State v. Santaw

2010 VT 111, 12 A.3d 548, 189 Vt. 546, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedDecember 13, 2010
Docket2009-396, MAY TERM, 2010, 2009-471, MAY TERM, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2010 VT 111 (State v. Santaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Santaw, 2010 VT 111, 12 A.3d 548, 189 Vt. 546, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 112 (Vt. 2010).

Opinions

¶ 1. The State appeals from a trial court order granting defendant’s motion to suppress and resulting judgment for defendant in a civil suspension action. The issue is whether a state trooper had reasonable and articulable suspicion to detain defendant and request field sobriety tests when the apparent target of his initial investigation was the driver of a second car stopped at the same time. We reverse and remand.

¶ 2. The tidal court found the following facts. On July 18, 2009, defendant was driving west on Calais Road, followed by a second car. Traveling in the opposite direction, a state trooper observed the vehicles and noticed the second car drift within its lane of travel. The trooper turned and followed, continuing to see the second vehicle drift, and eventually travel to the right and off the paved portion of the highway for some distance. Deciding to stop the second car, the trooper then saw the lead car cross the yellow centerline for some undetermined time and distance while going around a curve. Just after this, the trooper activated his blue lights and both cars turned into the same driveway, which happened to be at defendant’s residence.

¶ 3. Defendant, who was operating the first car, walked to the driver’s side door of the second car and was there when the trooper reached them. The trooper detected an odor of alcohol but could not determine if it was coming from defendant, the other driver, or both. He instructed defendant to return to his car and retrieve his license and registration. After a brief interview with the driver of the second car, the trooper approached defendant. The trooper detected the smell of alcohol emanating from his person, observed that his eyes were bloodshot and watery, and learned, through questioning him, that defendant had been drinking. Based upon defendant’s performance on dexterity exercises, as well as the result of a preliminary breath test (PBT), he was taken into custody where an evidentiary breath test reported a blood alcohol concentration of 0.140%. Defendant was charged with driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor (DUI) in violation of 23 V.S.A. § 1201(a)(2), [547]*547and driving with an alcohol concentration of 0.08% or more in violation of 23 V.S.A. § 1201(a)(1).

¶ 4. Defendant moved to suppress all evidence obtained subsequent to the trooper’s instruction that he return to his car. The court concluded, and defendant concurred, that the initial stop of the second car was lawful. Defendant maintained, however, that in the context of having just blocked defendant’s driveway with blue lights flashing to stop the second vehicle, the trooper’s direction that defendant return to his car and retrieve his license and registration constituted a detention. Moreover, asserted defendant, this detention was effected without the trooper having reasonable or articulable suspicion that defendant, rather than the driver of the second car, had engaged in any wrongdoing. See State v. Kettlewell, 149 Vt. 331, 334, 544 A.2d 591, 593 (1987) (recognizing validity of brief investigative detention if the officer, “based on objective facts and circumstances, reasonably believes that the suspect is, or is about to be, engaged in criminal activity”). The State responded, based on the testimony of the trooper, that the officer reasonably separated the two drivers for safety reasons and to determine the source of the intoxicant odor. The court observed that it was only after defendant was sent back to his car to find his documents that the trooper noted the odor of intoxicants from defendant’s person and his bloodshot and watery eyes.

¶ 5. The court held that the proper point of inquiry was the point at which the trooper directed defendant to return to the first car to fetch his documents. It was then, in the court’s view, that a reasonable person in defendant’s circumstances would not feel free to leave. Accordingly, concluded the court, when the officer separated the two drivers, defendant was detained for investigation. Relying, however, on the trooper’s concession that a single crossing of the centerline was not unusual, the court opined that at the time of detention the officer had no more than a hunch to support the suspicion of criminal activity on defendant’s part. Since a mere hunch is insufficient to justify police detention, the court ruled that the evidence of intoxication obtained after the invalid detention must be suppressed, citing State v. Emilo, 144 Vt. 477, 481, 479 A.2d 169, 171 (1984) (stopping a motorist “without at least articulable and reasonable suspicion [of wrongdoing] ... is an impermissible violation of the motorist’s Fourth Amendment rights” (quotation omitted)). We disagree with the trial court’s conclusion that the detention was unjustified, and reverse.

¶ 6. We review a trial court’s disposition of a motion to suppress in two steps. State v. Mara, 2009 VT 96A, ¶ 6, 186 Vt. 389, 987 A.2d 939. We first review the trial court’s factual findings for clear error, recognizing that the trier-of-fact is in the best position to determine the weight and sufficiency of the evidence presented. State v. Freeman, 2004 VT 56, ¶ 7, 177 Vt. 478, 857 A.2d 295 (mem.). “If the trial court’s findings are not clearly erroneous, we will then review the legal issues, such as the reasonableness of a seizure, de novo.” Id.

¶ 7. The essential facts of this case are not disputed. The parties agree that the trooper made a lawful stop of the second car in defendant’s driveway. Defendant conceded there was nothing unlawful about the trooper approaching him while he stood beside the second car. The trial court found the trooper then sent defendant to his own car, at which time “defendant did not have a choice[] (the officer admitted as much).” The findings are supported by the record below and not clearly erroneous.

¶ 8. We next review the trial court’s legal conclusions. It is a question of law whether the facts, as found by the trial court, justify a particular police action, such as detention. Mara, 2009 VT 96A, ¶ 6. The totality of the circumstances does [548]*548not, in our view, support the court’s characterization of defendant’s detention as being based on a mere hunch of the officer. At the time of the trooper’s instruction to defendant to return to his car, the trooper knew defendant had crossed the centerline with the second car, acting more erratically, following behind. From the odor of alcohol, indistinguishable between the two drivers, the trooper knew that one or both had been drinking. It was not unreasonable for the trooper to have defendant get his license and registration, nor was it unreasonable to separate the two drivers to discern if only one or both of the drivers smelled of alcohol. The trooper had not a hunch but a reasonable and articulable suspicion that each driver committed traffic violations. The odor of intoxicants could only add to that suspicion.

¶ 9. The progression of events in this case is analogous to the situation in State v. Gray, 150 Vt. 184, 552 A.2d 1190 (1988). In that case, the defendant arrived at a neighborhood bar, driving his truck over a sidewalk to park in a temporary lot. An officer who observed this approached the defendant, requested his license and registration, and followed the defendant back to the truck as he retrieved it.

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Related

State v. Spooner
2012 VT 90 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2012)
State v. Santaw
2010 VT 111 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 VT 111, 12 A.3d 548, 189 Vt. 546, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-santaw-vt-2010.