State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Reeves

988 P.2d 433, 163 Or. App. 497, 76 A.L.R. 5th 755, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 1822
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 27, 1999
DocketJV7154, JV7155; CA A101679, A101752
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 988 P.2d 433 (State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Reeves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Reeves, 988 P.2d 433, 163 Or. App. 497, 76 A.L.R. 5th 755, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 1822 (Or. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

HASELTON, J.

In this juvenile proceeding involving allegations of game-related offenses1 against two adolescent brothers, the state appeals from an order of suppression. The trial court concluded that the investigating officer unlawfully entered the property where the brothers lived with their father. We agree that the officer’s initial entry onto the property was unlawful. We further conclude that brothers’ father could not effectively retroactively consent to the unlawful invasion of brothers’ privacy interests. Accordingly, we affirm.

The material facts are as follows: On October 12, 1998, Trooper Pearson of the Oregon State Police Fish and Wildlife Division received a teletype that an anonymous caller had reported that “[Brothers], who live at North Way in North Bend, have shot four bucks and a spike so far this year and none have been tagged. All are hanging in a shop at the residence.” In response to the teletype, Pearson drove to the property where brothers lived with their father. The property was completely fenced, with the exception of a gated driveway leading 150 to 200 yards from the public road to the residence. Three “Keep Out - No Trespassing” signs were fixed at intervals on the fence between the property and the public road. When Pearson reached the driveway, he saw a sign posted on the fence next to the gate that read:

“PRIVATE ROAD NO UNAUTHORIZED PERSONS BEYOND THIS POINT.”2

Pearson testified that he understood the sign to mean that the property owner wanted to exclude people who did not have “a legitimate reason to be there,” but that he believed that he was authorized to enter because he wished to contact brothers to discuss the game-violation report. Pearson drove [500]*500up the driveway, parked beside the house, and got out of his car. He saw a garage roughly 50 feet away, and, because the garage door was raised about four or five feet, he could see the hindquarters of two skinned deer hanging inside the garage.

At that point, brothers’ father came out of a barn next to the house, and Pearson introduced himself. Father did not, at that time or at any time thereafter, tell Pearson that he was trespassing, ask him to leave, or give any other indication that Pearson was unwelcome on the property.

After engaging in some small talk, Pearson then “asked [father] if he would mind if I checked the tags on the deer that I could see hanging in the garage.” Pearson testified that father “told me to help myself.” After further discussion about the number of deer in the garage and whether they were tagged, Pearson again asked if they could go take a look in the garage, and father said they could.3 Pearson and father then walked over to the garage together, father rolled the garage door the rest of the way up, and they entered the garage. Once inside, Pearson saw four untagged buck deer carcasses, one of which was a spike deer.

Brothers were charged with having committed acts that, had they been adults, would constitute the crimes of failure to tag a deer, ORS 496.162, exceeding the bag limit on buck deer, ORS 498.002, and unlawfully taking a spike deer. ORS 498.002. Before trial, brothers moved to suppress all evidence obtained following Pearson’s warrantless entry onto the property, asserting, inter alia, that that entry was unlawful because the clearly posted sign, “PRIVATE ROAD NO UNAUTHORIZED PERSONS BEYOND THIS POINT,” [501]*501expressly manifested an intent to exclude the public. The state responded that (1) the posted sign did not adequately exclude all members of the public because it suggested that persons with “legitimate business” were free to enter, and (2) even if Pearson’s initial entry on the property was unlawful, father’s subsequent consent to Pearson’s request to search the garage retroactively ratified, and validated, Pearson’s initial unlawful entry. The state did not argue, under State v. Rodriguez, 317 Or 27, 854 P2d 399 (1993), that father’s consent to the search of the garage was not the product of exploitation of any prior illegality in entering the property and, that, thus, regardless of whether the initial entry was unlawful, the search of the garage was lawful.

The trial court rejected the state’s arguments. The court concluded that the driveway sign was “sufficient warning and sufficient expression of the intent” to exclude the public from the property. Moreover, although making a specific finding that, after Pearson’s initial unlawful entry, the “rest of the search” — i.e., the search of the garage — was consensual, the court implicitly rejected the state’s “retroactive consent” argument. Accordingly, the court granted brothers’ motion to suppress.

The state appeals, reiterating its alternative arguments that Pearson’s entry was lawful and that, in all events, father, by consenting to the search of the garage, necessarily retroactively consented to Pearson’s antecedent “trespass.” As amplified below, we reject both arguments.

State v. Dixson/Digby, 307 Or 195, 766 P2d 1015 (1988), and its progeny, frame our analysis of the lawfulness of Pearson’s initial entry. In Dixson/Digby, the Supreme Court announced that “the search and seizure provision in the Oregon Constitution [, Article I, section 9,] protects land outside the ‘curtilage’ of a residence” under certain conditions:

“An individual’s privacy interest in land he or she has left unimproved and unbounded is not sufficient to trigger the protections of Article I, section 9. Thus, it is not sufficient that the property in question is privately owned, or that it is shielded from view by vegetation or topographical barriers, because those features do not necessarily indicate the [502]*502owner’s intention that the property be kept private. A person who wishes to preserve a constitutionally protected privacy interest in land outside the curtilage must manifest an intention to exclude the public by erecting barriers to entry, such as fences, or by posting signs. * * * [I]f land is fenced, posted or otherwise closed off, one does not enter it without permission or, in the officers’ situation, permission or a warrant.” 307 Or at 211-12 (emphasis added).

Applying that rule, the court concluded that the officers had not conducted an illegal search by entering the defendants’ property. The court reasoned that, although the defendants had posted “No Hunting” signs and blocked vehicle access to their property with a cable across the road, the signs and cable did not express an intent to exclude persons from the property entirely, such as for uses other than hunting. Id.

In several post-Dixson/Digby cases, we have considered whether a landowner’s posting of a sign or signs on the property manifests a clear intent to exclude the public, thereby creating a protected privacy interest in the property under the Oregon Constitution. For example, in State v. Gorham, 121 Or App 347, 353, 854 P2d 971, rev den

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Bluebook (online)
988 P.2d 433, 163 Or. App. 497, 76 A.L.R. 5th 755, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 1822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-juvenile-department-v-reeves-orctapp-1999.