DocketNumber: 28,966
Filed Date: 5/4/2009
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO, 3 Plaintiff-Appellee, 4 v. NO. 28,966 5 ANDREW ONTIVEROS, 6 Defendant-Appellant. 7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SAN JUAN COUNTY 8 Karen L. Townsend, District Judge 9 Gary K. King, Attorney General 10 Santa Fe, NM 11 for Appellee 12 Hugh W. Dangler, Chief Public Defender 13 Eleanor Brogan, Assistant Appellate Defender 14 Santa Fe, NM 15 for Appellant 16 MEMORANDUM OPINION 17 CASTILLO, Judge. 18 Defendant appeals from his conviction for driving under the influence of 19 alcohol that was entered pursuant to a guilty plea under which Defendant reserved the 1 right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. [RP 18-19] In this Court’s notice 2 of proposed summary disposition, we proposed to affirm because we proposed to hold 3 that the officer’s act of asking Defendant to get out of his vehicle did not expand the 4 scope of the stop under the facts of this case and that even if it did expand the scope 5 of the stop, it was reasonable. Defendant has responded with a memorandum in 6 opposition that this Court has considered. As we are not persuaded by Defendant’s 7 arguments, we now affirm. 8 Defendant contends that the magistrate court erred in denying his motion to 9 suppress evidence obtained during a traffic stop. [DS 1-2] Defendant argues that the 10 evidence should have been suppressed because the officer expanded the scope of the 11 traffic stop in violation of Defendant’s constitutional right to be free from 12 unreasonable searches and seizures. [DS 2-3] The legality of a search or seizure 13 challenged in a suppression hearing is “generally tested as a mixed question of law 14 and fact wherein we review any factual questions under a substantial evidence 15 standard and we review the application of law to the facts de novo.” State v. Baca, 16 2004-NMCA-049, ¶ 11,135 N.M. 490
,90 P.3d 509
. 17 A police officer making a lawful stop is generally only authorized to “conduct 18 an investigation reasonably related to the circumstances that gave rise to the officer’s 19 reasons for the stop,” absent additional facts providing reasonable suspicion that a 2 1 crime other than the one on which the stop is based has been or is being committed. 2 State v. Williamson, 2000-NMCA-068, ¶ 8,129 N.M. 387
,9 P.3d 70
. 3 [W]hen considering whether a detention is reasonably related in scope 4 to the circumstances of the case, a reviewing court must consider 5 whether the officer’s subsequent actions were fairly responsive to the 6 emerging tableau—the circumstances originally warranting the stop, 7 informed by what occurred, and what the officer learned, as the stop 8 progressed. 9 State v. Funderburg, 2008-NMSC-026, ¶ 27,144 N.M. 37
,183 P.3d 922
(internal 10 quotation marks and citation omitted). 11 In the magistrate court, Defendant asserted that the traffic stop in this case was 12 valid only insofar as it was based on the observation that Defendant violated a traffic 13 law when his vehicle crossed a lane divider. [DS 1] We note that the officer testified 14 that the combination of Defendant’s traffic violation and his failure to immediately 15 pull over led the officer to believe that Defendant might have been intoxicated and 16 that the State argued that the proper scope of the stop should be defined by the 17 officer’s reasonable suspicion that Defendant was intoxicated. [MIO 1-2, 3] We need 18 not decide whether the officer had a reasonable suspicion that Defendant was driving 19 while intoxicated such that the traffic stop was justified on that basis, because we 20 conclude that even if the officer only had a reasonable suspicion that Defendant 21 violated a traffic law, the officer’s act of asking Defendant to step out of the vehicle 22 was reasonable under the circumstances. 3 1 Defendant has provided this Court with no authority for the proposition that 2 merely asking a driver to exit the vehicle for questioning about a traffic violation is 3 itself an improper expansion of the traffic stop, and we therefore assume that there is 4 none. See In re Adoption of Doe,100 N.M. 764
, 765,676 P.2d 1329
, 1330 (1984). 5 The officer was permitted to ask Defendant for his license and registration and to 6 question him about the traffic violation. See State v. Lowe, 2004-NMCA-054, ¶ 12, 7135 N.M. 520
,90 P.3d 539
. Whether this brief investigation was conducted while 8 Defendant was outside the vehicle or inside the vehicle does not seem to be of 9 constitutional import. Therefore, we hold that the officer’s request did not expand the 10 scope of the stop. 11 Furthermore, even if the officer’s request did expand the scope of the stop, 12 since it might allow the officer to better observe whether a person’s balance and 13 coordination was impaired—matters that are not within the scope of an investigation 14 of the traffic violation at issue, we would nonetheless hold that the officer’s conduct 15 was reasonable under the facts of this case and that, therefore, Defendant was not 16 entitled to have the evidence suppressed. See Baca, 2004-NMCA-049, ¶ 21 (“The 17 touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness.” (internal quotation marks 18 and citation omitted)). It appears that the officer testified that after he observed 19 Defendant’s traffic violation, he turned on his emergency lights. [RP 81] Defendant 4 1 did not immediately pull over, however, and instead drove for a period of time that the 2 officer considered to be longer than normal. [RP 81] When Defendant did pull off 3 the roadway, he pulled into a Burger King and, rather than stopping in the parking lot, 4 he drove into the drive-through lane as if he was going to order food. [RP 81] The 5 officer followed him and asked Defendant to step out of the vehicle. [RP 81] 6 The officer testified that he did so because he believed Defendant’s behavior 7 of pulling into a drive-through lane of a restaurant to be unusual under the 8 circumstances and because the officer did not feel safe placing himself between other 9 vehicles in the drive-through line in order to question Defendant about the traffic 10 violation. [RP 81-82] Defendant’s failure to pull over promptly and then his act of 11 trying to go through the drive-through also led the officer to be concerned that 12 Defendant might simply try to drive away if the officer permitted him to stay in his 13 vehicle. [RP 82] We therefore hold that even if the act of asking Defendant to step 14 out of his car gave rise to the possibility that the officer would obtain evidence of a 15 crime that he would not otherwise have had evidence of, the fact that asking 16 Defendant to get out of the vehicle was a de minimus intrusion combined with the 17 State’s significant interest in protecting its officers renders the brief expansion of the 18 scope of the detention reasonable. See State v. Robbs, 2006-NMCA-061, ¶ 21, 13919 N.M. 569
,136 P.3d 570
(“There are several factors that must be considered when we 5 1 determine whether the scope of an investigatory stop is permissible: the government’s 2 justification for the detention, the character of the intrusion on the individual, the 3 diligence of the police in conducting the investigation, and the length of the 4 detention.”). 5 Although the officer eventually asked Defendant if he had had anything to 6 drink, he did not do so until after Defendant approached him and the officer smelled 7 alcohol on Defendant’s person. [DS 1; MIO 2] At that point, the question was based 8 on a reasonable suspicion that Defendant might have been driving while intoxicated, 9 since Defendant smelled of alcohol, violated a traffic law, and behaved so unusually 10 when he was signaled to pull over. 11 Therefore, for the reasons stated in this opinion and in our notice of proposed 12 summary disposition, we affirm the denial of Defendant’s motion to suppress. 13 IT IS SO ORDERED. 14 ________________________________ 15 CELIA FOY CASTILLO, Judge 6 1 WE CONCUR: 2 ________________________________ 3 RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge 4 ________________________________ 5 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge 7