State v. Bonilla , 358 Or. 475 ( 2015 )


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  • No. 57	                  December 31, 2015	475
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Petitioner on Review,
    v.
    LINDA JEAN BONILLA,
    Respondent on Review.
    (CC 11CR2221FE; CA A153808; SC S062962)
    En Banc
    On review from the Court of Appeals.*
    Argued and submitted September 15, 2015.
    Paul L. Smith, Assistant Attorney General, Salem,
    argued the cause. Anna M. Joyce, Solicitor General, filed
    the brief for petitioner on review. With her on the brief was
    Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General.
    Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Salem, argued the
    cause and filed the brief for respondent on review.
    BREWER, J.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. The
    judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case is
    remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings.
    Landau, J., concurred and filed an opinion, in which
    Kistler, J., joins.
    ______________
    *  Appeal from Douglas County Circuit Court Ronald Poole, Judge. 
    267 Or App 337
    , 341 P3d 751 (2014).
    476	                                                         State v. Bonilla
    Case Summary: Police officers entered a residence without a warrant and
    opened a wooden box they found in a bedroom, believing that they had lawful
    consent to take each of those actions. Defendant, who was charged with a crime
    based on evidence found in the box, moved to suppress the evidence on the ground
    that the persons whose consent the police had relied on to enter the residence
    and open the box were not authorized to give consent. The trial court denied
    the motion and defendant was subsequently convicted. The Court of Appeals
    reversed, rejecting the state’s argument that the person who had consented to
    the search of the box had actual authority to do so, based on her shared pos-
    session and control of the room in which the box was located. On review, the
    state argued that consent that justifies a search under Article I, section 9, of the
    Oregon Constitution, exists if a person with apparent authority has given his or
    her consent. Held: A consent search is justified under Article I, section 9, only if
    someone who has authority gives their consent; the existence and scope of such
    authority is determined from the totality of the circumstances, and not the rea-
    sonable understanding of the police.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. The judgment of the cir-
    cuit court is reversed, and the case is remanded to the circuit court for further
    proceedings.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	477
    BREWER, J.
    Police officers entered a residence without a war-
    rant and opened a wooden box that they found in a bed-
    room, believing that they had lawful consent to take each of
    those actions. Defendant, who was charged with unlawful
    possession of a controlled substance based on evidence found
    in the box, moved to suppress the evidence under Article I,
    section 9, of the Oregon Constitution, on the ground that
    the persons who had given consent to the home entry and
    the search of the box were not authorized to give consent.
    The trial court denied the motion to suppress. On appeal
    from her ensuing conviction, defendant asserted that there
    was no evidence that she had consented to the home entry
    or the search of the box. The state replied that, for purposes
    of Article I, section 9, the persons who gave consent to the
    entry and search had actual authority to do so. The Court of
    Appeals reversed. Focusing specifically on the search of the
    box, that court rejected the state’s argument that the per-
    son who had consented to the search had actual authority to
    give consent, based on her shared possession and control of
    the room in which the box was located. State v. Bonilla, 
    267 Or App 337
    , 344-47, 341 P3d 751 (2014).
    In its merits brief on review before this court, the
    state abandoned its “actual authority” theory of consent in
    favor of a revised theory that the warrantless search of the
    box was justified under Article I, section 9, on the ground
    that a person with apparent authority—from the perspec-
    tive of the police officers—had given her consent, and that
    that was sufficient to qualify the search as a lawful con-
    sent search. Finally, at oral argument, the state asserted
    that, regardless of whether there was lawful consent to the
    warrantless search of the box, the dispositive issue under
    Article I, section 9, should be whether the search was rea-
    sonable in light of the information available to the police at
    the time. According to the state, the search of the box was
    lawful under that standard.
    As explained below, we conclude that the war-
    rantless search of the wooden box in this case was not
    authorized under the consent exception to the warrant
    478	                                                         State v. Bonilla
    requirement.1 We further conclude that the state’s alterna-
    tive argument—that the search was lawful because it was
    reasonable—is essentially a request to overturn this court’s
    longstanding construction of Article I, section 9; in the
    absence of a sufficiently developed argument to justify such
    reconsideration, we decline to consider that argument on its
    merits. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the Court of
    Appeals, reverse the trial court’s order denying suppression,
    and remand to the trial court for further proceedings.
    Our summary of the facts is largely based on the
    trial court’s findings, augmented by undisputed evidence
    in the record. Police officers arrived at the residence of a
    parolee, Fleshman, to investigate a report that he was
    involved in drug activity. There, they spoke to Dabbs, who
    told them that Fleshman and his girlfriend, Crowe, lived in
    a converted garage behind Dabbs’ house, that they were in
    the process of moving out, and that Fleshman was not home
    at the time. The officers asked to speak with Crowe. Dabbs
    led the officers back behind his own house to the converted
    garage. Access to the dwelling was through an open doorway
    leading to a storage area, inside of which was a second, inte-
    rior door. The interior door was closed. The officers followed
    Dabbs through the open doorway into the storage area and
    waited there while Dabbs contacted Crowe and explained to
    her that the officers wanted to talk to her about Fleshman.
    Crowe told Fleshman that the officers could enter through
    the interior door. They did so, and found themselves in a liv-
    ing room, where Crowe and defendant were present. Dabbs
    then left.
    Soon after entering the living room, the officers
    asked Crowe about a strong odor of marijuana inside the
    residence. Crowe told them that it was probably coming from
    a back room, where her grandmother was present. One of
    the officers asked if he could accompany Crowe to the back
    room and Crowe responded that he could. Crowe and the
    officer walked down a short hallway to a closed door, which
    Crowe opened. Inside was a small bedroom that was fur-
    nished with a single bed and a recliner. Crowe introduced
    1
    Like the Court of Appeals, we do not reach the question of whether the offi-
    cers had valid consent to enter the home.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	479
    the officer to her grandmother, Bull, who was sitting in the
    recliner. Crowe then returned to the living room.
    Bull admitted to the officer that she had been smok-
    ing marijuana and that she did not have a medical mari-
    juana card; she produced a bag of the drug, which the officer
    confiscated. The officer then asked Bull if he could “check to
    make sure” that there were no more drugs, and Bull told him
    that he could. On a “headboard type thing” next to the bed,
    the officer saw a wooden box; he opened it and discovered
    three plastic bags that contained a white crystalline resi-
    due. He asked Bull about the substance and she responded
    that it was not hers and that it must belong to her daughter.
    It was at that point that the officer first learned that Bull
    shared the bedroom with her daughter. After ascertaining
    that Bull’s daughter was defendant—the other woman in
    the living room—the officer returned to the living room. He
    told defendant what he had found in the box and then asked
    for her permission to search the bedroom. Defendant gave
    her consent, and the officer resumed his search of the bed-
    room, ultimately finding, in addition to the baggies, several
    “snort tubes” that also contained a white crystalline residue.
    Defendant was charged with unlawful possession of a con-
    trolled substance, ORS 475.894, after tests confirmed that
    the white residue was methamphetamine.
    Before trial, defendant moved to suppress the evi-
    dence found in the search of the bedroom, relying primar-
    ily on Article I, section 9.2 She argued that the evidence
    was obtained through a series of warrantless searches—
    including the entry by the police officers into the open stor-
    age area of the converted garage, their search of the box, and
    their second search of the bedroom after defendant’s shared
    occupancy of the bedroom was disclosed. Defendant further
    argued that, although the officers believed that they had
    obtained lawful consent for each of those actions, the per-
    sons who purportedly had consented to the initial entry and
    the search of the box—respectively, Dabbs and Bull—had
    2
    In a memorandum of “Points and Authorities” attached to her suppression
    motion, defendant cited both Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution and
    the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution as authority for her
    motion. Defendant’s arguments, however, were directed primarily, if not entirely,
    at Article I, section 9.
    480	                                           State v. Bonilla
    no actual authority to give such consent. As to her own con-
    sent to the second search of the bedroom, defendant argued
    that it was obtained through exploitation of the officers’
    earlier unlawful searches, and thus did not excuse the fail-
    ure to obtain a warrant. The trial court, however, accepted
    the state’s contrary arguments that the police officers had
    obtained lawful consent at every stage. It denied defendant’s
    motion to suppress, and defendant ultimately was convicted
    of the charged offense. Defendant then appealed, assigning
    error to the denial of her motion to suppress.
    To place the parties’ arguments on appeal and
    review in a more meaningful context, it is helpful to briefly
    describe several principles that guide our analysis. This
    court has adopted a categorical view under Article I, section
    9, that, subject to certain specifically established and limited
    exceptions, deems warrantless searches to be per se unrea-
    sonable. See State v. Bridewell, 
    306 Or 231
    , 235, 759 P2d
    1054 (1988) (“Absent consent, law enforcement officials must
    have a warrant to search a person’s premises. Warrantless
    entries and searches of premises are per se unreasonable
    unless they fall within one of the few specifically established
    and carefully delineated exceptions to the warrant require-
    ment.”); see also State v. Mazzola, 
    356 Or 804
    , 810, 345 P3d
    424 (2015) (same); State v. Kurokawa-Lasciak, 
    351 Or 179
    ,
    186, 263 P3d 336 (2011) (same); State v. Meharry, 
    342 Or 173
    , 177, 149 P3d 1155 (2006) (same); State v. Connally, 
    339 Or 583
    , 587, 125 P3d 1254 (2005) (same); State v. Snow, 
    337 Or 219
    , 223, 94 P3d 872 (2004) (same).
    This court has described consent to a search as an
    “exception” to the warrant requirement under Article I, sec-
    tion 9. See, e.g., State v. Weaver, 
    319 Or 212
    , 219, 874 P2d 1322
    (1994). We have done so, not because we excuse the failure
    to obtain a warrant for an exceptional reason, but because
    consent relinquishes a person’s privacy interest in property
    so that there is no unlawful intrusion under Article I, sec-
    tion 9. See, e.g., State v. Brown, 
    348 Or 293
    , 305, 232 P3d 962
    (2010) (“Beal’s consent to a search relinquished the remain-
    ing privacy interest in the room and its contents.”); see also
    State v. Tanner, 
    304 Or 312
    , 322, 745 P2d 757 (1987) (“B’s
    section 9 interests will not be violated if A allows the police
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	481
    to enter the house and discover the effects, * * * because A
    controls access to the house * * *.”).
    When the state relies on consent, it must prove by
    a preponderance of the evidence that “someone having the
    authority to do so” voluntarily gave the police consent to
    search the defendant’s property and that any limitations on
    the scope of the consent were complied with. Weaver, 
    319 Or at 219
    . Where, as in this case, the police rely on consent from
    someone other than the defendant, it is necessary to estab-
    lish the basis of the third party’s authority. As an example
    of valid authority, a co-inhabitant with common authority
    over property, based on joint access or control, generally has
    authority to give consent to search the property. State v.
    Carsey, 
    295 Or 32
    , 41, 664 P2d 1085 (1983).3
    Before the Court of Appeals, defendant argued that,
    to satisfy the requirements of the consent exception under
    Article I, section 9, consent must be given by a person with
    actual authority to give it. As pertinent here, defendant
    argued that Bull lacked authority to consent to a search of
    the wooden box because she did not have common access to
    or control over it. In its brief before the Court of Appeals, the
    state did not challenge the analytical framework that defen-
    dant had advanced. Rather, the state acknowledged that,
    under the Court of Appeals’ case law interpreting Article I,
    section 9, the existence of valid consent depends on the
    consenter’s actual authority. The state also acknowledged
    that the existence of such authority depends on whether
    the consenting person has joint access to and control over
    the property in question. However, the state disagreed with
    defendant’s application of those principles to the evidence in
    this case. The state insisted that, because no evidence in the
    record suggested any limitation on Bull’s authority over the
    shared bedroom and its contents, Bull had actual authority
    to consent to the search that the officers conducted.
    3
    In Carsey, this court explained that:
    “[C]ommon authority rests on mutual use of property by persons generally
    having joint access or control for most purposes so that it is reasonable to
    recognize that any of the co-inhabitants has the right to permit inspection
    in his own right, and that the others have assumed the risk that one of their
    number might permit the common area to be searched.”
    
    Id.
    482	                                        State v. Bonilla
    Focusing on Article I, section 9, the Court of
    Appeals hewed to the issue that the parties appeared to
    agree was dispositive—whether the consents on which the
    state relied had been given by persons with actual author-
    ity to consent, as determined by the rights of access to and
    control over the property that those persons held. The court
    held that, at least with respect to the search of the wooden
    box, the evidence did not support a determination that Bull
    had actual authority to give consent. The court reasoned
    that, although Bull had joint access to and control over the
    shared bedroom where the wooden box was located, there
    was no evidence that she had joint access to or control over
    the box itself, or that defendant had authorized or acqui-
    esced in its use by any person other than herself. 267 Or
    App at 344-46. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals held that
    the warrantless search of the box was unlawful and that
    the fruits of that search must be suppressed. It also con-
    cluded that defendant’s consent to the further search of the
    bedroom, given when she was confronted with the results
    of the search of the box, was the “unattenuated product[ ]
    of the unlawful search” and that, consequently, the items
    found in that further search also must be suppressed. Id. at
    346.
    When the state sought review of that decision by
    this court, it advanced a revised theory as to why there was
    lawful consent to the warrantless search of the wooden box
    for purposes of Article I, section 9. Abandoning the theory
    that Bull had had actual authority to consent to a search
    of the box, the state argued that the search was justified
    by what it described as “the apparent authority doctrine.”
    Under that doctrine, which was adopted by the United
    States Supreme Court in Illinois v. Rodriguez, 
    497 US 177
    ,
    188-89, 
    110 S Ct 2793
    , 
    111 L Ed 2d 148
     (1990), a police offi-
    cer who conducts a search based on consent given by a per-
    son that the officer reasonably—but mistakenly—believes
    has authority to consent, does not violate the Fourth
    Amendment prohibition against unreasonable searches.
    The primary question that the state posed on review was
    whether that apparent authority doctrine is cognizable
    under the consent exception to the warrant requirement
    under Article I, section 9.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	483
    A preliminary issue, not raised by the parties, is
    whether the state’s failure to advance that theory before
    the trial court and the Court of Appeals precludes the state
    from relying on it before this court as a basis for upholding
    the trial court’s ruling on defendant’s motion to suppress.
    We conclude that it does not. Here, the parties’ specific legal
    theories pertaining to consent were never clearly laid out in
    the trial court. Granted, the state did not advance an appar-
    ent authority theory of consent before the Court of Appeals.
    However, as articulated in both its petition for review and its
    merits brief before this court, the state continued to argue
    that the evidence before the trial court satisfied the consent
    exception under Article I, section 9. Moreover, it likely would
    have been futile for the state to raise a consent-based appar-
    ent authority theory before the Court of Appeals, because
    that court previously had held that only actual authority can
    satisfy the consent exception. See, e.g., State v. Fuller, 
    158 Or App 501
    , 505, 976 P2d 1137 (1999) (holding that consent, for
    purposes of Article I, section 9, must be given by a “person
    with the actual authority to do so”); State v. Ready, 
    148 Or App 149
    , 152-53, 939 P2d 117, rev den, 
    326 Or 68
    , 950 P2d
    892 (1997) (same). As a practical matter, the state was in
    a poor position to make its consent-based apparent author-
    ity argument to any Oregon tribunal other than this court,
    which has not directly addressed that issue. Accordingly,
    and in the absence of any argument by defendant that she
    has been prejudiced by the state’s revised theory of consent,
    we choose to exercise our discretion to consider it.
    As noted, the apparent authority doctrine that
    the state asks us to recognize is closely associated with
    Rodriguez, a Fourth Amendment case decided some 25
    years ago by the United States Supreme Court. In that case,
    a woman who had lived for a time with the defendant in his
    apartment, but who had moved out a month earlier, used a
    key that she had taken without the defendant’s knowledge
    to let police officers into the apartment. After entering the
    apartment, the officers observed drugs in plain view. As
    a consequence, the defendant was charged with unlawful
    possession of a controlled substance. The defendant moved
    to suppress the evidence, and the trial court granted the
    motion after concluding that the warrantless entry into the
    484	                                                         State v. Bonilla
    apartment violated the Fourth Amendment. 
    Id.,
     
    497 US at 179-80
    . Before the Supreme Court, the state argued that,
    because the police officers reasonably believed that they
    had entered the apartment with the consent of a co-tenant,4
    there had been no Fourth Amendment violation. 
    Id. at 182
    .
    The Court agreed with the state. The Court began
    its analysis by noting that the Fourth Amendment is a
    guarantee only against “unreasonable” searches and that
    a co-tenant’s consent to the search of a residence can make
    a warrantless search “reasonable.” 
    Id. at 183-84
    . The Court
    then observed that, in several prior decisions dealing with
    other factors that had been found to render a warrant-
    less search “reasonable,” it had concluded that the Fourth
    Amendment does not demand literal factual accuracy, but
    only that any mistake of fact be reasonable in light of the
    facts available to the police at the time of the search. 
    Id. at 184-85
     (discussing Maryland v. Garrison, 
    480 US 79
    , 
    107 S Ct 1013
    , 
    94 L Ed 2d 72
     (1987); Hill v. California, 
    401 US 797
    ,
    
    91 S Ct 1106
    , 
    28 L Ed 2d 484
     (1971); and Brinegar v. United
    States, 
    338 US 160
    , 
    69 S Ct 1302
    , 
    93 L Ed 1879
     (1949)). The
    Court saw no reason to depart from that “general rule” with
    respect to the factual determination of consent:
    “As with other factual determinations bearing on search
    and seizure, the determination of consent to enter must be
    judged against an objective standard: would the facts avail-
    able to the officer at the moment warrant a man of rea-
    sonable caution in the belief that the consenting party had
    authority over the premises. * * * [I]f so, the search is valid.”
    Rodriguez, 
    497 US at 188-89
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted).5
    This court has never specifically decided whether
    the Fourth Amendment “apparent authority” doctrine
    4
    In her conversations with the police, the woman had referred to the apart-
    ment as “our apartment.”
    5
    The dissent in Rodriguez argued that the “reasonableness” balance already
    had been struck against warrantless home intrusions, except for exigent circum-
    stances, and that “reasonable” factual errors by law enforcement officers could
    not validate a search that already was inherently unreasonable. Accordingly, the
    dissent concluded, “the reasonableness of a police officer’s mistaken belief that a
    third party had authority to consent is irrelevant.” 
    497 US at 196
     (Marshall, J.,
    dissenting).
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	485
    comports with the consent exception to the warrant require-
    ment under Article I, section 9.6 In urging us to conclude that
    it does, the state points to the “substantive[ ] similar[ity]”
    between Article I, section 9, and the Fourth Amendment
    that this court recognized in State v. Fair, 
    353 Or 588
    , 602,
    302 P3d 417 (2013). Like the federal provision, the state
    observes, Article I, section 9, does not protect against every
    search or seizure by the government, but only against those
    that are arbitrary, oppressive, or otherwise “unreasonable.”
    
    Id.
     The state contends that a corollary to that focus is evi-
    dent in this court’s Article I, section 9, jurisprudence: Not
    all factual mistakes by government actors about the cir-
    cumstances surrounding a search—but only those that are
    unreasonable—render the search unlawful under Article I,
    section 9.
    That principle was decisive, the state argues, in
    State v. Holdorf, 
    355 Or 812
    , 333 P3d 982 (2014), where this
    court held that, under Article I, section 9, a police officer
    lawfully could stop a person based on “reasonable” sus-
    picion that the person has committed a crime, as long as
    that suspicion was based on specific and articulable “facts”
    that had been conveyed to the officer by someone the officer
    could reasonably rely on. Similarly, the state notes, in State
    v. Baker, 
    350 Or 641
    , 260 P3d 476 (2011), this court held
    that a police officer’s objectively reasonable belief that an
    emergency existed was sufficient to trigger the emergency
    aid exception to the warrant requirement, even though no
    emergency existed in fact. The state argues for a similar
    analysis of warrantless searches under Article I, section 9’s,
    consent exception. In the state’s view, the lawfulness of a
    consent search should be assessed—similarly to the analy-
    sis in Rodriguez—based on the facts available to the police
    6
    In Carsey, this court held that the consent exception under the Fourth
    Amendment, as it was interpreted at that time, did not extend to circumstances
    in which the police had a mistaken, but reasonable, belief that a person with
    authority had consented to the search. 
    295 Or at 44-46
    . Carsey notwithstand-
    ing, as discussed above, the Court with the last word on Fourth Amendment
    questions adopted the apparent authority doctrine some seven years later, in
    Rodriguez. This court also implied in Carsey that actual authority is required to
    satisfy the consent exception under Article I, section 9, but it did not specifically
    decide that issue. See 
    295 Or at
    34 n 1. See State v. Guggenmos, 
    350 Or 243
    , 265
    n 4, 253 P3d 1042 (2011) (Kistler, J., dissenting) (so describing import of Carsey).
    486	                                                          State v. Bonilla
    at the time of the search, with the focus on whether a rea-
    sonable person, armed with those facts, would have believed
    that the consenting person had authority over the property
    to be searched.
    There are two overlapping problems with that
    approach, both of which stem from the fact that the Fourth
    Amendment doctrine of apparent authority is based on dif-
    ferent principles than those underlying the consent excep-
    tion under Article I, section 9. First, as discussed, the federal
    doctrine is premised on the Fourth Amendment precept that
    a reasonable mistake of fact as to the existence of author-
    ity to consent does not render a warrantless search invalid.
    See Rodriguez, 
    497 US at 184-86
    . Under that conception of
    apparent authority, it is immaterial whether the true owner
    of property authorized (or even appeared to authorize) a
    third party to consent to search the property. That is, the
    reasonableness of a factual mistake as to the consenter’s
    authority does not depend on any objective manifestation by
    the true owner; in fact, the police may not even know of the
    existence of the true owner.7
    In contrast, because consent under Article I, section
    9, involves the relinquishment of a privacy interest, Brown,
    
    348 Or at 305
    , it must be given by (or lawfully on behalf
    of) the person who holds the protected privacy interest. See
    Weaver, 
    319 Or at 219
     (consent must be given by someone
    “having the authority to do so.”). For that reason, the exis-
    tence of valid third-party consent depends either on the
    third party’s common authority over the property based on
    her or his own property interest, Carsey, 
    295 Or at 46
    , or,
    alternatively, on the application of agency principles.8
    7
    Thus, under the Fourth Amendment analysis, “apparent authority”—which
    ordinarily is associated with agency law principles—is unrelated to the law of
    agency. See, e.g., United States v. Moran, 214 F3d 950, 951 (8th Cir 2000) (declining
    to “pursue the intricacies of property and agency law” when the decisive question
    under Rodriguez “is whether the search was ‘unreasonable’ within the meaning
    of the Fourth Amendment”); State v. Morse, 156 Wash 2d 1, 12 n 3, 123 P3d 832
    (2005) (noting that “apparent authority,” as used under Fourth Amendment, “is
    quite different than ‘apparent authority’ as used in agency law,” where “apparent
    authority stems from the principal’s objective manifestation to a third party”).
    8
    When this court implied in Carsey that actual authority is required to sat-
    isfy the consent exception under Article I, section 9, 
    295 Or at
    34 n 1, it was
    considering the sort of actual authority that is based on joint access and control
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	487
    Second, and relatedly, the state’s argument fails to
    recognize that, under Article I, section 9, consent always
    has been treated differently from other recognized justifica-
    tions for warrantless searches, including, for example, justi-
    fications that are based on an exigency that makes obtain-
    ing a warrant infeasible. When an exigency-based exception
    applies, the lawfulness of a search depends on what a rea-
    sonable person would make of the facts known to the officer
    at the time of the search. Unlike a consent search, what the
    defendant intended or what authority he or she had is not
    part of that inquiry.
    When the police rely on an exigency-based excep-
    tion to the warrant requirement, they are exercising the
    government’s unilateral authority to intrude on a person’s
    protected property interests, as they do when executing
    warrants.9 Because a cognizable exigency makes obtaining
    over property. Id. at 44-45. As the Fourth Circuit has recognized, however, in
    theory, “third person authority could be derived from an actual agency relation-
    ship.” United States v. Block, 590 F2d 535, 539 n 5 (4th Cir 1978). The court in
    Carsey did not discuss agency-based actual authority, nor did it contrast such
    authority with the agency-based doctrine of apparent authority, which, unlike
    the Fourth Amendment doctrine adopted in Rodriguez, requires the “holding out”
    of an apparent agent by a principal. See Eads v. Borman, 
    351 Or 729
    , 736, 277
    P3d 503 (2012) (endorsing settled common-law agency principle that “[a]pparent
    authority to do any particular act can be created only by some conduct of the prin-
    cipal which, when reasonably interpreted, causes a third party to believe that
    the principal consents to have the apparent agent act for him on that matter”
    (emphasis added)). Under agency principles, irrespective of whether the agency
    is apparent or actual, the action taken by the agent also must be one that was
    within the scope of the agent’s actual or apparent authority. 
    Id.
     at 736 n 4.
    Because the Fourth Amendment doctrine of apparent authority is not
    anchored on an agency-based theory of consent, and because the state in this case
    does not contend that defendant engaged in any conduct that would have caused
    a reasonable person to believe that she had authorized Bull to consent to a search
    of the wooden box, we need not reach the issue of whether agency-based apparent
    authority would suffice to satisfy the consent exception under Article I, section 9.
    9
    The quintessentially “reasonable” way to establish the government’s
    authority to conduct a nonconsensual search is through issuance of a warrant
    from a neutral and detached magistrate, on a showing of “probable cause.” State
    v. Anspach, 
    298 Or 375
    , 380-81, 692 P2d 602 (1984). Of necessity, the probable
    cause showing is based on the facts as the person applying for the warrant—
    usually a police officer—understands them at the time of the application. Because
    the probable cause decision is predictive, the most that can be expected is that
    the decision be reasonable in light of the facts that are known to the government
    actor. Therefore, facts that would support a magistrate’s determination of proba-
    ble cause must “lead a reasonable person to believe that seizable things will prob-
    ably be found in the location to be searched.” 
    Id.
     Of course, a motion to controvert
    488	                                                             State v. Bonilla
    a warrant infeasible, it is the police officer, not a neutral
    magistrate, who initially must decide whether the search
    is justified. But the officer’s decision is made and reviewed
    under the same standard that would have applied if a mag-
    istrate had made it: Based on the facts known to the officer
    at the time of the search, would a reasonable person have
    believed that (1) seizable things would probably be found; and
    (2) circumstances constituting an exigency were present?
    See, e.g., State v. Miskell/Sinibaldi, 
    351 Or 680
    , 696, 277
    P3d 522 (2012) (illustrating point). If so, the officer’s unilat-
    eral exercise of authority is lawful, even if, in hindsight, that
    assessment turned out to be wrong. As with searches autho-
    rized by a warrant, the relevant temporal reference point
    for assessing the lawfulness of a warrantless search is when
    the search was conducted.10
    Thus, in Stevens, this court held that police officers
    lawfully had entered and searched the defendant’s residence
    under the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant
    requirement because they had probable cause to believe that
    kidnapped children could be found in the residence and that
    those children might be in immediate danger. 311 Or at 129.
    Likewise, in Miskell, this court focused on the circumstances
    known to police officers when they decided to proceed with
    a warrantless recording of suspect statements to determine
    whether it was objectively reasonable to believe that swift
    action was necessary to prevent the destruction of evidence.
    allows a defendant to challenge the “good faith, accuracy and truthfulness of
    the affiant.” ORS 133.693(2). However (and subject to the defendant’s ability to
    controvert), even if it later turns out that the factual circumstances were not as
    the affiant believed them to be, the magistrate’s determination of probable cause
    and issuance of a warrant remain valid, and any search performed under the
    authority of the warrant is lawful. See State v. Esplin, 
    314 Or 296
    , 305, 839 P2d
    211 (1992) (relevant time for determining probable cause is when police officer
    seeks warrant).
    10
    As Professor LaFave has explained:
    “It is axiomatic that hindsight may not be employed in determining
    whether a prior arrest or search was made upon probable cause. If the action
    was taken without a warrant, the information to be considered is the ‘totality
    of the facts’ available to the officer at the time of the arrest or search; if it was
    pursuant to warrant (of which the arresting officer must have been aware),
    then the information to be considered is that which was made available to
    the issuing magistrate before the warrant was issued, including reasonable
    inferences drawn by the affiant.”
    William R. La Fave, Search and Seizure § 3.2(d), 57-60 (5th ed 2012 & Supp 2014).
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	489
    351 Or at 696-99. Indeed, as the state points out, this court
    has used a standard of objective reasonableness, based
    on the facts known to police at the time of a search, when
    reviewing the lawfulness of warrantless searches based on
    the emergency aid exception, Baker, 
    350 Or at 649
    ; the offi-
    cer safety exception, State v. Bates, 
    304 Or 519
    , 524, 747 P2d
    991 (1987); and the school safety exception, State ex rel Juv.
    Dept. v. M. A. D., 
    348 Or 381
    , 392-93, 233 P3d 437 (2010); in
    addition to the more general “exigent circumstances” excep-
    tion at issue in Stevens and Miskell.
    In contrast, as discussed, a consent search is justi-
    fied only if someone who had authority gave consent, Weaver,
    
    319 Or at 219
    ; the existence and scope of that authority
    could depend on facts that were unknown to the police at
    the time of the search. Although not directly on point, this
    court’s decisions addressing the voluntariness requirement
    are consistent with that understanding in requiring consid-
    eration of the totality of circumstances, including facts not
    known to the police at the time of the search.
    For example, in State v. Kennedy, 
    290 Or 493
    , 502,
    624 P2d 99 (1981), this court stated that
    “the proper test for determining the validity of consent to
    a search is to examine the totality of the facts and circum-
    stances to see whether the consent was given by defendant’s
    free will or was the result of coercion, express or implied.”11
    (Emphasis added.) In Kennedy, police officers approached the
    defendant as he was leaving the Portland airport and told
    him that they had information suggesting that he might be
    carrying drugs in his luggage (the information, based on a
    drug smugglers’ profile, was insufficient, in itself, to provide
    probable cause to search the defendant). 
    Id. at 495-96
    . The
    defendant denied that he was carrying drugs and, without
    any questions from the officers, asked them if they would
    like to search his luggage. The officers searched his bag and
    11
    The court in Kennedy did not direct its analysis specifically to Article I,
    section 9, but noted that the statutory rights that the defendant had invoked
    involved “substantially the same * * * analysis” as the analysis under Article I,
    section 9 and the Fourth Amendment. 
    290 Or at 497
    . However, this court has
    since recognized the “totality of the circumstances” analysis in Kennedy as the
    correct test for determining the voluntariness of consent under Article I, section
    9. See, e.g., State v. Unger, 
    356 Or 59
    , 72, 79-80, 333 P3d 1009 (2014).
    490	                                             State v. Bonilla
    found a vial that was empty inside but which had a small
    amount of cocaine residue along its threads. 
    Id.
     In the defen-
    dant’s ensuing prosecution on drug charges, the trial court
    suppressed that evidence. On review, the question before
    this court was whether the warrantless search of the bag
    was justified under the consent exception—more particu-
    larly, the question was whether the defendant’s consent to
    the search of the bag had been voluntary, rather than the
    result of police coercion.
    After examining the totality of the factual circum-
    stances, this court concluded that the encounter was not
    coercive. Notably, among the facts that the court mentioned
    was one that would not have been known to the police at
    the time of the search—the fact that the only evidence the
    police would find in the bag was an empty glass vial that,
    when examined closely, revealed a residue of cocaine on its
    threads. The court explained that
    “[d]efendant may well have invited the search in the belief
    that no incriminating evidence would be found. Other
    courts have held that circumstances indicating that the
    consenting party believed no incriminating evidence would
    be found in a search are a proper factor for consideration in
    determining whether consent to the search was voluntary.”
    Id. at 505-06.
    In Stevens, this court also considered the totality
    of the circumstances, including facts that were unavail-
    able to the police at the time of the search, in reviewing a
    trial court’s determination that the defendant’s consent to
    a warrantless search of his home had been voluntary. The
    defendant in Stevens was arrested on a winter day, standing
    by a creek, soaking wet, and wearing only jeans and socks.
    Although he initially seemed to be physically and mentally
    impaired, he appeared to recover once the police took him
    to the county jail and gave him dry clothes, coffee, and
    cigarettes. Detectives began to interview the defendant at
    around 10:00 a.m. and, according to their testimony, he did
    not appear to be under the influence of drugs at that time.
    During the interview, the defendant told the detectives that
    he had injected methamphetamine three times during the
    previous night and that, at 3:00 a.m., he had injected the
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	491
    remaining “scraps” of the drug. The detectives sought defen-
    dant’s consent to search his home for evidence of the crimes
    for which he had been arrested; they explained that he
    could refuse and informed him that any evidence discovered
    could be used against him. The defendant told the detec-
    tives that he understood and signed a consent form. Several
    hours later, toward the end of the interview, the defendant
    affirmed that he had given his statements “knowingly, vol-
    untarily and intelligently,” and he attributed his earlier
    impairment to hypothermia. 311 Or at 133-34.
    In his ensuing prosecution, the defendant moved
    to suppress evidence discovered in the search of his home
    on the ground that, due to drug intoxication, his consent
    had not been knowing and voluntary. At the hearing on the
    motion, among other evidence, the trial court received tes-
    timony from a criminologist who had found methamphet-
    amine in a sample of the defendant’s urine taken after his
    interview, the testimony of a psychiatrist who had reviewed
    a tape of the interview and who opined that the defendant
    had not been capable of consenting voluntarily at the time,
    and the testimony of witnesses who had seen the defendant
    in the hours before his arrest. Based on its consideration of
    the totality of the circumstances, the trial court determined
    that the defendant had voluntarily consented to the search
    and therefore denied suppression. Id. at 135-36. In affirm-
    ing that decision, this court specifically approved the trial
    court’s consideration of all the evidence:
    “The trial court’s findings are supported by evidence,
    which we have summarized above. * * * The trial court spe-
    cifically found after examining the evidence with particu-
    lar concern about the issue, that defendant’s drug use did
    not impair his capacity to make a knowing, voluntary and
    intelligent choice. We hold that the trial court did not err
    in concluding from its findings that defendant’s consent to
    search * * * w[as] given voluntarily.”
    Id. at 136.
    Weaver involved the scope of a consent search. In
    that case, the owner of a secondhand store consented in
    writing to a warrantless search of his store for firearms and
    other regulated property. Unbeknownst to the owner, before
    492	                                               State v. Bonilla
    he signed the consent form, other police officers already
    had started to search and seize items from the store. The
    owner was charged with crimes based on evidence found
    in the search. At trial, he moved to suppress the evidence
    seized in the search on the ground that the consent form
    that he had signed did not authorize the warrantless search
    that occurred before his consent was given. The trial court
    granted the motion. 
    319 Or at 214-17
    .
    On review, this court concluded that the “true”
    issue before it was the scope of the defendant’s consent, that
    is, whether the defendant retroactively had consented to a
    search. Although the state did not propose a police-centric
    view of consent such as the one it advocates here, it did pro-
    pose a categorical rule that consent should be deemed ret-
    roactive as a matter of law. In rejecting that argument, this
    court explained:
    “The scope of a consent is to be determined by the consent-
    ing party. It is possible for a consent to ‘relate back’ to the
    beginning of a search or seizure that otherwise would be
    unlawful. For a consent to conduct a search retroactively
    to validate earlier police activity, however, there must be
    evidence that the person giving the consent intended the
    consent to be retroactive. In this case, there is no evidence
    in the record indicating that [the] defendant intended his
    consent to be retroactive.”
    
    Id. at 221-22
    .
    Because they involved the issues of voluntariness
    and scope of consent, rather than authority to give consent,
    the discussed cases are not directly on point here. However,
    they are inconsistent with the premise that the validity of
    consent can be controlled by what the police reasonably but
    mistakenly believe based on facts available to them when
    they decide to search. Instead, in determining whether the
    person giving consent both voluntarily consented and—by
    parity of reasoning—had authority to do so, the court must
    consider the totality of circumstances, including facts that
    may not have been available to the police when the decision
    to search was made. Because the state adduced no evidence
    in this case that Bull had authority to consent to the search
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	493
    of defendant’s wooden box, the evidence was insufficient to
    satisfy the consent exception under Article I, section 9.
    We turn to the state’s final argument, advanced for
    the first time in oral argument before this court, that we
    should adopt an interpretation of Article I, section 9, that is
    “regrounded” in the wording of the provision: “No law shall
    violate the right of the people to be secure in their persons,
    houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches
    and seizures.” (Emphasis added). Based on the text of the
    provision, the state argues that the question of constitu-
    tionality reduces to the determination of whether a search
    was “unreasonable,” without regard to whether a recognized
    exception to the warrant requirement permitted the search.
    The state contends that, under that analysis, the searches
    at issue in this case were lawful because the police reason-
    ably believed that they had permission to search from peo-
    ple with authority to consent.
    As with the consent-based theory discussed above,
    the state did not advance its “reasonableness” theory either
    in the trial court or in the Court of Appeals. As discussed,
    358 Or at 482-83, that fact, standing alone, would not nec-
    essarily and automatically preclude this court from consid-
    ering such a theory. This court sometimes has been willing
    to consider entirely new proposed interpretations of a con-
    stitutional provision that were presented for the first time
    on review. See, e.g., State v. Ciancanelli, 
    339 Or 282
    , 121
    P3d 613 (2005) (considering proposed new interpretation
    of Article I, section 8, that was not raised in trial court or
    Court of Appeals); Stranahan v. Fred Meyer, Inc., 
    331 Or 38
    ,
    11 P3d 228 (2000) (considering party’s request to overrule
    court’s prior interpretation of Article IV, section 1, of Oregon
    Constitution raised for first time on review). The circum-
    stances here may be distinguishable, however, because in
    this case the state raised its theory for the first time at oral
    argument, when there was little opportunity for defendant
    to formulate a considered response.
    We need not decide that question. Even assum-
    ing arguendo that it is appropriate to consider the state’s
    “reasonableness” theory when it was not raised until oral
    argument, we decline to do so, because it is insufficiently
    494	                                             State v. Bonilla
    developed to justify our reconsideration of longstanding prec-
    edent with which it is at odds. In particular, as noted, 358
    Or at 480, this court has adopted a categorical view under
    Article I, section 9, that deems warrantless searches to be
    per se unreasonable (subject to certain well-defined and lim-
    ited exceptions). See, e.g., Bridewell, 
    306 Or at 235
    . The state
    proposes to set aside that categorical approach in favor of
    one that asks, instead, whether an officer acted unreason-
    ably in conducting a search, in light of the circumstances
    known to the officer and without regard to the existence of a
    warrant.
    This court has expressed its willingness to recon-
    sider a prior interpretation of the Oregon Constitution “when-
    ever a party presents to us a principled argument suggesting
    that, in an earlier decision, this court wrongly considered or
    wrongly decided the issue in question.” Stranahan, 
    331 Or at 54
    . But we also have observed that the path to overturn
    established constitutional precedent is not an easy one:
    “[T]he principle of stare decisis means that the party seek-
    ing to change a precedent must assume responsibility for
    affirmatively persuading us that we should abandon that
    precedent.
    “Various considerations may add to that responsibility.
    The most common such consideration is time. Many deci-
    sions of this court serve as precedent in later decisions.
    Thus, disavowing one case may undermine the preceden-
    tial significance of several others.
    “* * * * *
    “[Thus] the state, in order to prevail in this case, must
    persuade us, first, that the constitutional rule that it
    attacks was not formulated either by means of the appro-
    priate paradigm or by some suitable substitute. If the state
    accomplishes that task, then it still has before it the more
    difficult task of persuading this court that application of
    the appropriate paradigm establishes that the challenged
    constitutional rule is incorrect. Finally, and assuming that
    it is able to convince us of the incorrectness of the chal-
    lenged rule, the state must persuade us that, when the pas-
    sage of time and the precedential use of the challenged rule
    is factored in, overturning the rule will not unduly cloud or
    complicate the law.”
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	495
    Ciancanelli, 
    339 Or at 290-91
    ; see also State v. Unger, 
    356 Or 59
    , 70, 333 P3d 1009 (2014) (describing same burden).
    The state’s argument, which primarily consists of
    a general appeal to the wording of Article I, section 9, falls
    short of that standard for reconsideration of constitutional
    precedent because it does not meaningfully reckon with this
    court’s prior jurisprudence discussed above. Under those cir-
    cumstances, we decline the state’s invitation to reconsider
    our interpretive paradigm under Article I, section 9, in this
    case.
    To summarize: We reject the state’s argument that
    the officers’ warrantless search of the wooden box owned by
    defendant was justified under the consent exception to the
    warrant requirement of Article I, section 9. In addition, we
    decline to consider the state’s alternative argument, raised
    for the first time during oral argument on review, that the
    searches at issue in this case were lawful because, even
    though they were conducted without a warrant and did not
    satisfy a recognized exception to the warrant requirement
    under Article I, section 9, they nonetheless were reasonable.
    It follows that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s
    motion to suppress the evidence obtained in the search of
    the wooden box, and that the Court of Appeals correctly
    reversed that decision.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
    The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case
    is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings.
    LANDAU, J., concurring.
    At issue in this case is the lawfulness of a police
    officer’s warrantless search based on a reasonable, but
    mistaken, belief that consent to search had properly been
    granted. Doctrinally, the search could be regarded as law-
    ful under any of at least three different theories. First, it
    could be that the search qualified under the consent excep-
    tion to the warrant requirement of Article I, section 9, of
    the Oregon Constitution. Second, this court could recog-
    nize a separate exception to the warrant requirement that
    applies to the circumstances of this case. Or third, the
    court could abandon its preference for warrants altogether
    496	                                           State v. Bonilla
    and evaluate each police action on a case-by-case basis for
    reasonableness.
    As I understand it, the state preserved only the
    first contention, and the court rejects it. I join in the court’s
    opinion. I write separately to emphasize that the other two
    arguments have not properly been presented to us, and
    the court’s opinion should not be read as if it has implicitly
    addressed them. It has not.
    The first of those two arguments is that this court
    should recognize an exception to the general rule that, to
    be reasonable, a search must be supported by a properly
    obtained warrant. As I understand it, the state did not make
    that argument in this case.
    The argument would go something like this. The
    text of Article I, section 9, does not guarantee a right to be
    free from all searches except those to which a person con-
    sents. Rather, it guarantees a right to be free from unrea-
    sonable searches. See State v. Guggenmos, 
    350 Or 243
    , 257
    n 6, 253 P3d 1042 (2011) (the “touchstone” of Article I, sec-
    tion 9, is “reasonableness”). We presume that warrantless
    searches are unreasonable, but we recognize exceptions to
    that general rule. See, e.g., State v. Mazzola, 
    356 Or 804
    ,
    810, 345 P3d 424 (2015) (“[A] search conducted without a
    warrant is deemed unreasonable unless it ‘fall[s] within one
    of the few specifically established and carefully delineated
    exceptions to the warrant requirement.’ ” (Quoting State v.
    Bridewell, 
    306 Or 231
    , 235, 759 P2d 1054 (1988).)). Each of
    those exceptions is based upon the judgment of this court
    that, in specified circumstances, proceeding without a war-
    rant nevertheless is reasonable.
    For example, the officer-safety exception is grounded
    in the determination that it is reasonable for officers to
    check for weapons in circumstances presenting a threat of
    imminent harm. See, e.g., State v. Bates, 
    304 Or 519
    , 524-
    25, 747 P2d 991 (1987) (“Our inquiry therefore is limited
    to whether the precautions taken were reasonable under
    the circumstances as they reasonably appeared at the time
    that the decision was made.”). Similarly, the emergency-aid
    exception is predicated on the court’s determination that in
    certain circumstances—those in which it appears that it is
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	497
    necessary to render immediate aid or assistance to someone
    in imminent threat of serious harm—officers may engage
    in conduct that might otherwise violate Article I, section 9,
    because it is reasonable to do so. State v. Baker, 
    350 Or 641
    ,
    649, 260 P3d 476 (2011) (“[W]e conclude that an emergency
    aid exception to the Article I, section 9 warrant requirement
    is justified when police officers have an objectively reasonable
    belief, based on articulable facts, that a warrantless entry is
    necessary to either render immediate aid to persons, or to
    assist persons who have suffered, or who are imminently
    threatened with suffering, serious physical injury or harm.”
    (Footnotes omitted.)).
    When an officer has been given consent to search
    by a person with apparent authority to grant it, and the cir-
    cumstances present no good reason for the officer to doubt
    the authority of the consenting party to do so, it certainly
    could be argued that the officer acts reasonably in accept-
    ing the consent and proceeding with a search. In fact, the
    United States Supreme Court and appellate courts in at
    least a dozen states have so held.1 And I confess that I am
    hard pressed to understand what makes an officer’s search
    under those circumstances unreasonable.
    It is not that unusual for the court to recognize
    new exceptions to the warrant requirement. We did it a few
    short years ago in Baker, in which we expressly recognized
    what we had implicitly held in a few earlier cases: namely,
    an emergency-aid exception to the warrant requirement of
    Article I, section 9. 350 Or at 649. So the fact that there is
    no current exception covering the police conduct in this case
    is not dispositive.
    1
    Illinois v. Rodriguez, 
    497 US 177
    , 188-89, 
    110 S Ct 2793
    , 
    111 L Ed 2d 148
    (1990); People v. Hopkins, 870 P2d 478, 483 (Colo 1994); State v. Buie, 129 Conn
    App 777, 787, 21 A3d 550, 557 (2011), aff’d, 312 Conn 574, 94 A3d 608 (2014);
    State v. McCaughey, 
    127 Idaho 669
    , 671-74, 904 P2d 939, 941-44 (1995); People
    v. Burton, 409 Ill App 3d 321, 330-33, 
    947 NE2d 843
    , 852-54 (2011); Lee v. State,
    
    849 NE2d 602
    , 610 (Ind 2006); State v. Chilson, 38 Kan App 2d 338, 347, 165
    P3d 304, 310 (2007); Commonwealth v. Santos, 465 Mass 689, 694-95, 
    991 NE2d 1049
    , 1055-56 (2013); State v. Licari, 659 NW2d 243, 252-54 (Minn 2003); State
    v. Reinpold, 284 Neb 950, 956, 824 NW2d 713, 720 (2013); State v. Sawyer, 147
    NH 191, 194-96, 784 A2d 1208, 1211-12 (2001); State v. Maristany, 133 NJ 299,
    305-08, 627 A2d 1066, 1069-70 (1993); Commonwealth v. Basking, 970 A2d 1181,
    1192-1200 (Pa Super Ct 2009); State v. Harding, 282 P3d 31, 39-41 (Utah 2011);
    State v. Wantland, 355 Wis 2d 135, 149-56, 848 NW2d 810, 817-20 (2014).
    498	                                                           State v. Bonilla
    Adopting such an exception arguably runs afoul of
    this court’s rejection of a more general good-faith exception
    to the warrant requirement. The court noted precisely that
    in State v. Carsey, 
    295 Or 32
    , 44-45, 664 P2d 1085 (1983),
    when it rejected the proposed exception as a matter of
    Fourth Amendment doctrine, based on then-existing Fourth
    Amendment case law. Of course, Fourth Amendment doc-
    trine has changed quite a bit since Carsey. Moreover, the
    same complaint could be leveled against the recognition of
    any number of existing exceptions to the warrant require-
    ment, which require only that police officers act reasonably
    under the circumstances, not that they are always correct.
    The emergency-aid exception, for example, applies “when
    police officers have an objectively reasonable belief” that
    immediate aid is required, Baker, 350 Or at 649, even if they
    turn out to have been mistaken.
    My point is not to resolve the matter here. My point
    is that the matter—which the parties did not address in this
    case—should be fully briefed and argued in an appropriate
    case.
    The second possible argument is more far-reaching.
    It would entail abandoning the warrant-preference-and-
    categorical-exception approach to Article I, section 9, in
    favor of a post hoc, case-by-case examination of the reason-
    ableness of police conduct. This is an argument that the
    state did mention, albeit—as the court correctly concludes—
    inadequately. At this point, I am skeptical. But it remains
    an argument worth carefully considering.
    The fact is that the court has never explained very
    well the source of the warrant-preference-and-categorical-
    exception approach to Article I, section 9. Certainly, the
    court has never sought to justify the approach in terms of
    the intentions or understanding of the framers of the con-
    stitution.2 It is likely that the court’s approach would have
    been entirely foreign to the framers of our constitution in
    2
    Interestingly, the court has applied that interpretive approach to the par-
    ticularity clause of Article I, section 9. See State v. Carter, 
    342 Or 39
    , 42, 147 P3d
    1151 (2006). But, to my knowledge, it has never applied that approach to the
    reasonableness guarantee.
    Cite as 
    358 Or 475
     (2015)	499
    the mid-nineteenth century.3 In fact, for nearly 100 years,
    the court abjured any such reading of Article I, section 9,
    explicitly holding that the law requires courts to examine
    only the reasonableness of an officer’s conduct under the cir-
    cumstances of each case, without any particular preference
    for warrants. As this court explained in State v. De Ford,
    
    120 Or 444
    , 452, 
    250 P 220
     (1927), “the possession of the
    warrant is not the controlling consideration of whether a
    search is reasonable or unreasonable. An officer armed with
    a warrant may make an unreasonable search. An officer
    without a warrant may make a reasonable search.”4
    Only in 1983 did the court adopt its current
    approach, but—oddly enough in a state that prides itself as
    a vanguard of state constitutionalism—the only support was
    a passing citation to a Fourth Amendment decision. State v.
    Davis, 
    295 Or 227
    , 237, 666 P2d 802 (1983) (citing Katz v.
    United States, 
    389 US 347
    , 357, 
    88 S Ct 507
    , 
    19 L Ed 2d 576
    (1967)). In the meantime, the earlier decisions have never
    been overruled, at least not explicitly.
    As I have explained elsewhere, I do not think that
    the framers’ intentions are particularly salient in constru-
    ing the reasonableness requirement of Article I, section 9.
    3
    See, e.g., Rohan v. Sawin, 59 Mass 281, 284-85 (1850) (upholding consta-
    ble’s warrantless search of premises because constitutional search and seizure
    provision was intended only to be “in restraint of general warrants to make
    searches and require[ ] warrants to issue only upon a complaint made under
    oath”); Mayo v. Wilson, 1 NH 53, 60 (1817) (constitutional search and seizure
    provision “does not seem intended to restrain the legislature from authorizing
    arrests without warrant”); Wakely v. Hart, 6 Binn 315, 319 (Pa 1814) (warrantless
    seizure upheld because constitutional search and seizure guarantee “was nothing
    more than an affirmance of the common law,” which permitted arrests without
    warrants). Nineteenth-century treatises likewise tend to emphasize that consti-
    tutional search and seizure guarantees were directed at abuses of general war-
    rants and made no mention of a warrant requirement. See, e.g., Joseph Story, 2
    Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States: With a Preliminary Review
    of the Constitutional History of the Colonies and States, Before the Adoption of the
    Constitution 678-80 (3d ed 1858) (the Fourth Amendment search and seizure
    guarantee “is little more than the affirmance of a great constitutional doctrine of
    the common law” requiring warrants to state with particularity the time, place,
    and nature of the offense).
    4
    See also State v. Lee, 
    120 Or 643
    , 651, 
    253 P 533
     (1927) (upholding consti-
    tutionality of warrantless search). As recently as 1959, this court held that the
    reasonableness of a search does not depend on the presence of a warrant, but
    on the circumstances of each case. State v. Hoover, 
    219 Or 288
    , 299, 347 P2d 69
    (1959).
    500	                                         State v. Bonilla
    See generally State v. Hemenway, 
    353 Or 129
    , 158-59, 295
    P3d 617 (2013) (Landau, J., concurring). Moreover, I am
    inclined to think that there are good reasons for an ex ante
    warrant requirement. But, at the very least, this court has
    some housekeeping to do.
    I write only to emphasize that nothing in the court’s
    opinion today addressees either of these doctrinal possibili-
    ties. To the contrary, both remain live issues that should be
    properly raised and fully briefed so that we may give them
    our careful attention in a future case.
    Kistler, J., joins this concurring opinion.