OPINION
Aрpellant, Larry Tomlin, was charged by informations filed December 21, 1988, in Cleveland County District Court, with Trafficking in Illegal Drugs, 63 O.S.Supp.1987, § 2-415 (CRF-88-1710), and Possession of a Firearm in the Commission of a Felony, 21 O.S.Supp.1982, § 1287 (CRF-88-1711). A bench trial was held July 27,1989, before the Honorable Edward M. McDanel, District Judge. The trial court found Appellant guilty as charged, and on September 6, 1989, sentenced him to ten years’ imprisonment and a $25,000 fine for the drug charge, and four years’ imprisonment for the firearms charge. From these Judgments and Sentences Appellant now appeals. This panel reverses.
Numbers in parentheses refer to page citatiоns in the Original Records of Cleveland County District Court Case Nos. CRF-88-1710 and CRF-88-1711; transcript of bench trial held July 27, 1989 (Tr. I); transcript of hearing held August 2, 1989 (Tr. II); and transcript of hearing held August 3,1989 (Tr. III).
FACTS: The charges in this case stem from the seizure of sixty-one pounds of marijuana and two firearms during an inventory of Appellant’s vehicle. The inventory was pursuant to Appellant’s arrest for allegedly violating a Norman city ordinance against trespassing. Appellant was placed under citizen’s arrest for trespassing by Garrick Ra-gon, a security guard employed to patrol the Robinson Crossing Shopping Center in Norman.
About 9 p.m. on December 20,1988, Ragon was patrolling the Robinson Crossing Shopping Center when he noticed a blue station wagon with Arizona license tags driving through the center’s parking lot. Ragon stopped the vehicle and asked the driver, Appellant, if he needed any help. According to Ragon, Appellant was acting irrationally. After talking with Ragon, Appellant voluntarily left the shopping center lot. (Tr. I 5-11).
A short time later, Ragon saw Appellant’s car in the shopping center lot again. Ragon approached Appellant’s vehicle and asked him to leave the premises. Appellant complied.
*337 Approximately two hours later, Ragon left the area that he was employed to patrol and drove to a nearby 7-11 convenience store, where he spotted Appellant’s vehicle. Ragon called Boyd Security, his employer, and asked that the Norman Police be notified, and then Ragon left. A short time later, Ragon again pulled into the 7-11 lot, and saw Appellant’s ear pulling in. (Tr. I 12-13, 19-20, 47). Ragon stopped Appellant and told him not to leave, that Appellant would have to explain his presence and actions to police. When Appellant protested, Ragon grabbed hold of Appellant’s car and ordered him to stay.
Norman Police Officers Nicholson and Schultz arrived at the store in separate patrol cars. Nicholson spoke with Ragon, then approached Appellant and asked for identification. Appellant complied, and explained to Nicholson, as he had to Ragon, that he was working for Sergeant Hill of the Oklahoma City Police Department, taking down tag numbers for an investigation. (Tr. I 63, 82-83, 97-98).
Sergeant Schultz arrived and conferred with Nicholson and Ragon. (Tr. I 26-28, 112-13). As the officers apprоached Appellant’s car a second time, they noticed an unloaded pistol lying on the passenger-side front seat. The officers drew their weapons and ordered Appellant out of the car. (Tr. I 67, 104, 117). After handcuffing and frisking Appellant, the officers instructed Ragon on how to make a citizen’s arrest for trespassing. (Tr. I 29-31, 44-45, 86-87).
Ragon testified that he detained Appellant at the convenience store, a location not within the area of Mr. Ragon’s employment, because he considered Appellant a suspicious character. (Tr. I 38). Ragon admitted at trial that Aрpellant had left the shopping center when he was asked to. (Tr. I 48). Ragon testified he told the Norman officers that Appellant was acting “irrationally.” (Tr. I 27).
According to the officers, Ragon was interested in filing a complaint against Appellant, and the officers were debating whether to take Appellant into custody when they approached Appellant’s car for the second time and saw the gun. (Tr. I 65-67,101-04). The officers admitted that the pistol was being transported legally, and that they had no probable cause to arrest Appellant for any felony, nor had they seen him commit any other public offense in their presence. (Tr. I 63, 84, 86, 95, 117, 121).
Ragon testified that the idea of a trespassing charge did not occur to him until after he had conferred with Nicholson and Schultz; he was unsure who brought up the idea. Ragon testified that when he first conferred with the officers, they all agreed Appellant was acting somewhat strangely; but that was the gist of the conversation. Ragon testified that the officers suggested he make a formal citizen’s arrest after they walked back to Appellant’s ear and spotted the gun. (Tr. I 27-30, 45-46, 64-65, 101-02, 114-15).
Following Appellant’s arrest, the officers impounded his vеhicle and conducted an inventory search in the parking lot of the 7-11 store. Three large containers, holding a total of sixty-one pounds of marijuana, and two rifles were found in the vehicle. (Tr. 170-74, 125-144).
I-Appellant’s first assignment of error is that because Appellant’s arrest was illegal, the evidence obtained from his vehicle was illegally seized.
The evidence on which Appellant’s convictions were based was obtained during an inventory search of his vehicle, pursuant to this arrest in the 7-11 parking lot for committing a trespass some hours earlier at another location, to-wit, аt the Robinson Crossing Shopping Center. Appellant urges this arrest was illegal for a number of reasons. The trial court ultimately found that Appellant did not, in fact, commit a trespass. Nevertheless, the trial court concluded that Ra-gon’s, and the Norman Police officers’, actions were protected because they had all acted in “good faith” in effecting the arrest. This conclusion was error and the trial court also erred in refusing to suppress the evidence used against Appellant. We hold Appellant’s convictions must be reversed with instructions to dismiss.
While the evidence in this case is detailed and somewhat confusing, the issues presented may be simply stated: (1) Is an arrest for *338 a misdemeanor offense legal, when the misdemeanor never occurred, when officers had no probable cause to believe that it occurred, and where the arrest was made by a private citizen at the suggestion and under the guidance of police officers? (2) Is evidence obtained pursuant to an illegal, warrantless, misdemeanor arrest otherwise admissible, because the arresting parties may have acted in good faith”? The answer to both of these questions is “No.”
Under both federal and state constitutional law, all warrantless seizures are presumptively unreasonable. U.S. Const. amends. IV, XIV;
Katz v. United States,
Although the search of Appellant’s vehicle was termed an “inventory,” its legality still rests on the legality of the arrest which led to the impoundment and inventory.
Patrick v. State,
In Oklahoma, a peace officer’s right to arrest without a warrant is limited not only by federal and state constitutions, but by state statute as well. See
Jones v. State,
must, before making the arrest, inform the person to be arrested of the cause thereof, and require him to submit, except when he is in actual commission of the offense or when he is arrested on pursuit immediately after its commission. 22 O.S.1981 § 203.
The dispositive issue in determining whether a felony arrest is legal is whether the arresting person had probable cause, or reasonable cause, to make the arrest. One may make a warrantless felony arrest basеd on information communicated to him by others, if that information provides reasonable cause for the arrest.
Stout v. State,
In contrast, a much stronger factual basis is needed to support a warrantless misdemeanor arrest. The law permitting warrantless arrests is more strictly circumscribed for misdemeanors than for felonies.
Heinzman v. State,
This Court held in
Ajeani v. State,
But this court also made it clear in
Ajeani
that its decision was based on the fact that the conduct giving rise to the initial arrest was committed in the officers’ presence. The same result cannot be reached where the officer relies on allegations of a misdemeanor related by another, or personally does not have information amounting to probable cause to make the arrest. See
Ajeani,
Turning to the case at bar, the record shows that Appellant never committed any offense in anyone’s presence. No one, neither security guard Ragon, nor Norman Police Officers Nicholson or Schultz, possessed information sufficient to justify Appellant’s arrest in the 7-11 parking lot for а misdemeanor offense.
Ragon’s initial attempt to detain Appellant occurred when he stopped Appellant in the 7-11 parking lot, some two to two-and-one-half hours after Appellant voluntarily left the Robinson Crossing Shopping Center. (Tr. I 49-51). Ragon testified that when he saw Appellant’s car at the convenience store, he stopped and ordered Appellant to stay until police came to the scene, not to arrest Appellant for “trespassing” or any other specific crime, but merely to “check him out” and “make sure he was okay.” (Tr. 113, 25-26, 36-39).
Ragon’s initiаl detention of Appellant was not a valid citizen’s arrest. Ragon failed to follow statutory procedure for such an arrest, specifically failing to tell Appellant why he was being detained. Appellant was not in actual commission of any crime when Ragon stopped him. He was in a convenience store parking lot, outside the area Ragon was employed to patrol. Nor had Ragon been immediately pursuing Appellant for “trespassing” or any other offense. See 22 O.S.1981, § 203.
Ragon himself admitted that he had no articulable reason for detaining Appellаnt at the convenience store. He testified he simply was “determined to keep him there until the police got there so they could just check him out to make sure he was okay.” (Tr. I 36). Ragon said he was suspicious because he’d “been around Appellant’s class of people before.” (Tr. I 21, 38). When Norman Police arrived, Ragon told the officers that Appellant was irrational and dangerous. Ragon admitted he had no factual basis for believing Appellant was dangerous. He said it was “instinct” that led him to that conclusion. (Tr. I 42-43). Ragon’s detention of Appellant was illegal because, not only did he fail to follow statutory procedure in effecting it, but he had nothing but suspicion on which to make it. See
Allen v. State,
The officers denied suggesting that Ragon make a complaint. Nicholson denied suggesting anything to Ragon, but Schultz admitted that Ragon was advised about what offense could be used as a basis for the complaint. (Tr. I 64-65, 101-02, 115). Ra-gon did not make his citizen’s arrest until after Appellant had already been ordered out of the car, frisked and handcuffed. (Tr. I 44-45, 86-87). Ragon testified that he thought he was arresting Appellant for something the police had observed. (Tr. I 27-28, 45).
The officers admitted they had no probable cause to arrest Appellant themselves, because no crime was committed in their presence. They admitted that they might simply have overlooked the empty pistol on their first meeting with Appellant; in any event, the pistol was unloaded and in plain view, and was thus being transported legally. (Tr. I 86, 117). Appellant made no suspicious or aggressive movements, but rather was cooperative with the officers. (Tr. I 95).
The officers were understandably concerned about seeing the pistol, even though it was unloaded, and they could have made a cursory pat-down search of Appellant’s person for concealed weapons. See
Terry v. Ohio,
No trespass was committed in the officers’ presence, and they had no authority to arrest Appellant without a warrant even if Ragon had had a trespassing charge in his mind when the police arrived. See
Ajeani v. State,
A citizen’s arrest made without cause is no better than an illegal police arrest; and the fact that a citizen made it does not insulate an officer to whom the arrestee is transferred. Even if Ragon had seen Appellant commit a trespass earlier, the officers had no authority to arrest Appellаnt in the 7-11 parking lot.
Ajeani,
The trial court agreed that Appellant did not, under Norman’s Municipal Code, commit a trespass on the Robinson Crossing Shopping Center, because he left the area when asked to do so. (Tr. II 3-4). See also Defendant’s Exhibit 3, copy of Norman Municipal Code § 15-605, regarding trespass. However, the trial court found that Ragon appeared to have acted in good faith in making his citizen’s arrest, and that the police also appeared to have acted in good faith in believing Ragon’s claim that a trespass had been committed. Therefore, the court concluded, the evidence obtained from the inventory of Appellant’s car was not the fruit of an illegal arrest. (Tr. II 4-14). 2
*341
This rationale is flawed for two reasons. First, there is no “good-faith exception” to the rule excluding illegally-obtained evidence for warrantless misdemeanor arrests. The good-faith exception in the search-and-seizure context applies only in a very limited number of cases where officers, in good faith, rely on what appears to be a valid search warrant. See
United States v. Leon,
Second, even assuming a good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule could apply to this case, the evidence belies a finding of good faith on the part of either Ragon or the police. Ragon detained Appellant on suspicion alone and admitted that the idea of a trespass had not entered his mind until Norman Police conferred with him. He was unfamiliar with the details of the ordinance itself and was instructed by the officers on how to make a formal citizen’s arrest after Appellant had been handcuffed. A citizen who acts merely on suspicion, in total ignorance of the law, but under the suggestion and guidance of police, cannot be said to have acted in good faith. The officers, as well, had no factual basis for making such an arrest, because Appellant had left the shopping center when asked to do so. A police officer who arrests on the bare charge of a misdemeanor, without any facts to support the charge, or who suggests that a pretextual citizen’s arrest be made to circumvent his own lack of probable cause, cannot be said to be acting in good faith. 3
An illegal arrest renders inadmissible any evidence obtained pursuant to the arrest. See
Hunt v. State,
All of the evidence used against Appellant in this case was obtained during the inventory of his car pursuant to his arrest for trespass. That arrest was at best totally unfounded and at worst a subterfuge. Because all of that evidence must be suppressed, Appellant’s convictions must be overturned and the cases must be remanded with instructions to dismiss.
II-Appellant’s second assignment of error is the evidence used against Appellant should *342 have been suppressed because it was obtained pursuant to an unlawful impoundment.
Appellant was stopped, forcibly detained, and arrested on private property — a convenience-store parking lot. The im-poundment and inventory of his vehicle took place there as well. Norman Police did not inquire whether the owner of the lot (or his agent) wished the vehicle to be removed. (Tr. I 87-88). Appellant asked permission to secure his vehicle and leave it parked at the convenience store until matters could be cleared up, but this request was denied. (Tr. I 88-89). Norman Police had no need, and no authority, to impound Appellant’s vehicle on the property without consent of the property owner. Because the impoundment was improper, the evidence obtained therefrom must be suppressed, and Appellant’s convictions must be reversed with instructions to dismiss.
Vehicle impoundments do not automatically offend constitutional guarantees against unreasonable searches, but neithеr are they exempted from them. Impoundment often involves nothing more than the police exercising “community care-taking functions” and following standard departmental guidelines in doing so. These care-taking functions include removing vehicles that pose a hazard to other traffic, or which are illegally parked. Inventory of the contents of these vehicles protects the vehicle owner as well as the police. See
South Dakota v. Opperman,
A vehicle inventory is illegal if there was no need to impound the vehicle. See
Lee, id.
The State carries the burden of showing that the impoundment was made pursuant to standard and proper police department policy. Above all, the impoundment-and-inven-tory procedure must comport with constitutional principles pertaining to reasonable searches.
Satterlee v. State,
The precise issues here are: Did Norman Police have authority, under the Norman Police Code, to impound Appellant’s vehicle on a private parking lot after his arrest but without the consent of the owner of the lot? Even if they did, is such а seizure reasonable under the state and federal constitutions?
The record includes, as State’s Exhibit 3, the portion of the Norman Police impoundment policy (Municipal Code § 20-701) that the State relied on to justify impoundment of Appellant’s vehicle. That policy states in part:
(a) The City Police Department is authorized to remove and impound any vehicle to a public or private storage yard: ... (7) when an officer arrests any person driving or in control of a vehicle for an alleged offense and the officer is by ordinance or state statute required or рermitted to take and does take the person arrested before a duly-appointed judge_
The State contended at trial that subsection (a)(7) authorized impoundment of Appellant’s vehicle from the 7-11 parking lot, because nothing in that subsection limits such impoundment to arrests made on public roads or highways. The State conceded that subsection (b) of Municipal Code § 20-701 specifically lists situations where Norman Police are authorized to impound a vehicle on private property, if they have written consent of the owner of the property. See Stаte’s Exhibit 3; Tr. Ill 16-17.
In
Lee v. State,
Appellant’s confrontation with Ragon and the officers started and ended on private property. There was no “hot pursuit” ending on private property here. Ragon decided to detain Appellant on suspicion in the parking lot of a private business which was not even part of thе property Ragon was paid to patrol.
In reversing eases where impoundment on private property after the driver’s arrest was held improper, this Court has intimated that such impoundments might be warranted if made under “proper departmental policy.” See
Lee,
Even assuming that Appellant’s arrest was not illegal, no fair reading of Norman Municipal Code § 20-701 authorizes impoundment at any place simply because the driver is arrested and taken to jail. The provisions of ordinance subsection (a) refer to situations where the vehicle constitutes a traffic hazard on a public roadway or where the vehicle itself is evidence of a crime. Subsection (b) generally deals with оther situations where the vehicle is parked on, or blocking, private property. See State’s Exhibit 3.
The ultimate issue is not whether the impoundment might be authorized by some city ordinance. The issue is whether the search, authorized or not, was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. See
Cooper v. California,
Because the impoundment of Appellant’s vehicle was neither authorized under city ordinance nor constitutionally reasonable, the fruits obtained during the subsequent inventory must be suppressed, and Appellant’s convictions must be reversed by this court with instructions to dismiss.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment and sentеnces of the trial court are REVERSED.
Notes
. Recent amendments to § 196 allow a peace officer to arrest in factual situations, not applicable to this case, that might include a misdemean- or not committed in the officer's presence. See 22 O.S.Supp.1987 § 196(5), (6);
McKay v. City of Tulsa,
. In concluding that the evidence in this case was admissible even though the arrest was illegal, the trial court referred to and relied on
Sutton
v.
State,
. The State contended at trial that the officers in this case had no duty whatsoever to determine whether probable cause existed for the arrest, because they were acting merely as agents of Ragon, a private citizen. (Tr. Ill 13).
. At trial, the State contended that the exclusionary rule was inapplicable here because Ragon, a private citizen, initiated the arrest. (Tr. Ill 2-16). See
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
