COURT OF APPEALS OF WISCONSIN
PUBLISHED OPINION
Case No.: 96-1744-CR |
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Complete Title of Case: |
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State
of Wisconsin,
Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Gregory
J. Dull,
Defendant-Appellant. |
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Opinion Filed: May 7, 1997 Submitted on Briefs: March 21, 1997 |
JUDGES: Snyder, P.J., Brown and Anderson, JJ. Concurred: Dissented: |
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Appellant ATTORNEYS: On
behalf of the defendant-appellant, the cause was submitted on the briefs of Scott
R. Letteney of Hudec Law Offices, S.C., of Lake Geneva. Respondent ATTORNEYS: On
behalf of the plaintiff-respondent, the cause was submitted on the brief of James
E. Doyle, attorney general, and Marguerite M. Moeller,
assistant attorney general. |
COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND RELEASED |
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May 7, 1997 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See § 808.10 and rule 809.62, Stats. |
This
opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version
will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. |
No. 96-1744-CR |
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STATE OF WISCONSIN |
IN COURT OF APPEALS |
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STATE
OF WISCONSIN, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. GREGORY
J. DULL, Defendant-Appellant. |
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APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for
Waukesha County: LEE S. DREYFUS, Jr., Judge. Reversed and cause remanded with
directions.
Before Snyder, P.J., Brown and Anderson,
JJ.
BROWN, J. Without a warrant, and
without consent, a sheriff’s deputy opened Gregory J. Dull’s closed bedroom
door and went inside. The deputy had
taken custody of Gregory’s younger brother, Matthew, for underage drinking and
testified that he wanted to leave him with Gregory. The trial court accepted the deputy’s explanation and determined
that the deputy acted reasonably when he entered Gregory’s home and bedroom for
this reason. We disagree that the deputy’s
conduct was reasonable and direct the trial court to suppress the deputy’s
testimony about how he found Gregory in bed with a fourteen-year-old girl.
As a result of what the deputy observed, the
State charged Gregory with sexual assault of a child, see § 948.02, Stats., and with causing a child to
expose his or her genitals. See §
948.10, Stats. After the trial court denied Gregory’s
suppression motion, Gregory pled no contest to the sexual assault charge. The other charge was dismissed and read in
for sentencing.
This appeal only concerns the trial court’s
decision to deny the motion to suppress “all evidence” gathered as a result of
the deputy’s entry into Gregory’s bedroom and the “testimony which would flow
therefrom.” The essence of the
trial court’s reasoning is captured in the following finding: “[T]he [deputy] was well within his rights
to make a determination as to whether there was an adult on the premises in
order to determine if Matthew was indeed releasable and did not have to be removed
from what was clearly his home.” Gregory
contends that the trial court erred in this analysis.
We apply a two-part standard to a ruling on a
suppression motion. We show great
deference to the trial court’s factual findings and will not reverse unless
they are clearly erroneous. See State
v. Guzy, 139 Wis.2d 663, 671, 407 N.W.2d 548, 552 (1987). Nonetheless, the legal determination of
whether those facts warrant suppression of the evidence is a matter which we
review independently of the trial court.
See id.
We accordingly begin with the trial court’s factual
findings. The deputy and his
partner were dispatched to the Dull residence at about 4:00 a.m. to answer a
noise complaint. When they arrived, the
deputy saw Matthew in front of the house talking with a teenage girl. The deputy identified them and confirmed
that they were juveniles. Matthew was
fifteen and the girl was fourteen or fifteen.
While the deputy was talking with Matthew, he
noticed that Matthew smelled like he had been consuming alcohol. The deputy therefore administered a
preliminary breath test. Matthew’s
test yielded a result of 0.06%.
Meanwhile,
the deputy’s partner questioned the girl who was in the front yard with
Matthew. She also tested positive for
alcohol and was placed in custody. The
partner put her in the squad car because he planned to take her to the juvenile
center until her parents could be contacted.
The
deputy likewise placed Matthew in custody.
The deputy asked Matthew if there was an adult in the house whom the
deputy could leave Matthew with. Matthew
told him that his father was at the Milwaukee Huber facility and that his
mother was not at home. Nonetheless,
Matthew volunteered that his older brother Gregory (who was twenty-one) was
inside.
However, Matthew told the deputy that Gregory
was sleeping and offered to have the deputy wait outside while he went in to
retrieve Gregory. But the deputy had
concerns with this plan. On other
occasions when he had previously let juveniles go inside their homes for
similar reasons, the deputy had been left “outside looking in” with no one
willing to “re-answer the door.”
While Matthew still argued to the deputy that
“he couldn’t enter because he didn’t have a warrant,” once the deputy explained
to Matthew that he was in custody and would remain in his custody until he made
personal contact with Gregory, Matthew permitted the deputy to go inside the
house. Once they were inside, Matthew
continued to hesitate, explaining to the deputy that “he didn’t think he should
allow [him] to proceed any further.”
Nonetheless, Matthew eventually led the deputy downstairs to Gregory’s
bedroom, but the door was shut.
Loud music was coming from inside and Matthew
and the deputy knocked on the door several times. When there was no response, the deputy opened the door and he and
Matthew went inside to awake Gregory.
When the deputy entered, Gregory awoke and
started to get up from the bed. The
deputy approached him and pulled back the covers. The deputy saw that Gregory was in bed with a juvenile girl and
that both were naked.
Before we turn to our legal analysis, we note
the State’s contention that the trial court never resolved whether the deputy
or Matthew opened the bedroom door and initiated entry. The State refers us to the portions of the
testimony which show that the testimony about this fact was disputed; the
deputy and Matthew each claimed that the other actually opened the door. The State further contends that the trial
court’s oral findings are ambiguous in regard to how it resolved this conflict.
We reject the State’s claim that the findings
are ambiguous. The court described the
events that took place outside Gregory’s door in this way:
They could hear loud music. It was quite clear from the testimony that
Matthew was convinced that his brother was in there. The only way under those circumstances [it] certainly was
appropriate for the officer to open the door to make inquiry. [Emphasis added.]
Although the trial court
made a legal determination that it was “appropriate” for the deputy to open the
door, the court plainly made the factual finding that the deputy opened
it, not Matthew.
Having set out the historical facts, we now
turn to the legal question of whether the deputy’s warrantless entry into the
house and eventually into Gregory’s bedroom violated the Fourth Amendment. The State offers two explanations of why it
did not.
First, the State refines the argument it
successfully presented to the trial court and argues that the deputy was acting
as a “community caretaker” who was only interested in Matthew’s safety. See generally Cady v.
Dombrowski, 413 U.S. 433, 441 (1973).
The State describes how the Juvenile Justice Code authorized the deputy
to take custody of Matthew in these circumstances and further mandated that the
deputy attempt to find a responsible adult with whom he could leave
Matthew. See § 938.19(1)(d)8, Stats.; see also § 938.20(2)(b), Stats.
This
court set out an analysis for evaluating “community caretaker” claims in State
v. Anderson, 142 Wis.2d 162, 169, 417 N.W.2d 411, 414 (Ct. App. 1987), rev’d
on other grounds, 155 Wis.2d 77, 454 N.W.2d 763 (1990). There we explained that after a Fourth
Amendment entry has occurred, a court must make two more inquiries before
applying this principle as a justification for that conduct. First,
the court must determine whether the law enforcement officer was engaged
in a “bona fide community caretaker activity.”
See id. Next, the court must weigh and balance the public good arising
from the alleged caretaking activity against the intrusion into individual
privacy that resulted and make a determination about the overall
“reasonableness” of the conduct. See
id. at 169-70, 417 N.W.2d at 414. The trial court’s determinations about the nature of the conduct
and the reasonableness of the conduct, like other legal issues arising in
suppression matters, are subject to our independent review. See Guzy, 139 Wis.2d at 671,
407 N.W.2d at 552.
With regard to the first phase of the
inquiry, in Anderson we defined the community caretaking function
as being “‘totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition
of evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute.’” See Anderson, 142
Wis.2d at 166, 417 N.W.2d at 413 (quoting Cady, 413 U.S. at
441). In addition, we noted our
approval of the analysis conducted by the Washington Court of Appeals in State
v. Chisholm, 696 P.2d 41, 43 (Wash. App. 1985), which identified
community caretaking functions as those beyond “traditional enforcement of
penal and regulatory laws.” See Anderson,
142 Wis.2d at 169 n.3, 417 N.W.2d at 414.
When we apply these definitions to what the
deputy did here, we reject the State’s assertion that he was acting as a
community caretaker. The deputy first
approached the residence to investigate a noise complaint and thus was initially
acting in that capacity. See Bies
v. State, 76 Wis.2d 457, 471, 251 N.W.2d 461, 468 (1977) (“Checking
noise complaints bears little in common with investigation of crime.”). But his role as a community caretaker ended
when he determined that Matthew was intoxicated and took him into custody
pursuant to the Juvenile Justice Code. See
§ 938.19(1)(d)8, Stats. At this point, the deputy returned to his
traditional role; he was enforcing this state’s beverage control laws. See § 125.07(4)(b), Stats. (prohibiting alcohol possession
and consumption by minors).
We recognize that the trial court found as a
matter of fact that the deputy’s decision to enter the house was intended
solely to find Gregory so that Gregory could take custody of Matthew, not
because he suspected that criminal activity was taking place inside the house.[1] Nonetheless, this finding is superfluous
because the deputy had already stepped out of the caretaking function when he
took custody of Matthew under § 938.19(1), Stats. Indeed, we find it difficult to
imagine an instance where a law enforcement officer who takes action pursuant
to a specific statute could be described as being divorced from his or her
traditional law enforcement duties. See
Anderson, 142 Wis.2d at 166, 417 N.W.2d at 413.
Although
we conclude that the State’s community caretaker claim fails to clear the first
phase of the Anderson inquiry—the deputy was not engaged in a
“bona fide community caretaker activity”—we will nonetheless briefly discuss
whether the deputy’s conduct was reasonable.
Specifically, we have concerns with the State’s claim that the deputy’s
entry into the residence during his alleged exercise of the community
caretaking function was “as limited as is reasonably possible.” See id. at 169, 417 N.W.2d at
414.
We must keep in mind that the deputy made a
warrantless entry into a house in the early hours of the morning without
exigent circumstances present. While we
are hesitant to second guess the on-the-scene judgments of a law enforcement
officer, the record leaves us too uncertain about why the deputy so quickly
concluded that he had to enter this house.
Once the deputy placed Matthew in custody under § 938.19(1)(d)8, Stats., the deputy was required (the
statute uses the term “shall”) to “make every effort to release the juvenile
immediately to the juvenile’s parent, guardian, or legal custodian.” See § 938.20(2),
Stats.
Matthew told the deputy that his father was in the Huber facility
and that his mother was not home, but the record does not show that the deputy
ever even tried to contact his mother.
And even assuming that the deputy had good reason to decide that
contacting Matthew’s mother was not feasible, we do not know why the deputy did
not first try ringing the doorbell to awake Gregory or tell the dispatcher to
phone the residence and tell Gregory that the police were outside. In sum, even if we concluded that the deputy
was performing a legitimate caretaking function that evening, the record does
not show that he performed that function in a reasonable manner.
We now turn to the second reason that the
State offers to justify the deputy’s conduct, one which was not presented to
the trial court. It contends that the
deputy was simply monitoring the conduct of a person in custody pursuant to Washington
v. Chrisman, 455 U.S. 1 (1982).[2] In Chrisman, the Supreme Court
held that a law enforcement officer may “monitor the movements of an arrested
person” without invading that person’s privacy rights. See id. at 7.
The facts of Chrisman are very
similar to this case and warrant our detailed attention. There, the law enforcement officer likewise
stopped (and arrested) an individual, a college student, for suspected underage
drinking. The student did not have any
identification and asked the officer if the officer would wait while he
retrieved it from his dorm room. The
officer responded that he would have to accompany the student, who agreed. See id. at 3.
When they arrived at the room, the door was
open and thus the officer waited in the doorway while the student went inside
to find his ID. As the officer stood
there waiting, he observed that the student’s roommate became nervous. The officer then saw what he thought were
marijuana seeds and drug paraphernalia on a desktop. The officer therefore entered the room and confirmed his suspicion
about these items. His discovery led to
charges against the roommate for marijuana possession. See id. at 3-4.
The Washington Supreme Court, however,
suppressed the drug-related evidence after determining that the officer’s entry
into the room was unreasonable. The
court recognized that a law enforcement officer must be able to closely monitor
an arrested person because of the possibility of escape and concerns of officer
safety, but the court reasoned that those goals could have been maintained had
the officer just stayed in the doorway.
See id. at 5.
The United States Supreme Court did not draw
the line that far away from an arrested person. In Chrisman, the Court held that a law enforcement
officer has a “right” to remain at an arrested person’s “elbow at all
times.” See id. at
6. The Court reasoned that concerns of
officer safety and flight of the arrested person required such close proximity
regardless of the nature of the underlying offense or that the possibility of
escape seemed remote. See id.
at 6-7. The Court accordingly upheld
the specific officer’s entry into the dorm room because he did not initially
have to wait at the door as he did. See
id. at 6.
Nonetheless, we hold that Chrisman
does not justify what the deputy did in this case. Setting aside our concerns that the “arrest” which Chrisman
describes is not the same as the “custody” that Matthew was placed into
pursuant to the Juvenile Justice Code, the explanation that the deputy was just
exercising his right to monitor Matthew as Matthew looked for his brother does
not justify the deputy’s separate decision to open Gregory’s bedroom door. See id.
The trial court found that the deputy opened the door
and initiated entry into Gregory’s bedroom.
So while the deputy may have properly monitored Matthew as Matthew
proceeded into the house, down the stairs and to Gregory’s closed bedroom door,
that is as far as Chrisman took the deputy. Once the deputy opened the door and
initiated entry into Gregory’s bedroom, he stopped exercising his right to
monitor Matthew, who was still waiting outside the door. When the deputy stopped monitoring Matthew,
he was no longer insulated from Fourth Amendment scrutiny. We therefore conclude that Chrisman
does not justify the deputy’s ultimate intrusion into Gregory’s bedroom.
Lastly, and regardless of our determination
regarding the unreasonableness of the deputy’s decision to enter the house and
eventually Gregory’s bedroom, the State argues that we should not suppress the
statements of the juvenile girl whom the deputy found in bed with Gregory. The State contends that “[t]he link between
the entry and [her] testimony is ... not close enough to justify application of
the exclusionary rule to her trial testimony.”
Since the trial court failed to suppress the
evidence gathered by the deputy, the court never addressed how far the scope of
a suppression order should carry.
Indeed, Gregory complains that “[h]er evidence has not been offered.”
We
agree that the record is inadequate and must be further developed. Therefore, we remand this case and direct
the trial court to hold an evidentiary hearing on this issue and reach a
determination about the scope of the suppression order.
In conclusion, we hold that the trial court
erred when it failed to suppress the evidence arising out of the deputy’s
unjustified entry into Gregory’s bedroom.
We therefore reverse its evidentiary ruling and the judgment of
conviction. On remand, we direct the
trial court to issue an order suppressing the deputy’s testimony about what he
observed in Gregory’s bedroom. Further,
we direct the trial court to determine whether this order should extend to the
testimony from the juvenile girl whom the deputy found in that bedroom.
By the Court.—Judgment reversed and
cause remanded with directions.
[1] We observe that Gregory argued during the suppression hearing that the deputy’s stated intention of finding someone to look after Matthew was a subterfuge, and that the deputy did indeed suspect that Gregory was involved in criminal activity. We further observe that the deputy admitted that he knew Gregory from past contacts and that he had previously visited the residence to check for runaway juveniles. While the trial court concluded that on this occasion the deputy was only interested in Matthew’s well being, we reveal above that this factual finding is irrelevant to the question of whether the deputy was functioning as a community caretaker when he decided to enter the house. Because he had already taken custody of Matthew, the deputy was no longer acting as a community caretaker.
[2] Although other Wisconsin cases have cited Washington v. Chrisman, 455 U.S. 1 (1982), the State reports that none of these cases have applied its reasoning. The State sought publication of this decision on that ground.