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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
3 Plaintiff-Appellee,
4 v. NO. 33,690
5 MARISA PAGE,
6 Defendant-Appellant.
7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
8 Christina P. Argyres, District Judge
9 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
10 Santa Fe, NM
11 Elizabeth Ashton, Assistant Attorney General
12 Albuquerque, NM
13 for Appellee
14 The Appellate Law Office of Scott M. Davidson
15 Scott M. Davidson
16 Albuquerque, NM
17 for Appellant
18 MEMORANDUM OPINION
19 HANISEE, Judge.
20 {1} Defendant appeals from the district court’s judgment affirming the metropolitan
1 court’s denial of her motion to suppress evidence supporting her conviction for
2 driving while intoxicated (DWI). Defendant’s motion argued that suppression was
3 required because the arresting officer stopped Defendant for a pretextual reason,
4 which this Court prohibited in State v. Ochoa, 2009-NMCA-002, 146 N.M. 32, 206
5 P.3d 143. The metropolitan court denied Defendant’s motion to suppress and
6 convicted Defendant of driving while intoxicated in violation of NMSA 1978, Section
7 66-8-102 (A) (2010), speeding in violation of NMSA 1978, Section 66-7-301 (2002),
8 and improper display of registration plates in violation of NMSA 1978, Section 66-3-
9 18 (C) (2007).
10 I. BACKGROUND
11 {2} On November 3, 2010, Albuquerque Police Department Officer Daniel Carr
12 (Officer Carr) observed Defendant driving above the posted speed limit on Lomas
13 Boulevard. Officer Carr followed Defendant and observed Defendant travel up to
14 fourteen miles per hour above the posted speed limit.1 Officer Carr also checked
15 Defendant’s license plate number against a database and discovered that her
16 registration had expired. Defendant concedes that Officer Carr had probable cause to
17 cite her for speeding and failing to display a validating sticker on her license plate.
1
18 Officer Carr estimated Defendant’s speed by “pac[ing]” her car; in other
19 words, Officer Carr ascertained Defendant’s speed by following behind her at a
20 constant distance while observing the speed of his police cruiser.
2
1 Defendant also does not dispute that Officer Carr developed probable cause to arrest
2 Defendant for DWI shortly after initiating the stop. Instead, Defendant asserts that
3 Officer Carr knew Defendant had been at a nearby brewery and that he pulled
4 Defendant over for speeding and failing to display a valid registration as a pretext to
5 conduct a DWI investigation.
6 {3} The metropolitan court heard the following evidence relevant to Defendant’s
7 contention. Officer Carr testified that on November 3, 2011, he was “on random
8 patrol” traveling east on Lomas when he initially observed Defendant’s vehicle
9 speeding. Officer Carr also testified that the “first time” he observed Defendant’s car
10 was when he saw it “speeding at about Lomas and Broadway.” Officer Carr said he
11 pulled over Defendant just to the west of the interstate, traveling east bound on
12 Lomas.
13 {4} On cross-examination, Officer Carr testified that he is a member of the
14 Albuquerque Police Department’s DWI unit and was on duty the night in question.
15 Officer Carr stated that in order to remain on the DWI unit, officers are required to
16 meet certain “performance standards,” i.e., meeting a quota for DWI arrests. Officer
17 Carr denied knowing that Defendant had left from a nearby brewery and denied
18 patrolling in the area surrounding the brewery in the hopes of catching drunk drivers.
19 However, Officer Carr agreed that when he patrols the Lomas area, “typically the
20 people I stop on Lomas, a lot of them are coming from the establishments downtown,
3
1 one of them . . . being the . . . brewery.”
2 {5} Officer Carr also testified that a significant number of traffic stops he conducts
3 result in a verbal warning rather than a ticket. Officer Carr explained that “part of the
4 reason” for this practice is his goal of catching drunk drivers—in other words, he
5 gives warnings when he finds that there is no reason to conclude that a driver is
6 intoxicated. However, Officer Carr also testified that he cites sober drivers when he
7 feels that a verbal warning will not change their behavior. Defendant’s attorney
8 attempted to ask Officer Carr whether he would have stopped Defendant in the
9 absence of his investigative remit as a member of the DWI unit, but the metropolitan
10 court sustained the State’s objection to that question as calling for speculation.
11 {6} Defendant called Steven Webb to testify about his experience being stopped by
12 Officer Carr under similar circumstances. Mr. Webb testified that on a previous
13 occasion, Officer Carr had stopped him after he left the same brewery that Defendant
14 had been at on the night of her arrest. Mr. Webb testified that Officer Carr observed
15 him driving east on Lomas and eventually stopped him in the same area where
16 Defendant was stopped. He also testified that he believed the reason that Officer Carr
17 stopped him was a predetermined desire to conduct a DWI investigation. Mr. Webb
18 also testified that Officer Carr had asked him if he was drinking before requesting to
19 see his license or registration, an apparent deviation from standard operating
20 procedures. Defendant’s attorney also proffered the testimony of two other witnesses
4
1 who would testify that each had been stopped by Officer Carr after leaving the same
2 brewery Defendant and Mr. Webb had left from but that Officer Carr had let them go
3 with a warning after determining that they had not been drinking.
4 {7} The metropolitan court judge denied Defendant’s motion to suppress and
5 explained its reasoning as follows:
6 First of all . . . I understand where you’re coming from. . . .[Y]ou’re
7 saying Officer Carr’s hanging out on this stretch of highway or this
8 stretch of road because he knows there’s individuals coming from [the
9 brewery. But t]hat’s no different from other DWI officers hanging
10 around near Downtown and making [a] circle of the blocks around
11 Downtown[.] It wouldn’t make sense for DWI enforcement for officers
12 to be off in the boondocks away from where individuals travel and to
13 enforce laws out there. I just don’t think that makes any sense. And so
14 do I think officers hang out in places they consider “hot spots”? Yes, I
15 do. Do I think they hang out in places where bars are getting out and
16 where . . . there’s more bars in the vicinity than the rest of the area? Yes
17 I do. Do I think that the officers then pull everybody over just based off
18 the fact that they think everybody pulled out of a bar or is coming from
19 a bar? No. I think each officer is out there, he’s looking for individuals
20 that are breaking the law, traffic violations, he’s forming his reasonable
21 suspicion and he’s pulling that individual over. I think in this case that’s
22 exactly what Officer Carr did. I think that he’s riding up and down
23 Lomas, or he’s in that general area, he sees somebody who by
24 [Defendant]’s own agreement, he has reasonable suspicion to pull over[.]
25 He then pulls that person over, and you know he makes the decision
26 based off of his conversation with her that he needs to further a DWI
27 investigation. Do I think he should have let her go at that point in time?
28 If he felt that he needed to further his investigation, then certainly I don’t
29 think he should have let her go. He needed to make sure, one, that she
30 was safe to be let go, and to be on the streets.2
2
29 The metropolitan court judge also stated on the record that her decision would
30 be the same even if she heard testimony in line with Defendant’s proffer that Officer
5
1 {8} Defendant appealed to the district court, which affirmed, holding that a
2 “ ‘totality of the circumstances’ demonstrates no indication Officer Carr had [a]
3 motive unrelated to [investigating] a traffic violation” when he stopped Defendant.
4 II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
5 {9} The Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court exercises combined statutory
6 jurisdiction over county and municipal offenses. NMSA 1978, § 34-8A-3(A)(1)
7 (2001). Part of this jurisdiction includes acting as “court of record for criminal actions
8 involving driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquors or drugs[.]” NMSA
9 1978, § 34-8A-6(C) (1993). Any party aggrieved by the metropolitan court’s
10 judgment in such cases may appeal the court’s judgment to the district court of the
11 county in which the metropolitan court is located (in this case, Bernalillo County). Id.
12 Since the metropolitan court was the court of record in this case, the district court
13 “acts as a typical appellate court reviewing the record of the lower court’s trial for
14 legal error.” State v. Foster, 2003-NMCA-099, ¶ 9, 134 N.M. 224, 75 P.3d 824. The
15 district court’s judgment disposing of the appeal is reviewed in this court in the same
16 manner as the district court reviewed the metropolitan court’s judgment. Rule 5-
29 Carr had pulled over other individuals who had recently driven away from the same
30 brewery and let them go with verbal warnings.
6
1 826(M) NMRA.3
2 {10} Whether a metropolitan court correctly grants or denies a motion to suppress
3 (and whether the district court correctly upheld or reversed the metropolitan court’s
4 order) is a mixed question of law and fact. State v. Neal, 2007-NMSC-043, ¶ 15, 142
5 N.M. 176, 164 P.3d 57. The district court (and this Court) reviews the metropolitan
6 court’s findings of fact for a substantial basis in the record. Id. However, we defer to
7 the metropolitan court’s resolution of conflicting evidence and evaluation of witness
8 credibility since it “has the best vantage from which to resolve [those] questions.” Id.
9 “Therefore, we review the facts in the light most favorable to the prevailing party,
10 deferring to the district court’s factual findings so long as substantial evidence exists
11 to support those findings.” Id.
12 III. DISCUSSION
13 {11} Article II, Section 10 of the New Mexico Constitution prohibits police officers
14 from initiating traffic stops or other seizures as a pretext for starting or continuing an
3
18 The State argues that this Court lacks jurisdiction to review a district court’s
19 disposition of an appeal from municipal court, citing State v. Armijo, 2014-NMCA-
20 013, 316 P.3d 902, cert. granted, 2013-NMCERT-012, 321 P.3d 127. A case that at
21 the time this case was briefed was pending before our Supreme Court. However, in
17 August 2015, our Supreme Court entered a dispositional order concluding that this
18 Court “has secondary appellate jurisdiction over DWI and domestic violence
19 convictions of the metropolitan court[.]” It is conceivable that the a precedential
20 opinion the Supreme Court intends to release “at a later date” may change this
21 conclusion, but we think the Court’s dispositional order is sufficient for our purposes
22 to reject the State’s argument summarily.
7
1 investigation into unrelated criminal activity. Schuster v. State of N.M. Taxation &
2 Revenue Dep’t, 2012-NMSC-025, ¶ 32, 283 P.3d 288. A pretextual traffic stop is
3 defined as “a detention supportable by reasonable suspicion or probable cause to
4 believe that a traffic offense has occurred, but is executed as a pretense to pursue a
5 ‘hunch,’ a different more serious investigative agenda for which there is no reasonable
6 suspicion or probable cause.” State v. Gonzales, 2011-NMSC-012, ¶ 12, 150 N.M. 74,
7 257 P.3d 894 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). A three-step approach
8 is followed when determining whether a pretextual stop has occurred:
9 First, the [s]tate has the burden to establish reasonable suspicion [or
10 probable cause] to stop the motorist. If the [s]tate fails in its burden, the
11 stop is unconstitutional. Second, if the [s]tate satisfies its burden, the
12 defendant may still establish that the seizure was unreasonable by
13 proving that the totality of the circumstances indicates the officer had an
14 unrelated motive to stop the motorist that was not supported by
15 reasonable suspicion. If the defendant does not satisfy the burden, the
16 stop is constitutional. Third, if the defendant satisfies the burden, there
17 is a presumption of a pretextual stop, and the [s]tate must prove that the
18 totality of the circumstances supports the conclusion that the officer who
19 made the stop would have done so even without the unrelated motive.
20 Id. ¶ 12 (citing Ochoa, 2009-NMCA-002, ¶ 40). We note that facts relevant to the
21 totality of the circumstances include
22 whether the defendant was arrested for and charged with a crime
23 unrelated to the stop; . . . whether the officer had information, which did
24 not rise to the level of reasonable suspicion or probable cause, relating
25 to another offense; the manner of the stop, including how long the officer
26 trailed the defendant before performing the stop; how long after the
27 alleged suspicion arose or violation was committed [after] the stop was
28 made . . .; the conduct, demeanor, and statements of the officer during
8
1 the stop; the relevant characteristics of the defendant; whether the
2 objective reason articulated for the stop was necessary for the protection
3 of traffic safety; and the officer’s testimony as to the reason for the stop.
4 Ochoa, 2009-NMCA-002, ¶ 41.
5 {12} Defendant argues that the metropolitan court and the district court both
6 “erroneously constru[ed] Ochoa to allow evidence to be admissible based on only the
7 first step of the three-part Ochoa analysis[.]” Defendant argues that the metropolitan
8 court and the district court both erred by conflating the presence or absence of
9 reasonable suspicion with the totality of the circumstances determination of whether
10 a stop was initiated based on an unrelated pretext.
11 {13} We disagree. The metropolitan court heard evidence and made express findings
12 as to Officer Carr’s subjective intent: “I think each officer is . . . looking for
13 individuals that are breaking the law. . . . I think in this case that’s exactly what
14 Officer Carr did. I think that he’s riding . . . up and down Lomas, or he’s in that
15 general area, he sees somebody who by defense’s own agreement, he has reasonable
16 suspicion to pull over. . . . [h]e then pulls that person over[.]” We disagree with
17 Defendant that the metropolitan court was single-mindedly focused on whether or not
18 Officer Carr had reasonable suspicion to conduct a traffic stop. We understand the
19 metropolitan court’s statement from the bench to contain separate conclusions: (1)
20 Officer Carr had reasonable suspicion or probable cause to believe Defendant had
21 violated the traffic code (thereby satisfying step one of the Ochoa analysis), and (2)
9
1 any pretextual motive arising from Officer Carr’s questionable actions at other traffic
2 stops and his participation as a member of the DWI unit were sufficiently overcome
3 in this case by the totality of the circumstances—establishing that the subjective
4 purpose of the stop was to address Defendant’s undisputed violations of the traffic
5 code, rather than a pretext to investigate if she was driving while intoxicated.
6 Effectively, the metropolitan court found that Defendant’s fact-specific Ochoa
7 challenge failed at steps two and three because the State’s evidence ultimately
8 established that the totality of the circumstances overcame Defendant’s evidence of
9 any pattern or practice of pretextual behavior by members of the DWI unit who
10 specifically targeted vehicles observed leaving parking lots near downtown nightclubs
11 and breweries.
12 {14} Defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying the
13 metropolitan court’s ultimate conclusion, but we find Defendant’s arguments
14 unpersuasive. To be sure, Defendant elicited sufficient testimony from Officer Carr
15 and Mr. Webb for the metropolitan court to find that Officer Carr had a valid and
16 “unrelated motive” to stop Defendant’s vehicle. See Ochoa, 2009-NMCA-002, ¶ 40.
17 Defendant points to Officer Carr’s testimony that catching DWI offenders“part[ly]”
18 explains his practice of giving verbal warnings to motorists he stops but who he
19 ultimately determines not to be intoxicated. But Officer Carr also explained that he
20 does cite sober motorists who he concludes will not improve their driving upon
10
1 receiving a warning. Mr. Webb testified that Officer Carr asked him if he had been
2 drinking before asking to see his registration, in apparent deviation from standard
3 practices during routine investigations of traffic code violations. While this testimony
4 supports an inference that Officer Carr had a practice of conducting pretextual traffic
5 stops, Defendant’s own testimony that Officer Carr asked her for her license and
6 registration before asking her whether she had been drinking supports a contrary
7 inference, that Mr. Webb’s stop (assuming it was pretextual) was not conducted in the
8 same manner as Defendant’s stop.
9 {15} So too with Defendant’s assertion of pretext that Officer Carr stakes out popular
10 bars, pulls over motorists leaving from them for minor traffic offenses, and lets those
11 who are sober go with a verbal warning. This assertion finds support through plausible
12 inferences from Mr. Webb’s testimony and Defendant’s attorney’s proffer that Officer
13 Carr had targeted at least two other individuals who had recently left the same
14 brewery Defendant had patronized. But the record also permitted the metropolitan
15 court judge to credit Officer Carr’s own testimony that he was “on random patrol” in
16 the downtown area on the night in question and did not observe Defendant leaving a
17 bar before he saw her speeding on Lomas. In sum, while there was substantial record
18 evidence to factually establish that Officer Carr’s decision to stop Defendant was
19 pretextual, there was also substantial evidence that any pretextual practices that may
20 have been utilized by the DWI unit in other circumstances was overcome by the
11
1 totality of circumstances in this case. Since we defer to the metropolitan court’s
2 findings of fact on appeal and view the record as a whole in a light most favorable to
3 the prevailing party in the metropolitan court, we, like the district court, reject
4 Defendant’s challenge to the metropolitan court’s finding that the stop was not
5 pretextual based upon the totality of these circumstances.
6 {16} Defendant next argues that the district court erroneously upheld the
7 metropolitan court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to suppress by focusing on the
8 presence or absence of reasonable suspicion and ignoring evidence that Officer Carr
9 was motivated by an impermissible pretext when he stopped Defendant. But any error
10 in the district court’s understanding of Ochoa is immaterial to the ultimate question
11 of whether the metropolitan court should have granted Defendant’s motion to
12 suppress, a question resolved by the district court exclusively based upon evidence
13 presented in metropolitan court. In any event, we disagree with Defendant’s
14 characterization of the district court’s ruling. The district court reviewed the
15 metropolitan court ruling to determine whether there was any “indication Officer Carr
16 had [a] motive unrelated to [investigating] a traffic violation[,]” citing Ochoa, 2009-
17 NMCA-002, ¶ 41, which recites a non-exhaustive list of factors relevant to
18 determining whether the totality of circumstances support a finding of pretext.
19 {17} After doing so, the district court found that the following facts demonstrated
20 Officer Carr did not stop Defendant for pretextual reasons: (1) Defendant was charged
12
1 with the offenses for which she was stopped (speeding and expired registration); (2)
2 according to Defendant’s recollection, Officer Carr asked her for her license and
3 registration before inquiring into whether she had been drinking, which distinguished
4 her encounter from Mr. Webb’s; (3) Officer Carr drove a marked car, wore his
5 uniform, and testified that part of his job responsibilities include enforcing traffic
6 laws; (4) Officer Carr testified that he was not in a position to see which street
7 Defendant came from and did not know she had recently left a brewery; and (5)
8 Officer Carr followed Defendant for only a short period of time.
9 {18} The core of Defendant’s argument is that the traffic infractions that gave rise
10 to the stop—speeding and failing to display a valid registration—were “minor
11 infractions” that did not give Officer Carr any basis to conclude that she was driving
12 while intoxicated. Defendant cites Gonzales, and State v. Alderete, 2011-NMCA-055,
13 149 N.M. 799, 255 P.3d 377, arguing that Officer Carr’s testimony that he has a
14 motive and incentive to catch drunk drivers as a general matter automatically shifts
15 the burden to the State to prove that Officer Carr would have made the stop in this
16 case in the absence of his motive and incentive to catch drunk drivers.
17 {19} But the State is only required to overcome a presumption of pretext when the
18 defendant demonstrates that the totality of the circumstances indicates that a specific
19 stop was initiated for pretextual reasons. See Gonzales, 2011-NMSC-012, ¶ 12 (stating
20 “the defendant may still establish that the seizure was unreasonable by proving that
13
1 the totality of the circumstances indicates the officer had an unrelated motive to stop
2 the motorist that was not supported by reasonable suspicion” (emphasis added));
3 Alderete, 2011-NMCA-055, ¶¶ 11-12 (providing “an otherwise pretextual stop will
4 only be invalidated if the underlying motive is not supported by reasonable suspicion
5 or probable cause” (emphasis added)). For purposes of our analysis, we can accept
6 without deciding Defendant’s allegation of pretext—that in certain factual scenarios,
7 the DWI unit has employed the pretextual practice of following vehicles leaving
8 parking lots located near downtown nightclubs and breweries for the express purpose
9 of stopping the vehicle and conducting a DWI investigation without reasonable
10 suspicion that the driver is intoxicated. Even assuming that such has taken place,
11 Defendant does not present facts in this case that fit into that pretextual scenario.
12 {20} Here, the metropolitan court found that Officer Carr’s participation in any
13 pretextual downtown practices by the DWI unit was overcome by evidence that he did
14 not follow Defendant from any downtown parking location, and he did in fact observe
15 and properly stop Defendant for speeding and failure to display a valid registration.
16 Once Officer Carr’s testimony was determined to be credible, it provided the
17 metropolitan court with ample evidence to decide that Defendant’s stop neither fit
18 within the pretextual scenario being alleged nor met the final steps required under
19 Ochoa. See 2009-NMCA-002, ¶ 40. As the metropolitan court noted, the fact that
20 Officer Carr has a special duty to investigate DWI offenses and that he was patrolling
14
1 the downtown area on the night of Defendant’s arrest did not require the metropolitan
2 court to disregard Officer Carr’s testimony that he was not motivated by pretext when
3 he stopped Defendant. In sum, despite an allegedly pretextual policy within the DWI
4 unit assigned to the downtown Albuquerque area, we cannot conclude that the
5 metropolitan court erred when it determined that the totality of the evidence, on
6 balance, established that Officer Carr stopped Defendant’s vehicle for legitimate
7 traffic violations and not based upon the improper pretextual scenario alleged by
8 Defendant.
9 III. CONCLUSION
10 {21} We affirm the district court.
11 {22} IT IS SO ORDERED.
12 _________________________________
13 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
14 WE CONCUR:
15 _________________________________
16 LINDA M. VANZI, Judge
17 _________________________________
18 TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
15