STATE of Washington, Respondent,
v.
James Bruce RANKIN, Petitioner.
State of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Kevin D. Staab, Petitioner.
Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.
*203 Washington Appellate Project, Sharon Blackford, Seattle, Nielsen, Broman & Assoc., Eric Nielsen, Seattle, for Petitioner.
James Krider, Snohomish County Prosecutor, Seth Fine and Charles Blackman, Deputies, Everett, Norm Maleng, King County Prosecutor, Daniel Clerk, Deputy, Seattle, for Respondent.
Tom P. Conom, Edmonds, for Amicus Curiae, Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
ALEXANDER, C.J.
The principal issue we are asked to resolve in this consolidated case is this: whether a police officer violates article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution when the officer requests identification from a passenger in a lawfully stopped vehicle but lacks an articulable suspicion that the passenger has engaged in criminal activity. The Court of Appeals concluded that although an officer in such a circumstance cannot demand identification from a passenger, an officer does not violate the state constitution by merely requesting that the passenger produce identification. We disagree with the Court of Appeals, concluding that the aforementioned constitutional provision affords automobile passengers a right of privacy that is violated when an officer requests identification from a passenger for investigative purposes, absent an independent basis for making the request. The Court of Appeals must, therefore, be reversed in both cases before us.
I.
State v. Rankin
On September 17, 1999, a vehicle driven by Karena Gunn was stopped by a Snohomish County sheriff's deputy. The deputy did so because he observed Gunn's vehicle "roll over a marked stop line," a noncriminal traffic offense. Rankin's Clerk's Papers at 5. James Rankin was a passenger in Gunn's vehicle. Although the deputy did not observe Rankin engaged in any criminal activity on this occasion, he recalled that he had arrested Rankin approximately a month earlier for possession of a stolen vehicle and possession of controlled substances.
*204 The deputy requested Gunn's driver's license, and then asked Rankin if he had any identification on his person. Rankin and Gunn each responded by providing the deputy with identification cards. The deputy used the personal information from the cards to run a check to see if there were warrants outstanding for either of the individuals. He learned that there were no warrants for Gunn but that there was an outstanding warrant for Rankin's arrest for allegedly violating a no-contact order. Consequently, he placed Rankin under arrest. During a search incident to the arrest, the deputy discovered a knife and about one ounce of methamphetamine on Rankin.
Rankin was charged in Snohomish County Superior Court with possession of a controlled substance. Rankin then moved to suppress the evidence that was seized from him at the time of his arrest. The trial court granted the motion and suppressed the evidеnce, concluding that the encounter was a seizure. It then dismissed the case, concluding that the State possessed insufficient evidence to maintain the charges against Rankin.
State v. Staab
On March 3, 1999, an officer from the Tukwila Police Department stopped a vehicle for the traffic offense of not having a license plate light. The officer asked the driver and his passenger, Kevin Staab, to produce their driver's licenses. Staab testified that the officer "was not politely asking when he wanted to see my driver's license," an assertion that the officer did not deny. Staab Report of Proceedings at 41. When Staab reached into his shirt pocket for his identification card, a clear plastic bag containing a white chalky substance fell out. Staab then put the bag back in his pocket and told the officer his name. After determining that there were no outstanding warrants for Staab, the officer arrested Staab based on his belief that the plastic bag contained cocaine. Staab admitted to the officer that the bag contained approximately three grams of cocaine.
Staab was thereafter charged in King County Superior Court with a violation of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act, chapter 69.50 RCW. At a subsequent hearing on the admissibility of the cocaine, the trial court determined that an officer may ask a passenger for identification even if the officer lacks a reasonable suspicion that the passenger is engaged in criminal activity. Consequently, it denied Staab's motion to suppress the cocaine. Staab was later found guilty of the charge.
At the Court of Appeals
Staab appealed his conviction to Division One of the Court of Appeals. The State appealed the order suppressing evidence in Rankin's case to that same court. The Court of Appeals consolidated the appeals and held that while an officer may not require a passenger to provide identification, unless there are independent grounds to question the passenger, the officer may request identification. State v. Rankin,
II.
Rankin and Staab both contend that the officers' requests for identification violated article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution. The determination of whether undisputed facts constitute a violation of that provision of the Washington Constitution is a question of law, which is reviewed de novo. State v. Thorn,
"It is well settled that article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution provides greater protection to individual privacy rights than the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution." State v. Jones,
The Washington Constitution provides that "[n]o person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without authority of law." Const. art. I, § 7. This provision protects "those privacy interests which citizens of this state have held, and should be entitled to hold, safe from governmental trespass absent a warrant." State v. Myrick,
"[N]ot every encounter between a police officer and a citizen is an intrusion requiring an objective justification." United States v. Mendenhall,
An automobile passenger is not seized when a police officer merely stops the vehicle in which the passenger is riding. State v. Mendez,
The trial court ordered suppression, reasoning that the police officers did not have any legal justification for "requesting" identification from the passenger. State v. Larson,
that the police officer who detained the petitioner for the purpose of requiring her to identify herself did so in violation of the fourth amendment to the United States Constitution and Const. art. 1, § 7, because none of the circumstances preceding the officer's detention of petitioner justified a reasonable suspicion that she was involved in criminal conduct.
Larson,
The dissent[3] relies heavily on Young where we held that asking for identification from a pedestrian does not constitute a seizure. Young,
Washington is not alone in holding that a mere request for identification from a passenger for investigatory purposes constitutes a seizure unless there is a reasonable basis for the inquiry. In Commonwealth v. Alvarez,
Not all jurisdictions are in agreement on this issue. The Supreme Court of Colorado, for instance, has determined that there is no seizure under the Fourth Amendment when an officer requests identification from an automobile passenger. See People v. Paynter,
[W]hile the Fourth Amendment operates on a downward ratcheting mechanism of diminishing expectations of privacy, article I, section 7, holds the line by pegging the constitutional standard to `those privacy interests which citizens of this state have held, and should be entitled to hold, safe from governmental trespass absent a warrant.
Ladson,
In each of the cases before us, a police officer asked a passenger for identification for the sole purpose of conducting a criminal investigation, notwithstanding the fact that the officer lacked any articulable suspicion of criminal activity. Applying Larson, we conclude that both individuals were seized as a matter of law when the officers made the request or demand for identification. Because both individuals were seized without the benefit of a warrant and the State does not contend that the seizures were justified by any exception to the warrant requirement,[5] the evidence obtained as a result of the seizures must be suppressed.
III.
In conclusion, we hold that the freedom from disturbance in "private affairs" afforded to passengers in Washington by article I, section 7 prohibits law enforcement officers from requesting identification from passengers for investigative purposes unless there is an independent reason that justifies the request. This is not to imply that officers may not engage passengers in conversation. They may do this. However, once the interactiоn develops into an investigation, it runs afoul of our state constitution unless there is justification for the intrusion into the passenger's private affairs. Because the Court of Appeals concluded otherwise, we reverse its decision to overturn the suppression of the evidence seized from Rankin as well as its affirmance of Staab's conviction.
JOHNSON, SANDERS, CHAMBERS and OWENS, JJ., concur.
FAIRHURST, J. (concurring in the majority).
I agree with the majority that the Court of Appeals should be reversed; however, I would confine the court's conclusion to the facts in this consolidated case and would clarify how the result could differ in other factual circumstances.
This matter involves two cases that raise the issue of whether a police officer requesting identification from a passenger in a vehicle who is merely present when the driver is legally stopped for a traffic infraction violates the passenger's privacy rights under article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution.[1] To determine if an article I, section 7 violation occurred in the context of this case, I engage in a two-step inquiry. First, was the defendant unlawfully seized without a warrant? State v. O'Neill,
The majority relies solely on State v. Larson,
A. Were Rankin and Staab unlawfully seized without a warrant?
Under article I, section 7, a person is seized when, in view of all the objective circumstances, a reasonable person would not feel free to leave. Young,
The federal courts and two divisions of the Washington Court of Appeals have recognized that an officer's detaining of a passenger during a traffic stop makes the passenger just as seized as the driver.[3]See, e.g., State v. Tijerina,
The above cases recognize that in a traffic stop, the officer exerts a significant amount of authority and control. First, the officer generally uses overhead flashing lights, sirens, or a combination of both, to exert authority. See, e.g., Stroud,
Turning to the cases at bar, in Rankin the officer pulled over the vehicle with his emergency lights, approached from the passenger side, and asked for identification. The officer took the identification from Rankin, wrote down information, and stated "be right back." Report of Proceedings (RP) at 20. In Staab, the officer pulled over the vehicle with his emergency lights and siren and asked for identification in an "impolite tone." RP at 41, 47. The officers did not suspect Rankin or Staab to be involved in any criminal activity when they made requests for identification. A reasonable person in the same situation would not have felt free to refuse the officer's requests and end the encounter. Based upon a review of state and federal precedent, and the objective circumstances surrounding the traffic stops, I would hold that Rankin and Staab were seized when the officers stopped the vehicles and requested their identifications.
B. Does an Exception to the Warrаnt Requirement Apply to the Facts in This Case?
A Terry investigative stop is a recognized exception to the warrant requirement under article I, section 7. State v. Acrey,
A Terry inquiry involves (1) whether the police "`officer's action was justified at its inception'" and (2) whether "`it was reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first place.'" Ladson,
Rather than applying a Terry analysis to this case, the majority applied Larson. I concur with the majority that Larson is the seminal Washington case that applies to these factual circumstances. Larson held that a stop based on a violation committed by a driver does not reasonably provide law enforcement with grounds to request identification from a passenger unless other circumstances give "independent cause to question passengers." Larson,
Many circumstances that might be reasonably related to the original circumstances for the stop can justify an officer's request for a passenger's identification. For example, if a vehicle is stopped because a passenger or passengers are not wearing seatbelts, a request for the passenger's identification would be appropriate. Similarly, if an officer observed a passenger acting in a way that suggested involvement in criminal activity (using drugs, hiding something, or pulling out a weapon), the officer would be justified in asking for identification. If an officer felt his safety was at risk, he might nеed to know with whom he is interacting. However, none of these circumstances existed in this case. Neither Rankin nor Staab committed any traffic infractions. The officers in both cases testified that neither Rankin nor Stabb did anything suspicious during the stops. The officers were unaware of any criminal activity until they checked Rankin's and Staab's records after obtaining their identification. Both officers expressed no concern about their safety during the stops.
Examples of other reasons that might justify an officer's request for identification are the need to obtain witnesses to an infraction, the need to know whether the driver of the vehicle is permissibly driving with another of suitable age and authority (i.e., minors), or the need to determine if anyone in the vehicle has a valid license to remove the vehicle from the premises. None of those circumstances existed in this case.
I would, therefore, reverse the Court of Appeals because of specific factual circumstances presented in this case.
IRELAND, J. (dissenting).
In this consolidated case, petitioners James Rankin and Kevin Staab contend that their right to privacy pursuant to Washington Constitution article I, section 7 was violated when, as passengers in vehicles that had been lawfully stopped, the officers in their respective cases asked them for identification in the absence of evidence that Rankin or Staab was еngaged in criminal activity. I disagree with the majority that the passengers were seized and would find that the inquiry for identification, by itself, did not infringe on Staab's or Rankin's right to privacy because, under the totality of the circumstances in each case, a reasonable person would have felt free to decline the officer's request. I therefore dissent.
FACTS
James Rankin
On the night of September 17, 1999, Deputy Geoghagan saw a black Mustang, driven *211 by Karena Gunn, roll through a stop line. Rankin was a passenger in that vehicle. Geoghagan proceeded to pull the vehicle over using the emergency lights on his marked patrol car and approached the passenger side window after the vehicle stopped in a grocery store parking lot. Geoghagan did not see Rankin commit an infraction, although Geoghagan recognized him as someone he had arrested one month prior for both possession of a stolen vehicle and possession of controlled substances. There is no indication that Rankin recognized Geoghagan as Rankin did not testify at the suppression hearing.
While Gunn was searching for her driver's license, Geoghagan asked if Rankin had any identification on him. Rankin handed his ID card to Geoghagan, who wrote down the information. There is conflicting testimony whether Geoghagan immediately returned Rankin's ID card, and the trial court did not make an explicit finding on that matter. Geoghagan estimated that about 20 seconds elapsed from the time he took Rankin's ID, wrote down the information, and then returned the card. By this time Gunn had found her license, which she also handed to Geoghagan. The majority is incorrect when it says the deputy used the cards to run a check for possible warrants. Majority at 204. Rather, Geoghagan testified that he then took Gunn's license and the information he had taken from Rankin's ID card, stating he would "be right back." Geoghagan had dispatch run a warrants check on both ID numbers, which revealed an outstanding warrant for Rankin's arrest for violation of a no contact order. Gunn's record was clear, and she was ultimately given a warning. Geoghagan estimated the warrants check took two to three minutes.
After discovering the outstanding arrest warrant, Geoghagan called for backup, and once another officer arrived, they approached the vehicle and arrested Rankin. There is uncertainty in the record whether a third patrol car arrived sometime during the stop. The search incident to arrest revealed a knife and a crystalline substance in Rankin's pocket. After giving Rankin Miranda warnings (Miranda v. Arizona,
The trial court concluded that, under the totality of the circumstances, Rankin had been illegally seized when the vehicle was pulled over and that a reasonable person in Rankin's position would have felt they were required to provide an officer their ID. The court suppressed the discovery of the methamphetamine and dismissed the case.
Kevin Staab
The following facts are undisputed. Late on March 3, 1999, Staab was riding in a vehicle stopped for a malfunctioning license plate light. Officer Renninger was driving in a marked patrol car and stopped the vehicle using his lights and siren. Renninger asked the driver for his license, proof of insurance, and registration. In the same tone he asked Staab, "Can I see your driver's license or proof of identification?" although Renninger did not suspect Staab of criminal activity. According to Staab, Renninger did not ask for the identification in a polite tone. Renninger agreed with that characterization. Staab responded that he did not think he had any ID on him, but he nonetheless reached in his left front shirt pocket and as he pulled out an ATM card, a clear plastic bag containing a white chalky substance fell out. Staab put the bag back in his pocket and gave Renninger his name orally.
Renninger did a computer check of the driver and Staab, both of which came back clear. While Renninger was running this check, Officer Syler arrived to assist with the stop; Renninger related what he had seen in the plastic bag. Both officers returned to the vehicle and arrested Staab. The search incident to the arrest produced the bag of white chalky powder that Renninger suspected was cocaine.
The trial court found that Renninger was within his authority to ask Staab for identification and that the circumstances of this case did not suggest any coercive police conduct. It ultimately denied Staab's motion to suppress the evidence of cocaine. Staab requested *212 a stipulated facts trial and was found guilty of possession of a controlled substance.
ISSUES
May an officer request the identification of a passenger in a lawfully stopped vehicle, absent an articulable suspicion of criminal activity or other reasonable rationale for doing so, without violating the passenger's right to privacy pursuant to Washington Constitution article I, section 7?
If so, should the officer be required to inform the passenger of his or her right to refuse the request for identification?
ANALYSIS
Standard of Review
On a motion to suppress, this court reviews disputed findings of fact under a substantial evidence standard. State v. Mendez,
Washington Constitution article I, section 7
Article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution provides: "[n]o person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without authority of law." This section requires that (1) there be a privacy interest worthy of protection, and (2) the government engages in some activity that infringes on that privacy interest. See City of Seattle v. McCready,
In the context of police-citizen interactions, this court has utilized a seizure type test to determine whether police have engaged in an activity that infringes on an individual's privacy right. See State v. Young,
"[T]he test for disturbance of a person's private affairs under article I, section 7 is a purely objective one, looking to the actions of the law enforcement officer...." Young,
Rankin and Staab insist that a seizure analysis is not dispositive in an article I, section 7 claim for protection. Touting the "unique privacy rights of innocent passengers," Rankin advocates solely a privacy analysis that balances the individual's privacy interest against the State's authority of law to infringe on that interest. Rankin and Staab argue that Geoghagan and Renninger required the surrender of their respective identification without authority of law. However, in fact neither of them surrendered their identification; at most Geoghagan looked at the identification for 20 seconds, took down the information, and handed it back. Staab did not produce any identification and responded orally with his name.
Rankin's and Staab's position is contrary to the law established by this court in Young,
The test here is to determine, as a matter of law, that a seizure occurred and that therefore Staab's or Rankin's privacy right was violated. If, in view of all the surrounding circumstances, Rankin or Staab had a reasonable objective belief, based upon a show of authority, that he could not refuse to show identification to the officer, the test is met.
The majority agrees with both defendants and Amicus Curiae Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers that State v. Larson,
Larson involved a defendant who was a passenger in a vehicle that was illegally parked at 3 a.m. more than one foot from the curb on the side of a road bordering a park. The officer who approached the passenger side "asked" for the defendant's identification. Larson,
The Court of Appeals read Larson to prohibit officer demands for identification (i.e., compliance is mandatory) absent some "independent basis for doing so." Rankin,
The defendants rely on the court's one-time use of the words "requested" and "asked" that the court used to describe the officer's solicitation for identification in Larson. See Larson,
However, after its initial, one-time use of "requested" and "asked," words that admittedly could be read to convey an element of permissiveness, the court discussed the issue and referenced the facts of the case exclusively using terms commonly associated with compelled activities: officers "demanding" or "requiring" Larson's identification, or "questioning" or "detaining" defendants. See id. at 641, 642, 643, 645,
As noted above, the first step is to determine if the officers' inquiry was a demand and, therefore, a seizure. The Larson court concluded, without an articulated analysis, that the officers' inquiry was a demand, therefore a seizure, and concluded that the seizure lacked independent justification. For this reason, Larson is not instructive here, where we must determine, in the first place, whether the officers' comments were a demand (a seizure) or permissive (no seizure). Only after drawing a conclusion that a seizure occurred do we arrive at where the Larson court began its analysis.
Moreover, even if we agreed that Larson was the test for seizure at one point, the bigger distinction to be drawn between Larson and the current case, that both the majority and concurrence misapprehend, is that the analysis in Larson is out-of-date. Mendenhall was reported only two days prior to Larson, thus the Mendenhall analysis that we use here was not realistically available to the Larson court.[2] Both defendants and the majority greatly depend on Larson, which (save a fleeting reference) had no article I, section 7 analysis and relied on the Fourth Amendment. See id. at 640,
A further distinction in Larson is that the court indicatеd that pretext might have been involved in the stop of the vehicle. In a footnote, the court expressed its uncertainty as to the officers' motives in effectuating the stop, citing inconsistencies in the record and undisputed testimony that the "officer who demanded identification from the [defendant] treated her rudely and made comments to the effect that she was a prostitute or a streetwalker."[4]Larson,
Young and its progeny should govern the question of whether a seizure occurred for purposes of Washington Constitution article I, section 7. While Larson is distinguishable because the officers demanded identification, it remains good law where there is a seizure. I agree with the majority that officer demands for identification constitute seizures. However, the law requires the court to look at the totality of the circumstances under a reasonable person standard to determine whether the officer's inquiry was, in the first place, a demand or request. This is the initial question that must be answered. It is after a determination that the inquiry was a demand, and therefore a seizure, that a court must ascertain whether the officers in a given case had an articulable suspicion of criminal activity or other reasonable rationale for the seizure. According to the law established by this court, we decide the character of the inquiry for idеntification in this case on article I, section 7 grounds, using the Mendenhall test for seizure and the analysis set forth in Young and recently affirmed in O'Neill.
Other Jurisdictions
Rankin points to three cases from other jurisdictions that he claims support his position. First, he broadly argues that in State v. Carty,
Second, Rankin cites People v. Gonzalez,
Third, Rankin relies on State v. Johnson,
In a strikingly similar case to the one at hand, Colorado's Supreme Court concluded that a request for the identification of a passenger was not a seizure, under a reasonable person standard, after consideration of all the circumstances. People v. Paynter,
Colorado has delineated three categories of police-citizen encounters: "(1) arrests, (2) investigatory stops, and (3) consensual interviews." Paynter,
James Rankin
In Rankin's case, the trial court concluded that he had been seized by Deputy Geoghagan based on its factual findings that Rankin was an innocent passenger, Geoghagan recognized Rankin from an arrest the month before, there were multiple officers, and Rankin had a "limited mental sophistication." Clerk's Papers (Rankin) at 5-6. The trial court concluded, after argument on the issue, that pretext was not involved in the stop; it also found that Geoghagan had "requested" Rankin's identification. Clerk's Papers (Rankin) at 5. The Court of Appeals disagreed with the trial court's findings, to wit, that Rankin's subjective mental state was relevant, that Rankin recognized Geoghagan from the prior arrest, and that Rankin would have noticed the presence of multiple officers at the scene, all of which, the trial court concluded, contributed to Rankin's reasonable belief he was not free to leave. Rankin,
The standard is whether a reasonable person would have felt free to end the encounter, after consideration of all the circumstances. The trial court found that the prior arrest by Geoghagan was a circumstance that would have led Rankin to believe he was not free to leave. As the Court of Appeals concluded, this rationale is faulty for two reasons. First, Rankin's recognition of Geoghagan as his prior arresting officer cannot be ascertained as Rankin did not testify. Second, and most importantly, the standard has always been strictly objective, and Rankin's recognition of Geoghagan, even if definitively determined at trial, would not be relevant to the inquiry. But cf. State v. Barnes,
The other officer was called in by Geoghagan only after discovery of Rankin's outstanding warrant. Ostensibly, Geoghagan would have ordered Rankin to stay in the car had Rankin attempted to leave the scene before the other officer arrived as Geoghagan had probable cause to arrest Rankin at the moment the outstanding warrant was discovered. The presence of the additional officer is irrelevant to the determination of whether Geoghagan's request for Rankin's identification was a seizure and whether it thereby violated Rankin's privacy rights.
Seizure analysis under article I, section 7 focuses on the conduct of the officer, not on the subjective reaction of the individual. See Young,
Rankin urges this court to consider Geoghagan's comment, "I'll be right back," made as he returned to his patrol car to run the names, as contributing to Rankin's reasonable belief he was not free to leave. The record does not clarify whether Geoghagan directed his comment only to Rankin, and there is no basis to assume it was anything other than a statement made to the driver. It would be just as reasonable to conclude that Geoghagan was simply telling each individual that he would not be keeping them much longer. In any case, Rankin has not met his burden merely by proffering that the statement was made.
The Court of Appeals also disagreed with the distinction the trial court drew between officers approaching pedestrians and officers approaching innocent passengers in vehicles, based on the fact that a passenger's mode of transportation is made unavailable when the vehicle is stopped, whereas a pedestrian is free to continue on his or her way as before. Rankin,
When the facts are distilled, the only ground upon which Rankin claims that he had a reasonable belief he was not free to leave is simply that Geoghagan requested Rankin's identification. Rankin has failed to show that the request was made in such a waythrough tone of voice, language used, or any other circumstancesas to show Rankin could have reasonably believed he was not free to leave. Of note, Rankin has not assigned error to the trial court's finding that Geoghagan "requested" the identification, thus it is a verity on appeal. The surrounding *218 circumstances cited by the trial court (presence of multiple officers, recognizing the arresting officer, and "limited mental sophistication") were irrelevant considerations in an objective standard and, in any event, were not supported by the record. Thus, in viewing all the circumstances, Rankin voluntarily disclosed his identity to Geoghaganinformation Rankin now asserts should be protected. Washington's privacy law does not еxtend article I, section 7 protection to information voluntarily given. In Rankin's case, we hold that his privacy was not infringed by Deputy Geoghagan's mere request for identification because his compliance was not coerced or compelled, in view of all the circumstances. Rather, while Rankin was free to refuse, instead, he voluntarily provided identification. I would affirm the Court of Appeals' reversal of the trial court's suppression of the evidence.
Kevin Staab
The Court of Appeals did not disturb the trial court's factual findings or legal conclusions on appeal and upheld the denial to suppress the discovery of the cocaine. In particular, the Court of Appeals concluded in Staab's case that the trial court's "factual finding" that Officer Renninger had not coerced Staab into producing identification was supported by the record.[6]Rankin,
In addition to arguments like those already discussed above, Staab challenges the Court of Appeals' reliance upon three cases involving police-pedestrian or passenger encounters: Mendez,
In Mendez, this court considered the validity of an officer's order to a passenger that he remain inside a vehicle. The defendant was a passenger in a vehicle that was legally stopped. Mendez,
In Armenta, which was decided on Fourth Amendment grounds, the defendants initiated contact with the officer when their car broke down; they accepted the officer's offer to assist them. Armenta,
Recall that in Young,
Staab distinguishes Mendez, Armenta, and Young basеd on his perceived legal distinction between passengers and pedestrians. Staab further distinguishes Armenta based on the fact that the defendants there initiated the contact with the officer and distinguishes Young based on the court's conclusion that the light revealed nothing that was not already in plain view. As previously discussed, there is no precedent for the distinction Staab and Rankin attempt to draw between pedestrians and passengers, and neither defendant offers a good reason to do so. The focus of the analysis is on the conduct of the officer, not on the individual's status as pedestrian or passenger. The Court of Appeals recognized the factual distinctions between Staab's and Rankin's cases and the facts in Mendez, Armenta, and Young, but these distinctions do not vitiate their precedential value in the court's seizure analysis.
Staab also contends that the Court of Appeals' reading of Larsonthat there must be a demand for identification before a seizure can be foundadds new elements to the Larson analysis. Staab perceives these new elements to be the factors the Court of Appeals identified as being relevant in determining whether a demand was made: the officer's tone of voice or language, the officer's position at the vehicle, and whether there has been a show of force. See Rankin,
A central reason why an officer might want to know the names of the occupants in a vehicle is to have a list of witnesses if a court proceeding ensued on the traffic stop or perhaps even a criminal trial or investigation depending on the circumstances of the stop.
Concurrence
I disagree with the concurrence by Justice Fairhurst that "an officer's detaining of a passenger during a traffic stop makes the passenger just as seized as the driver." Concurrence at 208. We held to the contrary in Mendez,
The federal cases cited by the concurrence do state that the stopping of an automobile and detaining its occupants constitutes a "seizure" under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments and must therefore be made under a standard of "reasonableness." Delaware v. Prouse,
If the federal precedent cited requires this court to hold that the passengers, Rankin and Staab, were "seized" merely because the driver was stopped for a traffic infraction, then whether identification was requested or demanded would not matter, as they would already be seized. The determination would then be, is it reasonable to request identification from a person seized in the traffic stop. For all the reasons noted in the concurrence, I would answer that question yes. As in a "Terry stop," the request for identification is a minimal intrusion and is permissible.
Requirement to Inform Passengers of Right to Refuse
Staab requests that we should require officers to alert innocent passengers of their right to refuse the officer's request for identification. He notes that we have already done so in the context of police requests to enter an individual's home to commence a search of the premises. (See State v. Ferrier,
Paynter,
CONCLUSION
Pursuant to article I, section 7, an individual is free from government intrusion into his private affairs absent authority of law. I would hold: (1) without an independent reason for doing so, an officer may not require a passenger to produce his or her identification (see Larson,
This court has refused to extend Ferrier to other circumstances involving searches of homes that did not involve and knock and talk. Such a guarded jurisprudence suggests it would be inappropriate to extend Ferrier to require officers to inform vehicle passengers of their right to refuse a request for identification. I would affirm the Court of Appeals and therefore dissent.
BRIDGE and MADSEN, JJ., concur.
NOTES
[1] Even the dissenters in Larson read the majority opinion as prohibiting officers from requesting identification without an independent reason. Larson,
[2] "Detention" is defined as "[t]he act or fact of holding a person in custody; confinement or compulsory delay." BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 459 (7th ed.1999).
[3] Dissent at 214.
[4] As we indicated, Larson was decided under the fourth amendment to the United States Constitution as well as the state constitution. Larson,
[5] Under the particular facts before us, the requests for identification were not reasonably related to officer safety. If there were issues of officer safety, the result might have been different. See State v. Hudson,
[1] "No person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without authority of law." WASH. CONST. art. I, § 7.
[2] O'Neill involved a person who was sitting in the driver's seat of a legally parked car when he was approached by an officer and asked for identification. Although I apply the rule articulated in O'Neill to the situation in this case, the outcome is necessarily quite different because the facts are substantially different. The different outcome in this case does not overrule O'Neill or limit its application in circumstances more comparable to the facts in that case.
[3] This court has held that a passenger is not seized by virtue of the vehicle stop alone. State v. Mendez,
[4] The dissent is correct that Tijerina has no precedential value for this court; however, it was not offered for that purpose. As noted above, Mendez, the case the dissent claims superseded Tijerina, is not fatal to my analysis because it held only that a passenger was not seized at the moment the car was stopped. I agree that the seizure does not occur when the car is stopped but when the officer takes additional action with respect to the passenger.
[5] The dissent claims that Stroud is distinguishable because the officer made a show of authority that resulted in the seizure. Here, the show of authority began with the accoutrements of the stop but reached its zenith when the officers asked the passengers, who had committed no infraction, for identification. As the dissent states, "[u]nder Washington law, merely stopping a vehicle for a traffic infraction, without more, does not result in a seizure of the passenger." Dissent at 220. I agree; the seizure occurred when the officers took the very next step.
[6] In acknowledging the relevance of the remaining cases cited, the dissent claims that the analysis relates more to the analysis in Terry. As noted above, I agree that the proper analytical framework for this issue is Terry. I merely disagree with the dissent's conclusion.
Notes
[7] I am aware of the cases that indicate that the officer's actions in pulling over the vehicle are directed toward the driver and not the passenger. See, e.g., People v. O'Neal,
[1] However, as is discussed more fully below, the record reflected that the officers spoke to her rudely and insinuated she was a prostitute and a "street walker."
[2] Mendenhall was decided May 27, 1980; Larson was decided May 29, 1980.
[3] Interestingly, both defendants' briefs ignore this portion of the Young analysis and the interplay it established between article I, section 7 and seizure law.
[4] The majority appears to ignore these surrounding circumstances when it says "the decision must be read in light of the facts of the case, which were that the officer merely `asked' the passenger for the identification." Majority at 205-06.
[5] So, while Paynter was decided on Fourth Amendment grounds, its analysis is still instructive.
[6] The Court of Appeals characterized this as a factual finding, despite its placement in the trial court's conclusions of law. This treatment appears to be deliberate given a footnote in the opinion stating, "[a]lthough these findings were listed as conclusions of law, it is clear that the trial court was actually making a factual determination, and we treat them as such." Rankin,
