STATE OF OREGON, Aрpellant - Cross-Respondent, v. JAMES R. WEAVER, Respondent - Cross-Appellant.
(C9103-31294; CA A71768)
Court of Appeals of Oregon
Argued and submitted September 4, 1992, resubmitted In Banc April 8, affirmed on appeal and on cross-appeal June 23, appellant‘s motion for reconsideration filed July 28 allowed by opinion November 17, 1993
854 P.2d 962 | 124 Or. App. 615 (1993)
See 124 Or App 615 (1993)
John S. Ransom, Portland, argued the cause for respondent - cross-appellant. With him on the brief were James D. Lang and Ransom, Blackman & Weil, Portland.
De MUNIZ, J.
Edmonds, J., dissenting.
De MUNIZ, J.
Defendant owns a secondhand store that sells guns. He was indicted on 52 counts of failing to register the transfer of handguns and on 249 cоunts of failing to register the transfer of used firearms.
We take the facts from the trial court‘s findings that are supported by the evidence and the evidence that is consistent with those findings. State v. Davis, 313 Or 246, 250, 834 P2d 1008 (1992); State v. Huckaba, 115 Or App 728, 730, 839 P2d 768, rev den 315 Or 272 (1992).
On October 19, 1990, Multnomah County sheriff‘s deputies and Portland police officers, armed with a warrant, searched defendant‘s store. They were looking for stolen property that had been sold to the store by a known burglar. During that search, Deputy Hutchison asked Sergeant Merrill to demonstrate how to check for compliance with an ordinance that regulates record keeping by secondhand dealers. The ordinance requires the dealеr, when purchasing regulated property, to record the identity of the seller and a description of the property on a form called a secondhand dealer report.1 Multnomah County Code § 6.81.080. The ordinance also requires the dealer to keep regulated items in the store for 15 days after purchasing them. Multnomah County Code § 6.81.090.
With defendant‘s cooperation, Hutchison and Merrill examined 31 secondhand dealer reports. The officers found irregularities on eight of the reports and seized them.2
Hutchison decided to do a more extensive “compliance check.” He returned to defendant‘s store on November 28, 1990, with 12 or 13 officers. According to Hutchison, they arrived around noon. Defendant was not at the store, but the manager, Laudum, was there. Thе officers began conducting the compliance check. They soon discovered that the firearms
Hutchison spoke with defendant on the telephone. Defendant asked Hutchison to come and speak to him in person at the fire stаtion where he was working. Hutchison and Sergeant Beamer went to the fire station and asked defendant if they could search his store. Defendant called his attorney, Alterman, and spoke with him while the officers waited. Alterman then spoke with Hutchison and negotiated an amendment to a written consent form. Alterman then advised defendant to sign the form. A notation on the form indicates that defеndant signed it at 2:00 p.m.
Merrill testified and explained how the search was conducted. A deputy took the Acquisition Disposition Register (ADR), a federally required record, to the sheriff‘s office, made photocopies of it and brought them back. The officers checked the brands and serial numbers of the guns that were in the store. Then, they checked the ADR to ascertain the secondhand dealer report number for each gun and asked the employees for each report. Most of the reports were not available, and some reports did not match the guns listed on the ADR. The officers seized most of the guns in the store. Merrill testified that the officers began examining the ADR, the guns and the secondhand dealer reports 30 to 45 minutes after arriving at the store.
Detective Howe testified about the property receipts that were filled out while the guns were being seized. He said that he put an identification tag on each gun while another officer entered a description of the gun and the tag number on the property receipt. After the officer entered the information about a gun in the property receipt, another officer remоved the gun to the property truck. Two of the three property receipts listed 12:15 p.m. as the “occurrence” time and the third receipt did not list any occurrence time. Howe examined one of the receipts and identified it. He said that the 12:15 time might not be accurate, but he indicated that he probably started tagging the guns by 1:00 p.m.
The state contends that there is no evidence to support the court‘s finding that the officers began their search before Hutchison obtained defendant‘s consent. The state is wrong. Hutchison and Merrill testified that the officers arrived at defendant‘s store around noon. Merrill‘s and Howe‘s testimony indicates that the seizure of evidence began no later than 1:00 p.m. The consent form indicates that defendant purportedly consented at 2:00 p.m. The evidence supports a finding that the officers began searching for and seizing evidence well before defendant signed the consent form. The officers invaded defendant‘s constitutionally protected privacy interests when they bеgan searching and seizing evidence without a warrant, without consent and without any other exception to the warrant requirements of Article I, section 9, and the Fourth Amendment. The fact that defendant subsequently consented does not vitiate the unlawfulness of a search and seizure that violated the state and federal constitutions at its inception.4
The state contends that the cоurt abused its discretion by refusing to allow the state to present additional evidence to clarify when the search began. To preserve that alleged error, the state was required to make an offer of proof on what evidence it would have presented. State v. Busby, 315 Or 292, 298, 844 P2d 897 (1993). The state did not make an offer of proof, nor did it attempt to do so. Compare State v. Rodriguez, 115 Or App 281, 840 P2d 711 (1992) (reversible error when the defendant had a right to make an offer of proof and the court refused to allow him to make the offer). The state has waived any objection it may have had to the court‘s decision to not allow the state to reopen the evidentiary phase of the hearing.
It is possible that some of the searching and seizing occurred after defendant consented. Howevеr, nothing in the record suggests which items were seized after 2:00 p.m., nor does the record indicate which evidence was seized without the benefit of information contained in the ADR.5 If any of the evidence was lawfully seized, the state has not met its burden of proving it.
Because the state did not prove that the search for and seizure of evidence followed defendant‘s consent, we neеd not decide whether the seizure exceeded the scope of defendant‘s consent.
In a separate motion, defendant moved to suppress the ADR on the ground that federal law forbade the officers from asking defendant for permission to examine it. The court denied that motion. That ruling is the subject of defendant‘s cross-appeal. We need not address sepаrately the
Affirmed on appeal and on cross-appeal.
EDMONDS, J., dissenting.
Once upon a time, there lived in a far away land some people called “Oregonians.” Because these people had traveled a long way to start a new life in the wilderness, they desired to adopt laws that would protect their privacy and possessory interests from government tyranny. To that end, they adopted a law called “Section 9.” It said:
“No law shall violate the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable search, or seizure; * * *” (Emphasis supplied.)1
The people also said that if a person cоnsented to a search of a place in which he had a privacy or property interest, then the search was “reasonable,” because that person had given up those interests with respect to that entry.2 After all, Oregonians were an intelligent and independent people who were capable of making up their own minds about whether to waive the protеction of section 9. For many years, the people lived happily under the protection of section 9. Although there were occasional disputes about the meaning of section 9, no one doubted that a search by “consent” was a “reasonable search.”
In a village in the kingdom, there lived a man by the name of Weaver who sold used items to Oregonians. One day, thе queen‘s soldiers wished to investigate as to whether Weaver was obeying a law3 that required him to keep certain
Weaver and his attorney had another private discussion, and then, Weaver asked Hutchinson to speak with Weaver‘s attorney for a second time. Hutchinson and the attorney negotiated an amendment to the written form of consent that Hutchinson had with him. Weaver and his attorney had another private conversation and then Weaver signed the consent form as amended by the discussion between Hutchinson and the аttorney. The consent form read:
“CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS WARNING: SEARCH BY CONSENT BEFORE ANY SEARCH IS MADE, YOU MUST UNDERSTAND YOUR RIGHTS
“(1) You may refuse to consent to a search and may demand that a search warrant be obtained prior to any search of the premises described below.
“(2) If you consent to a search, anything of value as evidence seized in the course of the search can be used in court against you.
“I HEREBY CONSENT TO A SEARCH WITHOUT WARRANT OF THE FOLLOWING (DESCRIBE PREMISES, AUTO OR OTHER SUBJECT OF SEARCH): ENTIRE PREMISE OF ABE‘S SECONDHAND STORE. FOR: ALL USED FIREARMS AND CORRESPONDING PAPER RECORDS, ONLY THOSE JEWELRY ITEMS + PAPER WORK WITH COMPLIANCE IRREGULARITIES, AND ONLY THOSE OTHER ITEMS OF REGULATED PROPERTY + PAPER RECORDS WITH COMPLIANCE IRREGULARITIES. BY DEPUTIES OF THE DIVISION OF PUBLIC SAFETY, MULTNOMAH COUNTY, OREGON. “I HEREBY AUTHORIZE THESE OFFICERS TO SEIZE ANY ARTICLE WHICH THEY CONSIDER TO BE OF VALUE AS EVIDENCE.
“THIS STATEMENT IS SIGNED OF MY OWN FREE WILL WITHOUT ANY THREATS OR PROMISES HAVING BEEN MADE TO ME.” (Bold portion reflects the handwritten modifiсations to the form made at the request of Weaver‘s attorney.)
After Weaver signed the consent, Hutchinson returned to the store, completed the compliance check, and seized a large number of firearms. As a result of the seizure, the queen‘s soldiers charged Weaver with multiple crimes of failure to register the transfer of a handgun under
The queen was very unhappy because this meant that there could be no trial to determine if Weaver had violated the laws of the kingdom. She asked the intermediate high court to review the magistrate‘s decision. According to the chronicle of the intermediate high court, the court heard the queen‘s arguments and agreed with the magistrate‘s alternative ruling. It concluded, “[t]he fаct that defendant subsequently consented does not vitiate the unlawfulness of a search and seizure that violated the state and federal constitutions at its inception.” 121 Or App at 366.
So far as we know, Weaver lived happily ever after, and the prohibition against “unreasonable searches and seizures” in section 9 had new meaning under the court‘s ruling. Thereafter, all the people in the kingdom knew: once an unauthorized search begins, it can never be consented to, even if the person whose privacy interests were being invaded agrees to the search and seizure after being advised to do so by his attorney. The moral of this fable is that “reasonable” really means “unreasonable,” and that even if one consents to a search by signing a consent form that one‘s lawyer helps write, the form still doesn‘t mean what it says.
This moral parallels the logic of a famous nursery rhyme character:
“‘When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more or less.’
“‘The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’
“‘The question is,’ said Humpty Dumpty, ‘which is to be master — that‘s all.‘” Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking-Glass ch 6 (1872).
To summarize: when the search began, it was unauthorized. The trial court and the majority say that that fact ends the inquiry. They err because they fail to consider whether the search and seizure that occurred before the consent was signed fall within the purview of the consent. So far as I can tell from the record, defendant and his attorney
I dissent.
Richardson, C. J., and Deits and Riggs, JJ., join in this dissent.
Notes
Hutchinson obtained defendant‘s consent at 2:00 p.m. The dissent contends:
“A knowing consent made subsequеnt to the inception of the search and seizure could relate back to the beginning of the search and act as a waiver of defendant‘s section 9 rights regarding the privacy interests that were invaded before the consent form was signed.” 121 Or App at 372.
The dissent concedes that from 12:30 to 2:00 p.m., the “queen‘s soldiers” were unreasonably searching and seizing. The dissent asserts: “The moral of this fable is thаt ‘reasonable’ really means ‘unreasonable.‘” 121 Or App at 371. That assertion could only be correct if we accept the dissent‘s proposition that the magic wand of
But this is not Wonderland; “unreasonable” still means “unreasonable,” and neither we nor Officer Hutchinson can travel back in time to alter the past. Even if we could, the record would not support a finding that defendant consented to a search that was already in progress. The state admits that defendant did not know about the ongoing search when he signed the consent form. He could not possibly have ratified the unreasоnable and unconstitutional search and seizure, and the state failed to prove that any evidence was seized after defendant consented.
