Eric A. Reynolds appeals from his judgment of conviction on various drug-related charges. He argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence found during a warrantless search of his home. We affirm.
I.
BACKGROUND
At approximately 10 p.m., three police officers were dispatched to the home of Eric and Melissa Reynolds to investigate a telephoned report from Melissa’s mother that Reynolds was holding Melissa against her will. The officers arrived simultaneously and saw Reynolds standing just outside of the front door, which was ajar. Two of the officers approached Reynolds and began to question him about the reported altercation. In the meantime, a third officer, Officer Harmon, entered the home through the partially-opened front door. He did not hear any noises coming from the house, nor did he *469 first knock, announce his presence, or call for Melissa.
Upon entering, Officer Harmon saw Melissa standing in the living room about ten feet from the door. She was visibly upset. She said that Reynolds had pushed her onto the couch and also restrained her when she was trying to leave the bedroom. A few minutes after entering, Officer Harmon smelled an odor that he believed to be marijuana. He questioned Melissa about the scent, and she said that there was marijuana in another room. Officer Harmon then motioned the two other officers, Farina and Hicks, into the house. Officer Farina asked Melissa if there were any weapons or other people in the home. She said there were no other people in the house, and directed Officer Farina down a hallway to an office which contained a handgun as well as a large plywood box or closet that was approximately four feet long, four feet wide, and six feet tall. Officer Farina then requested and received Melissa’s consent to search the home. She told the officer that the large plywood box, which was locked, belonged to Reynolds. Melissa told the officer that she did not have the key to unlock the closet and that it was probably on Reynolds’ key ring. Nonetheless, the two began to search the office for a key that would open the closet. Melissa pointed to a key ring hanging on the wall and instructed Officer Farina to try the key. It opened the plywood box, and the officer saw within marijuana plants and grow lamps. At some point — whether before or after opening the box is unclear — Officer Farina also .observed in another room marijuana hanging from the ceiling to dry.
Reynolds was charged with manufacturing a controlled substance, Idaho Code § 37-2732(a); possession of marijuana in excess of three ounces, I.C. § 37-2732(e); domestic battery, I.C. § 18 — 918(3)(b); and possession of drug paraphernalia, I.C. § 37-2734A. He filed a motion to suppress the evidence found in the house, arguing that his Fourth Amendment rights were violated when the officers entered the home and that Melissa did not have authority to consent to a search of his locked plywood box. The district court denied the motion, finding that exigent circumstances justified the officers’ entry into the home and that Melissa had at least apparent authority to consent to a search of the box. Reynolds conditionally pleaded guilty to possession of marijuana in excess of three ounces and domestic battery in exchange for the State’s agreement to dismiss the remaining charges and to recommend concurrent sentences. Reynolds now appeals the denial of his suppression motion.
II.
DISCUSSION/ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
In reviewing a decision to grant or deny a motion to suppress evidence, this Court defers to the trial court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous.
State v. Hawkins,
B. The Entry Was Illegal
Reynolds argues that the evidence discovered during the search of his home must be suppressed because the police illegally entered the house without a warrant or other lawful justification in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Fourth Amendment protects the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” The “physical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.”
United States v. United States District Court,
The State argues here that the officers’ warrantless entry into Reynolds’ home was permissible under the exigent circumstances exception, which allows for warrant-less searches by state agents when there is compelling need for official action and no time to secure a warrant.
Michigan v. Tyler,
Another illustrative case is
State v. Pearson-Anderson,
In our view, 911 hang-up calls are qualitatively different from ordinary emergency calls in which the caller communicates with the operator. In the latter' circumstance, responding officers ordinarily know, at a minimum, the gender of the caller and something about the nature of the emergency. With this information, officers who have responded can discern whether the reported emergency is under control and whether they have communicated with the person who was in need of help. The same cannot be said when the 911 call has been disconnected before there is anycommunication with the operator. When responding to a 911 hang-up call, officers may reasonably be cautious about concluding that the need for help has dissipated based solely upon an explanation from whoever greets them upon their arrival.
Id.
at 850,
In this case, the only factor that suggested a possible exigency was the report that Reynolds’ wife was being held against her will. By the time the officers arrived, however, Reynolds was standing outside the house, and the front door was ajar. With the couple thus separated, it was apparent that if there was a woman in the house, she was under no immediate risk of harm from Reynolds while he was outside being questioned by an officer. Therefore, there was no exigency that would justify entry into the house without first knocking or calling out to bring any occupant to the door where she could be interviewed and the situation assessed. If Officer Harmon had first knocked or called out to occupants and received no response, the telephoned report of a woman being held against her will could have justified a warrantless entry to ensure that there was no one in the house who was physically restrained or too frightened to respond to the officers, but that did not occur.
This situation should be contrasted to that in
Barrett,
In the present case, there was no attempt by police officers to contact the alleged victim through non-intrusive means such as knocking or calling out for her, and the surrounding circumstances did not suggest an immediate danger that would justify dispensing with an effort to bring someone to the door to be interviewed. Had the latter action been taken, the officers’ interview of Melissa could have either supported or dispelled the report that she was being held against her will. If the results of that interview left officers concerned that there could still be an individual in danger inside the house, and if permission to search could not be obtained from Reynolds or Melissa, perhaps a warrantless entry would have been justified. But in the circumstances as they are presented to us, there was no appearance of an immediate risk of harm sufficient to excuse the officers from the normal procedure of knocking or calling out to bring someone to the doorway for questioning. The circumstances here did not support a reasonable belief that immediate entry into the home was necessary.
C. Melissa’s Consent to a Search Was Valid
Notwithstanding the illegality of this initial entry, the State argues that evidence found in the home should not be suppressed because Melissa’s subsequent consent to the officers’ further intrusion into the home and the ultimate opening of the plywood box au *472 thorized and legitimized the officers’ search and discovery of the marijuana.
A voluntary consent to a search, given by either the defendant or a third party with authority over the place or item to be searched, will exempt a search from the warrant requirement.
Schneckloth v. Bustamante,
If the consent was preceded by police conduct that violated the accused’s constitutional rights, however, the State must also prove that the consent was not procured by exploitation of the previous illegality.
Wong Sun v. United States,
Accordingly, to determine whether the evidence found in Reynolds’ home must be suppressed, we must determine whether Melissa’s consent to the officers’ further intrusion into the home and search of the box was voluntary; whether Melissa possessed authority to authorize the officers’ intrusion into all of the areas that were searched; and whether the three Broum factors indicate that the connection between the officers’ unlawful entry and Melissa’s consent was sufficiently attenuated that the consent was untainted.
1. Voluntariness of consent
Here, two forms of consent were given, the first being implied. The implied consent occurred when, in response to Officer Farina’s question whether there were any weapons in the home, Melissa directed the officer down a hallway and into another room to show where a handgun was located. The express consent occurred thereafter when Farina requested, and Melissa gave, consent to a search of the home. Whether a consent to a search was voluntary is an issue of fact, and we therefore defer to the trial court’s findings as to voluntariness.
Tietsort,
2. Melissa’s authority to consent
The next question is whether Melissa possessed authority to consent to the *473 search. As noted above, a third party’s consent to a search will relieve government agents of the warrant requirement only if the person possessed authority to provide such a consent. Actual authority exists if the consenting party shares with the defendant common authority over the place searched. Such common authority generally is shared by cohabitants of a residence. The United States Supreme Court has explained:
Common authority is, of course, not to be implied from the mere property interest a third party has in the property. The authority which justifies the third-party consent ... rests ... [up]on mutual use of the property by persons generally having joint access or control for most purposes, so that it is reasonable to recognize that any of the co-inhabitants has the right to permit the inspection in his own right and that the others have assumed the risk that one of their number might permit the common area to be searched.
United States v. Matlock,
In this case, Melissa was married to Reynolds and shared the residence with him. She plainly possessed actual authority to consent to Officer Farina’s walk from the living room into the office where he saw the handgun and the large box, and to grant his subsequent request to search throughout the house.
The question of Melissa’s authority to permit the officers to open the big box in the office is more problematic. Common authority over shared premises does not necessarily translate into authority to search specific containers. That is, “The shared control of ‘host’ property does not serve to forfeit the expectation of privacy in containers within that property.”
United States v. Welch, 4
F.3d 761, 764 (9th Cir.1993),
overruled on other grounds United States v. Kim,
In the absence of actual authority, a search nevertheless may be valid if, based on the information known at the time, the law enforcement officer had an objectively reasonable belief that the consenting party possessed authority over the place to be searched.
Rodriguez,
In this case, Melissa disclaimed ownership of the plywood box and told officers that she did not want it in the house. She also told Officer Farina that she seldom went into the room with the box, but she did not indicate to the officers that Reynolds had forbidden her to open the box or prevented her from accessing its contents. There is no evidence that she lacked the right or ability to access or use the box. Although the box was locked and Melissa did not immediately know exactly where the key was located, it was quickly found hanging on the wall in the same room where the box was situated. The officers knew that the box was located in the marital home that Melissa shared with Reynolds and that she could readily access it by simply finding the correct key on a ring of keys located nearby. Absent any evidence that the officers knew that Reynolds had attempted to forbid or prevent Melissa’s access to the box, the officers were justified in a belief that Melissa had authority to consent to their search of the box’s interior. The evidence supports the district court’s finding that Melissa had at least apparent authority to consent to the search of the box.
3. Attenuation of taint from the illegal entry
Lastly, we turn to the attenuation question — whether Melissa’s consent was “fruit of the poisonous tree,” i.e., a product of the unlawful entry. The finding that Melissa’s consent was voluntary is important, but not decisive, in this inquiry. As noted above, there is a three-part test to determine whether there was a sufficient break in the causal chain between the unlawful conduct and the discovery of challenged evidence. The first of the three factors to be considered is the lapse of time between the police misconduct and Melissa’s consent. In this case, that time period was very brief, which militates against a finding of attenuation.
The other two factors, however, weigh in favor of attenuation. First, the warrantless entry into the Reynolds’ home without a warrant or permission was not a particularly egregious Fourth Amendment violation. The officer did so in the belief that someone may have been held against her will in the house. He entered not for a calculated purpose of trying to discover evidence of a crime, but rather to determine the location and well-being of an alleged victim of a domestic disturbance. Having entered, he went only a few feet inside before making contact with Melissa, and she consented to any further intrusion. Finally, the unsolicited and entirely self-initiated nature of Melissa’s invitation for an officer to walk into the office to see the gun, and her personal willingness to cooperate with the officers, is an intervening circumstance that separates the consent from the violation of Reynolds’ constitutional rights that occurred when the police entered. Apart from the temporal proximity, there is no evidence in the record that Melissa’s cooperation and consent were products of the unlawful entry. Nothing indicates that she was intimidated by the officers’ unannounced entry. The only information that the officers gained by their initial unlawful entry was the scent of marijuana, but that was not the reason that Melissa showed Officer Farina around the house. Rather, she led him into the office in response to the officer’s question about the presence of weapons, a legitimate
*475
inquiry considering that the purpose of the visit was to investigate a domestic disturbance. Weighing all of the factors that are to be considered in an attenuation analysis, we conclude that Melissa’s consent was not acquired by exploitation of the illegality but, instead, “by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.”
Wong Sun,
Because the consent was given voluntarily by someone with apparent authority and was not tainted by the officers’ initial unlawful entry into Reynolds’ home, the district court properly refused to suppress the evidence found.
III.
CONCLUSION
Although the officers’ initial entry into Reynolds’ home was unlawful, the district court correctly denied his suppression motion. The evidence shows that Melissa voluntarily consented to the officers’ search of her home and the large box within it, that she had actual or apparent authority to do so, and that her consent was not tainted by the officers’ prior unlawful entry into the house. Therefore, the order denying Reynolds’ motion to suppress evidence is affirmed.
