UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. MANNY BAKER, a/k/a HENRY HURTT Manny Baker, Appellant
No: 97-1977
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
August 7, 2000
2000 Decisions, Paper 160
BECKER, Chief Judge
D.C. Crim. No. 97-cr-00297. On Appeal from the United States District Court For the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. District Judge: Honorable Charles R. Weiner. Argued: November 5, 1999.
Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges, and McLAUGHLIN, District Judge.*
(Filed: August 7, 2000)
HOPE C. LEFEBER, ESQUIRE (ARGUED) 1420 Walnut Street, Suite 1000 Philadelphia, PA 19102 Counsel for Appellant
* Honorable Sean J. McLaughlin, United States District Judge for the Western District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation.
OPINION OF THE COURT
BECKER, Chief Judge.
Appellant Manny Baker, a Pennsylvania state parolee, was arrested while leaving the parole office for violating the condition of his parole that required him to refrain from driving. Parole officers searched the passenger compartment of the borrowed car that Baker had driven to the parole office. They also searched the trunk of the car and discovered what they believed to be drug paraphernalia. On the basis of what they found in the trunk, the officers searched Baker‘s home, where they found weapons and 66 grams of heroin. A federal grand jury indicted Baker for possessing with intent to deliver a controlled substance (heroin) in violation of
This appeal which, as we shall explain below, is now in its third discrete phase, raises an important first-impression question: whether the standard Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole consent to search form,
The consent to search form provided:
I expressly consent to the search of my person, property and residence, without a warrant by agents of the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole. Any items, in possession of which constitutes a violation of the parole/reparole shall be subject to seizure, and may be used as evidence in the parole revocation process.
If as a matter of Pennsylvania law the standard consent to search form implies a requirement that parole officers have reasonable suspicion in order to conduct a search of a parolee, the evidence against Baker must be suppressed and his conviction set aside. Because we conclude that the form should be so construed (or more precisely, predict that the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania would so construe it), the order of the District Court denying Baker‘s motion to suppress will be reversed.
I.
In August 1996, Baker drove to the state parole office in Philadelphia for a scheduled visit with his parole officer. As a condition of his parole, Baker had agreed not to drive without a license. During the parole visit, a parole agent asked Baker if he had a driver‘s license, and Baker responded that he did not. When Baker attempted to drive away after his visit, he was arrested by parole officers for violating this condition of parole.
In a prior opinion, United States v. Baker, No. 97-1977 (3d Cir. Jan. 7, 1999), we ordered a limited remand for the District Court to consider whether Baker had standing to challenge the search of the car and whether there was reasonable suspicion to justify the search of the trunk of the car. On remand, United States v. Baker, No. 97-00297 (E.D. Pa. Mar. 17, 1999), the District Court concluded that Baker had standing and that the parole officers had reasonable suspicion to search the trunk of the car. In the
Following receipt of supplemental briefing and additional argument, the panel conferred and concluded that: (1) Baker had standing to challenge the search of the car; and (2) that the police lacked reasonable suspicion to search the trunk of the car. On February 18, 2000, we certified to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court (pursuant to Pennsylvania Supreme Court Order No. 197, Judicial Administration, Docket No. 1, filed Jan. 12, 2000) the remaining--and vexing--question whether, under Pennsylvania law, the consent form authorized suspicionless searches.
The Supreme Court did not accept our petition for certification, leaving us to determine whether, under that Court‘s opinions in Scott v. Pennsylvania Bd. of Probation & Parole, 698 A.2d 32 (Pa. 1997), rev‘d on other grounds, 524 U.S. 357 (1998), and Commonwealth v. Williams, 692 A.2d 1031 (Pa. 1997), the consent to search form used by the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, as a matter of Pennsylvania law, authorizes suspicionless searches or implies a condition that any search conducted pursuant to the consent form be founded on reasonable suspicion.
II.
The threshold question presented by these facts is that of standing. Standing to challenge a search requires that the individual challenging the search have a reasonable
It is clear that a passenger in a car that he neither owns nor leases typically has no standing to challenge a search of the car. See Rakas, 439 U.S. 133-34 (holding that there is no legitimacy to a defendant‘s expectations of privacy where the area searched is in the control of a third party). “Fourth Amendment rights are personal rights, which, like some other constitutional rights, may not be vicariously asserted.” Id. at 133-34 (quoting Alderman v. United States, 394 U.S. 165, 174 (1969). “A person who is aggrieved by an illegal search and seizure only through the introduction of damaging evidence secured by a search of a third person‘s premises or property has not had any of his Fourth Amendment rights infringed.” Id. at 134.
For these reasons, we have previously suggested that a defendant who had stolen a car and used it in a robbery would not have standing to object to a search of the car. See United States v. Yeager, 448 F.2d 74, 85 (3d Cir. 1971) (rejecting challenge to search on basis that “if[the defendant‘s] theories were valid, a stolen car used in a robbery could not be searched and objects therein seized by the police without a search warrant“). We have never considered, however, whether an individual who borrows a car and has control over it has a legitimate expectation of privacy in it.
Cases from other circuits suggest that whether the driver of a car has the reasonable expectation of privacy necessary to show Fourth Amendment standing is a fact-bound question dependent on the strength of his interest in the car and the nature of his control over it; ownership is not necessary. Compare United States v. Cooper, 133 F.3d 1394, 1398-99 (11th Cir. 1998) (driver of a rental car whose contract to rent the car had expired four days before the search had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the car because he could have extended the contract with a simple phone call); United States v. Angulo-Fernandez, 53 F.3d 1177, 1179 (10th Cir. 1995) (driver who was able to produce registration papers in the name of the person from
Baker is asserting his own, not a third party‘s, expectation of privacy. He came alone in the car to the parole office. Although he did not own the car, he had substantial control over it insofar as he had borrowed it from a friend and had been driving it for four to six weeks. He carried the keys to the car with him into the parole office. Although the defendant and his associates were somewhat vague about who owned the car, there is no evidence in the record that the car was stolen or that Baker knowingly possessed a stolen car. All of these factors lead to the conclusion that Baker had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the car. In Angulo-Fernandez, 53 F.3d at 1179, the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit rejected the argument that the defendant lacked standing because the registered owner, from whom a defendant claimed to have
We conclude that a discrepancy between an individual‘s statement regarding the owner of the car he is driving, and the identity of the owner of the car as reflected by the title and registration, is not enough, by itself, to destroy the driver‘s reasonable expectation of privacy when there is clear evidence of continuing possession and control, as well as no evidence that the driver obtained the car illegitimately. Under the circumstances, therefore, Baker had the requisite legitimate expectation of privacy to support standing for Fourth Amendment purposes.
III.
Given that Baker has standing to challenge the search, the next question is whether the District Court erred in concluding that the parole agent had reasonable suspicion to search the trunk of the car. Though officers may lawfully search the passenger compartment of the car incident to arrest, see New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454, 460 (1981) (holding that, when a policeman has made a lawful custodial arrest of the occupant of an automobile, he may, as a contemporaneous incident of that arrest, search the passenger compartment of that automobile), such a search incident to arrest does not extend to the trunk of the car, see id. at 460-61 & n.4. Thus, in order for the search of the trunk to comport with the Fourth Amendment, it had to
Under normal circumstances, the Fourth Amendment requires government officials to have both probable cause and a warrant to conduct a search. In the case of parolees, however, the requisite level of suspicion is reduced and a warrant is not required. In Griffin v. Wisconsin, 483 U.S. 868, 871-72 (1987), a Wisconsin statute authorized probation officers to conduct warrantless searches of probationers’ homes when there were “reasonable grounds” to believe that contraband would be found there. The Court found that the operation of a state‘s probation system presented “special needs,” beyond the need for law enforcement, justifying an exception to the warrant and probable cause requirements of the Fourth Amendment. See id. at 873-74. The Court noted:
To a greater or lesser degree, it is always true of probationers (as we have said it to be true of parolees) that they do not enjoy “the absolute liberty to which every citizen is entitled, but only . . . conditional liberty properly dependent on observance of special [probation] restrictions.”
Id. at 874 (quoting Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 480 (1972)) (omission and alterations in original). The Court went on to hold that the special needs of the probation system, including the need to supervise probationers, see id. at 875, justified a lower standard for searches of a probationer‘s property, see id. at 878. Specifically, the Court held that a search could be conducted on the basis of such “reasonable grounds” as information indicating that there might be weapons in a probationer‘s home. See id. at 880.
In United States v. Hill, 967 F.2d 902, 909 (3d Cir. 1992), we extended the holding in Griffin to parolees and concluded that a parolee‘s car or home can be searched on the basis of reasonable suspicion alone, even in the absence of an authorizing state statute such as that in Griffin. In Hill, the defendant was arrested for violating parole. His apartment was then searched and two guns were seized. See id. at 904-05. We affirmed the
In Hill, the officers acted on a report from the parolee‘s estranged wife that he had committed several parole violations, including keeping drugs and guns in the home that they jointly owned. See id. at 904, 911. We concluded that these facts were specific enough to give rise to reasonable suspicion. We also rejected Hill‘s argument that, once he was arrested, any special need justifying a lower standard vanished, concluding that “the parole agents’ `interest in inspecting [Hill‘s] place of residence did not terminate upon his arrest; if anything, it intensified.’ ” Id. at 911 (quoting Latta, 521 F.2d at 252); see also United States v. Jones, 152 F.2d 680, 686 (7th Cir. 1998) (rejecting the argument that “the State‘s special supervisory need is diminished when a parolee is in custody“).
Following remand in this case, the District Court concluded that the search of the trunk was lawful because (1) Baker had no driver‘s license (which was a violation of his parole); (2) Baker could not produce documentation demonstrating that he owned the car; and (3) the parole officer might reasonably have concluded that Baker “might have been in further violation of his parole (the car might have been stolen) or that the trunk of the car might contain evidence of a further violation of his parole such as drug paraphernalia.”
Similarly, neither Baker‘s violation of his parole by driving a vehicle or his failure to document that he owned the vehicle can give rise to a reasonable suspicion that he was committing other, unspecified, unrelated parole violations--the evidence of which might be found in the trunk. Cf. Knowles v. Iowa, 525 U.S. 113, 118 (1998) (“Once [the defendant] was stopped for speeding and issued a citation, all the evidence necessary to prosecute that offense had been obtained. No further evidence of excessive speed was going to be found either on the person of the offender or in the passenger compartment of the car.” ).
IV.
The parties agree that the proper construction of the consent form that Baker signed turns on two cases decided by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, Commonwealth v. Williams, 692 A.2d 1031 (Pa. 1997), and Scott v. Pennsylvania Bd. of Probation & Parole, 698 A.2d 32 (Pa. 1997), rev‘d on other grounds, 524 U.S. 357 (1998). Baker contends that under these precedents the consent form that he signed must be construed as a matter of Pennsylvania law to imply a condition that the parole officers have reasonable suspicion to justify any search of his person, property, or residence. If Baker is correct, the evidence procured in the search of the house must be suppressed because the consent form he signed did not authorize searches in the absence of reasonable suspicion.
The United States disagrees, contending that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court‘s resolution of Williams and Scott rested on federal constitutional grounds rather than the proper construction of the Pennsylvania consent form. More specifically, the government submits that these cases hold that an unqualified consent to search executed as a condition of parole can justify a search consistent with the Fourth Amendment only where reasonable suspicion is present, but do not decide whether--under Pennsylvania law--the form should be construed to provide unqualified consent to search. Since we are not bound by Pennsylvania‘s interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, this reading of Williams and Scott would leave us free to construe the forms anew.
We agree with the government that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has never directly construed the form as a matter of Pennsylvania law. Nevertheless, as we shall
In Williams, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court reviewed a parolee‘s claim that a search conducted pursuant to a consent form identical to the one at issue here violated his Fourth Amendment rights.5 The Court analyzed the conflicting interests involved in the case, the relevant precedents (state and federal, including Griffin), and the approaches taken by other states, and adopted the approach that:
the parolee‘s signing of a parole agreement giving his parole officer permission to conduct a warrantless search does not mean either that the parole officer can conduct a search at any time and for any reason or that the parolee relinquishes his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches. Rather, the parolee‘s signature acts as acknowledgment that the parole officer has a right to conduct reasonable searches of his residence listed on the parole agreement without a warrant.
Significantly, the approach adopted requires a court to conduct what amounts to a Fourth Amendment analysis when a parole officer conducts a search pursuant to the consent form:
A search [conducted pursuant to the form] will be deemed reasonable if the totality of the evidence
demonstrates: (1) that the parole officer had a reasonable suspicion that the parolee had committed a parole violation, and (2) that the search was reasonably related to the parole officer‘s duty.
Id. (citation omitted). As such, the Williams case seems to be based on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court‘s interpretation of the Fourth Amendment (especially insofar as it purports to adopt the “middle ground” approach adopted by other states, which approach seems simply to require that parolees acknowledge that parole officers can conduct reasonable searches without a warrant, see id. at 1037). Indeed, the Court concluded that this approach “comports with the Fourth Amendment protection afforded to parolees by the United States Supreme Court in Griffin, supra, and in our sister states.” Id. Nevertheless, the Court in Williams concluded that the parole agents had reasonable suspicion to search the defendant, so it did not have to decide whether the form authorized suspicionless searches. See id. at 1037-38.
Four months later, in Scott v. Pennsylvania Bd. of Probation & Parole, 698 A.2d 32 (1997), rev‘d on other grounds, 524 U.S. 357 (1998), the same Court squarely faced the question whether a parolee is entitled to the protections of the Fourth Amendment in his parole revocation hearing when he signed a consent to search form as a condition of his parole. The Scott Court construed its decision in Williams as a decision balancing the interests of the government and parolees. The Court noted that, “[i]n deciding what effect the signing of the consent provision had on Williams‘s limited rights under the Fourth Amendment, we `balanc[ed] the governmental interests involved in granting parole and supervising parolees with that interest of the private individual, i.e., the parolee, which has been affected by the governmental action.’ ” Scott, 698 A.2d at 35 (1997) (quoting Williams, 692 A.2d at 1035). This passage suggests that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court read its earlier decision as having been based on weighing of the Fourth Amendment interests
The problem we have in construing the Williams and Scott decisions stems from the fact that, instead of engaging in a two-stage analysis, asking first whether the form as a matter of Pennsylvania law provided for suspicionless searches or required reasonable suspicion, and second whether the form as construed under Pennsylvania law comported with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court did not go beyond reasoning that under the Fourth Amendment a search of a parolee required reasonable suspicion, and it construed the form in light of that requirement. The Court did not independently analyze the meaning of the form as a matter of Pennsylvania law.7 Accordingly, we need to decide whether, as a matter of Pennsylvania law, Baker consented to a suspicionless search of his person and property by signing the form.
By its terms, there are (at least) two possible readings of the Pennsylvania standard form. First, it can be understood to authorize suspicionless searches, because there is no caveat modifying the phrase “I expressly consent to the search of my person, property and residence” that would suggest that the background rule of reasonable suspicion applies. This interpretation does make sense of the plain language of the consent form and the common understanding of what it means to consent to a search in the Fourth Amendment context. Cf. Florida v. Jimeno, 500
The second construction of the form is that it waives only the warrant requirement. On this reading, the phrase “I expressly consent to the search of my person, property and residence, without a warrant” is limited in the sense that it waives only the warrant requirement and leaves the reasonable suspicion requirement in place. The difficulty with this position is that Griffin (which we have applied to searches of parolees) holds not only that reasonable suspicion (rather than probable cause) is the requisite level of suspicion for searches of probationers, but also that no warrant is required when conducting such searches. See Griffin, 483 U.S. at 876-77 (holding that the special needs of the probation system made the warrant requirement impracticable); see also Hill, 967 F.2d at 910 (holding that in light of the special needs of a parole system, the warrant requirement does not apply to searches of parolees).
On this interpretation, the consent to search form has no effect--it simply states the legal standard for searching a parolee that would apply even in the absence of the form. It is hard to understand why Pennsylvania would feel the need to require parolees to consent affirmatively to the background rule of warrantless searches, but not to consent affirmatively to the background rule of reasonable suspicion, if the form was intended simply to set forth the governing standards to search parolees. Nevertheless, Williams characterizes the parole agreement as an “acknowledg[ment] that agents of the Parole Board could conduct a warrantless search,” id. at 1037, which supports the view that the consent form effects no waiver and serves only as an acknowledgment of the background rule.
More significantly, nothing in Scott suggests that the consent form authorizes the suspicionless searches not provided for by the statutory scheme, and at least one statement suggests that the consent form is similarly limited. As we have noted, Scott states that “applying Williams to the instant case, we hold that Appellee has a Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures that is unaffected by his signing of the consent to search provision.” Id. at 36. But if the form waived the reasonable suspicion requirement, it would affect a parolee‘s substantive rights.
When engaging in a predictive exercise, as we do here, we sometimes must not only read the lines but also between the lines, as it were. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court‘s consistent application of the Fourth Amendment reasonableness inquiry to the consent form in Williams and Scott, and its repeatedly expressed concern with balancing the interests of the state with the privacy interests of the parolee, also suggest to us that that Court does not believe that the form authorizes suspicionless searches. Rather, the analysis engaged in, which focuses on the
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the search of the trunk was not founded on reasonable suspicion, and that the consent form did not authorize a suspicionless search thereof. The fruits of the search, including the evidence found in the search of Baker‘s house, must therefore be suppressed. See Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471 (1963). The order of the District Court denying Baker‘s motion to suppress will be reversed and the case remanded to the District Court for further action consistent with this opinion.
A True Copy: Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
Notes
Appellee‘s Letter Br., Nov. 27, 1998. As the government did not make this argument in the District Court and did not renew it in its brief following remand, and as Baker timely objected that the argument had been waived in his response to the government‘s letter brief, see Appellant‘s Response to Appellee‘s Letter Br., Dec. 1, 1998, we will not consider this argument on appeal.the defendant consented to the search and seizure of his bag from the trunk of the car when he identified the bag as his and instructed the parole agent in how to open the trunk. Scheckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218 (1973) (consent to search must be voluntary, but the government is not obliged to prove that the suspect was warned of any right to refuse consent).
Scott v. Pennsylvania Bd. of Probation & Parole, Transcript of Oral Argument, 1998 WL 154625 at *5-6 (Mar. 30, 1998). While this colloquy hardly resolves the issue, we set it forth forQUESTION: I‘m not sure you‘re right in saying that the Pennsylvania supreme court based its interpretation of the consent form on its reading of the Fourth Amendment. I thought they might have just based it on an interpretation of Pennsylvania law.
GENERAL FISHER: Mr. Chief Justice, we argue very strongly that they did, in fact, interpret it based on their reading of the Fourth Amendment, and that is where we disagree. We believe that a search of a parolee‘s residence may be without suspicion, or a suspicionless search.
QUESTION: Well, you--suppose this consent form were redrafted to make clear that the person paroled is consenting to a search without a warrant and to a search without any suspicion whatever. Suppose it were drafted that way. Now, what do you think the Pennsylvania courts would say to that?
GENERAL FISHER: It‘s--we believe that the Pennsylvania courts would say, based on what they said in this case, that we could not have that kind of consent form, because we believe they have--
QUESTION:--the Fourth Amendment?
GENERAL FISHER: Because the Fourth Amendment requires reasonable suspicion.
QUESTION: It just wasn‘t clear to me whether that‘s what they said, because they could have meant the consent form just didn‘t cover it.
GENERAL FISHER: No, Justice O‘Connor, we think they said very clearly that the Fourth Amendment requires reasonable suspicion.
