Commonwealth v. Morrison

710 N.E.2d 584, 429 Mass. 511, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 210
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 4, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 710 N.E.2d 584 (Commonwealth v. Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Morrison, 710 N.E.2d 584, 429 Mass. 511, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 210 (Mass. 1999).

Opinion

Fried, J.

The Commonwealth appeals from an order of a District Court judge allowing the defendant’s motion to suppress all evidence seized during a warrantless entry into the apartment of a third party in which the defendant was present. We reverse the allowance of the motion to suppress because the defendant did not have a cognizable privacy interest in the apartment in question and, in any event, the search was justified by exigent circumstances.

I

On May 23, 1997, three officers of the Amherst police depart[512]*512ment responded to a report of a shouting match at the residence of Jamie Daniels.1 They were advised that there was a history of domestic problems between Daniels and one Joseph Morrison which, at Daniels’ request, had resulted in the issuance of a protective order against Morrison. The officers knocked at the door and it was answered by Daniels. Daniels, who was nine months pregnant with Morrison’s child, appeared upset, and the officers asked her to step into the hallway. In a conversation with one of the officers, she admitted that she had had a loud discussion with the man in the apartment, but denied that the man was Morrison. She further stated that there had not been a physical altercation and that she did not wish to have the police there. While this discussion was taking place, another officer entered the apartment and spoke to the man inside. The man identified himself as Morrison. Morrison disclaimed any knowledge of the protective order.2 The police advised Morrison of the order and told him that he would be arrested if he made any contact with Daniels while the order remained in force. Daniels stated that she would vacate the order in the morning. The officers then left, taking Morrison away from the scene with them and advising him to stay away from Daniels as long as the order was in effect.

At 3:43 a.m., the same officers returned to the area to investigate a report of a shouting match between a male and a female in the parking lot at the rear of the building adjacent to that in which Daniels had her apartment. The person reporting the incident told the police dispatcher that the female was pregnant and had entered Daniels’ apartment. The officers tried to contact Daniels, both by knocking at her door and by having the station officer telephone her apartment, but received no response. The officers then instructed the dispatcher to contact the apartment manager and request that a keyholder come to the scene so that they might check on Daniels’ well-being. The key-[513]*513holder arrived at approximately 4 a.m. and unlocked the door but the police were still prevented from entering because the door was chained shut from the inside. The officers once again announced that they were at the door and requested that someone come to the door. Daniels came to the door and the officers told her to unchain it. Daniels hesitated but relented and opened the door for the officers. The police then went into the. apartment and found the defendant in the bedroom lying in bed. They arrested the defendant for violation of the protective order.

The defendant moved to dismiss the charge against him (arguing that he could not be charged with violating the order until he had been served with a copy of it) or to suppress all evidence flowing from the warrantless entry and search of Daniels’ residence. The motion judge denied the motion to dismiss but allowed the motion to suppress. The judge held that the Commonwealth had not shown that Morrison did not have a cognizable privacy interest in Daniels’ apartment and thus that the warrantless search was not justified. The concern for Daniels’ safety, although justified, ended once she appeared uninjured and denied the officers’ request for entry. The judge also explained that the entry could not be justified based on probable cause that the defendant was in the apartment in violation of the order, as that violation is a misdemeanor. The Commonwealth was allowed to file an interlocutory appeal in the Appeals Court, and we transferred the matter here on our own initiative.

n

A

An overnight guest of a lawful occupant has standing to raise privacy claims in respect to a search of that occupant’s premises. The touchstone of rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, like those under art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, is a “reasonable expectation of privacy.” Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 360 (1947) (Harlan, J., concurring). Commonwealth v. Berry, 420 Mass. 95, 105 (1995). The Supreme Court has held that “[a] subjective expectation of privacy is legitimate if it is ‘one that society is prepared to recognize as “reasonable,” ’ ” and that “status as an overnight guest is alone enough to show that [a person] had an expectation of privacy in the home that society is prepared to recognize as reasonable.” Minnesota v. Olson, 495 U.S. 91, [514]*51495-96 (1990), quoting Rakas v. Illinois, 439 U.S. 128, 143-144 n.12 (1978). The Commonwealth’s argument, therefore, that the defendant had no standing because he had no interest in the apartment in which he was a guest by Daniels’ invitation must be rejected. Privacy standing is not a real property concept. But that is not the end of the matter.

Although an overnight guest in general may have such an expectation of privacy in the premises as society is prepared to recognize as reasonable, this overnight guest did not. The defendant in this case was the subject of a protective order forbidding his presence on the very premises in which he claims that society should recognize his right to quiet enjoyment. And on the strength of that order he had, just a short time before, been ordered by the police to stay away from that very place. It is simply nonsense to say that society is prepared to recognize his right to be where society by the processes of the law has ordered him not to be. In Minnesota v. Olson, supra, the police had probable cause to believe that the overnight guest had committed an armed robbery, and the defendant in this case argues that it follows a fortiori that his violation of a protective order, which is a mere misdemeanor, cannot deprive him of standing to raise privacy claims. There would be something to this argument, if the Commonwealth’s claim depended on the argument that a person’s violation of the law somehow rendered that person an outlaw, making his presence unlawful anywhere but in the custody of the police. But of course that is not the Commonwealth’s claim. Even an escaped convict, who might quite appropriately be said to belong nowhere but back in prison, is in a better position than the defendant here. What deprives this defendant of a reasonable expectation of privacy is not his status as a law violator in general, but the fact that he was under a specific and valid legal order not to be in this particular place.

B

Whether or not the defendant had standing to claim a privacy right in the premises, the Commonwealth correctly argues that the police acted reasonably in checking Daniels’ apartment to see whether he was there. Finding him there, they were entitled to arrest him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
710 N.E.2d 584, 429 Mass. 511, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-morrison-mass-1999.