State Of Washington v. Francisco J. Millan ( 2013 )


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    00M,T OF A PPEALS'
    o hffsjo, 41I
    2913 DEC - 3 AM 9: 22
    STATE OF 1 ASE° NGTON
    BY
    E UT Y
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                                                          No. 43244 -7 -II
    Respondent,
    MM
    FRANCISCO JAVIER MILLAN,                                                UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    QunNN- BRNTNALL, P. J. —             Francisco Millan was convicted of first degree driving while
    license   suspended and       first degree     unlawful possession of a    firearm.   Millan appealed, arguing
    that   under   Gant,' the firearm       should   have been   suppressed.    Our Supreme Court held that the
    new rule in Gant applied retroactively, and remanded to the trial court for a suppression hearing
    to determine      whether    the firearm      was properly admitted at   trial.   The trial court found that the
    firearm was properly admitted, and Millan appeals. We affirm.
    FACTS
    2
    Millan    was     convicted    of   first degree   unlawful   possession    of   a   firearm.       State V.
    Robinson, 
    171 Wash. 2d 292
    , 298, 253 ' P. 3d 84 ( 2011).              Millan appealed, arguing that the recent
    decision in Gant required reversal because the search of the vehicle was unconstitutional.
    Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 1710
    , 
    173 L. Ed. 2d 485
    ( 2009).
    2 Millan was originally charged with first degree driving with license suspended and first degree
    unlawful       possession   of a   firearm.     Millan pleaded guilty to first degree driving while license
    suspended.
    No. 43244 -7 -II
    
    Robinson, 171 Wash. 2d at 298
    .     Our Supreme Court held that Gant applied retroactively to
    Millan' s case. 
    Robinson, 171 Wash. 2d at 306
    . Our Supreme Court then remanded the case back to
    the trial court for a suppression hearing. 
    Robinson, 171 Wash. 2d at 307
    .
    The arresting officers, Officers Christopher Shipp and Timothy Caber of the Tacoma
    Police Department, testified             at    the   suppression   hearing. Shipp testified that on April 1, 2007, he
    and    Caber   responded     to   a    domestic      violence call.     Two citizen witnesses reported seeing a male,
    later identified as Millan, grab a female, later identified as his wife, by the hair, drag her into a
    car,   and   hit her   several         times in the      head.     Millan' s wife was obviously upset but told the
    officers   that no       physical assault     had taken     place.   However, based on the statements
    responding
    of the witnesses, the officers placed Millan under arrest for assault.
    At the suppression hearing, Officer Caber testified that he found a pistol in the backseat
    of the car during a search incident to arrest. He could not then recall when he first saw the pistol
    or whether the pistol was visible through the window. But at Millan' s original trial years earlier,
    Officer Caber testified that he walked up to the car and saw a pistol through the car window.
    The pistol was balanced on its spine on the floorboard of the back seat of the car. Under the then
    applicable law, Officer Caber performed a search incident to arrest and seized the pistol.
    Holding that the changes in the law announced after the search of Millan' s car applied
    retroactively, our Supreme Court reversed and remanded for a suppression hearing under the new
    standard.
    At the suppression hearing, the trial court concluded that the firearm was in " plain" view
    and that there was a safety concern for the officers and the public due to the volatile nature of
    domestic      violence    incidents.         Based on its conclusions of law, the trial court determined that the
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    No. 43244 -7 -II
    firearm     was     admissible     evidence.       Because the trial court properly ruled the pistol was
    admissible, we affirm Millan' s conviction for first degree unlawful possession of a firearm.
    ANALYSIS
    We   review   the trial    court' s   legal   conclusions    in   a suppression   hearing   de   novo.   State v.
    Johnson, 
    128 Wash. 2d 431
    , 443, 
    909 P.2d 293
    ( 1996).                         Under both the Fourth Amendment and
    article I, section 7, a warrantless search is per se unreasonable unless the search falls within one
    or more exceptions       to the     warrant requirement.       State v. Ross, 
    141 Wash. 2d 304
    , 312, 
    4 P.3d 130
    2000).     Originally, Millan' s firearm was admitted under the search incident to arrest exception
    to the    warrant requirement.         
    Robinson, 171 Wash. 2d at 297
    -98.   However, the search incident to
    arrest exception to the warrant requirement, which allowed officers to search a suspect' s car at
    the time of the arrest, was restricted by the United States Supreme Court' s opinion in Gant and
    our Supreme Court' s opinion in State v. Patton, 
    167 Wash. 2d 379
    , 394 -95, 
    219 P.3d 651
    ( 2009).
    Under Gant and Patton, officers may search a vehicle incident to arrest " only where there is `` a
    reasonable basis to believe that the arrestee poses a safety risk or that the vehicle contains
    evidence of the crime of arrest that could be concealed or destroyed, and that these concerns
    exist at    the time   of   the   search. "'    
    Robinson, 171 Wash. 2d at 302
    ( quoting 
    Patton, 167 Wash. 2d at 394
    -95).      Here, the Supreme Court ruled that under Gant and Patton, Millan was entitled to
    move to suppress the gun and that under the changes in search and seizure law occurring after
    the search of Millan' s car, the search incident to arrest exception could not justify the search of
    Millan'    s car.    It remanded for a suppression hearing to determine whether another exception to
    the warrant requirement allowed admission of the firearm.
    Here, the trial court determined the pistol was properly seized under what it referred to as
    the "   plain view"   doctrine. Although it        used   the term " plain     view,"   the trial court actually applied
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    No. 43244 -7 -II
    the open view doctrine in this case and noted that the officers not only saw the pistol from
    outside the car but that exigent circumstances warranted seizure of the weapon. Thus, it denied
    the   motion       to    suppress.       The    pistol was     properly         admissible under     the    open view           doctrine.    We
    affirm the trial court' s order determining that the evidence was admissible.
    Although the plain view and open view doctrine are similar, discovery of evidence in
    open view         is    not a search within            the meaning      of      the Fourth Amendment.              State v. Barnes, 158
    Wn.    App.       602, 612, 
    243 P.3d 165
    ( 2010) ( citing                 State v. Perez, 
    41 Wash. App. 481
    , 483, 
    704 P.2d 625
    ( 1985)). "           In the `` plain view' situation, the view takes place after an intrusion into activities
    or areas as       to    which     there   is   a reasonable expectation of               privacy."   
    Barnes, 158 Wash. App. at 612
    citing Perez, 41 Wn.              App.        at   483).   If the officer' s intrusion is justified, evidence in plain view
    is admissible. 
    Barnes, 158 Wash. App. at 612
    ( citing 
    Perez, 41 Wash. App. at 483
    ).
    But    evidence       is in   open view when          the   officer views        the   evidence       from   a "``   non- intrusive
    vantage point. "'           
    Barnes, 158 Wash. App. at 612
    ( quoting State v. Seagull, 
    95 Wash. 2d 898
    , 902, 
    632 P.2d 44
    ( 1981)).           In   an open view situation,           the    officer "``     is either oil the outside looking outside
    inside to that              is   knowingly                     to the   public. "'      Barnes, 158
    or    on   the   outside    looking                           which                         exposed
    Wn.        App.    at    612 ( quoting 
    Seagull, 95 Wash. 2d at 902
    ).    There is no reasonable expectation of
    item in                              therefore,                           the                   is not within the
    privacy in         an               open view and,                              observation of           evidence "
    scope of         the    constitution."         Barnes, 158 Wn.        App.       at   612 ( citing Perez, 41 Wn.         App.      at   483). "   It
    is well established that a person has a diminished expectation of privacy in the visible contents of
    an automobile parked               in   a public place."        
    Barnes, 158 Wash. App. at 612
    ( citing State v. Young, 
    28 Wash. App. 412
    , 416, 
    624 P.2d 725
    , review denied, 
    95 Wash. 2d 1024
    ( 1981)).
    Here, the officers did not observe the firearm during a search or invasion of the car, plain
    view, but rather the court held that they saw the firearm in the backseat of the car through the
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    No. 43244 -7 -II
    open view.
    window -                      Therefore, the open view doctrine, not the plain view doctrine, properly
    applies     in this   case.        Barnes,    158 Wn.         App.       at    612 -13.    Under the open view doctrine,
    observation of an item does not constitute a search; however, there must also be exigent
    circumstances       to   justify   the   seizure of     the item in           open view.     
    Barnes, 158 Wash. App. at 613
    .
    Millan argues that the seizure of the weapon was not justified because the officers could not
    identify the firearm as relevant evidence and there were no exigent circumstances. We disagree.
    First, the officers had probable cause to believe that a domestic violence assault had
    occurred.       At the time, witnesses reported that the couple was fighting, Millan had hit his wife
    several times, and the assault continued after Millan dragged his wife into the car. Although the
    officers originally arrested Millan for fourth degree assault ( before seeing the firearm in open
    view),    the   presence    of   the firearm      was      clearly   relevant evidence         of assault.   Barnes, 158 Wn.
    App.   at   613.    The fact that Millan was not charged with the crime for which he was arrested does
    not negate the officers' probable cause to arrest for that crime nor does it render unjustified
    seizure of evidence relevant             to the   crime of arrest.            Thus, officers properly seized the weapon at
    the time                         Millan for    assault and observed               it in   open view.   Therefore, the officers
    they   arrested
    lawfully seized the pistol and it is admissible evidence. 
    Barnes, 158 Wash. App. at 613
    -14.
    Second, the trial court found that there were safety concerns for the officers and the
    public.     These exigent circumstances existed and justified the officers seizing the weapon after
    observing it in      open view.         We consider the totality of the circumstances to determine whether
    exigent     circumstances         exist.    State    v.    Smith,       
    165 Wash. 2d 511
    ,     518,   
    199 P.3d 386
    ( 2009).
    Although we consider the following six factors when determining whether exigent circumstances
    exist, it is not necessary for all six factors to be met. State v. Cardenas, 
    146 Wash. 2d 400
    , 408, 
    47 P.3d 127
    , 
    57 P.3d 1156
    ( 2002),           cert.   denied, 
    538 U.S. 912
    ( 2003). The six factors are
    E
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    No. 43244 -7 -II
    1)   the gravity or violent nature of the offense with which the suspect is to be
    charged; (     2)   whether   the   suspect     is reasonably believed to be            armed; (   3) whether
    there   is reasonably trustworthy information that the suspect is guilty; ( 4) there is
    strong reason to believe that the suspect is on the premises; ( 5) a likelihood that
    the suspect will escape if not swiftly apprehended; and ( 6) the entry [ can be] made
    peaceably.
    
    Cardenas, 146 Wash. 2d at 406
    . In addition, five specific circumstances may be considered exigent
    circumstances         including      danger to the arresting         officer or    to the   public.        State v. Tibbles, 
    169 Wash. 2d 364
    , 370, 
    236 P.3d 885
    ( 2010) (                 quoting State v. Counts, 
    99 Wash. 2d 54
    , 60, 
    659 P.2d 1087
    1983)).
    Millan argues that there were no exigent circumstances because the officers had already
    arrested    Millan     and placed      him in handcuffs       so   there    was no risk     to   officer   safety.   But Millan' s
    cursory analysis of exigent circumstances does not take into account the totality of circumstances
    present    in this    case.    Here, the exigent circumstances need not be such as to allow the officers to
    search     Millan' s    otherwise private vehicle.           Rather, the officers observed a pistol in open view.
    So the issue is whether, when the pistol can be seen from outside the car, the exigent
    circumstances warrant seizure of                 the    evidence    Millan has left     open      to   public view.         Although
    Millan had already been              arrested,    his   wife was unsecured and          in the     area of    the    car.   Millan' s
    wife   was      clearly    upset     and uncooperative        with     arresting   officers.       Based on citizen witness
    Millan                                for domestic       violence assault —an          assault Millan' s wife said
    reports,               was     being   arrested
    did not occur. Given the totality of the circumstances, an unsecured firearm posed a clear risk to
    officer safety should Millan' s wife take action regarding her objections to the arrest of her
    husband, and public safety should the car be left on a public street with a gun clearly visible
    though the       car' s      window.     Therefore, exigent circumstances existed which justified lawful
    seizure of     the   pistol after   the officers      observed    it in   open view.
    No. 43244 -7 -II
    Although the trial     court   misstated   that it      relied   on    the "   plain   view"   exception to the
    warrant requirement, the firearm was properly seized and was nonetheless admissible evidence.
    The firearm was in open view through the window of the vehicle and the officers had reason to
    believe the firearm      was relevant evidence      in the   assault on        Millan' s   wife.   Moreover, under the
    circumstances presented, failure to secure the weapon would have posed a risk to officer and
    public   safety.   Therefore, there were exigent circumstances which justified immediately seizing
    the pistol. left in public view without a warrant before allowing Millan' s wife to drive the car
    away. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court' s denial of Millan' s motion to suppress the firearm
    and affirm his conviction for unlawful possession of a firearm. .
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
    2. 06. 040, it is so ordered.
    INN-BRINTNALL, P. J.
    We concur:
    PEI Oi'AR, J. ,     r``
    MAXA, J.
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