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State v. Solis

Court: Montana Supreme Court
Date filed: 1984-12-31
Citations: 693 P.2d 518, 214 Mont. 310
Copy Citations
15 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                                   No. 83-543

                  IN THE SUPREI4E COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

                                      1984




STATE OF MONTANA,
                   Plaintiff and Appellant,
         -vs-
GEORGE SOLIS,
                   Defendant and Respondent.




APPEAL FROM:       District Court of the Eighth Judicial District,
                   In and for the County of Cascade,
                   The Honorable H. William Coder, Judge presiding.

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

         For Appellant:
                   Hon. Mike Greely, Attorney General, Helena, Montana
                   Jim Scheier argued, Asst. Atty. General, Helena
                   J. Fred. Bourdeau, County Attorney, Great Falls,
                   Montana; Charles Lucero argued, Deputy County Atty.,
                   Great Falls, Montana

         For Respondent:
                   Jeffrey T. McAllister argued., Great Falls, Montana




                                      Submitted:    October 29, 1984
                                        Decided:    December 31, 1984


Filed:
          Df.h:      '"'84
                      i
                      "J




                                      Clerk
Mr.   J u s t i c e Frank B.           Morrison,          Jr. d e l i v e r e d t h e Opinion of
t h e Court.

        On March 1 6 , 1983, d e f e n d a n t George S o l i s was c h a r g e d by

i n f o r m a t i o n w i t h one c o u n t o f f e l o n y t h e f t , i n v i o l a t i o n o f          §

45-6-301 (1)( a ) , MCA.                T r i a l was t w i c e s c h e d u l e d and v a c a t e d

at    the    prosecution's              request         before       being       rescheduled             for

Monday, October 3 , 1983.                      The S t a t e f i l e d a " J u s t n o t i c e " o f

o t h e r c r i m e s e v i d e n c e on F r i d a y , September 30, 1983, t o g e t h e r

w i t h a motion i n l i m i n e t o i n t r o d u c e a v i d e o t a p e .                Defendant

then     filed        a       motion     in        limine    on     the     morning       of      trial,

o b j e c t i n g t o t h e t i m e l i n e s s of t h e S t a t e ' s " J u s t n o t i c e " and

t h e admission of t h e video t a p e s i n t o evidence.                            Following an

in-chambers h e a r i n g , t h e t r i a l judge s u p p r e s s e d t h e v i d e o t a p e

and postponed t r i a l .              On October 5 , 1983, a w r i t t e n o r d e r w a s

i s s u e d denying t h e p r o s e c u t i o n ' s r e q u e s t t o p r e s e n t e v i d e n c e

of    o t h e r crimes          and s u p p r e s s i n g t h e v i d e o t a p e .       The S t a t e

appeals.        W a f f i r m t h e o r d e r of t h e D i s t r i c t Court.
                 e

        During        the       months        of    January       a.nd F e b r u a r y    1983,          the

Cascade       County           Sheriff's       office        employed         Jimmy Emmons,               an

undercover o f f i c e r from I n d i a n a ,                t o a c t a s p r o p r i e t o r of          a

pawnshop,        Ma       &    Pa's    Second         Hand    Store.           As    part      of    that

o p e r a t i o n and w i t h Emmons' knowledge, S h e r i f f ' s o f f i c e r s made

v i d e o r e c o r d i n g s o f t h e e v e n t s which t r a n s p i r e d .

        Video r e c o r d i n g s       i n v o l v i n g d e f e n d a n t w e r e made on f i v e

separate        occasions.               On    January        28,     1983,         defendant        sold

n e c k l a c e s t o Emmons.            On February           15,     1983, defend.ant s o l d

nine     cartons          of     cigarettes          to     Emmons        and. i n q u i r e d      as    to

Emmons' i n t e r e s t i n some t i r e s .                F i f t y minutes l a t e r , defen-

dant returned,                s o l d Emmons f o u r B . F .        Goodrich 8-ply               tractor

t i r e s and t o l d Emmons he c o u l d g e t more new t i r e s .                        O Febru-
                                                                                             n

a r y 18,     1983, t h e t h e f t o f              f o u r t r a c t o r t i r e s matching t h e
description      of   those   sold   to    Emmons    by     defendant   was
reported.
     On February 22, 1983, Emmons purchased from defendant
six more tires for $140 on the condition that defendant take
an I.O.U.     for $100.       Defendant discussed with Emmons his
scheme to     obtain     twenty   additional tires and          a pending
burglary charge against him.         On February 24, 1983, defendant
returned to collect his $100.         Defendant was arrested during
that visit and eventually charged with felony theft of the
initial four tires he sold to Emmons.
     All of those transactions were videotaped.                    However,
neither the Cascade County Attorney's office nor the Cascade
County Sheriff's office ever sought or obtained a search
warrant prior to making any of the video recordings.
     An omnibus hearing was held April 27, 1983, at which the
prosecution represented that it did not intend to offer
evidence    of   other    offenses   or    acts     under   Rule    404(b),
M.R.Evid.      At that time, the prosecution intended to try
Solis using Emmons' testimony regarding only the sale of the
four tractor tires.       Thereafter, Emmons' refusal to return to
Montana to testify forced the cancellation of two scheduled
trial dates.     The Cascade County Attorney's office decided to
try the case using the videotape and testimony of deputies
who ran the taping machines.              That decision prompted the
September 30, 1983, "Just notice."
     In its appeal of the October 5, 1983, order of the
District Court, the State presents            this Court with           four
issues:
     1.     Whether the defendant's right to privacy, as guar-
anteed by the Montana Constitution, was violated.
     2.     Whether the videotape evidence meets the substan-
tive guidelines of admissibility established in Just?
        3.     Whether the prosecution complied with the procedur-
al guidelines established in Just in notifying the defendant
of its intent to offer evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or
acts.
        4.     Whether the State waived its right to offer evi-
dence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts.
        Our resolution of issue one renders the remaining issues
moot.
        "The right of individual privacy is essential to the
well-being of a free society and shall not be infringed
without the showing of a compelling state interest."              Mont.
Const. Art. 11,      §   10.
        We use a two-part test to determine whether an individ-
ual has a constitutionally protected right of privacy:               (1)

the individual must have either a subjective or an actual
expectation of privacy; and (2)             that expectation must be
viewed by society as reasonable.           The Missoulian v. Board of
Regents of Higher Education (Mont. 1984), 675 P.2d 962, 967,
41 St.Rep. 110, 116.           Thus, the first point for resolution of
this case is whether defendant exhibited an expectation of
privacy during his conversations at the pawnshop and, if so,
whether that expectation was reasonable.
        Having viewed the videotapes, we find that defendant did
exhibit an actual expectation of privacy.            His conversations
with Jimmy Emmons were held in a small, enclosed office.            The
only other individual present was an unidentified friend of
defendant.        Further, defendant's expectation of privacy was
reasonable.       There were no visible, separate areas from which
other        individuals may     have   overheard   the   conversations.
Thus, it was not unreasonable for defendant to have expected
no one but his unidentified friend and Emmons heard the
conversations.
       In support of its position, the State argues that our
decision in State v. Coleman (Mont. 1980), 616 P.2d 1090, 37
St.Rep. 1661, requires a determination in this instance that
defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy.          We do
not agree.     In Coleman, we reaffirmed our position "that
interception of telephone conversations by police officers is
legal if one of the parties to the conversation consents,
even an informer."      Coleman, 616 P.2d at 1096.      Likewise,
argues the State, since Jimmy Emmons consented to the video
recordings of his transactions with Solis, those recordings
required no court order.       However, our decision in Coleman
and our recent decision on the same issue, State v. Canon
(Mont. 1984), 687 P.2d     705, 41 St.Rep.    1659, rely on the
nature    of   a   telephone   conversation   as   opposed   to   a
face-to-face conversation.      An individual using a telephone
has no way of knowing whether that conversation is being
overheard by other parties.     Thus, there exists no reasonable
expecta.tion of privacy.   Coleman, supra.
       We are aware of the plurality opinion in United States
v. White (1971), 401 U.S. 745, 91 S.Ct. 1122, 28 L.Ed.2d 453.
With   reference to the issue now before this Court, the
Supreme Court of the United States said:
       "No different result should obtain where    .. .the
       informer disappears and is unavailable at trial;
       for the issue of whether specified events on a
       certain day violate the Fourth Amendment should not
       be determined by what later happens to the
       informer.     His unavailability at trial and
       profferring the testimony of other agents may raise
       evidentiary    problems   or    pose   issues    of
       prosecutorial misconduct with respect to the
       informer's disappearance, but they do not appear
       critical to deciding whether prior events invaded
       the defendant's Fourth Amendment rights."    White,
       401 U.S. at 753-754.
       Furthermore, the plurality opinion in White was approved
in United States v. Caceres (1979), 440 U.S.        741, 99 S.Ct.
1465, 59 L.Ed.2d 733, wherein the Supreme Court said:
       "Neither the Constitution nor any Act of Congress
       requires that official approval be secured before
       conversations are    overheard   or  recorded by
       Government agents with the consent of one of the
       conversants."  Caceres, 440 U.S. at 744.
       This Court is not bound by decisions of the United
States Supreme Court where       independent grounds exist for
reaching a contrary result.     State v. Van Haele (Mont. 1982) ,
649 P.2d 1311, 39 St.Rep. 1586.      State v. Hyem (Mont. 19811,
630 P.2d    202, 38 St-Rep. 891.     In Hyem, the Court divided
over the question of whether the delegates to the Montana
State Constitutional Convention intended to extend the right
of privacy to individual action.     However, all members of the
Court agreed that independent state grounds existed for this
Court to extend greater privacy rights, and thereby greater
protection against unreasonable       search and    seizure, than
would be afforded under the Federal Constitution.
       Much has been written about whether a state court should
grant greater rights than the United States Supreme Court
where the State Constitutional language is identical to that
in the Federal Constitution.         In State v. Jackson    (Mont.
3_983), 672 P.2d 255, 40 St.Rep 1698, a divided court held
that     the   Montana     Constitutional   guarantee      against
self-incrimination does not afford greater protection than
that afforded under the Federal Constitution.         However, in
that instance the language in the Montana Constitution does
not afford     a basis    for distinguishing self-incrimination
rights from those articulated in the Federal Constitution.
This Court has afforded greater rights in search and seizure
cases     because   the    Montana   Constitution    specificall-y
recognizes the importance of the right of privacy.
       In - Haele, 649 P.2d at 1313, Chief Justice Haswell
          Van
writing for the majority said:
     "We decline to overrule our previous citizen search
     cases and reaffirm our position taken therein. We
     base our reasoning on the firm stance taken by the
     Montana Constitution guaranteeing an individual's
     right of privacy."
     The   debate      among     delegates   considering   the   privacy
section    to    the     Montana     Constitution    evidences        clear
opposition      to    electronic    surveillance.      The     delegates
considered whether to specifically ban eavesdropping in the
Constitution itself.           In debating this amendment, Delegate
Campbell said:
    "We at the committee felt very strongly that the
    people of Montana should be protected as much as
    possible     against   eavesdropping,    electronic
    surveillance, and such type of activities. We also
    recognize that there may in the future be a
    legitimate need for such in legitimate police
    activities.    After careful consideration of the
    rough draft that we did produce, we found that the
    citizens of Montana were very suspicious of such
    type of activity.        We found from the law
    enforcement officers we talked to that there was
    really not a need and such activity was not taking
    place at this time. We had then decided that what
    we had done was made constitutional something that
    we may someday want to regulate or even abolish.
    There were people that would--testified to our
    committee that the wiretapping and such should be
    abolished expressly in the Constitution.     It was
    our feeling, after considering this, that it should
    not   be    solidified  and   cemented   into   the
    Constitution; it should be made a legislative
    matter; and as such, we have removed reference to
    it from the Constitution." Montana Constitutional
    Convention, Verbatim Transcript pp. 1682-1683.
     Delegate        Robinson,    speaking   in   opposition     to    the
position of Delegate Campbell, said:
    "I don't see, really, how you can talk about
    privacy and in the same breath mention the
    possibility    of    wiretapping    or   electronic:
    surveillance. I think these are probably two most
    incompatible things that you could ever have."
    Montana    Constitutional    Convention,   Verbatim
    Transcript p. 1683.
     Delegate Dahood said:
     "After listening to testimony, after examining
     briefs that were submitted to us, after analyzing
     the situation, it is inconceivable to any of us
     that there would ever exist a situation in the
     State of Montana where electronic surveillance
     could be justified.   And the thinking throughout
     the United States is, electronic surveillance shall
     be justified only in matters involving national
     security, perhaps in matters involving certain
     heinous federal crimes where the situation is such
     that in those instances we must risk the right of
     individual privacy because there is a greater
     purpose to be served. But within the area of the
     State of Montana, we cannot conceive of a situation
     where    we    could   ever    permit    electronic
     surveillance." Montana Constitutional Convention,
     Verbatim Transcript p. 1687.
     In Coleman, supra, and Canon, supra, this Court allowed
tapping of a telephone without a warrant, where consent was
given by one party to the conversation, for the reason that
the other party to the telephone conversation could not see
what was    transpiring       at   the other end      of the line and
therefore   assumed     the    risk     of    such monitoring.        These
decisions may    have    gone      further than the Constitutional
Convention delegates intended.               However, this very subject
was discussed during the debate and Delegate Robinson said:
     "Oh, no. You're--there's a difference between your
     knowing that you're telling me and you know whether
     there is someone around us listening or if it's
     just you and I; whereas, on the telephone, you may
     tell me that and you may suspect that I'm the only
     one listening, but you certainly may not know
     that." Montana Constitutional Convention, Verbatim
     Transcript p. 1686.
     If we were to extend warrantless eavesdropping beyond
the tel-ephone conversation sanctioned in Coleman and Canon,
we would clearly be violating the intent of those who drafted
the privacy section of our State Constitution.                      This we
refuse to do.
    We hold that in face-to-face encounters in a private
setting, there    is    a     reasonable expectation         that    hidd.en
monitoring is not taking place.                This does not foreclose
invasion    of   the    right      of    privacy     under   appropriate
circumstances.
     Since defendant's privacy expectation was reasonable, it
could not be invaded absent a compelling state interest.
Mont. Const. Art. 11, S 1 0 .           A compelling state interest
"exists where the state enforces its criminal laws for the
benefit and protection of other fundamental rights of its
citizens. l1    State ex rel. Zander v. District Court ( 1 9 7 9 )     ,
180 Mont.      548,   556,   591 P.2d    656,    660.   Especially    in
situations such as this, where a suspect has engaged in
repeated activity thought to be criminal in nature, there
exists a compelling state interest for the State to invade an
individual's right of privacy.
       However, even when       the State has such a compelling
interest, the invasion of an individual's privacy may usually
occur only with       certain procedural        safeguards.     In this
instance, those safeguards are the ones attached to our right
to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.                  The
State was required to show probable cause to support the
issuance of a search warrant.           Mont. Const. Art 11, S 11.
       This area of law is confusing because of the numerous
approaches to the right of privacy issue in the case law.
There has been unnecessary emphasis placed on distinguishing
right to privacy cases from search and seizure cases.                The
right to privacy is the cornerstone of protections against
unreasonable searches and seizures.              Thus, a warrantless
search can violate a person's right of privacy and thereby
violate the right to be free from unreasonable searches and
seizures.
       It is not always feasible to obtain a search warrant.
Time   constraints     sometimes make     it necessary        to conduct
warrantless searches.        However, in the instant case the trial
judge found that this d-id not "appear to be a situation of
exigent circumstances precluding a reasonable opportunity for
the said Sheriff's office to seek a prior search warrant."
Absent a clear abuse of discretion, the findings of the trial
court will be upheld on appeal.
     On the basis of this finding, we hold that the warrant-
1-ess recording of defendant's conversations with Jimmy Ernmons
violated    defendant's right to be     free   from unreasonable
searches.
     The same rationale applies to eavesdropping by the law
enforcement officers who were running the video tape machine.
They were entitled here to invade privacy, but not without a
warrant.      The   warrantless   eavesdropping   constituted   an
unreasonable search.
     The District Court




We concur:


Chief Justice




Justices
Justice John C. Sheehy, concurring specially:

       I concur with the result in this case.               The hidden vid.eo
camera     in    the    case   recorded the        defendant visually          and
aurally.    The use of the video camera in the manner described
i n this case constituted a "search" of the defendant.
 .                                                                             See
Katz v. United States (1967), 389 U.S. 347, 19 L.Ed.2d                     576,
88 S.Ct. 507.          A warrantless search is - - unreasonable,
                                               Per Se
unless it falls within one of the defined exceptions to the
wa-rrant requirement.          Coolidge v. New Hampshire (1971), 403
U.S.   443, 29 I,.Ed.2d 564, 91 S.Ct. 2022.                The exceptions to

the    warrant     requirement     generally       arise    out    of   exigent
circumstances          necessary   to    protect    or    preserve      life   or
property or to avoid serious injury.                     See Wayne v. C. S.
(C.A.D.C.       1963), 31-8 F.2d.       205.    No exigent circumstances
appear here to justify the warrantless search.                    Accordingly,
the video tape of the defendant in this case, without more,
was    invalidly        obtained   and    was   properly      excluded     from
evidence.


                                               (".&A l       &h3
                                                         Justice

Chief Justice Frank I. Haswell, specially concurring:
       I concur in the result for the reasons stated by
Justice Sheehy.




Mr. Justice Fred J. Weber, specially concurring:

       I concur in the result for the reasons stated by
Justice Sheehy.
Mr. Justice John Conway Harrison, dissenting.


        I dissent.
        We are here involved in a case in which known criminal
defendants have previously dealt with a "mom and dad" pawn
shop, where we are giving them far more than the benefit of
the doubt of an invasion of their privacy.                In these days
where banks are monitored by video equipment, hotels and
motels are involved in video taping of customers and many
business open all night try to protect their business from
persons such as we are here involved with, video tapes run
without anyone's privacy being invaded.           I find it incredible
under these circumstances that the effect of a carefully laid
"sting"     operation   to   catch    just     such   people     is    ruled
inadmissible.
        Lack of knowledge of the people involved, plus the
"sting" operator, in my opinion does not render the entire
video    tape   unreliable    to     reveal    the    contents    of    the
conversations.       See United States v. Knohl (2nd Cir. 1967) ,
379 F.2d 427, I would hold it was within the discretion of
the trial court to        find the video recordings here were
reliable and the tape should be               admitted   into evidence.
United States v. Avila (2nd. Cir. 1971), 443 F.2d 792; cert
denied 404 U.S. 944, 92 S.Ct. 295, 30 L.Ed.2d            258.

        While we have not previously, to my knowledge ever
expressly promulgated the requirements that must be met in
order to lay a proper foundation for the admission of video
recordings into evidence other than in State v.                   Warwick
(1972), 158 Mont. 531, 494 P.2d         627, I note in my research
that the general standards for the authentication are widely
accepted.     See 58 ALR2d 1032 and 29 AmJur2d, evidence, 5436,
such standards are set forth in various forms in other states
and in the Federal Courts including Warwick, supra.
         I think the proper test for such admission is set forth
in U.S.      v. Biggins (5th Cir. 1977), 551 F.2d 64, where the
Court held:
                 "The trial court properly admits a sound
                 recording into evidence only when the
                 party introducing it carries its burden
                 of going forth with the foundation
                 evidence demonstrating that the recording
                 as played as an accurate reproduction of
                 the relevant sounds previously audited by
                 the witness. As a general rule, at least
                 in the context of a criminal trial, this
                 requires the prosecution to go forward
                 with respect to the competency of the
                 operator, the fidelity of the recording
                 equipment, the     absence  of material
                 deletions, additions, or alterations in
                 relevant portions of the recording and
                 the   identification of    the   relevant
                 speakers."
         See also U.S.   v. McMillan   (8th Cir. 1974), 508 F.2d
101, cert. denied, 421 U.S.      916, 95 S.Ct.   1577, 43 L.Ed.2d
782 (1975); U.S.     v. McKeever (S.Dist. N.Y. 1958), 169 F.Supp
426.     Failure to allow the officers witn.essing the sale was
error.
       Viewing the entire operation presented by this case, I
find the evidence of guilt so overwhelming that not to allow
this evidence to go before a jury is tantamount to declaring
the issue of guilt to be irrelevant.       I would find that the
trial court abused its discretion in not allowing a jury to
view a video tape after limiting the tape to the offense
charged.




         I   join     the dissent
Harrison.