IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 41736
STATE OF IDAHO, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Lewiston, April 2015 Term
)
v. ) 2015 Opinion No. 54
)
ALESHA ANN GREEN, ) Filed: June 22, 2015
)
) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
Defendant-Respondent. )
_______________________________________ )
Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of
Idaho, Ada County. Hon. Melissa Moody, District Judge.
We vacate the district court’s Order Granting Motion to Suppress Evidence
and remand the case for further proceedings.
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General, Boise, for appellant. Russell J.
Spencer argued.
Sara B. Thomas, State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for respondent. Ben P.
McGreevy argued.
_____________________
J. JONES, Justice
The State appeals the district court’s order granting a motion to suppress evidence. The
defendant, Alesha Green, was stopped in her vehicle and subsequently arrested for driving
without a valid driver’s license. A search incident to that arrest produced incriminating evidence
against her. The district court suppressed the evidence, finding that the arrest was an
unreasonable seizure under the Idaho Constitution.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In October 2012, an Ada County Sheriff’s officer stopped a vehicle for failing to
maintain its lane. The officer identified the driver as Green, and it was subsequently discovered
that Green was driving with an invalid driver’s license, which Green admitted to knowing. The
1
officer testified at Green’s preliminary hearing that he had no reason to believe Green was
someone other than who she identified herself to be, nor did the officer have reason to believe
Green would not appear for court. Although driving without a valid license in violation of Idaho
Code section 49-301 is a misdemeanor offense, according to an Idaho statute it is not an
arrestable offense unless certain conditions are met, which were not met here. Nonetheless, the
officer arrested Green. The resulting search of Green’s person produced alleged drugs and drug
paraphernalia. Additionally, a large amount of cash was discovered during the search of Green’s
vehicle. Once transported to the Ada County Jail, Green made incriminating statements and gave
consent to search her hotel room, where police found a digital scale and small plastic bags.
Green was charged with a number of drug-related offenses under two different case
numbers. She moved the district court to suppress the evidence found as a result of her arrest in
both cases. The district court granted Green’s motion, finding that the arrest was “unlawful,”
therefore violating Green’s rights under Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution. The State
timely appealed.
II.
ISSUES ON APPEAL
This appeal presents two interrelated issues for decision:
1. Whether a misdemeanor arrest in violation of Idaho Code section 49-1407 is
unreasonable under Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution.
2. If not, must any evidence obtained incident to such an arrest be suppressed.
III.
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review.
When reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress evidence, this Court defers
to the trial court’s findings of fact unless clearly erroneous. State v. Donato, 135 Idaho 469, 470,
20 P.3d 5, 6 (2001). However, we exercise free review over whether a constitutional violation
has taken place in light of those facts. Id.
B. Analysis.
The district court found Green’s arrest was unreasonable under Article I, Section 17 of
the Idaho Constitution because it did not comply with Idaho Code section 49-1407. 1 The court
1
Idaho Code section 49-1407 provides:
Whenever any person is halted by a peace officer for any misdemeanor violation of the provisions
2
reasoned that to hold the arrest in this case was reasonable under the Idaho Constitution would
essentially transform Idaho arrest statutes into no more than guidelines the police could freely
disregard without risk of suppression. Concluding there was a violation of the Idaho Constitution
and that there was not an alternative remedy to deter similar action by police in the future, the
district court ordered that the evidence be suppressed.
On appeal, the State argues there is no basis for interpreting the Idaho Constitution
differently than the U.S. Constitution with respect to the standards for a reasonable arrest. In
support of its position, the State argues (1) the uniqueness of Idaho as a state, which has been one
of this Court’s reasons for deviating from Fourth Amendment jurisprudence in the past, has no
application in the context of arrest standards; (2) the language of the Fourth Amendment and
Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution are nearly identical; and (3) there is no long-
standing Idaho jurisprudence that justifies a differing interpretation. The State therefore
concludes that, because the arrest was reasonable under the Federal Constitution, it was likewise
reasonable under the Idaho Constitution. Green replies that Idaho’s long-standing jurisprudence
shows Article I, Section 17 is more protective than the Fourth Amendment where there is a
violation of state law that impacts constitutional rights. We agree with the State and hold that
there has been no constitutional violation here. We further hold that suppression is not the
appropriate remedy for statutory violations that do not amount to constitutional violations.
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that “[t]he right of the
people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches
and seizures, shall not be violated.” Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution nearly
identically guarantees that “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers
and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated.” Warrantless
of this title and is not required to be taken before a magistrate, the person shall, in the discretion of
the officer, either be given a traffic citation or be taken without unnecessary delay before the
proper magistrate as specified in section 49-1411, Idaho Code, in the following cases:
(1) When the person does not furnish satisfactory evidence of identity or when
the officer has reasonable and probable grounds to believe the person will
disregard a written promise to appear in court.
(2) When the person is charged with a violation relating to the refusal of a driver
of a vehicle to submit a vehicle to an inspection and test.
(3) When the person is charged with a violation relating to the failure or refusal
of a driver of a vehicle to submit the vehicle and load to a weighing or to
remove excess weight therefrom.
Green was arrested for violating Section 301 of Title 49, and the arresting officer admits that none of the exceptions
allowing arrest under section 49-1407 applied.
3
searches and seizures are presumptively unreasonable under both the federal and Idaho
constitutions unless they come within one of the established exceptions to the warrant
requirement. California v. Acevedo, 500 U.S. 565, 580 (1991); State v. Henderson, 114 Idaho
293, 295, 756 P.2d 1057, 1059 (1988).
One such exception under both state and federal law allows officers, incident to a lawful
arrest, to search the arrestee’s person and the area within the arrestee’s immediate control.
Chimel v. California, 395 U.S. 752, 762–63 (1969); State v. Pruss, 145 Idaho 623, 628, 181 P.3d
1231, 1236 (2008). In the context of the Federal Constitution and its interpreting case law, an
arrest is “lawful” if “officers have probable cause to believe that a person has committed a crime
in their presence” even if such an arrest does not comply with state statutes governing arrests.
Virginia v. Moore, 553 U.S. 164, 174–78 (2008). Individual states are free to interpret their own
constitutions as providing greater protection to citizens and greater limitation on police conduct
than does the Federal Constitution. Id. at 172; Donato, 135 Idaho at 472, 20 P.3d at 8. We
recently stated in CDA Dairy Queen, Inc. v. State Insurance Fund that, absent “clear precedent
or circumstances unique to the state of Idaho or its constitution” that would justify finding
Idaho’s constitution to have a meaning different from that of the Federal Constitution, the “Court
will use federal rules and methodology” to interpret the Idaho Constitution. 154 Idaho 379, 384,
299 P.3d 186, 191 (2013). However, in some instances, we have found Idaho’s Constitution
deserving of a unique interpretation “based on the uniqueness of our state, our Constitution, and
our long-standing jurisprudence.” 2 Donato, 135 Idaho at 472, 20 P.3d at 8. A similarity in
language and purpose between the Fourth Amendment and Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho
Constitution does not require this Court to follow Fourth Amendment jurisprudence in
interpreting the Idaho Constitution. Id. at 471, 20 P.3d at 7.
Green admitted to the officer that she knew she was driving without a valid driver’s
2
For example, in State v. Webb we found the definition of “curtilage,” as is relevant under an analysis of Article I,
Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution, was broader than the United States Supreme Court defined that term for an
analysis under the Fourth Amendment. 130 Idaho 462, 467–68, 943 P.2d 52, 57–58 (1997). We reasoned that the
broader interpretation more accurately reflected the legitimate expectations of privacy of those in Idaho, a state that
is particularly rural in nature. Id. In State v. Thompson, we held that use of a pen register on a suspect’s telephone
line was a “search” within the meaning of Article I, Section 17, even though the Supreme Court had held such
conduct was not a search under the Federal Constitution. 114 Idaho 746, 748–51, 760 P.2d 1162, 1164–67 (1988). In
State v. Guzman we found the Idaho Constitution to provide greater protection than its federal counterpart by
holding that the Idaho Constitution does not include a good-faith exception to the warrant requirement. 122 Idaho
981, 998, 842 P.2d 660, 677 (1992). But see Donato, 135 Idaho at 472, 20 P.3d at 8 (holding there is nothing unique
about one’s expectation of privacy in one’s garbage in Idaho that would justify an interpretation different from the
Fourth Amendment. Therefore, we adopted the U.S. Supreme Court’s holding on the issue.).
4
license. Therefore, having witnessed Green driving the vehicle, the police officer had probable
cause to believe Green had committed an offense in the officer’s presence. 3 This means the
resulting arrest was “lawful” as far as complying with the Federal Constitution. However, the
arrest did not comply with Idaho Code section 49-1407, which provides that only a citation may
be given for Green’s violation under the circumstances. The question then becomes whether an
arrest that complies with the Federal Constitution because it was made based on probable cause,
but that does not comply with an Idaho statute governing arrest, is “lawful” in the context of
Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution.
Provisions of the Idaho Constitution must be construed in light of the law prior to their
adoption. Higer v. Hansen, 67 Idaho 45, 55, 170 P.2d 411, 416 (1946); see also Idaho Const. art
XXI, § 2 (“All laws now in force in the territory of Idaho which are not repugnant to this
Constitution shall remain in force until they expire by their own limitation or be altered or
repealed by the legislature.”); State v. Mathews, 129 Idaho 865, 869, 934 P.2d 931, 935 (1997)
(stating substantive rights present in Idaho law prior to the Idaho Constitution were “affirmed by
Article XXI, Section 2 of the Idaho Constitution”). Because the constitutional guarantee against
unreasonable seizure of the person includes an arrest, the Idaho Constitution incorporated the
principles regarding arrest in the Idaho statutory and common law in 1890 when the constitution
was adopted. At that time, the law governing warrantless arrests by peace officers in Idaho was
found in Title III, Chapter V, Section 7540 of the Idaho Revised Statutes, which provided:
A peace officer may make an arrest in obedience to a warrant delivered to him, or
may, without a warrant, arrest a person:
1. For a public offense committed or attempted in his presence.
2. When a person arrested has committed a felony, although not in
his presence.
3. When a felony has in fact been committed and he has reasonable
cause for believing the person arrested to have committed it.
4. On a charge made, upon a reasonable cause, of the commission
of a felony by the party arrested.
5. At night, when there is reasonable cause to believe that he has
committed a felony.
Therefore, arrests made under the circumstances specified in this statute should be accepted as
constitutionally reasonable under the Idaho Constitution. 4 See State v. Hart, 66 Idaho 217, 157
3
The offense Green committed was a violation of Idaho Code section 49-301, which is a misdemeanor. I.C. § 49-
301(1), (8). Green does not argue that she was not in violation of this statute.
4
These five provisions of Idaho’s traditional warrantless arrest standards remain in identical form in current Idaho
5
P.2d 72 (1945) (finding that defendant’s arrest complied with I.C. § 19-603 and, therefore,
rejecting defendant’s argument that his arrest was constitutionally5 unlawful).
Because “public offense” in Section 19-603(1) includes misdemeanor offenses, State v.
Bowman, 124 Idaho 936, 940, 866 P.2d 193, 197 (Ct. App. 1993), an officer who arrests a person
for a misdemeanor offense committed in the officer’s presence has made a reasonable seizure
under Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution. This standard coincides with the federal
standard for a reasonable arrest, articulated by the United States Supreme Court a number of
times: “when an officer has probable cause to believe a person committed even a minor crime in
his presence, . . . [t]he arrest is constitutionally reasonable.” Moore, 553 U.S. at 171.
Since the time the Idaho Constitution was adopted, the Idaho Legislature has enacted
several more statutes governing arrests in Idaho under various circumstances. See, e.g., I.C. §§
19-603(6)–(7) (allowing warrantless misdemeanor arrests for offenses not committed in officers’
presence when committed on an airplane or when the offense is one of several specified violent
misdemeanors), 49-1407 (limiting officers’ discretion to arrest for certain minor offenses unless
specified circumstances are met), 39-6312(2) (providing that an officer may make a warrantless
arrest for a misdemeanor violation of a protection order even if that violation did not occur in
officer’s presence). However, the enactments and amendments of these statutes were not
required to be made through the same rigorous standard as an amendment to the Idaho
Constitution. See Idaho Const. art XX, § 1. Because these subsequently enacted arrest standards
did not exist at the time the Idaho Constitution was adopted, and because they were not
incorporated by constitutional amendment, they cannot be considered part of the constitutional
standard for what constitutes a reasonable seizure of the person. To hold otherwise would
essentially allow the Legislature to amend the Idaho Constitution by the process of a statutory
enactment or amendment. Because these subsequently enacted arrest standards are merely
statutory, constitutional remedies are inappropriate when those statutes have been violated by
police. Although the Legislature could certainly specify suppression as the remedy for police
violation of one of these statutes, because such a statutory violation is not a constitutional
Code section 19-603(1)–(5).
5
Though the Court in Hart does not expressly mention Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution, an analysis
under that authority is implied because the case discusses only the Idaho Constitution and not the Federal
Constitution and because the remedy discussed in that case was suppression of evidence, which applies only to
constitutional violations unless otherwise specified by statute. Therefore, when the Hart Court considered whether
the arrest was unlawful, it was presumably doing so to determine whether there was a reasonable search and seizure
under Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution.
6
violation, suppression is not warranted absent such a legislative directive.
Green argues Idaho’s long-standing jurisprudence holds there is a constitutional violation
where a statutory violation by police impacts one’s constitutional rights, citing State v. Rauch, 99
Idaho 586, 586 P.2d 671 (1978); State v. Mathews, 129 Idaho 865, 934 P.2d 931 (1997); and
State v. Card, 137 Idaho 182, 45 P.3d 838 (2002). Each of these cases will be discussed in turn.
Green argues that her arrest in this case impacted her constitutional rights because the violation
of Idaho Code section 49-1407 resulted in an unreasonable full-scale seizure of her person. The
State argues that the cases cited by Green are not in the context of arrest standards and are,
therefore, not relevant to the determination of the issue at hand. We agree with the State that the
cited Idaho case law shows neither “clear precedent” nor “circumstances unique to the state of
Idaho or its constitution” that would justify a deviation from the federal arrest standard.
Rauch involved police officers’ failure to comply with Idaho statutes requiring that,
before they enter a person’s home, they must announce their presence, demand entry, and state
the purpose for such entry. 99 Idaho at 588, 586 P.2d at 673; see also I.C. §§ 19-611 (requiring
these actions in the context of arrests), 19-4409 (requiring these actions in the context of
executing a search warrant). In Rauch, we upheld the trial court’s suppression of evidence
obtained as a result of the officers’ entry into the home without knocking and announcing their
presence. Rauch, 99 Idaho at 593–94, 586 P.2d at 678–79. Green argues the Rauch Court held
that a statutory violation impacting constitutional rights means the search/seizure in violation of
the state statute is constitutionally unreasonable. Although Green is correct that much of the
Court’s analysis in Rauch is phrased as though the Court’s holding was based on only the
statutory violation, that holding must be considered in light of the Court’s discussion of the
historical foundations of current knock-and-announce statutes.
As discussed above, constitutions are to be interpreted in light of the statutory and
common law that existed at the time of their adoption. In deciding that suppression was the
appropriate remedy, the Rauch Court noted the long common-law history of knock-and-
announce requirements, stating “[f]rom earliest days, the common law limited the authority of
law enforcement officers to break the door of a house to effect an arrest.” Id. at 592, 586 P.2d at
677. In support of this position, the Court cited to an English case dating back to 1603. Id. The
Court stated that these protections, long-guaranteed by the common law, are what have resulted
in the current statutory codifications of the knock-and-announce standards. Id. In the final
7
statement of its holding, the Court (quoting the United States Supreme Court) made multiple
references to the long history of knock-and-announce requirements:
The requirement of prior notice of authority and purpose before forcing entry into
a home is deeply rooted in our heritage and should not be given grudging
application. Congress, codifying a tradition embedded in Anglo-American law,
has declared in [18 U.S.C. §] 3109 6 the reverence of the law for the individual's
right of privacy in his house. . . . Because the petitioner did not receive that notice
before the officers broke the door to invade his home, the arrest was unlawful, and
the evidence seized should have been suppressed.
Id. at 593–94, 586 P.2d at 678–79 (quoting Miller v. United States, 357 U.S. 301, 313–14 (1958)
(footnote and emphasis added).
In light of the Court’s discussion of knock-and-announce requirements that were present
at the time the Idaho Constitution was adopted, the more accurate interpretation of the Court’s
holding is that the officers’ failure to knock and announce violated principles incorporated into
the Constitution at the time it was adopted. It is this direct violation of principles inherent in the
Constitution that resulted in the constitutional remedy of suppression. Further suggesting that the
violation in Rauch was more than simply a statutory violation and did in fact amount to a
constitutional violation, is the Court’s language stating that “[t]he rule is well settled in this state
that evidence, procured in violation of defendant’s constitutional immunity from search and
seizure, is inadmissible and will be excluded.” Id. at 592, 586 P.2d at 677 (quoting State v.
Conner, 59 Idaho 695, 703, 89 P.2d 197, 201 (1939)) (emphasis added). We also favorably
quoted from a dissent by Justice Morgan in State v. Anderson, 31 Idaho 514, 527, 174 P. 124,
129 (1918), as follows: “evidence procured by an illegal or unreasonable search . . . [is
inadmissible] because it was procured by an invasion of the rights guaranteed to all persons
within this state by sec. 17, art. 1 of the Constitution.” Id. at 593, 586 P.2d at 678 (emphasis
added).
Although the Rauch Court did not discuss Idaho’s historic codifications of the knock-
and-announce requirements, part of the deeply-rooted heritage the Court did mention is the fact
that Idaho has had codifications of knock-and-announce requirements nearly identical to those
currently in effect since well before the Idaho Constitution was adopted. See Idaho Cr. Prac. Act,
§§ 131–32, 637 (1864). Like the warrantless arrest standards in Idaho Code section 19-603(1)–
(5), the requirement that police knock and announce their presence was incorporated into the
6
18 U.S.C. § 3109 is a federal knock-and-announce statute.
8
Idaho Constitution at the time it was adopted. Therefore, whether phrased as a statutory violation
or a constitutional violation, when the police in Rauch failed to knock and announce their
presence, they were violating more than simply a statutory requirement. They were violating
rights guaranteed by the Idaho Constitution.
Green argues that Mathews also supports her proposed rule that a statutory violation
impacting constitutional rights amounts to a constitutional violation. We do not agree. Mathews
involved police searching a person’s home under a warrant issued by a magistrate but mistakenly
left unsigned by the magistrate. 129 Idaho at 867, 934 P.2d at 933. When police executed the
search warrant, the person living in the home questioned the validity of the search warrant
because it was not signed. Id. Three Idaho Code sections discussed in Mathews show that a
search warrant is required to be signed by the issuing judge. Id. at 869, 934 P.2d at 935; see also
I.C. §§ 19-4401, 19-4406, 19-4407. One of the issues before the Court on appeal was whether
the Idaho Constitution required the judge’s signature on the warrant in order for the search to be
constitutionally reasonable. Mathews, 129 Idaho at 868–69, 934 P.2d at 934–35.
Green extracts the following quotes from Mathews to support her claims: “[t]his Court
from its earliest interpretation of Article I, § 17 of the Idaho Constitution, has held that the right
afforded individuals to protection of their persons and homes is so fundamental as to require
strict adherence to the constitutional and statutory requirements,” and “[u]nder [Article I,
Section 17], it is uniformly held that the search-warrant must conform strictly to the
constitutional and statutory provisions providing for its issuance.” Id. at 869, 934 P.2d at 935
(emphasis added). However, these statements do not mean that any statutory violation by police
will result in a search or seizure being constitutionally unreasonable. The Mathews Court noted
that the principles found in the code sections requiring a warrant to be signed were part of Idaho
law prior to the adoption of the Idaho Constitution. Id. These and other provisions “create a
substantive right in a citizen to refuse to permit a search pursuant to an unsigned warrant[, and
t]his substantive right existed prior to the adoption of this State’s Constitution.” Id. The Court
further reasoned that this pre-existing “substantive right was affirmed by Article XXI, Section 2
of the Idaho Constitution.” Id. Although some of the Court’s language in Mathews could be
interpreted to mean the existence of a statutory violation by police may equate to a constitutional
violation, this rule is limited to statutory principles incorporated into Article I, Section 17
because they were present at the time of the Constitution’s adoption. It is, therefore, not the
9
violation of the statute that offends the Constitution; the offense comes from violating principles
incorporated into Article I, Section 17. The fact that those principles also continue to be codified
in the Idaho Code and there is also a violation of that code does not mean the violation is not
constitutional in nature. This limitation of the Mathews holding to violations of principles in
effect at the time the Constitution was adopted is consistent with the statutory violations
discussed above, such as knock-and-announce statutes and pre-existing arrest statutes.
Additionally, subsequent Idaho case law has further clarified the Mathews holding. In
State v. Bicknell we stated that the holding in Mathews was not based upon the fact that warrant-
signature statutes were violated. 140 Idaho 201, 204, 91 P.3d 1105, 1108 (2004). Rather, the
holding was based upon violation of one’s substantive constitutional right to refuse a search
under an unsigned warrant. Id.; see also State v. Zueger, 143 Idaho 647, 650, 152 P.3d 8, 11
(2006); State v. Branigh, 155 Idaho 404, 415, 313 P.3d 732, 743 (Ct. App. 2013), rev. denied
(Dec. 9, 2013), cert. denied, 134 S. Ct. 1342 (2014). The subsequent clarifications of the
Mathews holding show that, contrary to Green’s argument, a statutory violation impacting
constitutional rights is not enough to justify suppression. The violation must actually be
constitutional in character.
Green next turns to Card in support of her argument. In Card, the question was whether
the passive involvement of police in executing a search warrant justified suppression of evidence
where those persons doing the brunt of the work associated with executing the warrant were not
police officers. 137 Idaho at 185, 45 P.3d at 841. Three Idaho statutes relevant to the facts of
Card required that the officer mentioned in the warrant’s directions be the person to serve,
execute, and return the warrant. Id.; I.C. §§ 19-4408, 19-4413, 19-4415. These statutes also
allowed others to aid the officer if the officer required it, as long as they are acting at the
officer’s direction and while the officer is also present and acting in the warrant’s execution.
Card, 137 Idaho at 185, 45 P.3d at 841; I.C. §§ 19-4408, 19-4413, 19-4415. The Court found a
violation of the statutes mentioned above and upheld the district court’s suppression of the
evidence. Card, 137 Idaho at 187, 45 P.3d at 843. In so holding, the Court stated:
the statutes relating to issuance, execution and returns of search warrants
supplement the constitutional prohibition against unreasonable searches and
seizures. Violation of the statutory scheme in this case resulted in an unreasonable
search and seizure with respect to Card’s office and home. Suppression of the
evidence is an appropriate remedy to discourage the government agents from
engaging in unreasonable searches and seizures in violation of the state
10
constitution.
Id.
In support of the Card Court’s holding that the statutory violations amounted to
constitutional violations that warranted suppression, the only Idaho case law cited by the Court
was Mathews and Rauch. Id. at 185, 187, 45 P.3d at 841, 843. Card was decided without the
benefit of the Court’s subsequent decisions clarifying the holding in Mathews, and it appears
Card relied on an incorrect reading of that case. As discussed above, both Mathews and Rauch
were actually based on violations of constitutional principles that were made part of a
constitutional analysis because those principles were in effect at the adoption of the Constitution.
The fact that the principles also remain codified in the Idaho Code simply meant there was both
a statutory and a constitutional violation. The suppression was justified pursuant to the
constitutional violation. Mathews and Rauch, therefore, do not support the Court’s holding in
Card. Additionally, Card has never been cited by this Court, and the only published Idaho
appellate decision to cite Card suggests that Card has been abrogated. See Branigh, 155 Idaho at
414, 313 P.3d at 742. The Branigh court noted that the Idaho Supreme Court cases subsequent to
Card, have “uniformly h[e]ld that suppression is required only for constitutional violations,” not
for actions that violate only state statutes, and Card “appears to have been abrogated by later
decisions.” Id. Because the Court’s holding in Card was based on a misinterpretation of prior
case law, we disavow the reasoning found in that case to the extent that it stands for the
proposition that a violation of state statute warrants suppression without the violation amounting
also to a constitutional violation. 7
Finally, the district court found, and Green argues, the evidence in this case should be
suppressed because, otherwise, Green is left without an adequate remedy for being subject to an
arrest that violated state statute. However, as stated by Justice Schroeder in his dissent in Card,
suppression of evidence is a court-created remedy to ensure compliance with constitutional
standards, and it is not appropriate to extend that remedy to violations that are merely statutory.
137 Idaho at 188, 45 P.3d at 844 (Schroeder, J., dissenting). Although it is concerning that a
7
It is worth noting that, although the Court’s reasoning in Card was flawed, the Court reached the correct result.
This is because, as in Mathews and Rauch, the three statutory sections at issue in Card also have historical, pre-
Constitution counterparts, meaning the principles in these three statutes were incorporated into the constitutional
protections at the time of the Constitution’s adoption. I.C. § 19-4408 was originally codified at Cr. Prac. 1864 § 636.
I.C. § 19-4413 was originally codified at Cr. Prac. 1864 § 641. And, I.C. § 19-4415 was originally codified at Cr.
Prac. 1864 § 643. Therefore, the violations that occurred under the facts of Card did amount to constitutional
violations, rather than simply violations of statutes.
11
violation of Idaho Code section 49-1407 appears to allow no significant remedy for defendants,
or repercussion for police, such concerns do not bring the violation within the ambit of being
“constitutional” in character. If the Legislature intends a violation of Section 49-1407 to result in
suppression, it is the responsibility of that body to so provide.
As stated at the outset, we recently reiterated that in order for the Idaho Constitution’s
interpretation to deviate from the interpretation of the U.S. Constitution, there must be clear
precedent to that effect or circumstances unique to the state of Idaho or its Constitution that
would compel such a result. Neither the district court nor Green has identified circumstances
unique to Idaho or its Constitution in this case. Although Green cites several Idaho cases,
arguing that long-standing Idaho jurisprudence establishes that suppression is appropriate where
there has been a statutory violation that impacts one’s constitutional rights, an examination of
those cases reveals that Green’s position is without merit. Whether or not discussed by the Court
in its respective decisions, each statute directly at issue in Rauch, Mathews, and Card has a
historical, pre-constitution source of the currently codified principles. Therefore, suppression in
each of those cases was justified by a direct violation of principles inherent in the Idaho
Constitution. There is no historical counterpart to Idaho Code section 49-1407 that was present at
the time the Idaho Constitution was adopted. Therefore, it cannot be said that the principles in
that section limiting certain warrantless misdemeanor arrests to specific circumstances are
constitutional in nature. Likewise, a violation of that statute is not a constitutional violation.
Because there was no pre-constitution counterpart to Section 49-1407, a violation of this section
is merely statutory in nature. And, because there was no constitutional violation in this case,
suppression was inappropriate.
IV.
CONCLUSION
We vacate the district court’s suppression order and remand the cases for further
proceedings.
Chief Justice BURDICK, and Justices EISMANN and HORTON CONCUR.
W. JONES, J. specially concurring,
While I feel constrained by the legal precedent to join the majority, I do so reluctantly
because it troubles me that Green is left with no meaningful remedy after being subject to an
12
arrest and search in violation of a plainly worded statute. While Green’s arrest was properly
supported by probable cause under the Idaho Constitution, it clearly violated Idaho Code section
49-1407 8. This statute specifically states that a citizen cannot be arrested for the misdemeanor
offense of driving without a valid driver’s license. It is highly unlikely that the Legislature
contemplated that an arrest made in violation of this statute could be used as a basis for a search
incident to the same. While it is mind-bending to label the search here as one incident to a
“lawful” arrest when the arrest plainly violates Idaho law, the Legislature failed to expressly
include the constitutional remedy of suppression of evidence to cure a violation of the arrest
statute. Although this Court cannot fashion a constitutional remedy for a statutory violation, this
lack of a meaningful remedy is especially unsettling in the context of the police-citizen exchange
where the distinction between a constitutional and statutory harm is likely beyond the grasp of
the average citizen.
Even though the statute here expressly prohibits the arrest of a person for driving with an
invalid license, the lack of statutory authority does not negate an officer’s constitutional authority
to arrest for a misdemeanor committed in his presence. Thus, I ultimately agree with the
majority’s logic and holding. However, I also agree with the trial court’s observations that,
absent suppression of evidence, Green is left with no meaningful remedy. In enacting similar
arrest statutes, other states specifically provide remedies in the same, such as suppression of
evidence or a civil tort action. Idaho Code section 49-1407 does not prescribe any remedies for a
citizen who is arrested in violation of the statute. While I would like to read the logical remedy
of suppression into this situation, I am constrained by precedent and agree with the majority’s
rationale that this Court simply cannot read a constitutional remedy into the statute.
8
Idaho Code section 49-1407, entitled “When peace officer has option to take person before magistrate,” outlines:
Whenever any person is halted by a peace officer for any misdemeanor violation of the provisions
of this title and is not required to be taken before a magistrate, the person shall, in the discretion of
the officer, either be given a traffic citation or be taken without unnecessary delay before the
proper magistrate as specified in section 49-1411, Idaho Code, in the following cases:
(1) When the person does not furnish satisfactory evidence of identity or when the officer has
reasonable and probable grounds to believe the person will disregard a written promise to
appear in court.
(2) When the person is charged with a violation relating to the refusal of a driver of a vehicle to
submit a vehicle to an inspection and test.
(3) When the person is charged with a violation relating to the failure or refusal of a driver of a
vehicle to submit the vehicle and load to a weighing or to remove excess weight therefrom.
I.C. § 49-1407.
13
Notwithstanding, I wish to take this opportunity to point out that the commission of any
misdemeanor in violation of title 49 of the Idaho Code could subject a driver to an arrest and
search without any meaningful remedy. Should a driver commit one of these offenses in the
presence of law enforcement, he too could be arrested and searched incident to the same in
violation of Idaho Code section 49-1407 without any mechanism to enforce his rights under the
same. Such a driver has no remedy for this otherwise “unlawful” arrest and search, especially if
this search produces evidence of criminal activity. This is disconcerting. I suspect that most
persons will not be upset by the search in this case given that Green was ultimately found to be
in possession of contraband. However, my underlying purpose in writing separately is to point
out that ordinary, law-abiding citizens should be mindful that they too can be subject to all the
accoutrements of arrest (i.e. fingerprinted, photographed, searched) for committing any
misdemeanor in an officer’s presence, including those specifically prohibited by the Legislature.
The arrest and booking process is invasive, time consuming, and embarrassing. This invasion of
a citizen’s rights in violation of the statute, even though not prohibited by the Constitution, is
difficult to justify. Had the search of Green turned up no additional evidence of criminal activity,
Green would be in a different and less precarious position—but still without a meaningful
remedy for these intrusions.
In suppressing the evidence obtained in the search incident to Green’s arrest, the district
court cited this Court’s stated purposes for the exclusionary rule: to “provide an effective remedy
to persons who have been subjected to an unreasonable government search and/or seizure.” State
v. Guzman, 122 Idaho 981, 993, 842 P.2d 660, 672 (1992). However, Guzman does not apply to
this action. Because Guzman discusses the exclusionary rule in the context of violations of
Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution, the purposes for the rule discussed necessarily
relate to situations where there has been a constitutionally unreasonable search and seizure. Here,
Green’s seizure was constitutionally reasonable and there is no legal support for the trial court’s
finding that the violation of Idaho Code section 49-1407 amounts to a constitutional violation.
Thus, while the law is clear that there was no constitutional violation in this case, it is
troubling that Green, and other potential law-abiding citizens arrested and searched in violation
of the same statute, are left with no meaningful remedies for an officer’s violation of the arrest
statute. I agree with the expressed concerns of the district court that the majority’s holding
essentially transforms Idaho arrest statutes into mere guidelines that the police can disregard with
14
impunity and without risk of liability or suppression of evidence. Given the interpreting cases,
however, this Court is not in a position to provide Green with the relief she seeks. Only the
Legislature, by expressly including suppression of evidence as a remedy into the statutory
scheme, can provide Green and other citizens similarly situated with this remedy. For these
reasons, I join the majority’s decision, but seek to emphasize my concerns regarding the absence
of fair notice and clarity to the citizens of Idaho, as well as the lack of any real consequences or
meaningful remedies for violations of this statute.
15