Commonwealth v. Goncalves

815 N.E.2d 592, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 153, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 1094
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 2004
DocketNo. 03-P-744
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 815 N.E.2d 592 (Commonwealth v. Goncalves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Goncalves, 815 N.E.2d 592, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 153, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 1094 (Mass. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Brown, J.

After a hearing on the defendant’s pretrial motion, a judge of the District Court Department ordered the suppression of a firearm recovered from the defendant’s automobile at the time of his arrest for driving with a suspended license.1 A [154]*154single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court granted the Commonwealth’s request for interlocutory review. We reverse and remand the case for further proceedings in the District Court.

We summarize the findings of the motion judge, supplemented where necessary to provide context with uncontroverted evidence adduced at the suppression hearing. See Commonwealth v. Silva, 61 Mass. App. Ct. 28, 30 (2004). While on traffic patrol in a marked cruiser, Officer Robert Smith of the Brockton police department stopped the defendant for failing to obey a stop sign. During a subsequent records check, Smith discovered that the defendant’s license to drive had been suspended. He immediately asked the defendant to step out of his vehicle, and placed him under arrest.

The defendant was alone in his car at the time of his arrest, and the vehicle was stopped along the roadside in an area in which parking was not permitted. At about this time, another Brockton police officer, Paul Khoury, arrived on the scene. After conferring, the officers decided that Smith would transport the defendant to the police station for booking, while Khoury would wait with the defendant’s vehicle until a tow truck arrived. The motion judge determined that the removal of the defendant’s car was required, as there was no one else to drive it away, and it was parked in a no-parking area.

Turning his attention to the defendant’s vehicle, Khoury noticed that the driver’s side door was open, and that the engine was still running. The officer walked over to the defendant’s car, leaned inside, and turned the ignition off. As he leaned into the vehicle, Khoury spotted the barrel of a handgun on the driver’s side floor. After conferring with Smith, he seized the weapon and brought it to the station for processing. Other relevant facts are included in our analysis as necessary.

The defendant takes the view that what occurred here was an inventory search. Because the Brockton police have no written policy defining a standardized procedure for such searches, the defendant contends, citing Commonwealth v. Bishop, 402 Mass. [155]*155449 (1988), that Khoury’s actions were unlawful.2 Suppression, the defendant argues, is the ineluctable result.

Were we to assume that by leaning into the defendant’s vehicle to turn off the ignition, Khoury had in fact engaged in an inventory search, suppression might well be required here. Bishop established a bright-line rule for assessing the reasonableness of automobile inventory searches, and as noted, the Brockton police department manifestly failed to comply with those requirements. However, after a careful review of the record, we conclude that no inventory search occurred in this case.

Recently, in Commonwealth v. Silva, 61 Mass. App. Ct. at 31-37, we had occasion to consider the precise question when something less than a wholesale search of an impounded vehicle nonetheless constitutes an inventory search, and so implicates the requirements of Bishop. In Silva, after arresting the defendant for driving with a suspended license, police impounded his vehicle. Allegedly to obtain registration information that could be passed along to the tow truck driver, a police officer entered the defendant’s vehicle and reached for the glove compartment. While doing so, he spotted several bags of cocaine wedged between the passenger seat cushions.

In Silva, we concluded that the officer’s entry for the purpose of locating the registration documents amounted to an inventory search, irrespective of the limited scope of the intrusion. As we put it in Silva: “[Bishop] applies] to a police search to gather documents, papers, or records from within a car. This is so even if . . . such a record-based search is less expansive than a full inventory search.” Id. at 33. The holding in Silva was grounded in the general concept that whenever an officer intrudes into a private space, it amounts to a search for constitutional purposes, regardless of the officer’s subjective intent. See Commonwealth v. Ford, 394 Mass. 421, 423 (1985). [156]*156There are, however, important differences between the officer’s actions in Silva and Khoury’s conduct here. These differences, we conclude, mandate different outcomes.

While we held in Silva that even the brief foray into the defendant’s vehicle amounted to an inventory search, we also acknowledged the settled distinction between the physical act of impoundment and any ancillary inventory search. As we stated in Silva, “impoundment of a car and an inventory search of a car are not synonymous, and the constitutional analysis is not unilateral.” Commonwealth v. Silva, 61 Mass. App. Ct. at 33. Rather, the question of the lawfulness of the initial impoundment of a vehicle is a separate inquiry — implicating distinct standards — from the question of the lawfulness of any subsequent inventory search. See Commonwealth v. Ellerbe, 430 Mass. 769, 772-773 (2000). See also Commonwealth v. Garcia, 409 Mass. 675, 678 (1991).

To the extent that impoundment typically entails but a modest intrusion on privacy interests, the Supreme Judicial Court has determined that a vehicle may be impounded for noninvestigatory reasons when such action is “supported by public safety concerns or by the danger of theft or vandalism to a vehicle left unattended.” Commonwealth v. Daley, 423 Mass. 747, 750 (1996). See South Dakota v. Opperman, 428 U.S. 364, 369 (1976). The constitutional protections delineated in Bishop have never been held to apply to the impoundment itself. Once public safety or security concerns exist to justify the decision to impound a vehicle, an officer (or such person as he might designate) is empowered to carry out any physical act minimally necessary to accomplish that purpose — again, without implicating Bishop.

We implicitly acknowledged this principle in Commonwealth v. Silva, 61 Mass. App. Ct. at 33 n.6, where we observed: “[h'Jere, there was more than an impoundment; there was a search. It cannot logically be argued that a search of the glove compartment was physically necessary to accomplish the impoundment and towing” (emphasis added). By contrast, in this case, turning off the ignition and closing the car door were, in fact, “physically necessary” to accomplish the impoundment. Provided Khoury had a lawful basis for impounding the car — [157]*157and we agree with the motion judge that he did — he was entitled to enter the car to turn off the ignition.

Having established that Khoury did not transgress constitutional limits by leaning into the car to turn off the ignition before it was towed, we conclude that the seizure of the gun is justified by reference to the plain view doctrine.

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Bluebook (online)
815 N.E.2d 592, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 153, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-goncalves-massappct-2004.