State v. Palmersheim

2018 WI App 71, 922 N.W.2d 323, 384 Wis. 2d 633
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 31, 2018
DocketAppeal No. 2018AP746-CR
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 WI App 71 (State v. Palmersheim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Palmersheim, 2018 WI App 71, 922 N.W.2d 323, 384 Wis. 2d 633 (Wis. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

GUNDRUM, J.1

¶1 The State appeals from a circuit court order granting Steven D. Palmersheim's motion to suppress evidence. For the following reasons, we reverse.

Background

¶2 Palmersheim was arrested for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and subsequently charged with OWI, second offense. He filed a motion to suppress evidence, and the circuit court held an evidentiary hearing at which the arresting officer and Palmersheim were the only witnesses to testify. Their relevant testimony is as follows.

¶3 The officer testified that around 5:00 p.m. on September 25, 2017, dispatch informed him that a witness reported following a vehicle that was "all over the road." The witness identified the suspect vehicle and also provided his own name and a description of the vehicle he was driving. The officer responded to the home of the registered owner of the suspect vehicle, which home was in "a residential neighborhood with nothing but homes and residences surrounding it." Here, the officer first encountered the witness, who pointed to the red Ford Ranger parked in front of his vehicle. The witness informed the officer that he had remained in visual contact of the Ranger and observed the driver-Palmersheim-exit the vehicle and stand next to it, "sway[ ] side to side," and urinate.

¶4 The officer observed Palmersheim walk from the Ranger up the driveway towards the open garage attached to his home. The officer first attempted to speak with Palmersheim by stating something like, "[E]xcuse me, sir, can I talk to you." When Palmersheim did not respond, the officer "yelled" for him to stop. Palmersheim "did turn around and look" at the officer who was approximately thirty feet away in his "full police uniform and ... in proximity of [his] fully marked patrol car." After looking at the officer, Palmersheim turned and continued into the garage. The officer "briskly walked and hustled up to try to catch up" to Palmersheim. In the garage and near the door leading into his residence, Palmersheim "hit the button ... and started lowering the garage door," at which time the officer placed his foot in a position to and did "br[eak] the beam" at the bottom of the entryway to the garage, which caused the garage door to "retract back to the up position." The officer did this because he "wanted to continue to contact Mr. Palmersheim."

¶5 Palmersheim opened the door to enter his home, but as the garage door went back up, the officer, "still standing in the threshold of the garage,"2 asked Palmersheim: "[S]ir, can you please come out of the garage. Can you step out here and talk to me." Palmersheim complied by coming out of the garage and onto the driveway. The officer observed a "strong odor of intoxicants" coming from Palmersheim; his eyes, which were glassy and bloodshot, were "only about halfway open"; he was "kind of swaying side to side"; his speech was "very slurred"; and he "had a hard time completing sentences and putting thoughts together." When questioned by the officer, Palmersheim denied driving recklessly or urinating next to his vehicle. The officer turned and looked at the Ranger and noticed "a stream coming from underneath [Palmersheim's] vehicle which would have come from the area of the driver's door of his vehicle into the gutter curb area." The officer agreed this was consistent with somebody urinating near the vehicle. Palmersheim again denied urinating and then refused the officer's request that he perform field sobriety testing.

¶6 Palmersheim started to walk back into the garage, at which point the officer "made contact" with his arm and prevented him from going into the home. Palmersheim came back out of the garage and appeared as if he would cooperate with performing field sobriety tests, but when the officer asked him again if he would, Palmersheim did not answer. The officer interpreted this as Palmersheim refusing to perform the tests. The officer placed him under arrest for OWI. The officer also issued him a citation for disorderly conduct for urinating in the street.

¶7 Upon cross-examination, the officer expressed that by "briskly walking" toward Palmersheim to prevent him from entering his residence, he was "chasing" Palmersheim in "hot pursuit" for urinating in the street. The officer added that he "certainly stepped up [his] pace to catch up" to Palmersheim although "[t]he distance wasn't that far." Upon questioning by the court regarding why he stopped at the threshold of the garage if he was in hot pursuit, the officer explained that he "wanted to persuade [Palmersheim] to come back out. I didn't feel it was safe to follow" him into the home or even the garage.

¶8 Palmersheim testified that when the officer first asked him to stop, Palmersheim had already crossed the threshold into his garage. On cross-examination, Palmersheim agreed that his memory of the event could be "a little hazy" due to having consumed sufficient alcohol to result in a .23 blood alcohol concentration level, based upon subsequent testing.

¶9 The circuit court determined the officer had probable cause to arrest Palmersheim for obstructing an officer-due to Palmersheim turning away from the officer and continuing toward his home after the officer had told him to stop. It also concluded, however, that no exigent circumstances-specifically no "hot pursuit"-existed to legally justify the officer's warrantless entry into Palmersheim's garage by placing his foot into the garage to break the safety beam. The court granted Palmersheim's motion to suppress, and the State appeals from that order.

Discussion

¶10 The parties agree the officer committed a warrantless entry under the Fourth Amendment when he placed his foot into the garage to break the safety beam. See State v. Dumstrey , 2016 WI 3, ¶¶ 23, 35, 366 Wis. 2d 64, 873 N.W.2d 502 (recognizing that a garage attached to a home constitutes Fourth Amendment protected curtilage); State v. Davis , 2011 WI App 74, ¶ 12, 333 Wis. 2d 490, 798 N.W.2d 902 ; see also State v. Johnson , 177 Wis. 2d 224, 231-32, 501 N.W.2d 876 (Ct. App. 1993) (holding that the officer's "step into the threshold, preventing Johnson from closing the door, was an entry"). For purposes of this decision, we assume, without deciding, that that is correct.

¶11 To legally justify this warrantless entry, the officer would have had to have had probable cause that Palmersheim had committed a jailable offense, and exigent circumstances-in this case, that the officer was engaged in "hot pursuit" at the time he breached the garage entryway-would have had to have existed. See

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Bluebook (online)
2018 WI App 71, 922 N.W.2d 323, 384 Wis. 2d 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-palmersheim-wisctapp-2018.