.” (Emphasis supplied.)
ORS 98.005 provides:
“(1) If any person finds money or goods valued at $100 or more, and if the owner of the money or goods is unknown, such person, within-10 days after the date of the finding, shall give notice of the finding in writing to the county clerk of the county in which the money or goods was found.
“(2) If no person appears and establishes ownership of the money or goods prior to the expiration of three months after the date of the notice to the county clerk under subsection (1) of this section, the finder shall be the owner of the money or goods.”
Nothing in the purse furnished any reason to search the cigarette case.
