People v. Brown ( 2018 )


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    5
    6                                                           ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    7                                                                        April 16, 2018
    8
    9                                           
    2018 CO 27
    0
    1   No. 16SC922, People v. Brown—Inventory Search—Impoundment.
    2
    3          The People petitioned for review of the court of appeals’ judgment reversing
    4   Brown’s drug-related conviction on the ground that his motion to suppress should have
    5   been granted. See People v. Brown, 
    2016 COA 150
    , __ P.3d __. The district court found
    6   that the contraband in question was discovered during an inventory search of the
    7   defendant’s vehicle, the conduct of which was within the officers’ discretion according
    8   to the policies and procedures of the Aurora Police Department, even though they had
    9   already decided to issue a summons rather than arrest the defendant for driving with a
    0   suspended license. By contrast, the court of appeals found that in the absence of an
    1   arrest, seizing the defendant’s vehicle so as to provoke an inventory of its contents
    2   could not be justified as an exercise of the police caretaking function, and in the absence
    3   of any other recognized exception to the probable cause and warrant requirements of
    4   the Fourth Amendment, violated its prohibition against unreasonable searches and
    5   seizures.
    6          The supreme court affirms the judgment of the court of appeals because the
    7   record fails to demonstrate that seizure of the defendant’s vehicle was justified as an
    1   exercise of the police caretaking function or was otherwise reasonable within the
    2   meaning of the Fourth Amendment, regardless of local ordinances or police policies
    3   and procedures broad enough to grant the officers discretion to impound the vehicle of
    4   a driver merely summoned rather than arrested for driving with a suspended license.
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    2
    3
    4                       The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    5                         2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    6                                         
    2018 CO 27
    7                            Supreme Court Case No. 16SC922
    8                          Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
    9                            Court of Appeals Case No. 14CA959
    0                                         Petitioner:
    1                            The People of the State of Colorado,
    2                                              v.
    3                                        Respondent:
    4                                       Carl A. Brown.
    5                                    Judgment Affirmed
    6                                          en banc
    7                                        April 16, 2018
    8
    9   Attorneys for Petitioner:
    0   Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General
    1   Carmen Moraleda, Assistant Attorney General
    2    Denver, Colorado
    3
    4   Attorneys for Respondent:
    5   Douglas K. Wilson, Public Defender
    6   Rachel K. Mercer, Deputy Public Defender
    7    Denver, Colorado
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    9
    0
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    6   JUSTICE COATS delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1     The People petitioned for review of the court of appeals’ judgment reversing
    Brown’s drug-related conviction on the ground that his motion to suppress should have
    been granted. See People v. Brown, 
    2016 COA 150
    , __ P.3d __. The district court found
    that the contraband in question was discovered during an inventory search of the
    defendant’s vehicle, the conduct of which was within the officers’ discretion according
    to the policies and procedures of the Aurora Police Department, even though they had
    already decided to issue a summons rather than arrest the defendant for driving with a
    suspended license. By contrast, the court of appeals found that in the absence of an
    arrest, seizing the defendant’s vehicle so as to provoke an inventory of its contents
    could not be justified as an exercise of the police caretaking function, and in the absence
    of any other recognized exception to the probable cause and warrant requirements of
    the Fourth Amendment, violated its prohibition against unreasonable searches and
    seizures.
    ¶2     Because the record fails to demonstrate that seizure of the defendant’s vehicle
    was justified as an exercise of the police caretaking function or was otherwise
    reasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, regardless of local
    ordinances or police policies and procedures broad enough to grant the officers
    discretion to impound the vehicle of a driver merely summoned rather than arrested for
    driving with a suspended license, the judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.
    I.
    ¶3     Carl A. Brown was charged with and convicted of possession with intent to
    distribute a schedule II controlled substance, stemming from the discovery of crack
    2
    cocaine during an inventory search of his vehicle. He was sentenced to ten years in the
    custody of the Colorado Department of Corrections.
    ¶4    Prior to trial, he moved to suppress the contraband on the ground that the
    impoundment and inventory search of his vehicle violated the dictates of the Fourth
    Amendment. Following a hearing of the motion, at which the factual allegations of the
    stop, search, and arrest were largely undisputed, the district court entered its findings
    of fact and conclusions of law. As pertinent to the issue before this court, the district
    court’s findings and the uncontested testimony indicated the following.
    ¶5    Upon receiving an anonymous report of a suspicious person driving a gray
    BMW in the area, two Aurora police officers observed the defendant’s gray BMW fail to
    stop at a stop sign, pulled him over, and discovered that he was driving on a suspended
    license. Although the officers decided to issue a summons and release him, pursuant to
    routine police procedure authorized by an Aurora ordinance, the officers nevertheless
    decided to impound his vehicle and, while waiting for the towing company,
    inventoried its contents, discovered a number of bags of crack cocaine, and thereafter
    arrested him. With regard to the search of the defendant’s vehicle, the court concluded
    that under these circumstances, Aurora police policies and procedures granted the
    officers the discretion to conduct an inventory search, and for that reason, the search
    was not pretextual, even if the officers hoped to find evidence of a crime.
    ¶6    After rejecting the prosecution’s assertion of waiver, the court of appeals found
    that whether the department’s inventory procedure had been followed or not, the
    officers lacked justification for taking the vehicle into government custody in the first
    3
    place. Reasoning that nothing in the record indicated the defendant could not lawfully
    provide for the vehicle himself, and thereby prevent it from becoming a public hazard
    or subjecting the police to liability for the loss of it or its contents, the intermediate
    appellate court concluded that the public function exception to the probable cause and
    warrant requirements of the Fourth Amendment had not been met and that compliance
    with department policies alone did not constitute such an exception. In the absence of
    proof that the seizure of the vehicle fell within an exception to the Fourth Amendment
    warrant requirement, the court found that the exclusionary rule required suppression of
    the discovered items.
    ¶7    The People petitioned for a writ of certiorari.
    II.
    ¶8    It is now well-settled that the seizure of vehicles by the police for caretaking
    purposes, as well as an inventory of the contents of vehicles lawfully in government
    custody, can amount to reasonable searches and seizures within the meaning of the
    Fourth Amendment without regard for either probable cause or a warrant.               See
    Colorado v. Bertine, 
    479 U.S. 367
    , 371 (1987); South Dakota v. Opperman, 
    428 U.S. 364
    ,
    373–74 (1976); People v. Vaughn, 
    2014 CO 71
    , ¶ 14, 
    334 P.3d 226
    , 230. As the Supreme
    Court has observed, the “probable-cause approach is unhelpful when analysis centers
    upon the reasonableness of routine administrative caretaking functions,” as
    distinguished from criminal investigations.        
    Bertine, 479 U.S. at 371
    (quoting
    
    Opperman, 428 U.S. at 370
    n.5). Rather, it is the purpose of protecting against danger or
    loss, or even false claims of loss, and the routine or standardized nature of the
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    procedures by which they are carried out, that account for the reasonableness of
    seizures and subsequent inventory searches conducted in furtherance of so-called
    “community caretaking functions.” 
    Id. at 371,
    381.
    ¶9     Unlike the rationales for and limits of inventory searches of private property
    lawfully in government custody, the circumstances under which vehicles may become
    subject to impoundment by the government, implicating subsequent inventory of their
    contents, without suspicion that they themselves are connected to a crime, has received
    relatively little attention by the Supreme Court. As early as Cady v. Dombrowski, 
    413 U.S. 433
    (1973), the Court noted that local police frequently engage in “community
    caretaking functions, totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition of
    evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute.”       
    Id. at 441.
      However, in
    addressing a search of the trunk of the car towed from the scene of the accident to a
    private garage in that case, the Court simply noted, with regard to the seizure of the car
    itself, that it “had been placed where it was by virtue of lawful police action.” 
    Id. at 448.
    Similarly, in Opperman, in upholding the inventory search of a vehicle impounded for
    being illegally parked, the Court again simply noted that vehicles are frequently taken
    into police custody in the interests of public safety and community caretaking functions,
    and conclusorily found that “[t]he authority of police to seize and remove from the
    streets vehicles impeding traffic or threatening public safety and convenience is beyond
    challenge.” 
    Opperman, 413 U.S. at 369
    .
    ¶10    In Colorado v. Bertine, for the first and only time, the Court addressed a
    challenge to the inventory search of a defendant’s vehicle on the basis of departmental
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    regulations giving the seizing officers discretion to impound the vehicle in the first
    place. See 
    Bertine, 479 U.S. at 375
    . In holding that nothing in its applicable case law
    prohibited the exercise of police discretion, as long as that discretion was exercised
    according to standard criteria and on the basis of something other than suspicion of
    criminal activity, and in finding that the seizure of the defendant’s vehicle without
    probable cause in Bertine was not unconstitutional, for the reason that police discretion
    was exercised in that case in light of standardized criteria related to the feasibility and
    appropriateness of parking and locking the vehicle rather than impounding it, the
    Court implied, or simply accepted as inherent in the notion of caretaking functions, that
    a determination of the constitutionally required reasonableness of seizing a vehicle, just
    as the reasonableness of inventorying the contents of the vehicle once lawfully seized, is
    dependent upon standardized criteria limiting police discretion. See 
    id. at 375–76.
    In
    doing so, the Court clarified a limitation on, or necessary condition of, the community
    caretaking exception to the warrant requirement; however, it just as clearly did not
    create a new exception for every seizure authorized by legislative or departmental
    standardized criteria, as a result of that authorization alone.
    ¶11    In rejecting Bertine’s challenge to the policy granting police officers the discretion
    to choose whether to impound, the Court did not uphold the seizure simply because in
    exercising discretion, the officers complied with department policy, but rather for the
    reason that the policy reasonably circumscribed the discretion of the individual officers
    by imposing sufficient limitations on their discretion to use the alternate procedure of
    parking and locking. 
    Id. at 375–76,
    376 n.7. Moreover, with regard to the scope of the
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    inventory search itself, three justices, at least one of whom was required for the Court’s
    majority, joined a concurring opinion underscoring the importance of standardized
    procedures stripping the inventorying officers of any discretion whatsoever. 
    Id. at 376–
    77 (Blackmun, J., concurring).      While the Court has given meaning to the term
    “community caretaking functions” largely by referencing examples of non-
    investigatory, routine    administrative activities, rather than by attempting a
    comprehensive definition, see, e.g., 
    Opperman, 428 U.S. at 368
    –69 (stating that police
    may remove vehicles jeopardizing public safety and impeding the efficient movement
    of traffic), it has nevertheless never implied in any way that searches and seizures
    conducted according to standardized criteria prescribed by departmental policies are
    reasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment for that reason alone.
    ¶12    In a passage heavily relied on by the People, and paraphrased by both this court
    and the court of appeals on several occasions, we attributed to Bertine the proposition
    that in the absence of evidence showing that the police acted in bad faith or for the sole
    purpose of investigation, inventory searches conducted according to police department
    policies and procedures are generally considered reasonable. See Pineda v. People, 
    230 P.3d 1181
    , 1185 (Colo. 2010); see also Vaughn, ¶ 
    14, 334 P.3d at 230
    . In addition to the
    fact that this proposition is clearly a loose paraphrase of Bertine, and that Bertine itself
    appears to admit of a distinction between standardized policies for the inventory of
    vehicles already lawfully in police custody and standardized policies for the initial
    seizure of vehicles, see 
    Bertine, 479 U.S. at 372
    , 375, we prominently qualified our
    articulation of the proposition in question with the adverb “generally,” and we have
    7
    never relied on it to justify the lawfulness of a department policy permitting the seizure
    of private property, as distinguished from the lawfulness of a procedure dictating the
    scope and manner of inventorying lawfully seized property, cf. Vaughn, ¶ 
    16, 334 P.3d at 230
    (rejecting a challenge to the inventory of glove boxes and containers); 
    Pineda, 230 P.3d at 1185
    (rejecting assertion of bad faith). In context, it was clearly never intended
    to suggest that in the absence of bad faith, every search conducted in compliance with
    an inventory policy, much less every seizure effected in compliance with an impound
    policy, must be considered “reasonable” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
    Cf. United States v. Taylor, 
    636 F.3d 461
    , 466 (8th Cir. 2011) (“Moreover, we have
    rejected the argument that an impoundment is constitutional solely because [police]
    policy allows towing . . . .”).   Rather, the ultimate issue remains whether the
    impoundment and subsequent inventory serve an administrative community
    caretaking function.
    ¶13   Because arresting a person stopped while driving a motor vehicle necessarily
    deprives him of the immediate custody and control of that vehicle, the question has not
    infrequently arisen under what circumstances the vehicle may be impounded and
    subjected to an inventory of its contents. See, e.g., United States v. Sanders, 
    796 F.3d 1241
    , 1247–48 (10th Cir. 2015) (collecting and categorizing cases of arrested drivers from
    the federal circuits); cf. Vaughn, ¶¶ 15–
    16, 334 P.3d at 230
    (upholding seizure and
    inventory search of vehicle pursuant to department policy following arrest of driver
    whose license had not only been suspended but who was not even the registered owner
    of the vehicle). The circumstances considered relevant in these cases have generally
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    included such things as the time and location of the arrest, see, e.g., United States v.
    Torres, 
    828 F.3d 1113
    , 1120 (9th Cir. 2016) (involving impoundment from an apartment
    complex not the defendant’s); Gombert v. Lynch, 
    541 F. Supp. 2d 492
    , 498–99 (D. Conn.
    2008) (involving impoundment where driver was to be arrested for such a period of
    time that vehicle might become a nuisance), proof of ownership of the vehicle, see, e.g.,
    Vaughn, ¶ 
    3, 334 P.3d at 228
    (involving impoundment where defendant was not the
    registered owner of the vehicle), and the availability of someone else to take custody
    with the authorization of the arrestee, see, e.g., United States v. Velarde, 
    903 F.2d 1163
    ,
    1166–67 (7th Cir. 1990) (involving impoundment where none of the passengers had
    valid licenses and the owner was not available). Where the driver is, however, not
    arrested but merely cited for a driving violation, even for driving under suspension or
    otherwise without a valid license, which would bar the driver from lawfully driving the
    vehicle away himself, he will not have been deprived of the custody and control of his
    vehicle by any government action.
    ¶14   With regard to a driver who remains in possession and control of his vehicle, it is
    even more clear than the case of an arrested driver that justifying impoundment as an
    exercise of a community caretaking function, so as to fall within that exception to the
    probable cause and warrant requirements of the Fourth Amendment, will be dependent
    upon the particular circumstances of the seizure in addition to the standardized policy
    or procedure. In light of the driver’s retained freedom of action, short of reason to
    believe that he will be unable to make arrangements sufficient to prevent the vehicle
    from “impeding traffic or threatening public safety and convenience,” Opperman, 
    428 9 U.S. at 369
    , or that police action has rendered him unable to protect the vehicle or its
    contents, even routine policies or procedures providing for impoundment may be
    insufficient to demonstrate the reasonableness of a seizure in the absence of probable
    cause of a crime, see United States v. Cervantes, 
    703 F.3d 1135
    , 1142 (9th Cir. 2012)
    (“The fact that an impoundment complies with a state statute or police policy, by itself,
    is insufficient to justify an impoundment under the community caretaking exception.”);
    3 Wayne LaFave, Search & Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 7.3(c) (5th
    ed. 2017) (“[I]f the driver is only ticketed but cannot himself operate the car because of
    an expired license, impoundment of the vehicle is improper unless the driver is unable
    to provide for its custody or removal.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶15   The authority of police to act in furtherance of a community caretaking function
    does not originate from the same source as their authority to investigate criminal
    activity. Community caretaking is not concerned with potential criminal activity, but
    rather with administration of the risk to public safety threatened by the vehicle. See
    Miranda v. City of Cornelius, 
    429 F.3d 858
    , 863 (9th Cir. 2005). Although the officers
    may have reason to suspect that the driver will unlawfully drive the vehicle upon their
    departure, the community caretaking exception to the probable cause and warrant
    requirements of the Fourth Amendment definitionally cannot support seizures on the
    basis of suspicion that the driver has committed, is committing, or will commit a crime.
    See 
    Opperman, 428 U.S. at 370
    n.5; see also 
    Miranda, 429 F.3d at 866
    (“[T]he deterrence
    rationale is incompatible with the principles of the community caretaking doctrine.”);
    United States v. Nickleberry, 
    164 F. Supp. 3d 1322
    , 1329 (D. Utah 2016) (“[L]aw
    10
    enforcement’s claim that they were entitled to seize and search [the driver’s] car
    without a warrant in order to prevent any possible future instances of driving without
    insurance smacks of pretext and is insufficient to overcome the warrant requirement of
    the Fourth Amendment.”); People v. Torres, 
    188 Cal. App. 4th 775
    , 792 (2010) (holding
    that there must be a reason to impound a car other than temporarily depriving the
    driver of its use); State v. Gonzales, 
    236 P.3d 834
    , 840 (Or. Ct. App. 2010) (“[W]e reject
    the state’s suggestion that leaving the car accessible to defendant would have created a
    threat to public safety.”).
    III.
    ¶16    At the suppression hearing, the prosecution offered no evidence to suggest that
    any of the factors or purposes for which a community caretaking exception has been
    recognized supported the impoundment of the defendant’s vehicle. There was no
    suggestion that the car was impeding traffic or threatening public safety and
    convenience where it was stopped, much less that it was inoperable or otherwise unable
    to be safely and legally removed by a licensed party, even if that had been the case.
    Quite the contrary, the prosecution relied entirely on the fact that the vehicle was
    impounded pursuant to departmental procedure, based on an Aurora ordinance
    granting police officers the discretion to impound a vehicle being driven by someone
    whose driver’s license had been suspended. To the extent the testimony of the officer
    who ordered the impoundment reflected any reason other than policy, it suggested only
    that the defendant was not offered an option to have the car left at the scene or towed
    because he had already demonstrated that he would drive on a suspended license.
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    ¶17   Similarly, before this court, the People rely expressly on the assertion that seizing
    a vehicle in compliance with policies or procedures permitting as much is sufficient to
    bring it within an exception to the probable cause and warrant requirements of the
    Fourth Amendment. Alternatively they assert that impoundment of the vehicle of
    someone driving on a suspended license necessarily falls within the purposes of police
    caretaking functions by preventing a presumptively unsafe driver from endangering
    the public. Because we have rejected both of these rationales and the People assert no
    other exception to the Fourth Amendment probable cause requirement, we must
    conclude that the impoundment of the defendant’s vehicle in this case and, therefore, its
    subsequent    inventory   violated    the   Fourth   Amendment       prohibition   against
    unreasonable searches and seizures.
    IV.
    ¶18   Because the record fails to demonstrate that seizure of the defendant’s vehicle
    was justified as an exercise of the police caretaking function or was otherwise
    reasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, regardless of local
    ordinances or police policies and procedures broad enough to grant the officers
    discretion to impound the vehicle of a driver merely summoned rather than arrested for
    driving with a suspended license, the judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.
    12