State v. Linville

78 P.3d 136, 190 Or. App. 185, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 22, 2003
Docket01CR0188; A116335
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 78 P.3d 136 (State v. Linville) 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 v. Linville, 78 P.3d 136, 190 Or. App. 185, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1424 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

*187 EDMONDS, P. J.

Defendant appeals from a conviction for possession of a controlled substance. ORS 475.992(4). He assigns as error the denial of his motion to suppress evidence seized from his cigarette pack. After the motion was denied, he entered into a stipulated facts trial that resulted in his conviction. We affirm.

Defendant was a passenger in an automobile that had been lawfully stopped because of a defective tail light. After contacting the driver of the vehicle, the officer became concerned that the vehicle might be stolen. Because the driver had no identification with him, the officer asked defendant for his identification so that he would have a potential witness in the event that the traffic citation for the defective light was challenged. Defendant provided the officer with his driver’s license, and the officer returned to his patrol car in an effort to ascertain whether the car was stolen. Because of his suspicion about the car, he asked for a backup officer.

When the backup officer arrived at the scene, the officer approached the car again. He intended to ask the driver for permission to search the car, but he wanted defendant, who remained seated in the car, to get out first. He walked up to the passenger side of the car and asked defendant “if he had anything in his pockets that he shouldn’t have, * * * drugs or anything like that. Weapons was my concern for officer safety. [Defendant] said that he didn’t.” The officer asked if defendant would consent to a search of his pockets, and defendant agreed. After conducting a search of defendant’s pockets, the officer asked defendant to step back to the front of the patrol car. Before defendant complied, the officer asked, “[I]s there anything else in the vehicle that belongs to you[?]” The officer testified at the suppression hearing that in response to his question, “[Defendant] said, ‘[N]o, he did not have anything in the vehicle’.”

The officer obtained consent to search the car from the driver. On the floorboard of the car, he found a pack of Camel cigarettes. The officer asked the driver if the pack of cigarettes was his, and the driver replied in the negative. The officer saw that the driver was carrying a different brand of *188 cigarettes. The officer then opened the cigarette pack and found marijuana and methamphetamine. Defendant subsequently admitted that the cigarette pack and the methamphetamine belonged to him. Defendant’s motion to suppress in the trial court sought to exclude the above evidence, in part, on the ground that the officer conducted an unlawful search of the cigarette pack in violation of defendant’s rights under Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution. 1 On appeal, defendant reasserts that argument. He claims that he had a privacy interest in the cigarette pack before the stop occurred that he never abandoned. He relies primarily on State v. Cook, 332 Or 601, 34 P3d 156 (2001) in support of his position.

In Cook, two officers went to an apartment complex after they were told that two persons were possibly trying to commit thefts from vehicles. While looking for the suspects in the parking area of the complex, the officers observed the defendant, bent down next to a garbage dumpster, sorting clothing into a duffel bag. They approached the defendant and asked him to step back, believing that his behavior was consistent with someone who had committed theft from a vehicle. The defendant complied, leaving the bag and some clothing on the ground. One of the officers testified that the defendant said that “he discovered a pile of clothing there and he thought he may be able to use some of the clothing, and so he was going through the clothing to find items which he may be able [to] use.” Cook, 332 Or at 604 (brackets in original). The other officer also testified that the defendant said he “was going through [the duffel bag] to see what he wanted to take home.” ZdL When asked, the defendant repeatedly denied that the clothing or the bag belonged to him. The ensuing search of the bag resulted in the seizure of evidence of controlled substances, and the defendant eventually admitted that the bag was his.

The trial court and this court upheld the officers’ search in Cook on the basis that the defendant’s disclaimer of *189 ownership sufficed to constitute an abandonment of any privacy or possessory interest in the bag and its contents and to make the search of it reasonable under the circumstances. The Supreme Court disagreed. It explained,

“Defendant’s only statements before the seizure and search occurred were that he discovered the pile of clothing, that the items, with the exception of an army jacket, were not his and that he was going through the clothing to find items that he might have been able to use. The statements were responsive to Officer Petermen’s inquiry as to what defendant was doing with the bag and clothes, and permitted the officers reasonably to conclude that defendant did not own the bag and clothing.
“The fact that defendant told the officers that he did not own the bag and clothes did not, however, permit the officers to conclude that defendant intended to relinquish all his constitutionally protected interests in those items. Although defendant had relinquished his immediate physical possession of the bag and clothing by leaving them on the ground, undisputedly, he did so only after Officer Petermen instructed him to ‘step out’ of the area near the dumpster where defendant was sorting the clothes into the bag. Leaving the items on the ground in compliance with the officer’s request to ‘step out’ is not conduct demonstrating an intent permanently to relinquish possession of the items or the privacy interests that accompanied the right to possess them. Under those circumstances, the officers could not have reasonably concluded that defendant intended to relinquish his possessory and privacy interests in the clothing and the bag. Thus, the seizure of the clothing and bag followed by the immediate search of those items violated defendant’s possessory and accompanying privacy interests protected by Article I, section 9.”

332 Or at 608-09 (emphasis in original).

In response to defendant’s argument that Cook controls the outcome of this case, the state counters,

“The point of Cook thus is not that a person cannot intentionally relinquish his privacy interest in an object, simply by disclaiming ownership of it. It is that a person does not do so, when he has asserted a privacy interest in an item other than ownership and the only basis for concluding that he intended to relinquish that interest was that he *190 complied with an officer’s request to step away from it. In this case, defendant was given an opportunity to assert an interest in the cigarette pack in circumstances where it would have been reasonable to expect him to do so, if he wanted to retain a privacy interest in it. Because he abandoned that interest

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 P.3d 136, 190 Or. App. 185, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-linville-orctapp-2003.