#24549-a-JKM
2008 SD 41
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
* * * *
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
WADE DUSTIN HAYEN, Defendant and Appellee.
* * * *
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
MINNEHAHA COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
* * * *
HONORABLE GLEN A. SEVERSON
Judge
* * * *
LAWRENCE E. LONG
Attorney General
ANDREW KNECHT
CRAIG M. EICHSTADT
Assistant Attorneys General Attorneys for plaintiff
Pierre, South Dakota and appellant.
RONALD A. PARSONS, JR.
BRENDAN V. JOHNSON
KIMBERLY J. LANHAM of
Johnson, Heidepriem, Janklow,
Abdallah & Johnson, LLP Attorneys for defendant
Sioux Falls, South Dakota and appellee.
* * * *
ARGUED ON MARCH 27, 2008
OPINION FILED 06/04/08
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MEIERHENRY, Justice
[¶1.] The State of South Dakota appeals from a circuit court order
suppressing evidence obtained from a traffic stop on a main thoroughfare in Sioux
Falls, Minnehaha County, South Dakota. A Sioux Falls police officer, Officer
Flogstad, stopped Wade Hayen because he was unable to see the expiration date on
the bottom of the temporary thirty-day dealer’s license. The temporary license was
properly positioned and displayed on the rear driver’s side window of Hayen’s new
pickup truck; however, a box in the back of the pickup obstructed the bottom of the
license preventing the officer from seeing the expiration date from his position in
the driver’s seat of the patrol car as he followed Hayen’s pickup.
[¶2.] After the stop, the officer approached Hayen’s vehicle on the driver’s
side. He walked by the license without checking the expiration date. Had the
officer looked, he could easily have read the expiration date as he walked from his
vehicle to the driver’s side window. Nothing blocked his view, including the box
that had previously prevented him from reading the date while following Hayen in
his patrol car. Instead, the officer went directly to the driver-side window and
asked for Hayen’s driver’s license and proof of insurance. Hayen provided his
driver’s license but had difficulty locating his proof of insurance. Only after this
initial contact, did the officer step back to look at the expiration date on the
temporary license and determine it to be valid.
[¶3.] After ascertaining the validity of the temporary license, the officer
continued to detain Hayen while he returned to his patrol vehicle to run a warrant
and a driver’s license check. The warrant check revealed an outstanding warrant
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for Hayen’s arrest. The officer then arrested Hayen and proceeded to search his
person and vehicle. He found methamphetamine residue and drug paraphernalia in
Hayen’s coat pocket. As a result, the State charged Hayen with possession of a
controlled drug or substance and possession of drug paraphernalia.
[¶4.] Hayen moved to suppress the evidence gained from the search as a
violation of his rights against unreasonable search and seizure guaranteed under
the United States and South Dakota Constitutions. US Const amend IV; SD Const
art VI, § 11. See State v. Meyer, 1998 SD 122, ¶18, 587 NW2d 719, 723 (noting that
South Dakota Constitution and the United States Constitution provide similar
protections against unreasonable searches and seizures). The circuit court granted
Hayen’s motion to suppress because “at the time that Officer Flogstad asked for
[Hayen’s] license and proof of insurance, there was no objective evidence that a
traffic violation had occurred or was occurring.”
[¶5.] The State claims the circuit court erred in suppressing the evidence.
“Our review of a motion to suppress based on an alleged violation of a
constitutionally protected right is a question of law examined de novo.” State v.
Muller, 2005 SD 66, ¶12, 698 NW2d 285, 288 (citations omitted). The Fourth
Amendment to the United States Constitution provides protection against
“unreasonable searches and seizure.” The Fourth Amendment provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses,
papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,
shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and
particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons
or things to be seized.
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US Const amend IV. “The Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable
searches and seizures applies when a vehicle is stopped by law enforcement.”
Muller, 2005 SD 66, ¶14, 698 NW2d at 288 (citations omitted). We have recognized
that the Fourth Amendment permits a brief investigatory stop of a vehicle when
“the officer’s action is supported by reasonable suspicion to believe that criminal
activity ‘may be afoot.’” State v. Kenyon, 2002 SD 111, ¶14, 651 NW2d 269, 273
(citations omitted). However, prior to stopping a vehicle, the officer is required to
have an objective “specific and articulable suspicion” that a violation has occurred
or is occurring. State v. Vento, 1999 SD 158, ¶8, 604 NW 468, 470; see also Muller,
2005 SD 66, ¶14, 698 NW2d at 288 (citations omitted).
[¶6.] Hayen does not dispute that the officer had reasonable articulable
suspicion to stop his vehicle. Additionally, the State does not dispute that the
officer failed to verify the expiration date on the temporary license before asking
Hayen for his license and proof of insurance. The issue is whether extending
Hayen’s detention beyond verifying the expiration date on the clearly displayed
temporary license is a violation of Hayen’s constitutional right against
unreasonable search and seizure. The State argues that when an officer effectuates
a valid investigatory stop, it is not unreasonable for the officer first to approach the
driver to request a driver’s license and proof of insurance before investigating his
suspicions.
[¶7.] We have said that “an investigative detention must be temporary and
last no longer than is necessary to effectuate the purpose of the stop. Similarly, the
investigative methods employed should be the least intrusive means reasonably
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available to verify or dispel the officer’s suspicion in a short period of time.” State v.
Ballard, 2000 SD 134, ¶11, 617 NW2d 837, 841 (emphasis added) (quoting Florida
v. Royer, 460 US 491, 500, 103 SCt 1319, 1325-26, 75 LEd2d 229, 238 (1983)
(citations omitted)). We also required that the investigation be “‘reasonably related
in scope to the circumstances that justified the interference in the first place.’” Id.
(quoting United States v. Bloomfield, 40 F3d 910, 915 (8thCir 1994) (quoting United
States v. Cummins, 920 F2d 498, 502 (8thCir 1990) (quoting Terry v. Ohio, 392 US
1, 20, 88 SCt 1868, 1879, 20 LEd2d 889 (1968)))). We said additionally that after
the completion of the traffic investigation “an officer must allow the driver to
proceed without further constraint. To detain a driver further an officer must have
‘a reasonable, articulable suspicion that [the] person is involved in criminal activity
unrelated to the traffic violation.’” Id. ¶12, 617 NW2d at 841 (internal and external
citations omitted). Likewise, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has stated that
the Fourth Amendment intrusion “‘must be temporary and last no longer than is
necessary to effectuate the purpose of the stop’ and that the officer should employ
the least intrusive means available to dispel the officer’s suspicion in a timely
fashion.” United States v. Jones, 269 F3d 919, 924 (8thCir 2001) (citation omitted).
[¶8.] The officer testified that the sole purpose of stopping Hayen was to
ensure the temporary license had not expired. The circuit court found that “[t]he
temporary license was visible as Officer Flogstad approached the vehicle and was
valid.” The officer testified that he did not look at the date on the license as he
walked passed it, even though the license was visible without having to move any
objects in the back of the pickup. Only after requesting Hayen’s driver’s license and
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proof of insurance, did he read the expiration date clearly visible on the license.
The officer gave no explanation why he did not look at the license on the way to the
driver’s door, nor did he offer any other reason to extend his investigation beyond
verifying the date on the temporary license. The officer conceded at the hearing
that Hayen’s temporary license was valid, visible and properly affixed to Hayen’s
vehicle. The fact that a box obstructed the officer’s view from a certain angle is not
a violation of any South Dakota traffic law. The officer offered no reason to detain
Hayen except to verify the expiration date.
[¶9.] Whether an articulable purpose exists for continuing an investigative
detention depends entirely on the specific facts of the case. The State cites several
federal cases for the proposition that an officer is entitled to extend an investigative
detention despite clearly objective facts dispelling the purpose of the stop. The
cases cited by the State are easily distinguishable from the current facts and are
inapposite. In those cases, a traffic violation had occurred, was occurring or the
officer had objective reasonable articulable suspicion that a violation had occurred
or was occurring that permitted the continued investigative detention. E.g. United
States v. Bueno, 443 F3d 1017, 1024-25 (8thCir 2006) (stating the court “credit[s]
the district court’s finding that the officers could not see the temporary registration”
as adding to the reasonableness of the investigative detention, and the officer cited
the defendant for the violation); United States v. Dumas, 94 F3d 286, 290 (7thCir
1996) (temporary tags were “illegible” and could not be “readily and distinctly seen
and read” constituting a violation of the law); United States v. Dexter, 165 F3d 1120
(7thCir 1999) (same facts as Dumas, here the court also addressed the officer’s
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reasonable safety concerns which prevented him from investigating the actual
violation prior to talking to the driver); United States v. Tipton, 3 F3d 1119 (7thCir
1993) (temporary tags were not affixed properly constituting a violation of Illinois
law); United States v. Chevez Loya, 2007 WL 700991 (DNeb Feb 28, 2007) (valid
traffic stop with clearly articulated objective reasonable suspicion which had not
dissipated).
[¶10.] Likewise, the State relies on three of our prior cases: State v Muller,
2005 SD 66, 698 NW2d 285, State v. Kenyon, 2002 SD 111, 651 NW2d 269 and State
v. Vento, 1999 SD 158, 604 NW 468. Again, these cases are distinguishable and
inapposite. Muller involved an objectively reasonable stop based on the officer’s
observation that the license plate’s registration sticker was covered in snow and the
dispatcher’s confirmation that the registration had expired. Even though the police
dispatcher erroneously informed the officer that the plate had expired, the officer
immediately observed the smell of alcohol emanating from the vehicle as well as the
defendant’s blood shot eyes. These observations created reasonable suspicion for
further detention. Muller, 2005 SD 66, ¶25-26, 698 NW2d at 292-93. In Kenyon,
the detention involved an actual traffic violation for failing to display red taillights
as well as objectively reasonable suspicion articulated for the continued detention.
2002 SD 111, 651 NW2d 269. In Vento, there was also an objective violation of a
traffic law. 1999 SD 158, ¶11, 604 NW2d at 470.
[¶11.] The facts of United States v. McSwain, a Tenth Circuit Court of
Appeals case, parallel those of this case. 29 F3d 558 (10thCir 1994). In McSwain, a
Utah trooper stopped McSwain because tamper-proofing tape inhibited his ability to
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read the expiration sticker of the vehicle’s temporary license. As the trooper walked
up to the vehicle, he observed that the license was valid; nonetheless, the trooper
continued to request McSwain’s identification and vehicle registration. McSwain
provided the trooper with a Colorado registration in his name but he informed the
trooper that he did not have a driver’s license. After running McSwain’s name
through a computer check, the trooper learned that McSwain had a suspended
license and had been convicted of drug, gun and assault violations. The trooper
then requested permission to search the vehicle and McSwain consented. The
search turned up a gun, drugs and a set of scales.
[¶12.] McSwain moved to suppress the evidence as “the fruit of an unlawful
detention.” Id. at 560. The trial court denied the motion; however, the appellate
court reversed the order and suppressed the evidence, holding:
Trooper Avery’s reasonable suspicion regarding the validity of
Mr. McSwain’s temporary registration sticker was completely
dispelled prior to the time he questioned Mr. McSwain and
requested documentation. Having no “objectively reasonable
articulable suspicion that illegal activity ha[d] occurred or [was]
occurring,” Trooper Avery’s actions in questioning Mr. McSwain
and requesting his license and registration exceeded the limits
of a lawful investigative detention and violated the Fourth
Amendment.
Id. at 561-62 (citations omitted). The government in McSwain argued “that not
allowing an officer to request a driver’s license and registration in this type of case
will require the officer to ‘stop a vehicle, approach the vehicle on foot, observe it,
then walk away, get in his police car, drive away and wave, leaving the stopped
citizen to wonder what had just occurred.’” Id. at 562 (citation omitted). The court
responded that “[a]s a matter of courtesy, the officer could explain to drivers in Mr.
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McSwain’s circumstances the reason for the initial detention and then allow them
to continue on their way without asking them to produce their driver’s license and
registration.” Id.
[¶13.] Here, like in McSwain, the officer’s actions in requesting Hayen’s
license and proof of insurance went beyond the limits of a lawful investigative stop.
The officer could easily have looked at the license to satisfy his suspicions. Had he
done so, it would have been clear that no violation had occurred or was occurring.
At that point, his reason for detaining Hayen would have dissipated. He expressed
no safety concern, he did not allege any observed violation of law, nor did he proffer
any purpose for the continued stop. Without any further articulable suspicion of
criminal activity, the extended detention violated Hayen’s federal and state
constitutional rights. Although there certainly are situations where an officer is
permitted to make contact with the driver prior to investigating the purpose of the
investigatory stop, in this situation there were none articulated. Therefore, the
officer’s request for Hayen’s driver’s license and proof of insurance constituted an
unconstitutional detention and the evidence garnered from the unlawful detention
was properly suppressed.
[¶14.] Affirmed.
[¶15.] GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and SABERS, KONENKAMP, and
ZINTER, Justices, concur.
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