State of Maine v. Ryan Turner ( 2017 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                          Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2017 ME 185
    Docket:   Ken-16-402
    Argued:   April 13, 2017
    Decided:  August 22, 2017
    Revised:  December 7, 2017
    Panel:       SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.
    STATE OF MAINE
    v.
    RYAN TURNER
    SAUFLEY, C.J.
    [¶1] Ryan Turner drove his car up over a sidewalk median in Waterville
    and drew the attention of a Winslow police officer who had just stopped
    another driver, coming across the bridge into Waterville, for a traffic
    infraction that had occurred in Winslow. After Turner careened onward, he
    pulled into a parking lot and stopped his car. The Winslow officer stopped
    what he was doing, followed Turner, and approached Turner in the parking
    lot. Following that contact, Turner was charged by an arriving Waterville
    officer    with   operating     under    the     influence   (Class D),   29-A     M.R.S.
    § 2411(1-A)(C)(1) (2016).          After a jury found Turner guilty, the court
    (Kennebec County, Benson, J.) entered a judgment of conviction.                   Turner
    appeals from the conviction, arguing that the motion court (Marden, J.) erred
    2
    in denying his motion to suppress the evidence obtained from the Winslow
    officer’s extraterritorial stop of his vehicle because the officer exceeded the
    authority granted to him by 30-A M.R.S. § 2671 (2016) and Winslow, Me.,
    Code § 2-44 (2010). We affirm the judgment of conviction.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] The following facts were found by the motion court and are
    supported by competent evidence in the suppression record. See State v.
    Kierstead, 
    2015 ME 45
    , ¶ 14, 
    114 A.3d 984
    .
    [¶3] On March 19, 2015, at approximately 10:00 p.m., a Winslow law
    enforcement officer initiated a traffic stop in Winslow, but the car drove into
    Waterville before stopping. While engaged in that traffic stop in Waterville,
    the officer heard a loud noise and observed a silver four-door sedan drive
    over the curb and proceed in an erratic manner while turning from Spring
    Street onto Front Street. The officer terminated the traffic stop and attempted
    to locate the silver sedan on Front Street. He noticed a vehicle of identical
    appearance parked in an adjacent bank parking lot. The officer pulled his
    cruiser in behind the vehicle, leaving sufficient room for the vehicle to pull
    around the cruiser, and turned on the cruiser’s blue lights. He noticed that the
    motor was not running and that there was damage to the vehicle and fluid on
    3
    the ground consistent with what one would observe after a vehicle had been
    driven over a curb. The officer also made observations of the driver, whose
    appearance indicated impairment. The officer asked for the driver’s license
    and registration and identified the driver as Turner. The officer took no
    further action and immediately notified Waterville police.1 The record reflects
    that a Waterville officer arrived approximately two minutes later.
    [¶4] Turner was charged by complaint with criminal operating under
    the influence and failing to submit to a chemical test (Class D), 29-A M.R.S.
    § 2411(1-A)(C)(1). He entered a not guilty plea and moved to suppress all
    evidence obtained from the Winslow officer’s stop of the vehicle, arguing that
    he was unreasonably seized by the Winslow police officer because the officer
    was acting outside the municipality where he had been appointed, in violation
    of Maine’s “fresh pursuit” statute, 30-A M.R.S. § 2671, and the Winslow Code.
    [¶5] On April 26, 2016, the court held a suppression hearing where the
    Winslow officer was the only testifying witness. After the hearing, the court
    entered an order denying the motion to suppress. Turner filed two motions
    for further findings of fact and conclusions of law and a motion to reconsider.
    1The Winslow officer testified that he did not communicate directly with Waterville police but
    rather contacted “the Waterville communication center,” which dispatches for both Winslow police
    and Waterville police.
    4
    The court ultimately concluded that the officer’s observations of the erratic
    operation and possible property damage constituted specific and articulable
    facts for the officer to reasonably believe that a misdemeanor had been
    committed in his presence or that the driver was impaired and needed
    assistance. See M.R.U. Crim. P. 41A(d). The court further concluded that
    Turner was not seized until the Winslow officer asked for Turner’s license and
    registration, at which time the encounter became an investigatory detention.
    The court declined to give weight to Turner’s argument that the Winslow
    officer did not have jurisdictional authority to seize him in Waterville. Citing
    to State v. Rideout, 
    2000 ME 194
    , 
    761 A.2d 288
    , and State v. Jolin,
    
    639 A.2d 1062
     (Me. 1994), the court concluded, “The officer had probable
    cause to arrest [Turner] and his action was reasonable in light of an
    immediate need to prevent [Turner] from harming himself or others. An
    extraterritorial arrest is not per se unreasonable giving rise to the application
    of the exclusionary rule.”    The court declined to make further findings
    regarding the Winslow officer’s contact with the Waterville Police
    Department.
    [¶6]    Following the denial of the motion to suppress, the court
    (Benson, J.) held a one-day jury trial on August 22, 2016. The jury found
    5
    Turner guilty, and the court sentenced him to the mandatory ninety-six hours’
    imprisonment required by his refusal to submit to a chemical test, a 150-day
    license suspension, and a $600 fine. See 29-A M.R.S. § 2411(5)(A) (2016).
    Turner timely appealed. See 15 M.R.S. § 2115 (2016); M.R. App. P. 2(b)(2)(A).
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶7] Turner argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to
    suppress because he was unreasonably seized when the Winslow officer,
    outside that officer’s territorial jurisdiction, stopped him in violation of
    Maine’s fresh pursuit statute and the local ordinance. When reviewing a trial
    court’s denial of a motion to suppress, we review the findings of fact for clear
    error and the conclusions of law de novo. State v. Gerry, 
    2016 ME 163
    , ¶ 11,
    
    150 A.3d 810
    . Because Turner does not challenge the court’s factual findings,
    we review only the legal determination that the officer’s seizure of Turner was
    constitutional and reasonable. See Kierstead, 
    2015 ME 45
    , ¶ 14, 
    114 A.3d 984
    .
    “We will uphold the denial of a motion to suppress if any reasonable view of
    the evidence supports the trial court’s decision.”       
    Id.
     (quotation marks
    omitted).
    6
    A.       Fourth Amendment Seizure
    [¶8] The State contests the court’s finding that the Winslow officer
    subjected Turner to an investigatory detention. It argues that, without
    investigatory detention, Turner’s Fourth Amendment rights were not
    implicated.2 Although Turner asserts that the State cannot contest this finding
    because it did not cross-appeal, when the defendant appeals, the State is not
    required to cross-appeal and “may argue that error in the proceedings at trial
    in fact supports the judgment.” 15 M.R.S. § 2115-A(3). Ultimately, we defer to
    the motion court’s factual findings and final conclusion that the Winslow
    officer effected a brief, investigatory detention of Turner for which Turner
    was entitled to the protections of the Fourth Amendment.3
    [¶9]    Therefore, we must determine whether the officer’s actions
    constituted an unreasonable seizure.                  See State v. Gulick, 
    2000 ME 170
    ,
    ¶¶ 12-13, 
    759 A.2d 1085
    . As always, this is a mixed question of fact and law.
    2In its original order on Turner’s motion to suppress, the court concluded that the officer did
    not seize Turner for Fourth Amendment purposes. The court stated that it “[was] not satisfied that
    the mere operation of the officer’s blue light determines a traffic stop or detention of the operator.”
    After Turner filed a joint motion for further findings of fact and conclusions of law and motion for
    reconsideration, the court withdrew its prior finding and found that Turner was seized when the
    officer requested Turner’s license and registration, but not before.
    To support an investigatory detention of a motor vehicle, a law enforcement officer “must have
    3
    an objectively reasonable, articulable suspicion that either criminal conduct, a civil violation, or a
    threat to public safety has occurred, is occurring, or is about to occur.” State v. Sylvain, 
    2003 ME 5
    ,
    ¶ 11, 
    814 A.2d 984
    .
    7
    See Gerry, 
    2016 ME 163
    , ¶ 11, 
    150 A.3d 810
    . We begin with the operative
    facts. The court found that the officer parked his cruiser behind Turner’s car,
    activated the cruiser’s emergency lights, and asked Turner for his license and
    registration. The Winslow officer was in Waterville as a result of a legitimate
    pursuit of a motorist who traveled into Waterville in the course of a traffic
    stop that originated in Winslow.      The Winslow officer directly observed
    Turner’s erratic and potentially dangerous operation of the car, and the
    Winslow officer’s contact with Turner occurred immediately following that
    erratic operation and after Turner had himself stopped his car in the parking
    lot.   Finally, the record reflects that the Winslow officer contacted the
    Waterville dispatch center and that the Waterville officer arrived within
    minutes of that contact.
    [¶10]   On these facts, the Winslow officer certainly had sufficient
    articulable suspicion of either the commission of a crime or the existence of a
    health and safety crisis to support the stop of Turner’s vehicle, had the officer
    been operating within his geographic authority. Thus, the legal question
    presented is whether the extraterritorial nature of the stop rendered it
    “unreasonable” for purposes of a Fourth Amendment analysis, requiring
    8
    suppression of the evidence obtained during the Winslow officer’s stop of
    Turner.
    B.    Violation of the Fresh Pursuit Statute
    [¶11]   The geographic scope of the Winslow officer’s authority is
    defined by statute. Maine’s fresh pursuit statute provides, in pertinent part,
    “No police officer has any authority in criminal or traffic infraction matters
    beyond the limits of the municipality in which the officer is appointed, except,”
    as relevant here, to “[a]rrest a person who travels beyond the limits of the
    municipality in which the officer is appointed when in fresh pursuit of that
    person.” 30-A M.R.S. § 2671(2)(E).
    [¶12] An exception to the limitations set out in section 2671(2)(E)
    exists when the officer observes the commission of a crime outside of his or
    her municipality. A municipality may authorize its police officers who have
    completed the basic training course required for continued full-time
    employment to make warrantless extraterritorial arrests of “[a]ny person
    who has committed or is committing in the officer’s presence any Class D or
    Class E crime.” 30-A M.R.S. § 2671(2-A); 17-A M.R.S. § 15(1)(B) (2016); see
    also 25 M.R.S. § 2804-C (2016). Pursuant to section 2671(2-A), the Town of
    Winslow has authorized its full-time police officers to make such
    9
    extraterritorial arrests “if, when possible, the law enforcement agency of a
    foreign municipality in which the arrest is to be made is notified in advance or,
    when not possible, the law enforcement agency of the foreign municipality in
    which the arrest has been made is notified immediately after the arrest.”
    Winslow, Me., Code § 2-44 (incorporating the language in section 2671(2-A)).
    [¶13] Here, the entire encounter between Turner and the Winslow
    officer took place in Waterville outside that officer’s territorial limits.
    Accordingly, although the “fresh pursuit” authority set out in section
    2671(2)(E) applied to the Winslow officer’s pursuit of the motorist across the
    bridge into Waterville, that provision did not apply to his stop of Turner.
    Thus, for the Winslow officer to have had statutory authority to seize Turner
    in Waterville, he must have complied with the Winslow ordinance enacted
    pursuant to section 2671(2-A).
    [¶14] Pursuant to section 2671(2-A) and the Winslow Code, a Winslow
    officer acting outside of the officer’s municipality must contact the applicable
    municipal law enforcement agency as soon as possible. Turner argues that his
    seizure was unauthorized because the Winslow officer did not notify
    Waterville police in advance of the stop despite the officer’s testimony that it
    was “possible” to do so. The trial court twice declined to make that factual
    10
    finding, and the court did not make any other finding regarding the exact
    timing of the contact.    Because the defendant specifically sought further
    factual findings, our review is confined to the court’s explicit findings. In the
    absence of findings either that the officer notified Waterville in advance of the
    stop or that it was not possible for the officer to have done so, we cannot
    affirmatively conclude that the officer had statutory and municipal authority
    to seize Turner outside of his territorial limits. Cf. Ehret v. Ehret, 
    2016 ME 43
    ,
    ¶ 12, 
    135 A.3d 101
     (confining appellate review to the trial court’s explicit
    findings that are supported by the record when a motion for further findings
    of fact and conclusions of law has been filed pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 52).
    Accordingly, we assume without deciding that the officer acted without
    statutory authority when he approached Turner in his stopped car.
    C.    Exclusionary Rule
    [¶15] Thus, the question presented is narrowed to this: in the context
    of these facts, where (1) the officer had a reasonable and articulable suspicion
    that a crime had been committed in his presence, or that a person was in need
    of assistance, in the neighboring municipality but (2) the officer was without
    statutory authority to act in that municipality, was the “seizure” unreasonable
    11
    for purposes of the Fourth Amendment, thereby requiring suppression of the
    evidence?4
    [¶16] Turner argues that, based on our precedent, the officer’s conduct
    was unreasonable. He contends that the evidence should be suppressed
    because his conduct was not necessary to prevent imminent harm, was not
    carried out for community caretaking purposes, and was not undertaken at
    the request of Waterville law enforcement.
    [¶17] A review of the precedent on which Turner relies is illuminating.
    In Jolin, we first considered whether the exclusionary rule applied when an
    arrest based on probable cause was made in violation of the fresh pursuit
    statute. 
    639 A.2d at 1064
    . In that case, a Brewer police officer who was in
    Bangor returning from a coffee break stopped and arrested a driver whom she
    had witnessed driving erratically in Bangor. 
    Id. at 1063
    . The exclusionary
    rule did not require suppression because “the officer had probable cause to
    arrest [the] defendant and her action was reasonable in light of the immediate
    need to prevent [him] from harming himself or others.” 
    Id. at 1064
    .
    4The “exclusionary rule applies to violations of a defendant’s Fourth Amendment right to be
    free from unreasonable searches and seizures.” State v. Jolin, 
    639 A.2d 1062
    , 1064 n.2 (Me. 1994)
    (citing Mapp v. Ohio, 
    367 U.S. 643
    , 655 (1961)). As we have held on several occasions, however,
    “evidence obtained from an extraterritorial arrest based on probable cause should not per se be
    excluded.” Id. at 1064.
    12
    [¶18] In State v. Pike, a Milo officer approached the driver of a car who
    had pulled over just beyond the Milo town line to see whether there was a
    problem with the driver or if the car had broken down. 
    642 A.2d 145
    , 146
    (Me. 1994). After observing indicators of impairment, the officer performed a
    license check and notified the appropriate law enforcement agency of the
    stop. 
    Id.
     We held that, even if the officer had violated the fresh pursuit
    statute—which we assumed but did not decide—the exclusionary rule did not
    apply because the officer had probable cause to detain the driver, and he
    “acted reasonably and did not intentionally disregard the territorial limits to
    which he was subject in order to ferret out crime.” 
    Id. at 147
    .
    [¶19] Similarly, in Rideout, we affirmed a defendant’s conviction when a
    Fort Fairfield officer traveling in Presque Isle observed a vehicle he believed
    was being driven by a driver whose license had been suspended, requested
    that a Presque Isle officer stop the vehicle, and was told by the dispatcher to
    make the stop himself. 
    2000 ME 194
    , ¶¶ 2-3, 9, 
    761 A.2d 288
    . We held that “a
    reasonable and articulable suspicion satisfies the probable cause component
    of the Jolin and Pike test,” that the officer’s actions were reasonable, and that
    the officer was not attempting to ferret out crime with intentional disregard of
    his territorial limits. Id. ¶¶ 8-9.
    13
    [¶20] Contrary to Turner’s contention, the circumstances in Jolin, Pike,
    and Rideout do not support his assertion that the stop here was unreasonable.
    Taken together, the cases stand for the proposition that the exclusionary rule
    does not require the suppression of evidence if the extraterritorial exercise of
    the officer’s authority was (1) supported by the law and constitutional
    requirements that would have applied had the officer been within his lawful
    territory; (2) justified by the facts surrounding the stop; and (3) not made
    unreasonable by the presence of other factors, such as a willful disregard of
    territorial limits, the seeking out of crime in another territory, or a complete
    failure to contact the local law enforcement agency. Although we have not
    decided “the point at which a violation of the fresh pursuit statute might
    trigger an exclusionary rule,” Pike, 
    642 A.2d at 147
    , and we do not do so here,
    we have indicated that an intentional disregard of territorial limits to ferret
    out crime could require the suppression of evidence, see Rideout, 
    2000 ME 194
    , ¶ 9, 
    761 A.2d 288
    ; Jolin, 
    639 A.2d at 1064
    ; Pike, 
    642 A.2d at 147
    .
    [¶21] In the matter before us, the officer did not intentionally make an
    excursion into Waterville to ferret out crime; rather, he happened to observe a
    crime being committed while engaged in a lawful, extraterritorial traffic stop.
    See 30-A M.R.S. § 2671(2)(E). He also communicated his actions promptly
    14
    enough that a Waterville officer arrived on the scene almost immediately.
    Furthermore, based on the officer’s observations of the driver striking the
    median and operating erratically, the officer could have reached several
    reasonable conclusions justifying the officer’s further investigation.         For
    example, until the officer located the vehicle parked in the bank’s parking lot,
    the officer could have reasonably believed that the driver would continue to
    pose an imminent risk to public safety or was himself in some circumstance
    needing assistance. Until the officer checked the driver’s condition through
    personal contact, the officer could have been reasonably acting in his
    community caretaking capacity. Under all of these circumstances, the officer’s
    request for Turner’s license and registration during the very brief period
    between making contact with him and the arrival of the Waterville officer was
    not unreasonable.
    [¶22] In sum, the Winslow officer’s action of pursuing an erratically
    operated vehicle was reasonable, as was his initial contact with the driver, and
    the officer did not intentionally disregard his territorial limits in an attempt to
    ferret out crime. The motion court did not err in denying Turner’s motion to
    suppress.
    15
    The entry is:
    Judgment affirmed.
    Scott F. Hess, Esq. (orally), The Law Office of Scott F. Hess, LLC, Augusta, for
    appellant Ryan Turner
    Maeghan Maloney, District Attorney, Francis Griffin, Asst. Dist. Atty. (orally),
    and Mary-Ann Letourneau, Stud. Atty., Prosecutorial District IV, Augusta, for
    appellee State of Maine
    Waterville District Court docket number CR-2015-289
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY