Lead Opinion
The United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire refused to suppress a short-barreled shotgun which was seized from an automobile being operated by the defendant immediately prior to the seizure. After reserving the right to appeal the adverse suppression ruling, see Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2), and upon the entry of a conditional plea, the defendant was convicted of unlawful possession of an unregistered firearm under 26 U.S.C. §§ 5845(a) and 5861(d). We vacate the judgment of conviction and remand for further proceedings on the motion to suppress.
I FACTS
On July 6, 1988, Lieutenant Robert Graves of the Bow (New Hampshire) Police Department intercepted a police radio bulletin requesting assistance in the apprehension of defendant Michael Bouffard, last seen driving a 1979 Mercury Cougar. The defendant was described as “armed and dangerous” and in the company of an unidentified female.
Lt. Graves soon received a radio report that Sergeant Paul Stone had located the 1979 Mercury Cougar at the Bow public boat landing and that it was registered to David Bouffard. When Lt. Graves arrived at the boat landing a few minutes later, the defendant, dressed in a bathing suit, already had been arrested, handcuffed, and placed in the back seat of a police cruiser. Sergeant Stone told Lt. Graves that he had found no female subject.
After retrieving the car keys which the defendant had left in the Cougar, Graves opened the trunk lid for the stated purpose of attempting to locate the putative female companion. At first glance all he saw in the trunk were two large green garbage bags, filled with clothing, located in the well of the trunk, and a black coat spread across the back of the trunk. When Graves lifted one of the garbage bags, he immediately saw the shotgun resting on the floor of the trunk. The shotgun was not visible until the bag was moved.
II BACKGROUND
The defendant was unable to persuade the district court that the warrantless opening of the trunk to locate the putative female companion was pretextual. The district court concluded that the opening of the trunk was reasonable in the circumstances. Unlike the dissent, however, the district court did not undertake to consider whether the act of lifting the garbage bag constituted a “search,” reasonable or otherwise, see Arizona v. Hicks,
Ill DISCUSSION
More than a decade ago the Supreme Court laid to rest the persistent notion that fourth amendment “standing” and “reasonable expectation of privacy” are interchangeable concepts. See Rawlings v. Kentucky,
Prior to Rakas, petitioner might have been given ‘standing’ in such a case to challenge a ‘search’ that netted those drugs [owned by defendant, but in plain view] but probably would have lost his claim on the merits. After Rakas, the two inquiries merge into one: whether governmental officials violated any legitimate expectation of privacy held by petitioner.
Rawlings
Notwithstanding a certain reluctance in legal circles to relinquish familiar rubrics with convenient labels, “standing” no longer can connote a legitimate expectation of privacy in the evidence seized or the premises searched.
More to the present point, Rakas discarded the formula for “standing” previously approved in Jones v. United States,
The Supreme Court reformulated in substantive terms the appropriate fourth amendment inquiry.
[T]he question is whether the challenged search and seizure violated the Fourth Amendment rights of a criminal defendant who seeks to exclude the evidence obtained during it. That inquiry in turn requires a determination of whether the disputed search and seizure has infringed an interest of the defendant which the Fourth Amendment was designed to protect. We are under no illusion that by dispensing with the rubric of standing used in Jones we have rendered any simpler the determination of whether the proponent of a motion to suppress is entitled to contest the legality of a search and seizure. But by frankly recognizing that this aspect of the analysis belongs more properly under the heading of substantive Fourth Amendment doctrine than under the heading of standing, we think the decision of this issue will rest on sounder logical footing.
Rakas,
The present case poses similar problems. There is no assertion and no evidence that the defendant had a proprietary interest in the vehicle, see id. at 148,
As concerns the nature of any possessory right or interest the defendant retained in the vehicle at the time of the seizure of the shotgun, the present record would support findings that (1) the defendant retained possession of the vehicle beyond the bailment term, (2) the bailor re
In the unusual posture of the present ease, however, the more immediate consideration is whether remand is appropriate to enable further factfinding or the presentation of further evidence. Compare Combs v. United States,
The government’s crude concession resulted in the absence of any district court determination, and an insufficiently developed record, as to whether defendant possessed a “legitimate expectation of privacy:” (1) a subjective expectation of privacy in the area searched, Cruz Jimenez,
Without limitation upon the district court’s discretion to permit broader ranging proceedings, on remand the parties should be permitted to explore whether the defendant possessed a subjective expectation of privacy in the firearm, or in the trunk of the 1979 Mercury Cougar,
We vacate the judgment of conviction and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Evelyn Bouffard, the wife of defendant's brother, David, sought the assistance of the Hooksett Police Department in recovering the vehicle. She told a Hooksett police officer that she had let the defendant use the vehicle the previous afternoon, on the condition that defendant return the car by 5:00 p.m. so that she could drive it home from work. Evelyn knew that there were warrants outstanding for defendant’s arrest, and she understood from the defendant that he needed the car so that he could drive his girlfriend to her home before he turned himself in to the police. It was this understanding which prompted Evelyn to advise the police that the defendant might be accompanied by a female. The police officer did not seem much interested in Evelyn’s report until she mentioned Michael Bouffard by name. Evelyn did not give the police any indication that the defendant was armed. Indeed, she protested when she heard the police bulletin report that the defendant was "armed and dangerous;’’ she was told that the announcement was "precautionary.” The police bulletin reported the Cougar "stolen.” There is no evidence that Evelyn protested the latter characterization.
. Defense counsel represented in the motion to suppress that "counsel for the Government ... has indicated that the Government concedes that the defendant has standing to challenge the search which led to the discovery of the subject firearm. Counsel for the Government, however, does not concur in the present motion in all other respects.” At oral argument government counsel again conceded "standing.”
. The dissent considers it "most important ... that the litigants only appeal the issue of whether the police exceeded the scope of the permissible warrantless search of the automobile.” Post at 678-79 (emphasis in original). This observation overlooks the fact that the permissible scope of every warrantless search is defined, in the first instance, in our dissenting colleague’s well-turned phrase, by "the amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures [which] extends only to protect those places and interests in which the accused can be characterized as having a legitimate expectation of privacy". United States v. Cruz Jimenez,
. The Court in Rawlings refused to permit suppression of illegal drugs which the owner had placed in a friend’s purse, because the owner of the drugs had not demonstrated a legitimate expectation of privacy in the purse. Rawlings,
. As the present case well demonstrates, after Rakas the familiar nomenclature of "standing” retains no utility in fourth amendment jurisprudence, except for facilitating reference and promoting confusion.
. The defendants in Rakas were passengers in a getaway car being driven by its owner at the time it was stopped by the police. A search of the passenger compartment disclosed a sawed-off rifle and a box of shells. The government challenged defendants’ "standing,” but, like Bouffard, the Rakas defendants neither asserted nor evidenced any proprietary interest in the car or the gun.
Rakas reaffirmed the rule in Alderman v. United States,
. Our review is not constrained to the grounds relied on in the district court. We may uphold the denial of the suppression motion if supported by any reasonable view of the evidence. Soule,
. Cf. Simmons v. United States,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
Bouffard’s fate is decided on issues not raised on appeal by the parties, as well as by a side-stepping of concessions made by the government before both the district court and our court. I believe this to be inappropriate and unwarranted particularly because it leads to results that run contrary to Supreme Court precedent. Arizona v. Hicks,
Below, the government conceded defendant's standing to challenge the search. According to the majority, a problem is presented by the concession in that “the record consequently contains insufficient evidence that the defendant had a legitimate expectation of privacy.” Supra at 677. However, in my opinion, the government’s acknowledgment was made because Bouffard’s reasonable expectation of privacy was obvious. Firstly, regardless of whether the permission to use the car had expired,
But most important is the fact that the litigants only appeal the issue of whether the police exceeded the scope of the permissible warrantless search of the automobile. This issue is properly before us on appeal because, contrary to the majority’s charac
As stated by the appellee:
Whether the district court’s factual finding — that fear for the safety of the missing woman justified the warrant-less search of the trunk of the stolen car — is correct and not “clear error.”
As stated by the appellant:
I. Whether the warrantless search of the trunk of an automobile which had been driven by the defendant was legally justifiable by a combination of exigent circumstances and the “community caretaking function” of the police?
II. Assuming arguendo that the warrantless search of the trunk of an automobile which had been driven by the defendant was legally justifiable by a combination of exigent circumstances and the “community caretaking function” of the police, whether the search as conducted exceeded the scope of a search so justified on the particular facts of this case?
The majority, however, motu propio expands the theater of operations. This is not a proper role for our court to assume.
If this appeal is limited to the issues actually litigated before the district court, and those briefed and argued by the parties on appeal, the following is apparent: The police officer was correct in opening the trunk pursuant to Bouffard’s arrest because the radio dispatch gave him reason to believe that a female might be in peril. Mincey v. Arizona,
The record of the police officer’s examination establishes without doubt that his search of the automobile’s trunk transgressed constitutional limits. When asked if he expected to find a female under the bag, Graves responded that “it could have been a female child.” But he admitted on further inquiry that he had no information that the reported female was a child. He also admitted that he was not looking for a 21 inch human being, which is the approximate area covered by the bag that he moved. These facts clearly indicate that Graves engaged in prohibited “exploratory rummaging.” The moving of the bag was a search separate and apart from the lawful objective of looking for the missing female and it required support by independent probable cause. Arizona v. Hicks,
There was no support for the actions of the police officer once the trunk was opened and he failed to see any evidence of criminal activity in plain view or any place in the trunk where the object of the search could reasonably have been hidden. Bouffard’s motion to suppress the shotgun should have been granted because his Fourth Amendment rights were violated by Graves’ exploratory rummaging of the
I dissent.
. It should be noted that the owner of the car neither reported her car to the police as stolen nor at any time filed charges to such effect.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I accept, albeit reluctantly, Judge Cyr’s opinion and consequences. If the opinion had ended with footnote 7, and a resulting affirmance, I would have agreed more wholeheartedly. However, my brother Cyr does have a point that the government’s repeated stipulation of the defendant’s “standing” muddied the waters. From this he concludes that, in all fairness, though defendant failed, he should now have a chance to prove a case. Given the record facts, the sister-in-law’s call to the police and the registration, I have great difficulty in seeing how defendant can prove a right of privacy, or, perhaps more to the point, within the recent case of Illinois v. Rodriguez, — U.S. -,
