The primary issue in this case is whether appellant-driver legitimately expected Fourth Amendment-level privacy in an overdue rental ear that the rental company had not repossessed at the time of law enforcement’s warrantless search. We (1) affirm the district court’s conclusion that a law enforcement officer permissibly stopped appellant; (2) resolve the issue of first impression in appellant’s favor, reversing the district court’s conclusion that he lacked standing to challenge the search; and (3) remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
On January 6, 1996, appellant, Dwayne Cooper, rented a car from Budget Rent-A-Car (Budget) in West Palm Beach, Florida. The contract specified January 20 as the return due date and West Palm Beach as the return location. 1 The contract also included the following terms and conditions:
14) VEHICLE RETURN: Renter is responsible for returning the Vehicle in the same condition as when received, to the location and on the date specified, or sooner if requested by Budget. FAILURE TO RETURN THE VEHICLE TO THE SPECIFIED LOCATION ON THE DUE DATE MAY RESULT IN A DROP CHARGE AND/OR RATE CHANGE.
15) REPOSSESSION OF VEHICLE: The Vehicle may be repossessed, without notice and at Renter’s expense, if it is not returned when due, is illegally parked, is used in violation of law or of this Agreement, appears abandoned, or if Renter provides false or misleading information at time of rental.
16) FAILURE TO RETURN VEHICLE: If the Vehicle is not returned when due or *1396 within 24 hours after written or oral demand by Budget, Renter will be in unlawful possession of the Vehicle, and Budget may seek the issuance of a warrant for the arrest of anyone in possession of the Vehicle (including Renter). Written demand is considered delivered 48 hours after Budget mañs a certified letter to Renter at the home or business address Renter provides at time of rental.
Government’s Ex. Three (capital letters and bold print in original). Aside from its warning about late fees in paragraph fifteen, the contract does not address the renter’s ability to extend the due date. Budget’s established policy, however, is that it will extend the due date if the renter makes a request over the telephone and sufficient funds exist on his or her credit card. Through his past course of dealings with Budget, Cooper knew of this unwritten policy. It had also been Cooper’s experience that returning a rental ear after the due date was “no problem” with Budget as long he had “room” on his credit card for the extra days and applicable fees.
On January 24, four days after the rental contract expired, Michael King of the Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) saw the rental car on Interstate 95 in Jacksonville, Florida. King, traveling in the center northbound lane of Interstate 95 in a marked ear, noticed Cooper in his rear-view mirror unsuccessfully attempting to merge from the left to the center lane to continue on Interstate 95 after the highway “splits.” 2 Finding himself on Interstate 10 rather than Interstate 95, Cooper accelerated past King, cut across King’s lane, drove over an apex and exited the highway. Cooper’s car came too close to King’s vehicle during the lane change, causing King to apply his brakes in order to avoid an accident. Intending to issue Cooper a citation for an. improper lane change, King signaled for Cooper to pull over into the exit’s emergency lane. 3
Complying with King’s requests, Cooper identified himself, stepped out of the car and proffered his driver’s license and the rental contract. King inquired about the rental ear being four days overdue, and Cooper explained that he had extended the due date. Using his car telephone, King directed the FHP dispatcher to contact Budget and verify this information. Budget informed the dispatcher that Cooper had not requested an extension past January 20 and asked that the car be towed and returned. Budget had not reported the car stolen, sought a warrant for Cooper’s arrest or otherwise notified Cooper that it intended to repossess the car. The dispatcher relayed this information to King, and he asked the dispatcher to contact a private towing service.
Soon thereafter, a second FHP trooper, Michael Smith, arrived to assist King. The troopers informed Cooper about Budget’s plan to tow the car. Cooper requested to speak with a Budget representative, but the troopers would not permit him to use the telephone. Instead, King asked Cooper for consent to search the car. The parties dispute, and the district court did not resolve, whether Cooper consented. 4 In any event, King reached in through the passenger door, turned off the ignition, “swept” under the car seats and opened the glove compartment. Although he did not find anything under the seats, King found a loaded firearm in the glove compartment and arrested Cooper for concealing a firearm.
While Cooper remained in custody inside the patrol car, King and Smith decided to proceed with a full inventory search of the rental car, a procedure which FHP policy required. King opened the trunk and noticed garbage bags covering two square boxes. Also, on the floor of the trunk, King saw several plastic sandwich bags. Before the *1397 inventory proceeded any further, however, it started to rain. King told the dispatcher to cancel the towing service so that he and Smith would not have to search the car in the rain.
With assistance from another trooper, King and Smith drove the rental car to a covered overpass near the FHP station. Resuming the search, they discovered that the boxes in the trunk were actually safes, in which Cooper denied having any ownership stake. After Smith’s K-9 unit detected narcotics upon sniffing the exterior of the safes, Smith pried them open with a crowbar and found cocaine, cocaine base, scales and other drug paraphernalia. Eventually, after a “thorough search,” the car was towed and returned to Budget. Budget charged Cooper’s credit card for use of the car through January 25.
On February 28, a federal grand jury returned a three-count indictment against Cooper, charging him with: (1) conspiracy to distribute cocaine base and possess cocaine with intent to manufacture cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846; (2) possession with intent to distribute cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2; and (3) possession of cocaine with intent to manufacture cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. 5 Cooper moved to suppress the evidence found inside the rental car, contending that King stopped him without probable cause and that the FHP’s warrantless search violated his Fourth Amendment rights. After an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied Cooper’s motion and adopted the magistrate judge’s recommended conclusions that: (1) the stop was permissible; and (2) Cooper lacked standing to challenge the search because “[ajfter the rental agreement expired and he failed to seek its extension, [Cooper] did not have a legitimate expectation of privacy in the rental ear.” 6 The jury convicted Cooper on all three counts, and the district court sentenced him to life in prison. 7
II.ISSUES
Cooper raises two issues on appeal: (1) whether the district court clearly erred in finding that the FHP conducted a permissible traffic stop; and (2) whether the district court erred in concluding that he lacked standing to challenge the search of the rental car and the items therein.
III.CONTENTIONS
As to the first issue, Cooper contends that King’s testimony that he stopped Cooper for an improper lane change was not credible. Cooper insists that he did not violate any traffic laws and that King stopped him only to investigate for drugs. The government points to the record, arguing that sufficient evidence supports the district court’s finding and credibility assessment.
As to the second issue, Cooper argues that he subjectively and objectively expected privacy in the rental car, regardless of his failure to extend the due date. In support of his subjective expectation, Cooper points to his prior course of dealings with Budget and its leniency regarding overdue rental ears. Cooper further contends that society is willing to accept his expectation as reasonable because Budget had not acted upon its contractual right to repossess the vehicle at the time of the FHP’s warrantless search. The government, conversely, maintains that the rental car’s overdue status renders unreasonable any expectation of privacy on Cooper’s part. The government further contends that Budget exercised its right to repossess through the FHP and, therefore, Cooper was neither an authorized driver nor in possession of the rental car at the time of the inventory search.
IV.DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s findings of fact, including the permissibility of a stop, for clear error.
See United States v.
*1398
Smith,
A. The Stop
As the district court correctly stated, law enforcement “may stop a vehicle when there is probable cause to believe that the driver is violating any one of the multitude of applicable traffic and equipment regulations relating to the operation of motor vehicles.”
United States v. Strickland,
B. Standing
The Fourth Amendment prohibits law enforcement from conducting “unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. To have standing to challenge a search, one must manifest a subjective expectation of privacy in the invaded area that “society is prepared to recognize as reasonable.”
Rakas v. Illinois,
The government does not seriously dispute Cooper’s subjective expectation of privacy in the rental car, even after the rental contract expired. Cooper testified that, based on his prior course of dealings with Budget, returning a rental car after the due date is “no problem” as long as he has ample funds on his credit card to pay for it. Cooper’s awareness that Budget could exercise its contractual right to repossess the rental car anytime after the due date does not alter the sincerity of his belief that he retained privacy in the ear as long as he possessed and payed for it. Nor does his acknowledgment that he should have contacted Budget to extend the due date. Consequently, we move to the second part of the analysis, the objective reasonableness of Cooper’s expectation of privacy.
Although fact-specific, case law has established some general boundaries as to what society will accept as reasonable regarding privacy in a motor vehicle. A passenger usually lacks a privacy interest in a vehicle that the passenger neither owns nor rents, regardless of whether the driver owns or rents it.
See, e.g., Rakas,
The legitimacy of a driver’s expectation of privacy in an
overdue
rental car, however, is
*1399
apparently an issue of first impression in this and other circuits. Nevertheless, we find several indications that under the circumstances of this case, Cooper’s expectation of privacy is a reasonable one. First, a prior panel of this court has indicated in
dicta
a willingness to legitimize such an expectation of privacy. In
United States v. Miller,
In addition to recognizing this
dicta
in
Miller,
we note that
Smith
originated in the very same federal district as this case. Contrary to its present dispute regarding Cooper’s privacy rights in a four-day overdue rental car, the United States Attorney’s Office apparently did not contest the
Smith
driver’s privacy right in a three-week overdue rental ear.
See
We find additional indicia of reasonableness from a district court opinion,
United States v. Kelly,
Kelly moved to suppress the evidence seized from the glove compartment and all derivative evidence.
Kelly,
*1400 Cooper’s expectation of privacy was vastly more reasonable than Kelly’s. 12 First, Cooper’s rental contract expired four days prior to the search; Kelly’s rental contract expired more than one month prior to the search. Second, at the time of their initial contact with law enforcement officers, Copper was in actual possession of the rental car, while Kelly was merely in constructive possession. Third, Cooper paid Budget in full; Kelly had a large unpaid bill. Finally, neither rental company took any affirmative steps'to repossess the car prior to law enforcement officers’ inquiries.
Thus, we have
dicta
from a prior panel of this court, past inaction from the government, the FHP’s inquiry of Cooper and a district court opinion indicating the reasonableness of Cooper’s expectation of privacy. None of the cases upon which the government relies militate against such a finding. First, we find no support for the government’s view that Cooper’s rights were functionally equivalent to those of an unauthorized driver at the time of the search. The only “ear” case that the government advances is
United States v. Wellons,
The district court denied Wellons’s motion to suppress the drugs.
See
Unlike Wellons, Cooper was listed on the rental contract as an authorized driver. Cooper and Budget, in contrast to Wellons and Hertz, were in privity of contract (albeit in breach) at the time of the search. As such, Cooper’s expectation .of privacy was materially different from that of Wellons. 14
Recognizing the reasonableness of Cooper’s expectation of privacy also reconciles with the hotel/motel/loeker eases upon which the government relies to support its argument that one loses a legitimate expectation of privacy in rented property the moment the rental contract expires. In
United States v. Allen,
Budget, unlike the motel manager in
Allen,
had not repossessed the rented property pri- or to the challenged search. Further, the government’s argument that the law enforcement officers acted as Budget’s repossession agent lacks merit because, unlike the motel manager’s changing the lock on the door to Allen’s room, the FHP’s assertion of control over Cooper’s rental car was not “private action.”
Just as distinguishable as
Allen
are
United States v. Huffhines,
Like
Allen, Huffhines, Reyes
and
Ramirez
involved repossession prior to the presence of law enforcement. Unlike Budget, the lessors in
Huffhines, Reyes
and
Ramirez
took affirmative steps to regain control of the rented property. In
Huffhines
and
Reyes,
the lessors changed or obstructed the locks.
Huffhines,
If we were to accept the government’s position, a driver could not expect privacy in a rental car even one minute after the rental contract expired. In other words, the rental company’s dormant right of repossession would govern the scope of the driver’s Fourth Amendment protections. The Supreme Court, however, highly disfavors such hard-and-fast rules.
See Rakas,
Accordingly, and upon careful consideration of the circumstances of this case, we hold that society is prepared to accept as reasonable Cooper’s expectation of privacy in the overdue rental car and, therefore, he has standing to challenge law enforcement’s search of the glove compartment, the trunk and the items therein.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we (1) affirm the district court’s finding that the FHP validly stopped Cooper; (2) reverse the district court’s conclusion that Cooper lacked standing to challenge the warrantless search of the rental ear and the items therein; and (3) remand this ease to the district court with instructions to address the merits of Cooper’s motion to suppress and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 19
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED and REMANDED IN PART.
Notes
. All dates correspond with 1996 unless otherwise stated.
. ■ Irving Higgs accompanied Cooper as a passenger.
. Florida law prohibits an improper lane change:
No vehicle shall be driven from a direct course in any lane on any highway until the driver has determined that the vehicle is not being approached or passed by any oilier vehicle in the lane or on the side to which the driver desires to move and that the move can be completely made with safety and without interfering with the safe operation of any vehicle approaching from the same direction.
Fla. Stat. § 316.085(2) (1995).
. Consent is one of many factual issues that the district court did not resolve. Our recitation of the facts derives from the few findings of fact that the district court actually rendered and undisputed portions of the record.
. The indictment also charged Higgs, the passenger, with these same counts, but the district court granted the government’s motion to dismiss him from the case.
. The district court partially granted Cooper’s motion to suppress with respect to all statements that Cooper made after his invocation of the right to remain silent. This portion of the order, however, is not at issue.
.Because of Cooper’s two prior felony drug convictions, the federal "three-strikes” law mandated the life imprisonment sentence. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A).
.
Accord United States v. Hargrove,
. The
Kye Soo Lee
court also recognized the passenger’s privacy right.
. In
Smith,
the court held that law enforcement officers’ stop of the rental car based on the defendants fitting a drug courier profile was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
. The district court rejected as irrelevant ’ the rental company’s consent to search the car, in light of its conclusion that the defendant retained privacy rights in it.
See Kelly,
. Like our reference to Smith and Miller, our reference to Kelly does not mean that we endorse its holding.
.
But cf. United States v. Muhammad,
. The actions of the rental companies reflect the difference between these relationships. Hertz instructed the police to "impound” the car, whereas Budget wanted to merely "tow” it.
See Wellons,
. The district court cited Huffhines as the only support for its conclusion that "[a]fter the rental agreement expired and he failed to seek its extension, [Cooper] did not have a legitimate expectation of privacy in the rental car.”
. The
Ramirez
court also concluded that the hotel manager’s repossession and search did not constitute state action since he acted without direction from law enforcement.
See
.
Cf. Hughes v. State,
. See also Kelly,
. Because we leave it to the district court to address the constitutionality of the search, we do not vacate Cooper’s conviction and sentence.
Cf. Miller,
