Lead Opinion
Thе question in this case is whether a police officer has “specific and articulable facts” to justify stopping and warning a driver when he observes improper driving behavior not worthy of a citation for a traffic infraction. Concluding that a civil or criminal infraction is not always essential and that safety reasons alone could justify such a stop, we vacate the judgment of the District Court (Skowhegan, MacNi-chol, J.) that granted the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence and remand for further proceedings.
At about 2:00 A.M. on a summer Sunday morning a police officer in the town of Skowhegan observed the defendant drive down Russell Street to its intersection with Madison Avenue. Weather conditions were clear and there were no other vehicles around. At the Russell-Madison intersection, Russell Street is a one-way street divided into three lanes. Well-marked and clearly visible directional arrows painted on the рavement indicate that the right lane is to be used for turning right onto Madison Avenue, the middle lane is to be used for proceeding ahead through the intersection onto Elm Street and the left lane is to be used for turning left onto Madison Avenue. There are yield signs but no traffic lights at the intersection.
The defendant entered the right lane, slowed down, then instead of turning right
On the defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence resulting from the stop, the District Court reasoned that the grounds identified by the police officer did not justify the stop. It interpreted State v. Caron,
Caron involved a one-time straddling of the center line for 25 to 50 yards with nо oncoming traffic on an early morning. Id. at 978-79. In Caron, this Court held that the single incident of lane-straddling “did not give rise to an objectively reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was involved.” Id. In Caron we had no occasion to focus upon the adequacy of a safety justification.
This record presents only the safety issue. The Skowhegan police officer had no suspicion of criminal activity,
The Fourth Amendment standard is clear: “[i]n order to initiate an investigation involving brief detention short of a formal arrest, a law enforcement officer must act on the basis of ‘specific and artic-ulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion.’ ” State v. Griffin,
The stop here was not a random stop like that condemned in Delaware v. Prouse,
Because the District Court granted the motion to suppress evidence resulting from the vehicle stop, thus effectively terminating the action, the defendant never had the opportunity to conduct cross-examination on his other motions, an issue he preserved by cross-appeal as the State concedes. Depending upon the outcome of the District Court’s reconsideration of the motion to suppress on remand, it may also be necessary for the District Court to take further testimony on thе remaining motions.
The entry is:
Order on motion to suppress evidence vacated;
Order denying motion to suppress statements, confessions or admissions vacated;
Order denying motion to suppress evidence of test refusal vacated;
Remanded to the District Court for further proceedings.
McKUSICK, C.J., and WATHEN, CLIFFORD and COLLINS, JJ., concurring.
Notes
. There was substantial discussion in the Distriсt Court whether markings painted on a road surface are "placed or erected” within the meaning of 29 M.R.S.A. § 1(17-B) (1978) so as to create a violation of 29 M.R.S.A. § 941-A (Pamph.1988) out of the driving behavior and whether a municipal ordinance сould have any effect. Because the police officer did not testify that any infraction prompted him to pull the defendant over, we do not decide whether a violation in fact occurred.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I cannot agrеe with the court that a possible future risk to the safety of persons or property warrants the intrusion of a present stop of a motor vehicle. I would affirm the decision of the District Court.
At the hearing to suppress the evidеnce seized after the stop of Pinkham’s car, the police officer testified that neither the speed of the car nor the manner in which it was driven caused him to stop the car. The officer stopped Pinkham’s vehiсle after it went straight ahead when the directional arrow painted on the pavement indicated that the lane should be used for a right turn. There was no other vehicular or pedestrian traffic in the area. He made thе stop at 2:00 a.m. in Skowhegan “purely for safety reasons ... to inform [Pinkham] that in the future, should he use the lanes, to be sure to advise other drivers of his intentions.” The District Court found that no traffic violation had occurred and that Pinkham’s “driving in the right lanе rather than the middle lane as he went through the intersection at 2:00 a.m. with no other traffic on the road is not a significant act and I so find.” The court concluded that “on these facts” the stop was not warranted and granted Pinkham’s motion to suppress the seized evidence.
It is clear that on the evidence before it that the District Court could have found that the officer could not reasonably believe that any risk to the safety of persons or рroperty had occurred, was present or was imminent, and could properly conclude, as the court did, that the intrusion of the stop was not warranted. See State v.
In vacating the trial court’s decision, this court establishes a new and different standard to govern the legality of a stop for safety reasons. This standard differs significantly from the well-established standard governing the validity of a stop fоr a believed civil infraction or a criminal violation that we have previously applied to a stop for safety reasons. The court today holds that the police officer’s apparent concern thаt at some future time Pinkham might not comply with the painted directional arrow when other vehicular or pedestrian traffic might be at the intersection is a sufficient “specific and articulable fact” to give rise to an objectively reasonable belief that safety reasons warrant the intrusion of a stop.
This is a substantial departure from the holding in Terry v. Ohio,
Nothing in our decision in State v. Fuller,
I find no authority, nor does the court cite any, to support the proposition it advances today: that the intrusion of a stop can be justified on the basis of a possible future risk to the safety of persons or property.
