Javier Gomez challenges his conviction of conspiracy, possession of marihuana with intent to distribute, and maintaining a place for the purposes of possession and distribution of marihuana. We vacate and remand.
I.
Customs agents received a tip that a rental truck was parked outside Gomez’s residence in El Paso, Texas. The agents previously had received information suggesting the house was being used as a narcotics “stash house.”
When the agents arrived at Gomez’s house, he refused them permission to search inside but consented to a search of the garage. When asked about the truck parkеd in his driveway, Gomez stated that it belonged to his cousin and that a person named “Ben” had the keys.
Sergeant Tom Holloway entered the backyard when he saw Angel Valenzuela, Gomez’s cousin, who informed Holloway that another nearby man, Benjamin Lowe, had the keys to the truck. Holloway advised Lowe that he was a police officer conducting an investigation and requested permission to search the truck. Lowe consented and gave Holloway the keys. The resulting search revealed that the back of the truck contained seven cardboard boxes — over 170 pounds — of marihuana. The agents also found marihuana and other potentially incriminating evidence inside Gomez’s house.
After the discovery of the marihuana, the officers arrested Gomez, Valenzuela, and Lowe. They advised Gomez of his Miranda rights and begаn to question him. After telling two contradictory stories, Gomez eventually admitted that Valenzuela and Lowe had paid him $200 for permission to use his house to “store the dope” for eventual sale. The truck was determined to be a rental vehicle; the rental agreement was signed by Lowe and does not list Gomez as an authorized driver.
II.
The district court suppressed all evidence obtained in the search of the house but admitted the evidence found in the truck, holding that Gomez lacked standing to challenge its admissibility. Gomez’s conviction was based in large part on this evidence. On appeal, Gomez contends that the use of the evidence from the truck violated his Fourth Amendment rights. He also avers that the use of co-defendant testimony against him at trial violated his Sixth Amendment rights under the Confrontation Clause.
III.
To establish standing to “contеst the validity of a search under the Fourth
This case presents an issue of first impression: whether a homeowner has a reasonable exрectation of privacy in a vehicle owned and operated by a third party but parked on the homeowner’s driveway. 1 We conclude that Gomez had that expectation, but only because the evidence seized not only was in a truck parked on his property, but also was known to him because it was the subject of the unlawful enterprise in which he took part. We do not speculate on whethеr there would be standing in any other situation in which these factors were not present.
Whether there is standing to contest the validity of a search “depends on (1) whether the defendant is able to establish an aсtual, subjective expectation of privacy with respect to the place being searched or items being seized, and (2) whether that expectation of privacy is one which society would recognize as reasonable.”
United States v. Kye Soo Lee,
A.
There is no real doubt that Gomez had a “subjective expectation of privacy with respеct” to the truck parked in his driveway. Id. at 1037. Otherwise, he hardly would have been likely to allow Lowe and Valenzuela to stash the marihuana there while the truck was in his driveway. In any event, the government does not claim thаt Gomez fails this prong of the test.
B.
The difficult question is whether Gomez’s expectation of privacy in the truck “is one which society would recognize as reasonable.”
Id.
at 1037-38. “Fourth amendment rights are individually held and cannot be asserted solely by reference to a particular place.”
United States v. Vega,
The Haydel factors tilt in Gomez’s favor. He had a strong possessory interest in “the plаce searched,” id., which was the real property on which his house was located. He plainly had the right to exclude others from the premises, which he owned, and thereby to exclude others — excеpt possibly the renters of the truck — from the truck by excluding them from the real property. Although apparently it was not Gomez who locked the truck, he had a subjective expectation of privacy in its contents; he obviously knew of the 170 pounds of marihuana stored there and was concerned that it not be discovered. The “normal precautions to maintain his privacy,” id., included having the truck parked on his property to protect that privacy. Finally, it is undeniable that Gomez was “legitimately on the premises,” id., of his own house.
Because of Gomez’s possessory interest in the land, and particularly because he and his assоciates had an overriding interest in privacy regarding the marihuana in the truck, we conclude, under the specific facts of this case, that he did indeed have a reasonable expectation оf privacy sufficient to create standing for a Fourth Amendment challenge to the search of the truck. 3
IV.
Gomez alsp challenges his conviction on the ground that the district court allowed co-defendant testimony to be used against him in violation of the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause, as ex
The judgment of conviction is VACATED, and this matter is REMANDED for further proceedings. 5
Notes
. The only two federal courts to have addressed the issue have concluded that a homeowner does have such an expectation.
See United States ex rel. Boyance v. Myers,
.
See, e.g., Rakas v. Illinois,
. Other circuits have gone further and have recognized standing by homeowners to challenge searches of containers found on their premises but owned by third рarties.
See United States v. Cassity,
We need not opine on the validity of these conclusions, for Gomez told the police that he had given Valenzuela and Lowe permission to store marihuana at his house; he therefore definitely knew of the contents of the truck. We need not, and do not, express a view on the expectation of privacy in the other cited cases, in which the defendants did not know the contents of the searched containers.
This case also is readily distinguishable from Garcia-Rosa. There, the court based its decision on the fact that the defendant had "failed to assert" any expectation of privacy in the content of the box at his suppression hearing. Id. at 219. By contrast, Gomez asked the district court to suppress "[a]ll tangible evidence seized ... in connection with the search of the residence ... or in connection with the investigation of this case.” Sеcond, the Garcia-Rosa defendant may not have known of the contents of the box and in fact went "out of his way to” minimize his connection to it. Id.
.
See United States v. Briscoe,
. We do not consider Gomez’s argument that the search of the truck was "fruit of the poisonous tree” of the illegal search of his house and backyard. This issue was not raised in the district court, and the outcome may depend on faсts not fully developed in the suppression hearing. Nor do we consider the question whether there was consent to search. The government and Gomez are free to raise these and other issues on remand, as appropriate.
