Lead Opinion
The panel of judges that rendered the decision in this case having voted to deny the petition for rehearing and the suggestion for the holding of a rehearing en banc having been carefully considered by the judges of this Court in regular active service and a majority of said judges not having voted to order that the appeal be heard or reheard by the Court en banc, the Court being equally divided,
It is ordered that the petition for rehearing en banc be denied.
Dissenting Opinion
with whom TORRUELLA, Chief Judge, joins, and with whom LIPEZ, Circuit Judge, joins as to Parts II and III, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the denial of defendant Woodrum’s petition for rehearing en banc for two reasons: the case has great constitutional and societal significance, and so meets the requirements of Rule 35(a), Fed. R.App. P., and there is reason to doubt that the opinion is correctly decided.
I.
This case is an important one, not just for the development of Fourth Amendment law, but also for the quality of life in urban areas and the protection of individual rights. These factors alone argue for rehearing en banc. The panel decision permits police, without any particular justification, to stop and look over taxicabs occupied with passengers. This is a seizure under the Constitution, as the government concedes. See Townes v. City of New York,
According to the panel, a voluntary, police-sponsored program (called the Taxi Inspection Program for Safety or TIPS) justifies this new rule. By its participation in TIPS, the cab company consents to the police stopping the cab, the company’s consent can be attributed to the cab driver, and from there, consent can be imputed to the passenger because of his decision to enter the cab. See United States v. Woodrum,
There are important interests on both sides of this case. Begun in 1991 as “Operation Taxi,” and modified in 1996 to become TIPS,
But there are also interests on the other side, particularly Fourth Amendment interests. The very purpose of many constitutional guarantees, particularly those contained in the Fourth Amendment, is to fetter the exercise of discretion by the police. Indeed, it may be unhealthy for the police themselves to have such unfettered discretion, as such discretion could easily lead to dishonest and sloppy police work., Further, unfettered police discretion has at times led to racial bias in law enforcement, whether intended or not. Commentators and cases have noted that being “stopped for being black” is a frequent occurrence. See, e.g., Randall Kennedy, Race, Crime, and the Law 138-63 (1997). A decade ago, the Massachusetts Attorney General issued a report assailing the Boston Police Department for the practice of subjecting black citizens to unconstitutional searches and seizures. See Report of the Attorney General’s Civil Rights Division on Boston Police Department Practices (Dec. 18, 1990), cited in David Cole, No Equal Justice 25-26 & 57 n. 30 (1999). And in 1992, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts held unconstitutional, under the Fourth Amendment, another policy of the Boston Police, under which the police stopped and searched known or suspected gang members and their associates on sight.
The police already have considerable discretion to stop persons. A police officer can stop a person based simply on reasonable suspicion, see Terry v. Ohio,
II.
The case should be reheard by the en banc court because a novel constitutional issue is involved. It is far from clear that the panel’s decision (even as amended) is correct. The case turns on the following
This question and the panel’s answer raise a number of concerns. To begin with, the opinion applies third-party consent principles derived from the search context to the seizure context. This is novel. Woodrum made no individual decision to submit to police authority. Rather, that decision was made for him by the taxicab owner, and imputedly, the driver.
The panel opinion correctly points out that “when the prosecution seeks to justify a warrantless search by proof of voluntary consent, it ... may show that permission to search was obtained from a third party who possessed common authority over or other sufficient relationship to the premises or effects sought to be inspected.” United States v. Matlock,
But there is no authority cited for the application of third-party consent rules to the seizure context. Indeed, the only authority cited by the panel for the proposition that “[sjeizures by consent generally are considered reasonable” is Florida v. Jimeno,
Critical to- the panel’s decision is the analogy it draws between the shared control over the taxicab and the shared control over a living space. The analogy is weak. In the latter instance, one co-habi-tant’s consent is imputed to other co-habi-tants because persons living together reasonably understand that their housemates may invite outsiders (including the police) to enter the premises and look around “common areas.”
Although the passenger, in entering a taxicab, certainly relinquishes some control over the technical driving decisions of the taxicab driver, the relationship is not like the sharing expected between housemates. When a passenger hires a taxicab, the expectation is that the passenger assumes control over all the important decisions, including the vehicle’s travel route (should the passenger choose to specify) and its ultimate destiny. It is doubtful that a passenger, through nothing more than this relationship with the taxicab driver, consents to the unfettered discretion of the police to stop the taxicab in order to make sure that he himself is not a dangerous criminal.
Further, the relevant seizure, here, is not of the taxicab, and so the cab driver and passenger’s overlapping authority over the vehicle is beside the point. For the purposes of third-party consent in this seizure, the relevant object over which the cab driver and passenger would need to have common authority is the taxicab pas
The opinion also discounts the privacy interests of someone who hails a cab. There is in fact a reasonable expectation of privacy by the passenger in a cab. Sometimes people take cabs precisely because cabs give a greater degree of privacy than public mass transit or even than walking along a sidewalk. If a cab driver were to stop the cab against the will of the passenger, the fare would normally end; the passenger’s expectation is that the cab will not normally stop until it reaches the destination dictated by the passenger; and the passenger expects he will enjoy the privacy of the passenger compartment.
The cab passenger is not like someone who visits a prison and so “consents” to certain special prison procedures that are driven by security needs. Cf. United States v. Sihler,
Further, the purported “consent” here is of an odd sort — it is not a consent to specific police action in a specific factual setting, as is usually the situation in consent to search cases. In those situations, the voluntariness of the consent is determined from the circumstances. See Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
In some respects, this case is more akin to random stops of motorists on public highways by the police that are not supported by probable cause or reasonable suspicion. In Delaware v. Prouse,
“[T]he Fourth Amendment requires that a seizure must be based on specific, objective facts indicating that society’s legitimate interests require the seizure of the particular individual, or that the seizure must be carried out pursuant to a plan embodying explicit, neutral limitations on the conduct of individual officers.” Brown v. Texas,
III.
This is a difficult case and the panel opinion is a lucid articulation of an alternative analysis. But, for the reasons stated, I respectfully dissent from the denial of the petition for rehearing en banc.
Notes
. The program was revised after a number of Massachusetts trial courts granted motions to suppress items seized in searches that resulted from "Operation Taxi” stops. See Commonwealth v. Carle, Nos. 94-11050, 94-11049,
. New York City implemented a similar program, now called TRIP (Taxi and Livery Robbery Inspection Program), in 1993. Recently, the New York Court of Appeals found seizures conducted under the program constitutionally invalid, thereby tainting evidence acquired as a result. ' See In re Muhammad F.,
. As Judge Newman has said,
[t]he risk inherent in such a practice is that some police officers will use the pretext of traffic violations or other minor infractions to harass members of groups identified by factors that are totally impermissible as a basis for law enforcement activity — factors such as race or ethnic origin, or simply appearances that some police officers do not like, such as young men with long hair, heavy jewelry, and flashy clothing.
United States v. Scopo,
. Even if the cab company could consent to stops and seizures of its cabs when the cab had only the driver in it, it does not follow that the driver has any authority to consent to the seizure-of the passenger. It would be a fiction to characterize the consent given by the driver and the passenger as "direct.”
. It is a weak argument that a passenger who hails a cab, perhaps the only cab in sight and perhaps after dark, has voluntarily consented to being seized because there is a small decal on the cab indicating its participation in the TIPS program. In this case, Woodrum apparently hailed the cab in the dark between midnight and 1 a.m. on a January night in Boston. In Massachusetts, a cab is a public accommodation and a common carrier, and citizens have every reason to think that their constitutional rights will be protected, not waived, when they take a cab. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272, § 92A (public accommodation); Hathaway v. Checker Taxi Co.,
. A Massachusetts Superior Court judge held that almost identical instructions, in a predecessor program to TIPS, did not act to limit "the arbitrary and unbridled discretion of the police officers.” Commonwealth v. Cosme, No. 9410014,
