Commonwealth v. Thompson, M., Aplt.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 31, 2024
Docket85 MAP 2023
StatusPublished

This text of Commonwealth v. Thompson, M., Aplt. (Commonwealth v. Thompson, M., Aplt.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Thompson, M., Aplt., (Pa. 2024).

Opinion

[J-6-2024] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA MIDDLE DISTRICT

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : No. 85 MAP 2023 : Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the : Superior Court at No. 2632 EDA : 2021 dated February 7, 2023 v. : Affirming the Judgment of Sentence : of the Delaware County Court of : Common Pleas, Criminal Division, MICHAEL THOMPSON, : at No. CP-23-CR-0002233-2020 : dated December 13, 2021. Appellant : : ARGUED: March 5, 2024

DISSENTING STATEMENT

JUSTICE WECHT FILED: May 31, 2024

Unaccountably, today’s Majority refuses to decide the issue that we agreed to

review: whether inventory searches remain valid under Pennsylvania’s Constitution

following our rejection of the federal automobile exception to the warrant requirement. 1

1 We granted allocatur to answer the following question: Whether the [t]rial [c]ourt and the Superior Court of Pennsylvania erred in determining that an inventory search of an automobile by law enforcement is an exception to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision in Commonwealth v. Alexander, 664 Pa. 145, 243 A.3d 177 (2020) requiring a search warrant before conducting a search of a person’s vehicle or requir[ing] production and proof of exigent circumstances for a warrantless search of a vehicle? Commonwealth v. Thompson, 303 A.3d 111 (Pa. 2023) (per curiam) (bracketed material in original). If there is any obstacle to our consideration of this question, it was just as apparent when we issued this order. I cannot discern any impediment of the sort that ordinarily warrants dismissal of an appeal as improvidently granted. There is no procedural defect here. The issue presented was not waived. The matter is not moot. There has been no change in the procedural posture of this case, nor any external change in the facts or circumstances. There has been no intervening change in the law. The (continued…) We have enjoyed ample briefing and argument, and we should render decision. Inventory

searches violate our Constitution because they deprive citizens of security in their

possessions 2 without adequate justification. Case law has enshrined a set of flawed

excuses that allow police officers to rummage systematically through citizens’ property

without a search warrant, on no articulable suspicion of wrongdoing whatsoever.

Inventory searches are premised upon a fiction. This sort of search is tolerated,

courts say, because (despite all appearances) it is not a matter of law enforcement at all.

Rather, the governmental intrusion is branded as a “community caretaking” function—a

service helpfully performed by police to safeguard citizens’ property. This is so

notwithstanding that the property’s owner, whose thoughts on the matter are not invited,

would prefer not to be the beneficiary of this “service.” Indeed, in every case in which an

appellate court perpetuates the inventory search fiction, the owner of the property has

been convicted of a crime based upon what a police officer discovered while rummaging

through the owner’s belongings. Quite the service, indeed.

We can call it whatever we want. The fact of the matter is that a government agent

is conducting a search—without a search warrant, without any exigency or compelling

need, and without even probable cause that evidence of a crime will be found inside the

vehicle. For too long the law has legitimized these fishing expeditions. And because the

justifications offered in their support cannot withstand even minimal scrutiny, continuing

to pretend that the inventory search is a valid law enforcement function leaves the law

issue presented is precisely the same now as it was when this Court granted allowance of appeal. There appears to be no reason to dismiss this appeal beyond an apparent change in the Majority’s willingness to consider the significant legal question that it raises. 2 Compare PA. CONST. art. I, § 8 (“The people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and possessions from unreasonable searches and seizures . . . .”); with U.S. CONST. amend. IV (“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated . . . .”).

[J-6-2024, 85 MAP 2023] - 2 with a “yawning credibility gap” that we should no longer tolerate. 3 There is no good

reason for this species of search. The inventory search is an unreasonable search, for it

needlessly strips people of their right to privacy in their possessions guaranteed under

Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, while providing no corresponding

benefit to any legitimate governmental interest.

Privacy is the watchword. Although the reasons for the Court’s dismissal today

are unstated, the difficulty may be the perceived degree of connection between the

inventory search doctrine and our decision in Commonwealth v. Alexander. 4 While

Alexander does not directly answer the question before us, the connection is apparent on

the face of the case law. The inventory search doctrine is built upon the very same

foundation as the federal automobile exception that we rejected in Alexander: the United

States Supreme Court’s insistence that people have a diminished privacy interest in their

vehicles, which interest is therefore unworthy of any meaningful protection. Here in

Pennsylvania, as Alexander makes plain, our Constitution (which predates the United

States Constitution by a dozen years) embodies “a strong notion of privacy,

notwithstanding federal cases to the contrary.” 5 This recognition of significant privacy

rights forms the core of this Court’s conclusion that Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania

Constitution “affords greater protection to our citizens than the Fourth Amendment” in the

context of vehicle searches. 6 It is not Alexander’s rejection of the federal automobile

3 Charles E. Moylan, Jr., The Inventory Search of an Automobile: A Willing Suspension of Disbelief, 5 U. BAL. L. REV. 203, 203 (1976). 4 Commonwealth v. Alexander, 243 A.3d 177 (Pa. 2020) (holding that the federal “automobile exception” to the warrant requirement is invalid under Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution). 5 Alexander, 243 A.3d at 203 (quoting Commonwealth v. Edmunds, 586 A.2d 887, 898 (Pa. 1991)). 6 Id. at 181.

[J-6-2024, 85 MAP 2023] - 3 exception that controls the matter before us. Rather, Alexander’s relevance lies in its

doctrinal underpinnings, which are plainly inconsistent with the assumptions underlying

the federal approach to privacy rights in vehicles and, thus, with inventory searches.

I.

Let us recall what an inventory search is. When a driver is arrested and cannot

lawfully move the vehicle for whatever reason, and the vehicle is in a place where it cannot

remain—where it is unlawfully parked or poses some obstacle to traffic or the like—the

vehicle may need to be impounded. Most often, this is achieved when a police officer

summons a tow truck operated by a private towing company. But, because police officers

ostensibly are in possession of the arrestee’s property (even though it often is turned over

to the towing company), they deem themselves responsible for its safekeeping. Thus, a

police officer enters the car, searches it, and creates an “inventory” of the items inside it.

Why? According to the United States Supreme Court’s decision in South Dakota

v. Opperman, this intrusion is justified by “three distinct needs,” none of which (we are

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