In this interlocutory transfer, the State appeals a ruling of the Superior Court (Murphy, J.) granting the defendant’s motion to suppress certain evidence. The State argues that the search that uncovered the evidence was proper: (1) as a search incident to arrest; (2) under the exigent circumstances exception to the State constitutional warrant requirement; or (3) under the automobile exception to the State constitutional warrant requirement. We affirm and remand.
On April 26, 1993, Officer Kirk Gautier of the Nashua Police Department was on routine patrol in a marked police cruiser. At approximately 6:40 p.m., Officer Gautier observed an automobile make an abrupt turn without using its directional signal. Gautier followed the car and estimated its speed to be forty-two miles per hour. He activated the blue lights atop his police cruiser, and the vehicle slowed down but did not stop immediately. Gautier observed the driver, the sole occupant of the car, bend down and to the right and return to an upright position. Gautier then saw the driver turn to the right, grab a brown object and place it toward the rear of the vehicle.
The automobile Gautier was following came to a stop at the intersection of Walnut and High Streets in Nashua. Officer Gautier approached the car and asked the driver, the defendant, for her license and registration. She responded that she had neither, at which point
Gautier then asked the defendant what she had put under the seat when she bent down and to the right. The defendant replied that she had not put anything under the seat. Thereupon the officer directed the defendant to exit the vehicle and step to the sidewalk with him, where they were met by Officer George McCarthy, who had arrived at the scene to assist Officer Gautier. While the defendant waited with Officer McCarthy, Officer Gautier returned to the defendant’s car and looked under the passenger seat, where he found an ashtray containing partially burnt marijuana cigarettes, colloquially known as “roaches.” Gautier confronted the defendant with the roaches and placed her under arrest. The defendant was handcuffed and placed in the back of Officer Gautier’s cruiser.
After thus securing the defendant, Gautier returned to her vehicle and saw through the window a brown paper bag, apparently the item he had seen the defendant place behind her. Officer Gautier leaned inside the car, opened the paper bag, and found four clear, plastic bags containing what he believed to be marijuana. This evidence was suppressed by the superior court.
The State predicates its arguments against suppression solely on part I, article 19 of the New Hampshire Constitution, as this was the basis of the superior court’s ruling. Therefore, we base our decision on State constitutional law, citing federal cases only as an analytical aid. State v. Baroudi,
The State argues that the warrantless search of the brown paper bag was proper as a search incident to a valid arrest. Our decision on this issue is controlled by Murray. In that case, we held that the search incident to arrest exception to the warrant clause of part I, article 19 requires both temporal and spatial proximity to the arrest and applies only to “those items within the defendant’s immediate control.” Id. This is because such a search is limited by the exception’s very specific justifications: the need to prevent harm to the arresting officer; the State interest in preventing the destruction of evidence; and the concern that the arrestee may obtain the elements of escape. Id.
The State also argues that the search was permissible under the exigent circumstances exception to the constitutional warrant requirement. This argument, however, was not raised before the trial court and thus will not be considered on appeal. State v. Horne,
Similarly, at the suppression hearing before the superior court, exigency was not raised as a warrant exception justifying the search of the brown paper bag. The following exchange took place between the court and the prosecutor:
THE COURT: Is that your theory that this was a search incident to arrest?
COUNSEL: As far as the bag, yes, your Honor.
At oral arguments before this court, the State pointed to page twenty-six of the suppression hearing transcript as demonstrating that the State had raised the exigency exception below. Our review of the transcript reveals that the State was arguing that the automobile exception to the warrant requirement applied to the brown bag. Furthermore, any mention of exigent circumstances by the State at the hearing concerned either the roaches — not at issue in this appeal — or the automobile exception, which we discuss below.
The United States Supreme Court has identified two justifications for the automobile exception to the fourth amendment to the United States Constitution: there is a “reduced expectation of privacy” in an automobile, and an automobile is “readily mobile” and could be “moved beyond the reach of the police.” California v. Carney,
Under our State Constitution, “where the search or seizure of a motor vehicle is involved, article 19 provides significantly greater protection than the fourth amendment against intrusion by the State.” State v. Koppel,
Less convincing still is the theory that every automobile, due to its mobility, serves to justify governmental intrusion into the vehicle. Under our State constitutional jurisprudence, a parked car does not have the inherent mobility to justify a warrantless search. State v. Camargo,
Justice Blackmun correctly observed the Supreme Court’s “vacillation in what is rightly described as this troubled area.” Ross,
Affirmed and remanded.
