Defendant appeals from convictions for unlawful delivery of a controlled substance and unlawful possession of a controlled substance. ORS 475.992. Defendant asserts that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence, specifically, 1.47 grams of crack cocaine found in his jacket during the execution of a search warrant at an apartment where he was an overnight guest. As described below, we conclude that, because the jacket was not in defendant’s actual physical possession at the time that it was seized and searched, the search was lawful, as within the scope of the warrant, under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. 1 Accordingly, we affirm.
For purposes of our review, the material facts are undisputed. In March 2000, the Lane County Circuit Court issued a warrant authorizing the search of an apartment in Eugene, an automobile, and the persons of David Jefferson and James Allensworth, for evidence including firearms, cocaine, packaging materials, financial and travel records, and cash. Neither the warrant nor the supporting affidavit included any reference to defendant.
On March 21, at about 7:00 a.m., federal, state, and local law enforcement officers, including Oregon State Police Officer Rebecca Martin, executed the warrant at the apartment. Upon entry, police found defendant and defendant’s sister, Grundy, asleep in the living room. Defendant was wearing a T-shirt and shorts. Defendant’s belongings, including a jacket, were also in the living room. Jefferson was in another room in the apartment.
After presenting the warrant and reading Miranda rights to all three, Martin took Jefferson outside to interview him. Jefferson immediately exercised his right to an attorney, and the interview ended in less than five minutes. *52 Martin then interviewed defendant. During the course of that interview, another officer, Rauch, told Martin that officers had found cocaine in a jacket located inside the apartment and that defendant had acknowledged ownership of the jacket. When Martin asked defendant about the cocaine, defendant admitted that it was his.
Defendant subsequently moved to suppress the cocaine found in the jacket. In addition to the facts just recited, testimony at the suppression hearing established that defendant was not wearing the jacket at the time that it was seized. However, the record does not disclose the jacket’s exact physical proximity to defendant when it was seized. Nor does the record disclose when defendant told the police that the jacket was his. That is, it is impossible to determine from this record whether, at the time the police seized and searched the jacket, they knew that it was defendant’s.
In moving to suppress, defendant referred to both the Fourth Amendment and Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution. Defendant did not contest the validity of the warrant itself. Rather, defendant argued that, under
Ybarra v. Illinois,
The trial court endorsed the state’s position. The court found that the jacket was not in defendant’s possession at the time that the warrant was executed and that, consequently, the search of the jacket was within the scope of the warrant. Defendant was subsequently convicted after a stipulated facts trial.
On appeal, as noted,
see
*53 (1) the state has the burden of proving that a search was within the scope of a warrant; and (2) the search of the jacket would be lawful, as within the scope of the warrant, only if the officers did not know that the jacket was defendant’s before they seized and searched it. Defendant contends that, because the record does not disclose when the officers learned that the jacket was his, the state necessarily failed in its burden of proof.
Defendant is correct that the state bears the burden of demonstrating that the seizure or search of a contested item falls within the scope of a valid warrant.
See State v. Hall,
In framing the dispute on appeal, the parties rely almost exclusively on two cases,
Ybarra
and
State v. Kurtz,
We addressed that question — in part — the next year in
Kurtz.
In
Kurtz,
police officers executed a warrant to search a residence for cocaine and found the defendant, who was not named in the warrant, in the basement. The officers detained the defendant and took him upstairs and, in the ensuing search of the basement, found a daypack that contained cocaine. After the discovery of the cocaine, the officers determined that the pack belonged to the defendant.
We first considered the defendant’s contention that “officers executing a search warrant who have reason to think that guests are present with identifiable personal property should allow such guests to identify and claim property before the premises are searched.”
We then turned to the defendant’s alternative argument that, notwithstanding any “duty of inquiry,” the search of the pack was beyond the scope of the warrant under an application of Ybarra’s reasoning to a visitor’s personal effects. In that regard, the defendant relied on the so-called “relationship test” developed in United States v. Micheli, 487 F2d 429 (1st Cir 1973), a pre-Ybarra decision.
*55 In Micheli, the issue was whether a warrant to search a business premises authorized a search of a briefcase that officers had seen the defendant, a co-owner of the business, carry onto the premises immediately before the warrant was executed. The First Circuit, in sustaining the search, determined that the relationship between the defendant and the premises was such that the defendant could have reasonably expected that a search of the premises pursuant to a warrant would encompass a search of his personal effects. 4
In Kurtz, we quoted the Micheli test, in part:
“ ‘It should not be assumed that whatever is found on the premises described in the warrant necessarily falls within the proper scope of the search; rather, it is necessary to examine why a person’s belongings happen to be on the premises. “[T]he Fourth Amendment protects people, not places,” Katz v. United States,389 US 347 , 352,88 S Ct 507 , 511,19 L Ed 2d 576 (1967), and the protective boundary established by requiring a search warrant should encompass those extensions of a person which he reasonably seeks to preserve as private, regardless of where he may be.’ ”
Kurtz,
“We decline to adopt the suggested test in determining whether a search warrant allows search of visitors’ belongings. If the search does not constitute a search of the person as proscribed under Ybarra, then the only issue is whether the scope of the search is ‘reasonably necessary’ to find those items specified in the warrant. ORS 133.585.
*56 “The trial court here determined that the daypack was on the floor several feet from defendant when he was frisked. At the time of the discovery of the pack and its search, defendant was upstairs, the pack downstairs, and its ownership was not known to the officers at the time. The warrant authorized search of the premises for cocaine and identification, and those things could have been concealed in the daypack. The search of the daypack was therefore within the scope of the warrant and valid.”
Id. at 622-23 (footnote omitted; emphasis and boldface added).
As noted, both defendant and the state view
Kurtz
as being dispositive. Defendant points to the boldface language, as well as the court’s earlier reference to the trial court’s same finding (“the officers who found and searched the pack did not have actual knowledge that it belonged to defendant,”
With respect, we believe that neither party is correct — and that, in fact,
Kurtz
did not choose between the “actual notice” and “physical possession” tests. Certainly— and there are few certainties about
Kurtz
— the court was not required to make that choice because the trial court there was correct under either formulation.
5
Beyond that is ambiguity. The opinion’s reference to “a search of the person as proscribed under Ybarra,”
We must now decide that question. The same question has deeply divided courts in other jurisdictions since
Ybarra. See
Diane L. Schmauder, Annotation,
Propriety of Search of Nonoccupant Visitor’s Belongings Pursuant to Warrant Issued for Another’s Premises,
The “actual notice” test evolved as a restrictive variation of the pure “relationship” test that originated in
Micheli
and
Commonwealth v. Platou,
455 Pa 258,
*58
In
People v. McCabe,
144 Cal App 3d 827, 830, 192 Cal Rptr 635, 636-37 (1983), the court set out the classic formulation of the “actual notice” test, which subsequently was endorsed in other jurisdictions:
*59
(Citations omitted.)
See also Houghton v. State,
*58 “The police may ordinarily assume that all personal property which they find while executing a search warrant is the property of a resident of the premises subject to search. Thus, the police may search any personal property of a visitor which might serve as a plausible repository of the contraband which is the object of the search where they have no knowledge of the fact that the item searched is the personal property of a visitor. If the police have actual knowledge that the property which is searched belongs to a nonresident, however, they may not, as a general rule, rely on the authority conferred by a search warrant to conduct a warrantless search of the nonresident’s property, even though it is a plausible repository of contraband. When the police know that the personal effects found on the property belong to a nonresident, the police may rely on the authority of the search warrant to conduct a search of the personal effects of the nonresident only if someone within the premises has had an opportunity to conceal contraband within the personal effects of the nonresident immediately prior to the execution of the search warrant.” 6
*59
Practical application of the “actual notice” test is problematic.
See State v. Leiper,
145 NH 233, 235,
Further, is the operative standard one of actual knowledge, putative objectively reasonable knowledge, or something else? That is, must executing officers actually
*60
“know” that an object belonged to a “visitor,” or is it sufficient if an objectively reasonable officer should have known — and how, if at all, should notions of imputed or shared knowledge apply?
Compare McCabe,
144 Cal App 3d at 830, 192 Cal Rptr at 636-37 (“actual knowledge”),
with Thomas,
Perhaps most troubling from a pragmatic sense is the assessment of what type or source of information is adequate to establish “actual” (or sufficient constructive) “knowledge.” If, in the course of a raid, a person not subject to the warrant proclaims that he or she is a mere visitor and claims ownership of a parcel or backpack, would that be sufficient to preclude a seizure and search of that item?
See Jackson,
In contrast to the “actual notice” test, the virtue of the “physical possession” test is its simplicity and ease of application. Its vice is the same bright-line, potentially arbitrary, simplicity and inflexibility.
Under the “physical possession” test, officers executing a warrant may search all items that could contain articles identified in the warrant except those that are in the actual physical possession of a person not subject to the warrant.
See, e.g., Leiper,
145 NH at 234-36,
The courts that have adopted the “physical possession” test have emphasized its simplicity and clarity.
See, e.g., Leiper,
145 NH at 235,
More fundamentally, under the “physical possession” test, the lawfulness of a search depends not on the nature of the object being searched but, instead, on the circumstantial fortuity of physical possession. Thus, a jacket cannot be searched if it is worn by a person not subject to the warrant, but the same jacket can be searched it if is thrown on the floor or hung in a closet. See Micheli, 487 F2d at 431 (“physical possession” rule “would leave vulnerable many personal effects, such as wallets, purses, cases, or overcoats, *62 which are often set down upon chairs or counters, hung on racks, or checked for convenient storage”); see also LaFave, 2 Search and Seizure § 4.10(b) at 662 (endorsing criticism). 8
Finally, in its most literal application, the “physical possession” test sanctions searches of property that could not possibly have been within the issuing magistrate’s contemplation.
See Platou,
455 Pa at 263,
We are, thus, faced with a choice between two competing Fourth Amendment tests. One is, at least in the abstract, more protective of privacy interests but presents considerable problems of practical application bylaw enforcement personnel and reviewing courts. The other test, while not entirely free of ambiguity, is much simpler to apply and review but, in some circumstances, is less protective of privacy interests. That choice is not easy, as our recounting of the division among other courts shows.
But, in fact, our function is not to “choose” between those tests. Rather, we must discern which of those approaches is more consonant with the evolving Fourth Amendment jurisprudence of the United States Supreme Court. In that regard — and unlike almost every other court that has considered this question — we have the benefit of the *63 Court’s 1999 opinion in Wyoming v. Houghton. Although Houghton is not dispositive because it involved the search of a vehicle, the thrust and tone of the Court’s analysis leaves little doubt that, if faced with the question, the Court would endorse a “physical possession” test for searches of premises.
In
Houghton,
Wyoming police made a routine traffic stop of a car, driven by a man, with two women passengers, one of whom was the defendant. An officer noticed a syringe in the driver’s pocket and, when asked why he had the syringe, the driver responded that “he used it to take drugs.”
The defendant was convicted of possession of a controlled substance. The Wyoming Supreme Court reversed the conviction, holding that the search of the defendant’s purse was unlawful.
Houghton v. State,
“The ‘notice’ test provides law enforcement officers clear guidelines, and can be quickly implemented in an emergency situation, but does not unnecessarily abrogate individualized Fourth Amendment protection merely because a jacket is removed or a purse is placed on a floor or table.”
Id. at 369-70. Applying that test, the court concluded that the search of the defendant’s purse was not within the scope of the automobile search because (1) the officer’s probable cause pertained solely to the driver, and not to the defendant; *64 (2) the officer “knew or should have known” that the purse did not belong to the driver because it was a “lady’s purse” and “men do not carry purses”; and (3) the officers had no reason to believe that contraband had been placed in the purse immediately before or during the stop. Id. at 370-71.
The Supreme Court reversed.
9
The Court first held that the search was lawful as within the scope of the automobile exception as described in
Ross
and related cases.
Houghton,
First,
under the Fourth Amendment, “ ‘the critical element in a reasonable search is not that the owner of the property is suspected of crime but that there is reasonable cause to believe that the specific “things” to be searched for and seized are located on the property to which entry is sought.’ ”
Id.
at 302 (quoting
Zurcher v. Stanford Daily,
Second,
such nonauto search cases as
Ybarra
and
United States v. Di Re,
Further, in responding to the dissent’s criticism that it was coining a “newly minted” rule that was “based on a distinction between property contained in clothing worn by a passenger and property contained in a passenger’s briefcase or purse,”
Houghton,
“Does the dissent really believe that Justice Jackson was saying that a house-search could not inspect property belonging to persons found in the house — say a large standing safe or violin case belonging to the owner’s visiting godfather? Of course that is not what Justice Jackson meant at all. He was referring precisely to that ‘distinction between property contained in clothing worn by a passenger and property contained in a passenger’s briefcase or purse’ that the dissent disparages * * *. This distinction between searches of the person and searches of property is assuredly not ‘newly minted * * *.’ And if the dissent thinks ‘pockets’ and ‘clothing’ do not count as part of the person, it must believe that the only searches of the person are strip searches.”
Houghton,
Third, and finally, the Court emphasized the practical difficulties of employing the “actual notice” test:
“[0]nce a ‘passenger’s property exception to car searches became widely known, one would expect passenger-confederates to claim everything as their own. And one would anticipate a bog of litigation — in the form of both civil lawsuits and motions to suppress in criminal trials — involving such questions as whether the officer should have believed a passenger’s claim of ownership, whether he should have inferred ownership from various objective factors, whether he had probable cause to believe that the passenger was a *66 confederate, or to believe that the driver might have introduced the contraband into the package with or without the passenger’s knowledge. When balancing the competing interests, our determinations of‘reasonableness’under the Fourth Amendment must take account of these practical realities. We think they militate in favor of the needs of law enforcement, and against a personal-privacy interest that is ordinarily weak.”
Id. at 305-06 (footnote omitted). The Court particularly challenged the dissent’s “confiden[ce] in a police officer’s ability to apply a rule requiring a warrant or individualized probable cause to search belongings that are * * * obviously owned by and in the custody of a passenger,” id. at 311:
“Should it not be enough if the passenger says he owns the briefcase, and the officer has no concrete reason to believe otherwise? Or would the dissent consider that an example of‘obvious’ ownership? On reflection, it seems not at all obvious precisely what constitutes obviousness — and so even the dissent’s on-the-cheap protection of passengers’ privacy interest in their property turns out to be unclear, and hence unadministrable.”
Id. at 306 n 2 (emphasis in original).
Houghton
leaves little to the imagination. The Court restrictively characterized the contours of “person” (as opposed to a person’s property) in
Ybarra
and
Di Re;
it disparaged the “actual notice” test as “unadministrable”; and, in “balancing” the personal privacy interests that it deemed “ordinarily weak” against the “practical realities” of law enforcement, the Court decisively favored the latter.
Houghton,
*67 We thus conclude that, under the Fourth Amendment, the lawfulness of the seizure and search of defendant’s jacket must be assessed under the “physical possession” test. The record establishes that, at the time the jacket was seized and searched, it was not in defendant’s actual physical possession. Defendant was not wearing the jacket; instead, it, along with his other belongings, was physically separated from him. It is undisputed that the jacket was capable of containing items of the sort identified in the search warrant. Consequently, the state met its burden of demonstrating that the search of the jacket was within the scope of the warrant.
Affirmed.
Notes
On appeal, defendant does not invoke, much less make any distinct argument under, Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution. Given that posture, we imply no view as to the proper disposition under the Oregon Constitution.
See State v. Mendez,
As the court explained in Ybarra:
“[A] person’s mere propinquity to others independently suspected of criminal activity does not, without more, give rise to probable cause to search that person.
«* * * * *
*54 “Although the search warrant, issued upon probable cause, gave the officers authority to search the premises * * * it gave them no authority whatever to invade the constitutional protections possessed individually by the tavern’s customers.”
The validity of the search of the daypack was raised by a cross-appeal.
Kurtz,
The court explained:
“[A]s co-owner of the [business], appellant was not in the position of a mere visitor or passerby who suddenly found his belongings vulnerable to a search of the premises. He had a special relation to the place, which meant that it could reasonably be expected that some of his personal belongings would be there. Thus, the showing of probable cause and necessity which was required prior to the initial intrusion into his office reasonably comprehended within its scope those personal articles, such as his briefcase, which might be lying about the office.”
Micheli, 487 F2d at 432.
Viz., the daypack was not in Kurtz’s physical possession, and the officers were unaware that the pack was his at the time they seized and searched it.
The origins of the “actual notice” test antedated
McCabe. In State v. Nabarro,
55 Haw 583,
“[Pjolice cannot realistically be expected to avoid searching the property of a mere visitor to the premises unless they are aware of its ownership. Absent a requirement of such awareness, the effective execution of a warrant to search a place would be impossible since the police could never be sure that a plausible repository for items named in the warrant belongs to a resident, and hence is searchable, or to a non-resident, and hence is not searchable. Because of this, without notice of some sort of the ownership of a belonging, the police are entitled to assume that all objects within premises lawfully subject to search under a warrant are part of those premises for the purpose of executing the warrant.”
55 Haw at 587-88,
“[T]here was no question that the police had notice, prior to the search, that [the defendant] — indisputably a non-resident visitor to the premises — was the owner of the purse. The warrant named two men as the occupants of the room to be searched, making it likely that any purses, which are characteristically female attire, found in the room belonged to non-residents.”
Id.
at 588,
The “physical possession” test appears to have originated in a
pre-Ybarra
case,
United States v. Teller,
397 F2d 494, 497 (7th Cir 1968),
cert den,
In Micheli, the court continued:
“The Fourth Amendment’s basic interest in protecting privacy, and avoiding unreasonable governmental intrusions, is hardly furthered by making its applicability hinge upon whether the individual happens to be holding or wearing his personal belongings after he chances into a place where a search is underway. The rudest of governmental intrusions into someone’s private domain may occur by way of a search of a personal belonging which has been entrusted to a nearby hook or shelf.”
487 F2d at 431 (citations omitted).
Justice Scalia authored the opinion of the Court, in which five other justices, including Justice Breyer, joined. Justice Breyer also concurred,
The majority acknowledged that “there was no passenger in
Ross,
and it was not claimed that the package in the trunk belonged to anyone other than the driver.”
