State v. Taua

49 P.3d 1227, 98 Haw. 426
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 2002
Docket23992
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 49 P.3d 1227 (State v. Taua) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Taua, 49 P.3d 1227, 98 Haw. 426 (haw 2002).

Opinion

49 P.3d 1227 (2002)
98 Hawai`i 426

STATE of Hawai`i, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Murphy TAU`A, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 23992.

Supreme Court of Hawai`i.

June 28, 2002.

*1228 Jerrie L. Sheppard, Deputy Prosecuting Attorney, on the briefs, for the plaintiff-appellant State of Hawai`i.

Mark Graven, on the briefs, for the defendant-appellee Murphy Tau'a.

MOON, C.J., LEVINSON, AND NAKAYAMA, JJ.; RAMIL and ACOBA, JJ., not joining.[1]

Opinion of the Court by LEVINSON, J.

The plaintiff-appellant State of Hawai`i (the prosecution) appeals from an order of the second circuit court, the Honorable Shackley F. Raffetto presiding, granting the defendant-appellee Murphy Tau`a's motion to suppress (1) evidence that Maui Police Department (MPD) officers seized in executing a search warrant upon a vehicle in which Tau`a had been a passenger and (2) a written statement that Tau`a subsequently gave to the police.[2] On appeal, the prosecution principally contends that the circuit court clearly erred in connection with three of its findings of fact (FOFs) and, consequently, wrongly concluded, in its two conclusions of law (COLs), that a canine screening of the interior of the vehicle infringed upon Tau`a's federal and state constitutional rights to be free from unreasonable searches,[3] and, thus, required *1229 that the evidence obtained as a result of and tainted by the canine screen be suppressed at trial.

We hold on the record in this case that, because Tau`a's personal constitutional rights were not violated by the canine screen, Tau`a could not invoke either article I, section 7 of the Hawai`i Constitution or the fourth amendment to the United States Constitution, see supra note 3, as a basis for suppressing the evidence recovered from the vehicle. Because the officers' subsequent search of the vehicle—executed pursuant to a warrant obtained, in part, upon the canine's "alert" to the presence of narcotics in the vehicle—was not unconstitutional with respect to Tau`a, the circuit court further erred in concluding that Tau`a's subsequent written statement was "tainted" and inadmissable. Accordingly, we remand this matter for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

On December 28, 1999, MPD officers executed warrants to arrest and search the person of Aaron Yamashita.[4] Acting on information that Yamashita would be in a particular area—specifically, an Eagle Hardware parking lot located in the Maui Market Place—in the late afternoon of December 28, 1999, approximately a dozen officers, in five different vehicles, participated in apprehending Yamashita. The officers awaited Yamashita's arrival in the area; when he arrived, driving a two-door "red king cab F-150 Ford pickup truck," the officers followed him and, shortly thereafter, succeeded in stopping the truck that he was driving.

In the truck with Yamashita, at the time the officers stopped it, were, in the front passenger seat, Jennifer Biho and, in the back seat, Tau`a. Although the officers ordered all three occupants out of the truck, it appears that they did not immediately heed the officers, because the record reflects that the officers themselves "opened" the truck's doors and that Yamashita was "taken out of the [truck] and proned out," Biho was "taken out of the [truck]," and Tau`a was "removed" from the truck, which, apparently, necessitated that two officers briefly enter it in order to reach him in the back seat.[5] Yamashita, Biho, and Tau`a were kept separated. The officers did not have warrants to search or arrest either Biho or Tau`a; nor did the officers have a warrant to search anything other than Yamashita's person.

The warrant authorizing a search of Yamashita's person was not, however, immediately executed. Rather, the officers asked Yamashita for his consent to search the truck. He refused, responding that the truck was not his.[6] Thereafter, within approximately ten or fifteen minutes of the officers stopping the truck, MPD Officer William Gannon, together with his "drug detection dog" Ben,[7] conducted a "canine screening" of the truck.[8] Officer Gannon described the canine screening that he conducted with Ben of the truck as follows:

Utilizing a leash, we start[ed] at the front of the vehicle, work[ing our] way along the driver's side. At this point in time the door had been open[ed][p]rior to my arrival[.]... The door was wide open.
Me having a four-foot lead, a leash, Ben detected the odor emanating from within *1230 the vehicle and immediately entered the vehicle, jumped over the driver's side seat through this opening between the front seats. There is a console that can fold down[, which] was open.
Ben made entry through that opening and immediately alerted to the base of the [front] passenger side seat.

Throughout his testimony, adduced during the hearing conducted in connection with Tau`a's motion to suppress, Officer Gannon consistently asserted that Ben had first detected the odor of narcotics while outside the vehicle, but did not "alert" to the actual location of those narcotics under the front passenger side seat until inside the truck.[9] According to Officer Gannon, Ben is trained to "go to the strongest source [of an odor he has detected] as fast as he can," or, in other words, to "follow his nose." Officer Gannon asserted that detecting or "indicating" an odor is distinct from an "alert," but did not elaborate with any degree of specificity as to what the distinction was. However, Officer Gannon did explain that, "[o]nce [Ben] indicates [an] odor, he's going to take his nose, which is trained to detect the odor at the strongest source."

Because of Ben's size, temperament, quickness, agility, and training, Officer Gannon asserted that he could not have prevented Ben from jumping into the truck once Ben had detected the odor of narcotics emanating from it. After Ben "alerted" to the presence of narcotics in the truck, Officer Gannon told him, "Good boy," pulled him out of the truck, and ceased conducting the canine screening. Throughout Ben's sojourn in the truck, Officer Gannon asserted that he did not enter it himself, but conceded that his "hand maybe" broke "the pla[ne] of the door" as he was pulling Ben out of the truck. After Ben "alerted" to the presence of narcotics in the truck, Officer Callinan executed the warrant to search Yamishita's person; however, Officer Callinan did not find anything incriminating on Yamashita's person.

The truck was towed to a police station pending the issuance of a warrant to search it. Subsequently, upon Officer Gannon's affidavit,[10] a warrant was issued to search the *1231 truck, and, in executing the warrant, officers found: (1) various items of alleged drug paraphernalia, some of which contained "residue," in the "third door/panel"; (2) a nine millimeter semi-automatic pistol under "the back seat" (apparently on the driver's side); and (3) a "cut plastic straw (loader)," apparently under the front seat.[11]

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Bluebook (online)
49 P.3d 1227, 98 Haw. 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-taua-haw-2002.