State v. Updegraff

2011 MT 321, 267 P.3d 28, 363 Mont. 123, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 427
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 2011
DocketDA 10-0613
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2011 MT 321 (State v. Updegraff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Updegraff, 2011 MT 321, 267 P.3d 28, 363 Mont. 123, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 427 (Mo. 2011).

Opinion

JUSTICE NELSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Late one night in July 2009, Jefferson County Reserve Deputy Francine Janik came upon a car parked in a posted “day use only” fishing access site in neighboring Madison County. The car’s driver, Floyd Thomas Updegraff, appeared motionless and unresponsive. Janik approached the vehicle and made contact with Updegraff. Upon doing so, she ascertained that Updegraff was intoxicated. Janik detained Updegraff and radioed for assistance from a second Jefferson County officer, Deputy Michael Wharton. Wharton responded to the scene and placed Updegraff under arrest for driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI).

¶2 Updegraff subsequently was charged in the Fifth Judicial District *125 Court, Madison County, with various offenses, including felony DUI (sixth offense). Before trial, he filed a motion to dismiss or, alternatively, to suppress the evidence against him on the ground that Deputy Janik and Deputy Wharton had effected an illegal arrest. The District Court held an evidentiary hearing and denied the motion. The case then proceeded to trial, and the jury ultimately convicted Updegraff.

¶3 On appeal, Updegraff raises one issue: whether the District Court erred in denying his motion to dismiss/suppress. His arguments in the District Court and this Court boil down to the following proposition: either the deputies were acting “under color of law” as Jefferson County “peace officers,” in which case they had no authority to make an arrest in Madison County, or the deputies were acting as “private citizens,” in which case they failed to comply with the mandates and limited authority of the private person arrest statute (§ 46-6-502, MCA). Either way, the arrest was illegal.

¶4 The State, on the other hand, argues the arrest was lawful. The State contends that Janik was “still a peace officer” when her duties brought her into Madison County and that her initial contact with Updegraff was justified under the community caretaker doctrine. 1 The State further contends that Janik’s observations after making contact with Updegraff gave rise to “probable cause of a criminal offense involving an immediate, real danger to Updegraff and other motorists,” thus meeting the arrest standard set forth in the private person arrest statute. Finally, the State acknowledges that Janik and Wharton followed certain “police procedures” in conjunction with UpdegrafFs arrest, but the State maintains that so-called “out-of-jurisdiction” peace officers are allowed to “employ their training, experience, and procedures when exercising citizen arrest authority.”

¶5 These arguments implicate two questions in addressing the legality of Updegraff s arrest: what authority the deputies had to make a warrantless arrest in another county, and what restrictions applied to the deputies’ actions incident to that arrest. As the State points out, we have held that a law enforcement officer is always a peace officer, *126 no matter Ms or her geographical location. Yet, at the same time, we have also made it clear that, unless authorized by statute, a peace officer may not use criminal procedure statutes and does not have authority to make an arrest in the capacity of a peace officer when outside the territorial jurisdictional limits of the law enforcement entity for which the officer works. Instead, we have analyzed arrests by out-of-jurisdiction officers for compliance with the requirements of the private person arrest statute.

¶6 The assumption underlying this approach is that an out-of-jurisdiction officer “acts as a private citizen” and that the private person arrest statute, therefore, applies wholesale to the officer’s actions. The parties’ arguments and the events surrounding Updegraff s arrest, however, require that we address the correctness of this assumption. Following a detailed examination of the law of private person arrests, we conclude that the private person arrest statute applies only to arrests by actual “private persons” (i.e., non-peace officers) and those whose arrest authority is, by statute, limited to that of a private person. As such, it is necessary to clarify the analysis for arrests by out-of-jurisdiction peace officers. Based on the discussion below, and because it does not alter the outcome of this appeal, we hold that in order to make a warrantless arrest, an out-of-jurisdiction officer must meet the arrest standard that would apply to a private person in the same circumstances, but that if this standard is met, the officer may then follow the procedures applicable to peace officers in processing the arrest. Applying this approach here, we conclude that Updegraff s arrest was legal, and we accordingly affirm the District Court’s denial of his motion to dismiss/suppress.

BACKGROUND

¶7 Deputy Janik is a retired Montana Highway Patrol officer. At the time of the events at issue here, she had served for ten years as a reserve officer with the Jefferson County Sheriffs Office. A “reserve officer” is “a sworn, part-time, volunteer member of a law enforcement agency who is a peace officer, as defined in 46-1-202, and has arrest authority, as described in 46-6-210, only when authorized to perform these functions as a representative of the law enforcement agency.” Section 7-32-201(6), MCA. The qualifications, training requirements, and limitations of reserve officers are set forth in §7-32-213, - 214, -216, and -217, MCA. Upon being activated by the chief law enforcement administrator of the local government, and wMle on assigned duty only, a reserve officer ‘is vested with the same powers, *127 rights, privileges, obligations, and duties as any other peace officer of this state.” Section 7-32-218, MCA.

¶8 Deputy Janik was on duty during the evening and early morning hours of July 11 and 12,2009. At around 1:00 a.m., while patrolling on Highway 359 in Jefferson County between Cardwell and Interstate 90, she noticed a southbound vehicle that appeared to be speeding. Janik followed the vehicle, but the driver quickly slowed down. Thus, after crossing the Jefferson River into Madison County, Janik pulled into the Cardwell Bridge Fishing Access Site intending to turn around and return to Jefferson County.

¶9 As she made her turn, Janik’s headlights illuminated a car parked on the roadway in the fishing access site. Because this is a posted “day use only” area, and thus nobody was supposed to be there at night, Janik decided to drive in and “make sure there was nothing going on that might need some attention.” Based on what she had heard over the radio traffic that evening, Janik believed there were no Madison County deputies, Montana Highway Patrol officers, or Fish, Wildlife, and Parks officers in the area at the time. Thus, she did not contact any of these agencies regarding her situation. She did call in to the Jefferson County dispatcher, however, who noted TS [traffic stop] @ Cardwell Fishing Access” on the dispatch logs at 1:13 a.m.

¶10 As she drove toward the parked vehicle, Janik could see that someone (Updegraff) was sitting in the driver’s seat. His head was laid back against the seat, his eyes were closed, and Janik could see no movement. She shined her headlights into the vehicle, but Updegraff did not respond.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 MT 321, 267 P.3d 28, 363 Mont. 123, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-updegraff-mont-2011.