The State of Idaho appeals from the district court’s order granting Clifton Turek’s motion to suppress evidence. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
On the morning of September 2, 2008, Turek was convicted of driving under the influence of intoxicants and placed on two years of supervised misdemeanor probation. One of the conditions of Turek’s probation, to which he agreed, was that he was required to:
[sjubmit to searches of his/her person, residence, and any property under his/her control, without a warrant pursuant to probation supervision, at the request of the Probation Officer or Law Enforcement. 1
He was also instructed to contact the Boundary County Adult Misdemeanor Probation office within two business days.
At approximately 12:21 p.m. on the same day, before Turek had met with the probation department, two probation officers and a sheriffs officer went to Turek’s residence to conduct an “initial probation home visit.” The officers did not get an answer after knocking on the door, but they could hear music coming from the residence and saw smoke coming from the chimney. The sheriffs officer proceeded to the back of the house and opened an unlocked shed door, looking for Turek. The officer discovered an active marijuana growing operation inside the shed. Turek was not present at any
Turek was charged with manufacturing marijuana, Idaho Code § 37-2732(a)(l)(B), and possession of drug paraphernalia, I.C. § 37-2734A. He filed a motion to suppress evidence of the marijuana growing operation as having been found during an unconstitutional search. Following a hearing, the district court granted the motion. The state now appeals.
II.
ANALYSIS
The standard of review of a suppression motion is bifurcated. When a decision on a motion to suppress is challenged, we accept the trial court’s findings of fact which are supported by substantial evidence, but we freely review the application of constitutional principles to the facts as found.
State v. Atkinson,
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 Disk Court for Eastern Disk of Michigan, Southern Division,
In granting Turek’s motion to suppress, the district court concluded that no exception to the rule against warrantless searches applied to render the search of the outbuilding constitutional. The court first examined the condition of Turek’s probation which required that he “submit to searches of his ... person, residence, and any property under his ... control without a warrant, pursuant to probation supervision at the request of the Probation Officer or Law Enforcement.” The court found that the provision required that Turek submit to searches only at the request of the probation department or law enforcement. Because the officers on the scene did not request that Turek submit to a search of his property (as he was not present), the court concluded that the requisite consent was not granted by virtue of Turek’s agreement to the conditions of probation. The court also found that because the officers had no right to search Turek’s property pursuant to his probation agreement, the plain view doctrine could not justify the search when they found evidence of a marijuana operation in the shed, because they had discovered the evidence in a place they had no right to be.
The state advances two arguments on appeal in support of its contention that the district court erred in granting Turek’s mo
tion
We first dispense with the state’s contention that probation officer “visits” without a warrant or without meeting a warrant exception are permissible. For its argument, the State relies upon a twenty-eight-year-old case,
State v. Pinson,
Accordingly, we conclude that the state’s reliance on Pinson is misplaced because in that case the entry was supported by reasonable suspicion, which is not present here, and neither Idaho appellate courts nor the United States Supreme Court has subsequently held that probation officers may enter probationers’ homes without a warrant in the absence of either consent or reasonable suspicion. Moreover, even if Pinson is properly interpreted as authorizing entries without consent or reasonable suspicion, Pinson was addressing only an entry made after the probation officer had requested and been denied permission by the probationer. It did not endorse a warrantless entry made without the probationer’s knowledge as occurred in the instant case.
We next examine whether Turek’s agreement to submit to warrantless searches “at the request of’ a probation officer or law enforcement official as a condition of his probation constituted requisite consent to render the search constitutional. The state contends that Turek waived his Fourth Amendment right to be free from warrantless searches when he agreed to the probation condition such that he consented in advance to the search and there was no need to obtain his consent at the scene, despite the language stating that Turek must submit to a search “at the request of’ probation or law enforcement officials.
In
Gawron,
That probationer does hereby agree and consent to the search of his person, automobile, real property, and any other property at any time and at any place by any law enforcement officer, peace officer, or probation officer, and does waive his constitutional right to be free from such searches.
On appeal, Gawron argued that the probation condition constituted an unreasonable invasion of his Fourth Amendment rights. The Supreme Court disagreed, noting that persons conditionally released into society have a reduced expectation of privacy which thereby renders intrusion by government authorities “reasonable” which otherwise would be unreasonable or invalid under traditional constitutional concepts.
Id.
at 843,
In
Purdum,
We are unconvinced that
Gawron
and
Purdum
stand for the proposition that the type of probation condition at issue here constitutes a
complete
waiver of all Fourth Amendment rights, regardless of the actual language in the condition. The state’s assertion that the acceptance of this probation condition constitutes an unfettered waiver of all Fourth Amendment rights against any warrantless search ignores a key component of the consent exception to the Fourth Amendment’s proscription of warrantless searches — the
scope
of the consent. It is well settled that when the basis for a search is consent, the state must conform its search to the limitations placed upon the right granted by the consent.
State v. Ballou,
Thus, we must determine whether the search in this instance — where the officer proceeded into Turek’s shed while Turek was not present — exceeded the scope of Turek’s Fourth Amendment waiver. Several courts that have addressed the issue have concluded that the inclusion of “at the request of’ in the search condition requires that any search conducted under the authority of the provision be
preceded
by a request to search directed at the probationer.
3
In
In concluding that the condition imposed required that the probation officer first request the opportunity to search, the court first noted:
One might reasonably argue that the purposes of probation would be better advanced if [the condition] were interpreted as the State suggests — to allow probation officers to conduct unrestricted, unannounced searches of a probationer’s residence. However, other societal interests support [the probationer’s] interpretation of [the condition]. As the supreme court recognized in Roman v. State,570 P.2d 1235 (Alaska 1977), there is a price to be paid for adopting a rule that probationers and parolees give up all of their Fourth Amendment rights simply because they are on probation or parole:
Fourth amendment protection will be diminished not only for parolees, but also for the family and friends with whom the parolee might be living. Those bystanders may find themselves subject to warrantless searches only because they are good enough to shelter the parolee, and they may therefore be less willing to help him — a sadly ironic result in a system designed to encourage reintegration into society.
Roman,570 P.2d at 1243 (quoting Note, Striking the Balance Between Privacy and, Supervision: The Fourth Amendment and Parole and Probation Officer Searches of Parolees and, Probationers, 51 N.Y.U. L. Rev 800, 816 (1976)).
Id.
After examining this policy consideration and how it played out in that case (where the
[W]e note that we do not have complete liberty to construe [the condition] as we think best. In Alaska, a defendant has the choice whether to accept the sentencing court’s offered conditions of probation or to refuse and serve the suspended prison term instead.... Thus, to a certain extent, “the terms of probation might be likened to a contract between the court and the defendant”. In construing [the condition], we must therefore examine how a reasonable person in [the probationer’s] place would have understood it, taking into consideration “the language of the disputed provision ... and the case law interpreting similar provisions”.
As noted before, the language of [the condition] does not, on its face, grant a probation officer the kind of open-ended authorization to search that the State argues for. Instead [the condition] is worded so as to impose an obligation upon [the probationer] — the obligation to submit to a search whenever requested by his probation officer. Thus, the language of the disputed provision appears to support [the probationer’s] interpretation — that the probation officer’s authority to search is premised on [the probationer] receiving notice of the intended search.
Id. (emphasis added) (citations omitted). The court noted that eases from other states interpreting similar provisions also tended to support the probationer’s interpretation of the provision and that the state had failed to cite any case law to support its interpretation that the condition authorized the probation officer to search the probationer’s residence essentially at will, with no prior notice to the probationer and without regard to whether the probationer was present. For these reasons, the court concluded that the condition required the probation officer to notify the probationer before searching his house and therefore, the search conducted in the case was not authorized by the conditions of the probationer’s probation. Id. at 1194.
Similarly, in
State v. Hindman,
The language of the probation condition ... requires that defendant submit to searches upon request. We thus conclude that defendant’s probation condition was an agreement to consent to a search and not a prospective consent. If defendant was to refuse to consent to a requested search, he would be violating a condition of his probation---- [T]he record does not show that defendant’s consent was either asked for or given before the police conducted the search.... Accordingly, we hold that the search was unlawful....
Id. at 483.
The California Supreme Court came to the same conclusion in
People v. Mason,
Finding the reasoning of these authorities persuasive, we conclude that a probation condition that requires a probationer to submit to a search “at the request of’ an officer requires that the probationer be informed of an officer’s intent to conduct an impending search. 4 Like the Joubert Court, we recognize that the purposes of probation may be better advanced if we were to allow probation officers to conduct unrestricted, unannounced searches of a probationer’s residence. However, we must keep in mind that probationers’ expectation of privacy is merely diminished, not obliterated. In addition, to adopt the state’s interpretation of the term would be to essentially ignore the plain language of the probation condition — a proposition for which the state has cited no authority and which does not constitute an “objectively reasonable,” nor logical, interpretation.
III.
CONCLUSION
Because we conclude that the search could not be justified on the grounds that it was a reasonable and lawful “visit” and that the inclusion of the phrase “at the request of’ in the probation search condition required that the probation officer notify Turek prior to the search, we affirm the district court’s grant of Turek’s motion to suppress the evidence found in his shed.
Notes
. The record indicates that Turek was informed of the conditions of his probation orally by the court and also signed a document listing the conditions.
. This Court has previously held that there is no blanket prohibition against including a waiver of Fourth Amendment rights as a condition of probation whenever the underlying offense is a misdemeanor.
State v. Josephson,
. This is a distinct issue from whether a probationer may refuse the request to search (which
would constitute a violation of the probation conditions and put him at risk for revocation of probation) or whether an officer may proceed with a warrantless search regardless of whether a probationer actually consents at the time of the impending search. As the state points out, most courts that have addressed this issue have concluded that a condition which requires a probationer to "submit” to a search permits warrant-less searches by probation officers regardless of whether the probationer actually consents to the search.
See Owens v. Kelley,
. The Illinois Supreme Court has taken an even stricter stance on the interpretation of search conditions — holding that a condition which stated that the probationer "shall submit” to searches at any time, and which did
not
include the phrase "at the request of,” still required officers to obtain consent from the probationer as the term did not constitute prospective consent which waived the probationer’s fourth amendment rights. Specifically, the court concluded that the use of “shall” created a duty in the probationer to submit to searches which implied the requirement of further action on the probationer’s part rather than prospective consent toward possible future, unspecified searches.
Lampitok,
The Oregon Court of Appeals came to the same conclusion where the condition required the defendant to “submit ... to reasonable search and seizure by the Probation Officer without a warrant.”
Davis,
