State v. Vivian ( 2022 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 49271
    STATE OF IDAHO,                                      )
    )
    Plaintiff-Respondent,                           )
    )        June 2022 Term
    v.                                                   )
    )        Opinion filed: October 4, 2022
    ARTHUR ELLIS VIVIAN,                                 )
    )        Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk
    Defendant-Appellant.                            )
    )
    Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of
    Idaho, Ada County. Cheri C. Copsey, District Judge.
    The district court’s decision is reversed, vacated and remanded for further
    proceedings.
    Eric D. Fredericksen, State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for Appellant.
    Kimberly A. Coster argued.
    Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for Respondent. John McKinney
    argued.
    ZAHN, Justice.
    Arthur Ellis Vivian appeals from the district court’s order denying his motion to suppress
    evidence obtained following an unlawfully extended traffic stop. For the reasons stated below,
    we reverse the district court’s decision denying the motion to suppress, vacate Vivian’s judgment
    of conviction, and remand for further proceedings.
    I.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On April 24, 2019, Deputy Brott stopped Vivian’s car because Vivian’s brake lights were
    not working. Brott recorded the stop using a body camera (“body cam”). Vivian informed Brott
    that his license had been suspended and Brott began investigating the reason for Vivian’s
    suspended license. After five minutes and forty seconds of interaction with Vivian, Brott
    returned to his vehicle to run Vivian’s license. After returning to his patrol car, Brott talked to
    Officer Short, who had recently arrived at the scene. Short advised Brott that he was familiar
    1
    with Vivian and there was a possibility there could be narcotics in Vivian’s vehicle. Brott called
    for a drug detecting K-9 unit nine minutes into the stop. After confirming Vivian’s license was
    suspended, Brott completed a citation for driving without privileges. Brott discussed with Short
    what to do with Vivian’s vehicle since Vivian could not drive it home.
    Brott exited his patrol car with the completed citation and Vivian’s license at sixteen
    minutes and forty-six seconds into the stop. Brott did not immediately return to Vivian’s car but
    instead continually looked down the road. At seventeen minutes and one second on the body
    cam, Short shook his head several times. Deputy Hickam and a drug detecting K-9 arrived
    eighteen minutes and thirty-seven seconds into the stop.
    At nineteen minutes and twenty-nine seconds Brott approached Vivian’s vehicle, asked
    Vivian to exit the vehicle and requested to pat him down. Brott issued the citation for driving
    with a suspended license at twenty minutes and forty seconds. During the time Brott explained
    the citation to Vivian, the drug K-9 alerted to a controlled substance in the vehicle. A subsequent
    search discovered a bag containing methamphetamine.
    Following the discovery of the methamphetamine, Vivian admitted to Hickham that he
    had used methamphetamine a few days prior. Brott then read Vivian his Miranda rights and
    Vivian subsequently admitted to paying $60 for the methamphetamine and admitted that his
    “fingerprints could have been on the bag.”
    The State charged Vivian with possession of a controlled substance and possession of
    drug paraphernalia. Vivian moved to suppress all evidence gathered as a result of an illegal
    seizure, arguing that officers unlawfully extended the traffic stop in violation of the Fourth
    Amendment. The State argued the motion should be denied because Brott did not impermissibly
    extend the stop, and even if he did, the drugs discovered in the vehicle were admissible under the
    inevitable discovery doctrine. The State did not argue that Vivian’s pre- or post-Miranda
    statements were admissible under an exception to the exclusionary rule. At the suppression
    hearing, Brott testified and the prosecutor admitted the body cam footage.
    The district court later issued a written decision, granting the motion in part. The district
    court first determined that the investigative detention was justified since Vivian’s brake lights
    were not working. Next, the district court determined that Brott delayed delivering the citation
    while waiting for the K-9 to arrive and thereby unlawfully extended the stop. Nonetheless, the
    district court found that the methamphetamine and paraphernalia would have been inevitably
    2
    discovered because Vivian could not drive his vehicle home due to the suspended driver’s
    license, and therefore a “lawful sniff of Vivian’s vehicle would have occurred regardless of any
    unlawful extension of the stop.” The district court suppressed all of Vivian’s incriminating pre-
    Miranda statements, but declined to address whether Vivian’s post-Miranda statements should
    be suppressed because Vivian failed to establish that they were coerced.
    Vivian pleaded guilty to possession of methamphetamine pursuant to an Idaho Criminal
    Rule 11 plea agreement and reserved his right to appeal the district court’s decision on his
    motion to suppress. Vivian timely appealed and his appeal was assigned to the Idaho Court of
    Appeals.
    The Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s decision after determining that Vivian
    failed to challenge an adverse ruling by the district court on appeal. State v. Vivian, No. 47811,
    
    2021 WL 3877712
    , at *4 (Idaho Ct. App. Aug. 31, 2021). The Court of Appeals concluded that
    while Vivian challenged the district court’s failure to apply the exclusionary rule to his post-
    Miranda statements the district court never ruled on the issue and, therefore, Vivian failed to
    obtain an adverse ruling, which is a prerequisite to raising an issue on appeal. Id. at *3. Vivian
    filed a petition for review, which this Court granted.
    II.     ISSUE ON APPEAL
    Whether the district court erred in declining to apply the Fourth Amendment’s
    exclusionary rule to suppress Vivian’s post-Miranda statements?
    III.         STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “In   cases    that   come         before   this   Court   on   a   petition   for   review   of
    a Court of Appeals decision, this Court gives serious consideration to the views of
    the Court of Appeals, but directly reviews the decision of the lower court.” State v. Purdum, 
    147 Idaho 206
    , 207, 
    207 P.3d 182
    , 183 (2009) (quoting State v. Oliver, 
    144 Idaho 722
    , 724, 
    170 P.3d 387
    , 389 (2007)). “The standard of review of a suppression motion is bifurcated.” State v.
    Holland, 
    135 Idaho 159
    , 161, 
    15 P.3d 1167
    , 1169 (2000). “When a decision on a motion to
    suppress is challenged, we accept the trial court's findings of fact that are supported by
    substantial evidence, but we freely review the application of constitutional principles to the facts
    as found.” State v. Smith, 
    159 Idaho 865
    , 868, 
    367 P.3d 260
    , 263 (Ct. App. 2016).
    3
    IV.     ANALYSIS
    A.      Vivian preserved his argument concerning suppression of his post-Miranda
    statements.
    The Court of Appeals determined, sua sponte, that Vivian failed to preserve the issue that
    his post-Miranda statements should have been suppressed because he did not demonstrate an
    adverse ruling forming the basis of his assignment of error. In doing so, the Court of Appeals
    relied on the premise that “in order for an issue to be raised on appeal, the record must reveal an
    adverse ruling that forms the basis for assignment of error.” See, e.g., State v. Huntsman, 
    146 Idaho 580
    , 585, 
    199 P.3d 155
    , 160 (Ct. App. 2008). We recently clarified our adverse ruling
    jurisprudence, however, and held that “a party preserves an issue for appeal by properly
    presenting the issue with argument and authority to the trial court below and noticing it for
    hearing or a party preserves an issue for appeal if the trial court issues an adverse ruling. Both
    are not required.” State v. Miramontes, ___ Idaho ___, ___, ___ P.3d ___, ___ (2022) (emphasis
    in original).
    Applying this standard here, Vivian filed a written motion to suppress, seeking to
    suppress “all evidence gathered as a result of an illegal seizure, in violation of the Fourth
    Amendment.” Vivian argued, in his brief in support of the motion, that this included the
    statements he made before and after the unlawful delay, because they too were “fruit of the
    poisonous tree.” Vivian noticed the motion for hearing and argued it to the district court. The
    district court, however, only addressed suppression of the physical evidence found in the vehicle
    and Vivian’s pre-Miranda statements. Vivian did everything required to present the issue to the
    district court and provide the court with the opportunity to consider and decide the issue. This
    was sufficient to preserve the issue for appeal.
    B. The district court erred in declining to suppress Vivian’s post-Miranda statements.
    Having concluded that Vivian preserved the issue for appeal, we now turn to the merits of
    his argument. Vivian does not challenge the admissibility of the methamphetamine discovered in
    his vehicle, but only the admissibility of his post-Miranda statements. Vivian argues that the
    district court properly concluded that Brott unlawfully extended the stop and, therefore, he was
    entitled to suppression of all statements made, regardless of whether they were made before or
    after the Miranda warning. Vivian also contends that the State failed to argue or otherwise
    demonstrate that his statements were admissible under the inevitable discovery doctrine.
    4
    The exclusionary rule bars the use of physical evidence and verbal statements obtained as
    a result of a Fourth Amendment violation. Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 485 (1963).
    When determining whether evidence is obtained as a result of a Fourth Amendment violation—
    so called “fruit of a poisonous tree”—the Court must consider whether the evidence was
    discovered through the exploitation of the illegal actions by police or “instead by means
    sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.” 
    Id.
     at 487–88. “Where a defendant
    has moved to suppress evidence allegedly gained through unconstitutional police conduct . . . the
    defendant bears an initial burden of going forward with evidence to show a factual nexus
    between the illegality and the state’s acquisition of the evidence.” State v. Kapelle, 
    158 Idaho 121
    , 127, 
    344 P.3d 901
    , 907 (Ct. App. 2014). “This requires a prima facie showing that the
    evidence sought to be suppressed would not have come to light but for the government's
    unconstitutional conduct.” State v. McBaine, 
    144 Idaho 130
    , 133, 
    157 P.3d 1101
    , 1104 (Ct. App.
    2007) (internal quotations omitted). This burden does not require the defendant to prove that the
    State could not have discovered the evidence absent an illegal search, but instead, “the
    defendant need only show that, on the events that did take place, the discovery of the evidence
    was a product or result of the unlawful police conduct.” Id. at 134, 157 P.3d at 1105. Once the
    defendant proves this factual nexus, the burden shifts to “the State to demonstrate the exception
    applicable to the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine. . . .” State v. Bills, 
    166 Idaho 778
    , 782, 
    463 P.3d 412
    , 416 (Ct. App. 2020). There are three exceptions to the exclusionary rule: independent
    origin, inevitable discovery, and attenuated basis. Stuart v. State, 
    136 Idaho 490
    , 495, 
    36 P.3d 1278
    , 1283 (2001).
    Vivian thus bore the initial burden to show a factual nexus between the unlawful
    extension and his incriminating statements. Vivian’s motion to suppress and brief in support
    requested suppression of all evidence obtained as a result of the illegally extended stop,
    including his “statements.” He specifically referenced statements made after officers found drugs
    and paraphernalia in his vehicle. His argument was broad enough to encompass both his pre- and
    post-Miranda statements. Vivian supported his motion with Brott’s body cam video. The video
    depicts Vivian’s post-Miranda statements, which occurred during what the district court
    determined to be an unlawfully extended traffic stop. This was sufficient evidence to satisfy
    Vivian’s initial obligation. See State v. Babb, 
    136 Idaho 95
    , 99, 
    29 P.3d 406
    , 410 (Ct. App. 2001)
    (holding video surveillance showing defendant’s detention and arrest can be sufficient to
    5
    demonstrate a factual nexus between arrest and discovery of evidence). The burden then shifted
    to the state to demonstrate an exception to the exclusionary rule. Bills, 166 Idaho at 782, 463
    P.3d at 416.
    1. The inevitable discovery exception does not apply to verbal statements.
    The only exclusionary rule exception that the state argued below was the inevitable
    discovery doctrine. The State reasserts that argument on appeal and contends that, given his
    suspended driver’s license, Vivian could not lawfully drive his vehicle away and, therefore, the
    drug-detection dog would have eventually sniffed the vehicle and alerted to the presence of
    drugs. The State contends that Vivian would “have inevitably made his statements in response to
    being confronted with the evidence discovered in his car.”
    Before deciding whether the inevitable discovery exception applies here, we will first
    address the district court’s decision declining to rule on whether Vivian’s post-Miranda
    statements should be suppressed as fruit of the poisonous tree. The district court wrote that it
    declined to reach the issue because, “Vivian has not argued or presented evidence [that] his post-
    Miranda statements were coerced.” The district court erred in this regard. “Miranda warnings,
    alone and per se, cannot always make the act sufficiently a product of free will [to] break, for
    Fourth Amendment purposes, the causal connection between the illegality and the confession.”
    Brown v. Illinois, 
    422 U.S. 590
    , 603, 
    95 S. Ct. 2254
    , 2261, 
    45 L. Ed. 2d 416
     (1975). The district
    court improperly assumed the Miranda warnings cleansed Vivian’s statements of any illegal taint
    and placed the burden on Vivian to establish that the Miranda warnings did not attenuate the
    illegal taint from the statements. But that was never Vivian’s burden. As discussed above, once
    Vivian established the causal nexus between the illegality and his subsequent statements, the
    burden then shifted to the State to establish an exception to the exclusionary rule. Moreover, the
    State never argued below that the Miranda warnings attenuated the illegal taint resulting from
    the Fourth Amendment violation. The district court erred when it imported an argument that was
    not presented below and when it placed a burden on Vivian that was not his to bear.
    We now address the only exclusionary rule exception that the State proffered below—
    that Vivian’s statements were admissible under the inevitable discovery doctrine.
    “[T]he inevitable discovery doctrine applies when a preponderance of the evidence demonstrates
    that the evidence discovered pursuant to an unlawful search or seizure would have inevitably
    been discovered by lawful methods.” State v. Rowland, 
    158 Idaho 784
    , 787, 
    352 P.3d 506
    , 509
    6
    (Ct. App. 2015). The lawful means of discovery “must be the result of some action that actually
    took place (or was in the process of taking place) that would inevitably have led to the discovery
    of the unlawfully obtained evidence . . . .” 
    Id.
     “Each piece of evidence must have an independent
    basis for admissibility.” Bills, 166 Idaho at 781, 463 P.3d at 415.
    The district court determined that the methamphetamine and paraphernalia would have
    inevitably been discovered because Vivian’s car would have remained at the scene and a lawful
    search of the vehicle would have occurred regardless of any unlawful extension of the stop.
    Vivian has not appealed this determination. The State argues that this analysis should also extend
    to Vivian’s post-Miranda incriminating statements because Vivian would have inevitably made
    the incriminating statements after being confronted with the methamphetamine and paraphernalia
    that would have been inevitably discovered in his vehicle.
    The Court of Appeals recently addressed a similar argument in State v. Bills, 
    166 Idaho 778
    , 
    463 P.3d 412
    , (Ct. App. 2020). There, the defendant made incriminating statements after an
    unlawful search. 166 Idaho at 779, 463 P.3d at 413. The district court concluded that the
    contraband discovered as a result of that search was admissible under the inevitable discovery
    exception. Id. Further, the district court suppressed the defendant’s pre-Miranda statements but
    admitted her post-Miranda statements. Id. On appeal, the State argued that the post-Miranda
    statements were admissible under the inevitable discovery exception because “had Bills been
    lawfully searched incident to the arrest, she would have made the same statements when
    confronted with the evidence.” Id. at 781, 463 P.3d at 415. The Court of Appeals rejected the
    State’s argument, explaining, “[s]tatements are inherently different than physical evidence
    which, by its nature, a defendant cannot change or ignore. Conversely, a defendant, after given
    time to reflect upon her circumstances, may not make the same statements and may not make
    any statements at all.” Id. The Court of Appeals subsequently held,
    The State does not point to any evidence in the record to indicate Bills would
    have spoken and given the same answers absent the initial illegality. This Court
    will not speculate as to if and to what extent Bills would have made the
    same statements; the burden is on the State to demonstrate the exception
    applicable to the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine, and the State has failed to do
    so in this case.
    Id. at 781–82, 463 P.3d at 415–16.
    The State’s argument in this case is essentially the same argument that the Court of
    Appeals rejected in Bills. As the Court of Appeals explained in that case, verbal statements are
    7
    different than physical evidence because a defendant could choose, if given time for reflection,
    not to make the statements or to answer differently. Relying on this same reasoning, other courts
    have categorically concluded that the inevitable discovery exception does not apply to
    statements. See State v. McClain, 
    862 N.W.2d 717
    , 725 (Minn. Ct. App. 2015) (holding the
    “inevitable-discovery doctrine does not apply to statements obtained after an unlawful search.”);
    United States v. Vasquez De Reyes, 
    149 F.3d 192
    , 195–196 (3d Cir.1998) (holding the inevitable
    discovery exception did not apply to the defendant’s statements); United States v. Polanco, 
    93 F.3d 555
    , 562 (9th Cir. 1996) (holding the inevitable discovery exception does not apply to the
    admission of unconstitutional inculpatory statements).
    We now join other courts and hold that the inevitable discovery exception does not allow
    the admission of verbal statements that would otherwise be excluded as “fruit of the poisonous
    tree.” We agree with the Court of Appeals’ obervations in Bills that verbal statements are
    inherently different than physical evidence and that it is entirely speculative to say that a person
    would make the same statements under different circumstances. A defendant may well choose,
    under different circumstances not resulting from an illegal search or seizure, to not make any
    statements or to make different statements. As a result of our holding today, Vivian’s post-
    Miranda statements are not admissible under the inevitable discovery exception.
    C.     The State failed to preserve any argument that Vivian’s statements are admissible
    under the attenuation doctrine.
    The State also appears to argue in its briefing on appeal that the statements should be
    admitted under the attenuation doctrine, arguing that “Vivian’s post-Miranda statements were
    the product of free will such that the Miranda warning dissipated the taint of the illegal seizure.”
    Vivian argues that the delivery of the Miranda warnings did not purge the taint of the officer’s
    Fourth Amendment violation in prolonging the stop.
    The State conceded at oral argument that it did not argue the attenuation exception to the
    district court. “Issues not raised below will not be considered by this Court on appeal, and the
    parties will be held to the theory upon which the case was presented to the lower court.” State v.
    Hoskins, 
    165 Idaho 217
    , 221, 
    443 P.3d 231
    , 235 (2019) (quoting State v. Garcia-Rodriguez, 
    162 Idaho 271
    , 275, 
    396 P.3d 700
    , 704 (2017) (alternation omitted). Because appellate review is
    limited to the theory presented below, we will not consider the State’s argument regarding the
    attenuation exception.
    8
    The State failed to establish that Vivian’s post-Miranda statements should be admitted
    under an exception to the exclusionary rule. The district court, therefore, erred in failing to
    suppress Vivian’s post-Miranda statements.
    V.    CONCLUSION
    For reasons stated above, we reverse the district court’s decision that Vivian’s post-
    Miranda statements were admissible, vacate Vivian’s judgment of conviction, and remand for
    further proceedings.
    Chief Justice BEVAN and Justices BRODY, STEGNER, and MOELLER CONCUR.
    9