Commonwealth v. Nicoleau , 90 Mass. App. Ct. 518 ( 2016 )


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    15-P-1015                                              Appeals Court
    COMMONWEALTH    vs.   JAHLIEL M. NICOLEAU.
    No. 15-P-1015.
    Suffolk.      May 16, 2016. - October 14, 2016.
    Present:   Agnes, Massing, & Kinder, JJ.
    Constitutional Law, Search and seizure. Search and Seizure,
    Inventory. Practice, Criminal, Motion to suppress.
    Complaint received and sworn to in the Dorchester Division
    of the Boston Municipal Court Department on September 5, 2014.
    A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by
    Catherine K. Byrne, J.
    An application for leave to prosecute an interlocutory
    appeal was heard by Fernande R.V. Duffly, J., in the Supreme
    Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk, and the appeal was
    reported by her to the Appeals Court.
    Michael A. Lafleur, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    John M. Corridan for the defendant.
    AGNES, J.     The question presented in this case is whether
    it was reasonable for police to seize and inventory the contents
    of a backpack found in the back seat of a vehicle operated by
    2
    the defendant, Jahliel M. Nicoleau, upon his arrest.    The
    vehicle was parked in front of his home where he lived with his
    grandmother, who was present at the scene, and to whom the
    police gave other personal belongings of the defendant.     Based
    on the reasoning in Commonwealth v. Abdallah, 
    475 Mass. 47
    , 52-
    53 (2016), we conclude that although the police had a right to
    impound and tow the unregistered, uninsured vehicle that the
    defendant was operating, there was a practical, available
    alternative to the seizure of the defendant's backpack --
    namely, turning it over to the defendant's grandmother -- which
    would have precluded the police from seizing it and subjecting
    it to an inventory search.   Accordingly, we affirm the order
    allowing the defendant's motion to suppress a knife that the
    police found inside the backpack.
    Background.   On review of "a ruling on a motion to
    suppress, we accept the judge's subsidiary findings of fact
    absent clear error 'but conduct an independent review of [her]
    ultimate findings and conclusions of law.'"   Commonwealth v.
    Scott, 
    440 Mass. 642
    , 646 (2004), quoting from Commonwealth v.
    Jimenez, 
    438 Mass. 213
    , 218 (2002).   We recite the facts as
    found by the motion judge, supplemented with uncontested
    testimony from the hearing on the motion to suppress.
    On September 4, 2014, Officer Brian Tracey and his partner
    were patrolling in Boston and observed a car, driven by the
    3
    defendant, with one headlight out.     The vehicle's registration
    and license plates were invalid.     The officers followed the car
    and attempted to stop it, but the defendant continued to drive
    until he parked the car outside his home, where he lived with
    his grandmother.   Other officers arrived, and the grandmother
    emerged from the home to speak with the police.     The defendant
    was placed under arrest for failure to stop and for motor
    vehicle violations.     Because the vehicle was unregistered and
    uninsured, and the defendant was unable to produce a driver's
    license, the officers arranged to have it impounded.
    Having made the decision to impound the vehicle, but prior
    to the car being towed, officers searched the vehicle, removing
    a music player from the backseat and giving it to the
    grandmother.   They handed the defendant's keys to the
    grandmother as well.1    The police also removed a backpack from
    the back seat, but instead of handing it to the grandmother,
    they opened it and located a knife inside.     The defendant was
    additionally charged with unlawfully carrying a dangerous weapon
    in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 10(b).
    1
    It appears that the grandmother was willing to and
    interested in taking possession of the defendant's other
    belongings. Although the defendant specifically asked the
    police whether his grandmother could take the stereo, he did not
    object to her taking any other items.
    4
    The defendant moved to suppress the knife, and Officer
    Tracey testified at the motion hearing.   Although Tracey
    admitted that the officers removed a music player from the car,
    the inventory search form that was completed indicated that
    nothing had been removed from the vehicle.   The motion judge
    ruled that the stop, impoundment, and inventory search were
    lawful.   However, she concluded that the inventory search should
    not have extended to the interior of the backpack, because the
    grandmother was present and willing to take possession of the
    defendant's property, and in fact did so in the case of the
    music player.   Therefore, the judge reasoned, it appeared that
    the search was for evidence of another crime, and the police did
    not follow their own inventory policy.
    Discussion.    An inventory search is lawful under the United
    States Constitution and art. 14 of the Massachusetts
    Constitution only if (1) the impoundment of the vehicle was
    reasonable, and (2) the search of the vehicle following
    impoundment was "conducted in accord with standard police
    written procedures."   Commonwealth v. Oliveira, 
    474 Mass. 10
    , 13
    (2016).   See Commonwealth v. Ellerbe, 
    430 Mass. 769
    , 776 (2000);
    Commonwealth v. Brinson, 
    440 Mass. 609
    , 612 (2003).
    Impoundment of a vehicle on a public way is justified by at
    least four distinct needs:   protection of the owner's property
    from vandalism or theft while the vehicle remains in police
    5
    custody, see Ellerbe, supra at 775-776; where a vehicle, if left
    unattended, poses a public safety risk, see 
    Brinson, supra
    ;
    where the vehicle stopped did not possess valid registration
    plates, see Commonwealth v. Horton, 
    63 Mass. App. Ct. 571
    , 573,
    577 (2005); and protection of police and the public from
    potentially dangerous items in the vehicle, see United States v.
    Coccia, 
    446 F.3d 233
    , 240 (1st Cir. 2006), cert. denied, 
    549 U.S. 1149
    (2007).   See Oliveira, supra at 13; South Dakota v.
    Opperman, 
    428 U.S. 364
    , 369 (1976).   "The propriety of the
    impoundment of the vehicle is a threshold issue in determining
    the lawfulness of [an] inventory search."   Commonwealth v.
    Eddington, 
    459 Mass. 102
    , 108 (2011), quoting from Commonwealth
    v. Garcia, 
    409 Mass. 675
    , 678 (1991).
    In this case, the defendant does not argue that the police
    lacked authority to seize and impound the automobile.   Indeed,
    impoundment for noninvestigatory purposes is justified "if
    supported by public safety concerns or by the danger of theft or
    vandalism [if] left unattended."   Commonwealth v. Daley, 
    423 Mass. 747
    , 750 (1996).   See Commonwealth v. Caceres, 
    413 Mass. 749
    , 751 (1992) (where no person is authorized to operate motor
    vehicle, police had no alternative but to seize vehicle and
    conduct inventory search).   Here, the defendant could not
    produce a driver's license, and the vehicle was unregistered and
    6
    uninsured.   The vehicle could not be left on a public roadway.
    See Commonwealth v. Figueroa, 
    412 Mass. 745
    , 748 n.4 (1992).
    Nevertheless, "[i]mpoundment of a car and an inventory
    search of a car are not synonymous, and the constitutional
    analysis is not unilateral."    Commonwealth v. Silva, 61 Mass.
    App. Ct. 28, 33 (2004).    The lawfulness of an inventory search
    subsequent to impoundment implicates distinct standards from
    those governing the lawfulness of impoundment itself.     See
    Commonwealth v. Goncalves, 
    62 Mass. App. Ct. 153
    , 156 (2004).
    The sole issue in our case, then, is whether the scope of the
    lawful inventory search properly included the backpack's
    interior.    We begin with a review of the purpose underlying the
    inventory search exception to the warrant requirement.
    An inventory search is justified exclusively by a necessity
    that is independent of any suspicion of criminal activity.      It
    may be considered necessary "for the purpose of protecting the
    car or its contents, for the purpose of protecting the police
    against unfounded charges of misappropriation of such property,
    for the purpose of protecting the public against the possibility
    that the car might contain weapons or other dangerous
    instrumentalities which might fall into the hands of vandals, or
    for a combination of such reasons."     Commonwealth v. Matchett,
    
    386 Mass. 492
    , 510 (1982).     The target of the inventory search
    is the contents of the vehicle at the time it is to be towed.
    7
    See Commonwealth v. Alvarado, 
    420 Mass. 542
    , 553 (1995)
    ("Inventory searches are intended to be noninvestigatory and are
    for the purpose of protecting property which may be within the
    vehicle").     Indeed, there is no need to safeguard property or
    protect the police against false claims of misappropriation
    where the police will not take possession of the property in
    question.    See Commonwealth v. Vanya V., 
    75 Mass. App. Ct. 370
    ,
    379 (2009), quoting from Commonwealth v. Muckle, 61 Mass. App.
    Ct. 678, 682-683 (2004) ("safeguarding the [item taken by law
    enforcement]" is subject to inventory search as opposed to
    gathering evidence or investigation).     See also Commonwealth v.
    Tisserand, 
    5 Mass. App. Ct. 383
    , 386 (1977) (inventory of "the
    contents of a car about to be towed or impounded is a reasonable
    procedure").
    This case requires us to determine whether the police have
    discretion to decide which items of personal property contained
    in the vehicle of an arrested party will remain with the vehicle
    when it is towed, and which will be turned over to an
    appropriate third party who is present, able, and willing to
    take possession of the property.     This case is unlike the more
    common scenario in which the driver is under arrest and no one
    is available to take possession of any of the vehicle's
    contents, which must, out of necessity, be inventoried before
    the vehicle is impounded.     See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Ford, 394
    
    8 Mass. 421
    (1985) (lone driver under arrest); Commonwealth v.
    Bishop, 
    402 Mass. 449
    (1988) (lone driver arrested); 
    Garcia, 409 Mass. at 675
    (passenger and driver both under arrest); 
    Alvarado, supra
    (both occupants of vehicle placed under arrest prior to
    inventory search); 
    Muckle, supra
    (driver and passenger both
    under arrest).   The seizure of an item that is not itself
    suspected to be dangerous, in circumstances where there is a
    responsible third party available to take possession of it, is
    inconsistent with the purposes underlying an inventory search.
    See 
    Opperman, 428 U.S. at 369
    ; Garcia, supra at 682.   In a case
    such as this, there is simply no need to seize or safeguard
    items that are not instrumentalities of a crime or contraband,
    or where there is no suspicion that they may be a danger to the
    public.
    The Supreme Judicial Court's recent decision in 
    Abdallah, 475 Mass. at 51
    , reinforces the point that an inventory search
    is valid only when it is necessary and carried out in compliance
    with written police procedures.   Although it did not involve the
    contents of a vehicle, Abdallah concerned the propriety of an
    inventory search of the defendant's backpack, which was seized
    upon his arrest and searched during the subsequent booking
    process.   The court rested its rationale on the fact that it was
    not necessary to conduct an inventory search of the backpack's
    interior because there was a reasonable practical alternative to
    9
    seizing the backpack.2   See 
    id. at 51-53.
      Abdallah, then,
    requires an inquiry into whether the officers in this case had a
    reasonable practical alternative to seizing the backpack and
    conducting an inventory search of its interior.      See 
    id. at 52-
    53.   "This inquiry is fact driven, with the overriding concern
    being the guiding touchstone of [r]easonableness."     
    Id. at 52,
    quoting from 
    Eddington, 459 Mass. at 108
    .    For substantially the
    same reasons as the court in Abdallah, we conclude that the
    officers did not take advantage of a reasonable, practical
    alternative.
    In Abdallah, the defendant was arrested at his hotel room,
    and the officers informed him that he would be able to pick up
    his belongings, which had been inside the room, from the hotel's
    front desk after he was released.   See 
    id. at 49.
       When Abdallah
    asked the officers to secure certain more valuable items (his
    computer and video game system), they did so.     See 
    ibid. However, the police
    chose one of Abdallah's belongings, a
    2
    Applied in the context of motor vehicles, Abdallah stands
    for the proposition that the reasonable inquiry must be
    undertaken at two distinct points in time: first, in deciding
    whether the car must be impounded; and second, in deciding
    whether certain property must, out of necessity, be inventoried
    prior to the vehicle being towed. Abdallah instructs that after
    the initial determination is made, the defendant should be asked
    his preference as to the disposition of his property. If there
    is a practical and available alternative that the defendant
    expressly or impliedly approves, the police must choose it.
    Otherwise, they may proceed with an inventory search. See 
    id. at 52-
    53.
    10
    backpack, which had been on his person, to take into custody
    along with the defendant as he was booked at the police station.
    As part of standard booking procedures, the bag's contents were
    inventoried, and discovered to contain controlled substances and
    a great deal of cash.   
    Ibid. The Supreme Judicial
    Court affirmed the allowance of a
    motion to suppress the contents of the backpack, first
    concluding that there was no reason to believe that the bag
    posed any danger to public safety.   
    Id. at 52.
      Then, the court
    analyzed whether it was reasonable for the police to seize the
    backpack, concluding that in the totality of the circumstances,
    where the officers had arranged with the hotel clerk to
    safeguard certain of Abdallah's belongings, as well as his
    vehicle, it was unreasonable for them to "single out" the
    backpack and subject it alone to an inventory search at the
    station.   
    Id. at 53.
    In the present case, as in Abdallah, there was no evidence
    prior to the search that the defendant's backpack or its
    contents presented a danger to anyone or contained evidence of a
    crime.   A third party, the defendant's grandmother, was present
    and willing to take possession of the defendant's belongings.
    The police did, in fact, arrange for her to do so in the case of
    the music player.   Having made the decision to give the music
    player to the defendant's grandmother, the police did not have
    11
    the discretion to decide to seize and inventory the defendant's
    backpack, which also could have been turned over to the
    grandmother.3   Therefore, we affirm the motion judge's allowance
    of the defendant's motion to suppress.4
    So ordered.
    3
    The Commonwealth contends that opening the backpack to
    inventory its contents, under circumstances where the vehicle
    was to be impounded and towed, was expressly required by the
    plain language of the police department's inventory search
    policy. Indeed, if the backpack were to remain in the vehicle
    after it was towed, the policy would dictate such a result;
    officers do not have discretion to determine the scope of an
    inventory search, once commenced. See 
    Opperman, 428 U.S. at 377
    (Powell, J., concurring). See also Commonwealth v. Rostad, 
    410 Mass. 618
    , 622 (1991). Here, however, contents of the vehicle
    removed prior to towing had no need to be inventoried, as the
    purpose of an inventory search was not implicated by items that
    would not remain inside the vehicle. The purpose of an
    inventory search is to protect property and to guard against
    false claims against the police regarding items stored in a
    vehicle when it is impounded and towed. See 
    Caceres, 413 Mass. at 754
    . No such need arises where an item may be removed and
    handed over to a responsible third party.
    4
    In view of the result we reach, it is unnecessary to
    consider whether the police complied strictly with their own
    policy, which required them to ask the owner of property in a
    vehicle to be towed for his preference as to its disposition.
    The only evidence presented at the hearing was that the
    defendant specifically requested that the grandmother take
    possession of the stereo. The motion judge made no findings in
    this regard. Neither did he make a finding that the seizure and
    search of the defendant's backpack was a pretext for an
    investigatory search, and therefore, we have no occasion to
    address that issue.