City of Overland Park v. LaGuardia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 5, 2024
Docket125566
StatusPublished

This text of City of Overland Park v. LaGuardia (City of Overland Park v. LaGuardia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Overland Park v. LaGuardia, (kanctapp 2024).

Opinion

No. 125,566

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

CITY OF OVERLAND PARK, Appellee,

v.

LEONARD LAGUARDIA, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. Traffic stops cannot be measurably extended beyond the time necessary to process the infraction that prompted the stop unless there is a reasonable suspicion of or probable cause to believe the detainee is involved in other criminal activity.

2. Officers must be careful to ensure that any inquiries of matters beyond the reason for the traffic stop occur concurrently with the tasks permitted for such stops so they will not measurably extend the time it would otherwise take. This is called multitasking. If an officer is not effectively multitasking, these unrelated inquiries—without reasonable suspicion, probable cause, or consent—impermissibly expand the stop beyond what the United States Constitution permits.

3. The prosecution does not meet its burden by simply proving that the officer believed the circumstances could have formed a reasonable suspicion. Rather, something more than an unparticularized suspicion or hunch must be articulated by the officer. Consistent with this long-standing caselaw, we find that the prosecution does not meet its

1 burden by pointing to factors not articulated by the officer that could have formed a reasonable suspicion in an effort to justify the delay after the fact. The focus must be on the factors, if any, articulated by the officer.

Appeal from Johnson District Court; CHRISTINA DUNN GYLLENBORG, judge. Oral argument held April 11, 2024. Opinion filed July 5, 2024. Reversed and remanded with directions.

Adam D. Stolte, of Stolte Law, LLC, of Overland Park, for appellant.

Melissa Ruttan, assistant city attorney, for appellee.

Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., MALONE and WARNER, JJ.

ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J.: Leonard LaGuardia crashed his car into a guardrail on the highway in snowy conditions. The issue here is whether the officer had a reasonable suspicion that LaGuardia was intoxicated in order to request that he complete several field sobriety tests in the field. After a review of the evidence and the relevant caselaw, we find that LaGuardia was unlawfully detained and his motion to suppress evidence should have been granted. Accordingly, we reverse his conviction and remand with instructions to suppress, upon retrial, all evidence collected after the officer decided to administer the HGN test.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In the early morning hours in January 2020, a passerby reported a single-car accident on southbound 69 Highway north of 103rd Street in Overland Park. It had been snowing and sleeting that day, and the roads were slushy and covered with about an inch of snow. Officer Eric Opperman responded to the scene.

2 When he arrived, he did not see a vehicle. But he did see some debris, including a passenger car bumper, that appeared to be from the car crash. Soon after, a captain notified Officer Opperman that he saw a damaged vehicle leaving the area on a traffic camera. The officer attempted to find the vehicle, eventually locating it on Mastin Street, which is north of 103rd Street. The vehicle was unoccupied, had heavy damage to its front end, damage to its rear end, and was missing its bumper. It also had a flat tire. The car was not covered in snow, indicating that it had been recently driven.

Before Officer Opperman left the vehicle to locate the driver, a tow truck pulled up to retrieve it. The driver of the tow truck told the officer that the owner of the damaged vehicle had asked him to meet him over by the Shell gas station on 103rd Street.

Officer Opperman eventually located the driver, later identified as LaGuardia, after he had been seen on a traffic camera walking on foot away from his car. LaGuardia was on 103rd Street, about 300 yards away from the wrecked car near the Shell gas station—consistent with the tow truck driver's report. The officer began talking to LaGuardia.

LaGuardia confirmed that he was the driver of the car and had been in an accident. He told the officer that he lost control of his vehicle after sliding in some snow and hit a guardrail. And he explained that he abandoned his vehicle on Mastin Street because he was not comfortable staying in a residential area in front of people's homes. LaGuardia also mentioned that he called a tow truck to retrieve his car, but hoped to get an Uber because he was not sure if the tow truck was coming. LaGuardia himself never reported the accident to law enforcement—it was called in by a passerby.

Officer Opperman asked for LaGuardia's license because he wanted to start a crash report and LaGuardia complied. Rather than start a crash report, the officer ran

3 LaGuardia's license though dispatch. The results showed that LaGuardia had a valid license and no warrants for arrest.

Officer Opperman continued talking to LaGuardia because he had some questions about why he abandoned his car. The officer testified that LaGuardia's story about why he walked away from his car did not make sense to him. It struck Opperman that LaGuardia was attempting to hide that he was impaired when he was driving since LaGuardia did not report the accident to police, but had a valid license, registration, and no arrest warrants. Opperman testified that he was suspicious because of the time of the crash, no other vehicles being involved, and the fact that LaGuardia left the scene. The officer agreed that unless there were injuries from the collision or damage in excess of $1,000, city ordinance did not require that the collision be reported. And the State offered no evidence regarding the value of the damage, and there was no evidence Opperman was injured in the collision. Opperman told LaGuardia that he did not find it suspicious in and of itself that LaGuardia wrecked his car, but he did find it suspicious that LaGuardia left the parked car to meet an Uber.

It is telling that LaGuardia was not charged with failure to report an accident to police or leaving the scene of an accident. It is not unreasonable to conclude that Opperman did not believe LaGuardia violated the law. Again, this conclusion is bolstered by the bodycam video that was introduced at the suppression hearing. The officer actually doubled down on this point when he verified what was on the bodycam video—that he told LaGuardia that he could understand why LaGuardia did not call the police. During that same discussion, captured on the bodycam video, Opperman told LaGuardia that the fact that he wrecked his car in slushy weather was not a problem or suspicious. But the officer found it suspicious that LaGuardia left the car to meet an Uber, rather than wait in the relative warmth of the parked car for the tow truck to arrive. Opperman never alleged failing to wait for a tow truck in your car was against the law, he just thought it did not make sense.

4 With no more than a belief that LaGuardia's story about leaving his car to meet an Uber did not make sense, while observing no signs of impairment, Officer Opperman began a driving under the influence (DUI) investigation. He asked LaGuardia to step in front of his police car and perform the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus (HGN) test.

While conducting the HGN test, Officer Opperman smelled alcohol on LaGuardia's breath. LaGuardia denied having had any drinks that night. At this point, the officer asked LaGuardia to step over to the gas station canopy to get out of the weather, since it was still snowing.

The officer asked LaGuardia to complete two field sobriety tests—the walk-and- turn and the one-leg stand.

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City of Overland Park v. LaGuardia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-overland-park-v-laguardia-kanctapp-2024.