State of Minnesota v. Marcus Wade Hall ( 2016 )


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  •                           This opinion will be unpublished and
    may not be cited except as provided by
    Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
    STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A16-0640
    State of Minnesota,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    Marcus Wade Hall,
    Respondent.
    Filed September 6, 2016
    Reversed and remanded
    Connolly, Judge
    Ramsey County District Court
    File No. 62SU-CR-15-2277
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    Heather Monnens, Robb L. Olson, Geck, Duea & Olson, PLLC, White Bear Lake,
    Minnesota (for appellant)
    Alexander H. De Marco, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Considered and decided by Worke, Presiding Judge; Ross, Judge; and Connolly,
    Judge.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    CONNOLLY, Judge
    Appellant the State of Minnesota challenges the district court’s grant of
    respondent’s motion to suppress the evidence of his driving while intoxicated (DWI) on
    the ground that respondent was unlawfully seized from his home. Because the police
    officer had probable cause to arrest respondent at the threshold of his home, we reverse
    and remand.
    FACTS
    About 8:00 in the evening of July 6, 2015, complainant E.S.B. made a 911 report
    that: (1) while he was in his driveway with his children, he observed respondent Marcus
    Wade Hall, whom E.S.B. recognized as a neighbor, speed past, going about 50 mph in the
    30 mph zone; (2) E.S.B. also recognized respondent’s car, a gray Saturn; (3) respondent
    was wearing khaki pants and a black shirt; (4) E.S.B. yelled at the car to slow down;
    (5) E.S.B. walked to respondent’s residence; and (6) they had an altercation.
    A police officer in uniform was dispatched to the scene in a squad car. He first
    talked to E.S.B., then went to respondent’s house and knocked on the front door. The door
    was answered by a man wearing khaki pants and a black shirt whom the officer identified
    as respondent. Respondent’s eyes were bloodshot, he emitted the odor of alcohol, his
    speech was slurred, and he held on to the front door to keep his balance. The officer
    remained standing on the porch; he did not enter respondent’s house.
    Respondent told the officer he had just come home from a bar where he had
    consumed two beers, had driven past E.S.B.’s house, had parked his car in his own garage,
    and had been involved in an altercation with E.S.B. Based on respondent’s condition and
    his statements, the officer believed that respondent had been driving while intoxicated.
    The officer asked respondent to open the garage so he could see if the car was there;
    respondent refused, saying “Because it’s my property.” The officer then asked respondent
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    to come out of his house to perform some field sobriety tests; respondent said it was his
    house and the officer should not be there. The officer said he did not want to have to come
    in and get respondent, but would do so if necessary, and that respondent would be arrested
    for DWI in any event. Respondent then came out of the house and attempted to perform
    the field sobriety tests. He failed a preliminary breath test (PBT). The officer determined
    that he had probable cause to arrest respondent and arrested him. Respondent was taken
    to a police station, where the implied consent advisory was read to him, and he provided a
    breath sample; it indicated an alcohol concentration of 0.19.
    Respondent was charged with misdemeanor DWI. He moved to dismiss the charges
    on several grounds or, in the alternative, to suppress all evidence acquired subsequent to
    his leaving his house on the ground that his Fourth Amendment rights were violated when
    he was unlawfully coerced into leaving his house because there was no probable cause for
    his arrest. At the hearing, the officer testified, and the squad car video was received into
    evidence.
    In his posthearing brief, respondent addressed three issues: (1) was he unlawfully
    seized from his home without a warrant; (2) was there sufficient probable cause to arrest
    him; and (3) did any exceptions to the warrant requirement apply to the warrantless
    chemical test of respondent. The district court concluded that “the [s]eizure was not lawful
    because [respondent] was coerced and threatened into leaving the sanctuary of his house”
    and suppressed the results of the PBT, the field sobriety tests, and the subsequent breath
    test at the police station. But the district court did not suppress the information obtained
    prior to respondent’s leaving his house because it concluded that the officer had probable
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    cause to arrest respondent. Finally, the district court noted that it did not need to reach the
    question of whether respondent’s warrantless breath test was lawful because it had
    suppressed “all evidence following the unlawful order [to respondent] to exit his house.”
    The state challenges the order suppressing the evidence.
    DECISION
    “[W]hen reviewing a pre-trial order suppressing evidence where the facts are not in
    dispute and the [district] court’s decision is a question of law, the reviewing court may
    independently review the facts and determine, as a matter of law, whether the evidence
    need be suppressed.” State v. Othoudt, 
    482 N.W.2d 218
    , 221-22 (Minn. 1992) (holding
    that, absent some manifestation of consent to an officer’s warrantless entry into a home,
    the entry is not made with consent).
    To support its statement that “[t]he [s]eizure was not lawful because [respondent]
    was coerced and threatened into leaving the sanctuary of his house,” the district court relied
    on language from Othoudt: “[T]his court will not look kindly upon warrantless entries of
    family residences, justified on the flimsiest and most pretextual of excuses.             The
    constitutional right to be free from unjustified, official invasions of one’s home is basic,
    and this court will not tolerate its violation.” 
    Id. at 224.
    But Othoudt is distinguishable.
    Here, the officer did not enter respondent’s house. In that case, the officer entered the
    home without knocking or seeking permission to enter from a person sitting in the
    entryway, questioned the person, and, after the person pointed upstairs, walked upstairs
    and into the defendant’s bedroom, where he found the defendant in bed, told him to get up
    and get dressed, questioned him, and arrested him. 
    Id. at 221.
    Here, the officer knocked
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    and remained on the porch while he talked to respondent. There was no “warrantless entry
    of [a] family residence[]” because the officer stood in the open doorway. 
    Id. at 224;
    see
    also Castillo v. Comm’r of Pub. Safety, 
    416 N.W.2d 730
    , 732 (Minn. 1987) (trial court’s
    ruling that, because “the arrest occurred in the doorway after [the defendant] voluntarily
    opened the door in response to the knocking by the police . . . there was no warrantless
    entry . . . was clearly consistent with our cases”).
    For Fourth-Amendment purposes, an open doorway is a public place. United States
    v. Santana, 
    427 U.S. 38
    , 42, 
    96 S. Ct. 2406
    , 2409 (1976). A defendant who is in a public
    place when officers initiate an arrest may not thwart the arrest by retreating into his
    residence. 
    Id. at 43,
    96 S. Ct. at 2410. Respondent opened the door of his house to the
    police officer and, while they were in the open doorway, gave the officer probable cause
    to arrest him by displaying several indicia of intoxication and admitting that he had just
    driven home from a bar where he had been drinking. Having done these things, respondent
    had no right to thwart his arrest by retreating into his house. See 
    id. at 42-43,
    96 S. Ct. at
    2409-10 (stating that a defendant’s “act of retreating into her house could [not] thwart an
    otherwise proper arrest” and concluding that the officer’s following the defendant into her
    house was “hot pursuit” and justified his warrantless entry). If respondent had retreated
    into his house and the officer, without a warrant, had followed him, the warrantless entry
    of respondent’s house would have been justified.
    The district court offers no support for its view that, having seen indicia of
    intoxication in respondent and heard from respondent that he had just driven home from a
    bar, the officer needed a warrant to arrest him. “A peace officer may lawfully arrest a
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    person for violation of section 169A.20 . . . without a warrant upon probable cause, without
    regard to whether the violation was committed in the officer’s presence.” Minn. Stat.
    § 169A.40 (2014). Moreover, “only . . . one objective indication of intoxication . . .
    constitute[s] reasonable and probable grounds to believe a person is under the influence.”
    Holtz v. Comm’r of Pub. Safety, 
    340 N.W.2d 363
    , 365 (Minn. App. 1983). The officer
    could have arrested respondent without a warrant while respondent was standing in his
    doorway, so the officer’s telling respondent he would be arrested if he refused to leave the
    doorway was not illegal. Moreover, it was not necessary for the officer to require field
    sobriety tests to establish probable cause for the arrest, and the fact that he did require
    respondent to perform the tests does not invalidate the arrest.
    Because there was no basis to suppress the results of either the field sobriety tests
    or the breath test given at the police station, we reverse the district court’s pretrial
    suppression order and remand this matter to the district court. On remand, the district court
    should also consider respondent’s remaining issue, i.e., whether any of the exceptions to
    the warrant requirement applies to the warrantless chemical test of respondent.
    Reversed and remanded.
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Document Info

Docket Number: A16-640

Filed Date: 9/6/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021