Karen Daily Schmidt appeals from the district court’s appellate decision reversing the magistrate’s order suppressing certain evidence seized from a vehicle in which she was a passenger. We reverse the district court’s appellate decision and affirm the magistrate’s order granting Schmidt’s motion to suppress.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
At approximately 6:49 p.m. on December 29, 1999, Gooding County Deputy Robert Morgado was on routine patrol, driving southbound on Highway 1950 East, south of Wendell. Morgado noticed a white vehicle parked twenty to thirty feet off on the right side of the road in аn unimproved pullout. Believing that the vehicle had perhaps run off the road or had an accident, Morgado stopped to investigate. Morgado parked his patrol vehiclе directly in front of the other vehicle and left the headlights on bright. In addition, Morgado’s overhead lights were activated and the position of Morgado’s patrol vehicle essentially bloсked any exit route. Morgado approached the vehicle and as he did so, he noticed the passenger, later identified as Schmidt, trying to hide something either underneath the dashboard or between her legs.
Morgado proceeded to the driver’s side of the vehicle to ask the driver if she was okay. When the driver rolled down the window, Morgado detected an odor of what he believed to be marijuana coming from the vehicle. He asked the driver for identification and she provided a valid driver’s license. Morgado then walked around to passenger Schmidt’s side of the vehicle, opened the door, and asked both the driver and Schmidt to exit the vehicle. After reading the two women their Miranda rights from a card, Morgado asked them if they possessеd any marijuana. Schmidt admitted to having a marijuana bud in the ashtray of the vehicle. Morgado then asked the driver for permission to search the car and she agreed. The subsequent search revealed a marijuana bud in the ashtray, a minimal amount of a green leafy substance scattered along the center *303 console, cigarette-rolling papers and Visine eye drops.
Schmidt was arrested and charged with misdemeanor possessiоn of marijuana, I.C. § 37-2732(c)(3), and misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia, I.C. § 37-2734A. Schmidt filed a motion to suppress any statements she made at the scene and evidence seized from the vehicle. After a suppression hearing, the magistrate granted Schmidt’s motion to suppress. The state appealed to the district court, and the district court reversed the magistrate’s order. Schmidt now appeals, arguing that her initial detention was constitutionally unreasonable.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
On review of a decision of the district court, rendered in its appellate capаcity, we examine the record of the trial court independently of, but with due regard for, the district court’s intermediate appellate decision.
State v. Bowman,
III.
DISCUSSION
In the proceedings below, the state argued that Schmidt’s initial detention wаs constitutionally reasonable pursuant to Morgado’s community caretaking function. However, the magistrate did not view Morgado’s conduct as consistent with his community care-taking function. The magistrate concluded that because the vehicle in which Schmidt was a passenger was lawfully parked a safe distance from the road and there was no visible evidence, eithеr from the appearance of the vehicle or the condition of the roadway, that the vehicle had been in an accident, it was unreasonable for Morgado to believe that the occupants of the vehicle were in need of immediate assistance.
On the intermediate appeal to the district court, the district court reversed the magistrate’s order. The district court held that under a totality of the circumstances, Morgado had a duty to stop and investigate a vehicle that may have been in an accident. On the present appeal, Schmidt asserts that the district court erred by reversing the magistrate’s order granting her motion to suppress because the community caretaking function analysis was not applicable. 1
The community caretaking function involves the duty of police to help individuals officers believe are in need of immediate assistance.
State v. Mireles,
Local police officers, unlike federal officers, frequently investigate vehicle accidents in which there is no claim of criminal liability and engage in what, for want of a better term, may be described as community caretaking functions, totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition of evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute.
Id.
at 441,
In analyzing community caretaking function cases, Idaho has adopted a totality of the circumstances test.
State v. Wixom,
In the instant case, although Morgado may have held a subjective belief that the ocсupants of the car were in need of immediate assistance, his belief was not reasonable in view of all the surrounding circumstances. As the magistrate found, Morgado did not receive any notice from dispatch that there were any emergencies involving vehicles in the area nor did he have any reports from any other source that this particular vehicle was strаnded or abandoned. There was no debris or skid marks on the roadway, and the roadway was not slick with ice, snow or rain so as to create the possibility of a slide-off. The exterior appearance of the vehicle did not indicate that it had been involved in an accident. There was no visual evidence that the vehicle left the road in a reckless or inattentive manner. Further, the vehicle was parked in a lawful and safe manner at least twenty feet from the roadway in an area described by Morgado as a “pull out.” It is undisputed that it was off the roadway and not a safety hazard. Moreover, Morgado did not observe anything about the vehicle’s occupants that led him to believe they were in need of assistance. The only information that Morgado possessed was that the vehicle was parked with its lights off, facing oncoming traffic in a place he had never seen a car parked before.
In reversing thе magistrate’s order granting Schmidt’s motion to suppress, the district court relied heavily on
In re Clayton,
IV.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the information possessed by Morgado did not justify the initial detention of the vehicle in which Schmidt was a passenger pursuant to the community care-taking function. In addition, we conclude that the reasonable and articulablе suspicion that Morgado developed after contacting the vehicle’s occupants cannot be relied upon to justify the subsequent investigative detention. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s appellate decision and affirm the magistrate’s order granting Schmidt’s motion to suppress. This case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Therе is no dispute that the vehicle in which Schmidt was a passenger was seized for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Additionally, the state does not argue that Morgado had reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal conduct that would justify seizing the vehicle. Rather, the state relies solely on the community caretaking function to justify the seizure.
