MEMORANDUM DECISION FILED
Nov 14 2017, 9:08 am
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
regarded as precedent or cited before any Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
court except for the purpose of establishing
the defense of res judicata, collateral
estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Elizabeth A. Bellin Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Elkhart, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
George P. Sherman
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Melvin Levy, November 14, 2017
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No.
20A04-1705-CR-1206
v. Appeal from the Elkhart Superior
Court
State of Indiana, The Honorable Stephen R.
Appellee-Plaintiff. Bowers, Judge
Trial Court Cause No.
20D02-1508-F4-46
Vaidik, Chief Judge.
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Case Summary
[1] Melvin Levy appeals his convictions for unlawful possession of a firearm by a
serious violent felon and possession of marijuana. He argues that the search
that led to the discovery of the gun and the marijuana violated the Fourth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. We agree and reverse Levy’s
convictions.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] On the afternoon of August 21, 2015, Corporal Brandon Roundtree and
Corporal Jason Gruber of the Elkhart Police Department were together in a
squad car in Elkhart, “watching cars” at an intersection. Tr. p. 11. They saw
an SUV with darkly tinted windows and, “being proactive,” decided to follow
it. Id. at 12. The driver of the SUV, later identified as Levy, pulled up to a stop
sign, activated his right-turn signal, and turned right. Corporal Roundtree
immediately initiated a traffic stop because Levy did not signal for at least 200
feet before the turn (as required by Indiana Code section 9-21-8-25). A video of
the stop shows that Levy parked the SUV in front of some buildings on Indiana
Avenue, in a parking lane separated from the driving lane by a solid white line.
[3] When the officers approached Levy, he informed them that he did not have
insurance. The officers decided to have the SUV impounded. While waiting
for a tow truck, Corporal Roundtree searched the SUV, and he found a revolver
under the driver’s seat. Because Levy did not have a license to carry a
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handgun, and none of the exceptions to the license requirement applied, see Ind.
Code § 35-47-2-1, the officers placed him under arrest. Corporal Gruber then
searched Levy and found two bags of marijuana.
[4] After the arrest, the State determined that Levy had been convicted of dealing
in cocaine in 2008 and charged him with unlawful possession of a firearm by a
serious violent felon (dealing in cocaine being a “serious violent felony” under
the controlling statute, see Ind. Code § 35-47-4-5), as well as possession of
marijuana (elevated from a Class B misdemeanor to a Class A misdemeanor
based on the same cocaine-dealing conviction). Levy filed a motion to suppress
the gun and the marijuana, claiming that the searches of him and his SUV were
done “without a warrant, consent by the Defendant or probable cause that a
crime had been committed that would have justified a warrantless search of the
person and property of the Defendant” and that the searches therefore violated
the Fourth Amendment and Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution.
Appellant’s App. Vol. II pp. 66-67.
[5] In its written response to Levy’s motion, the State asserted that no warrant was
required for the search of the SUV because it was merely an “inventory
search”—a term used to describe the process of documenting the contents of an
automobile that has been or is going to be impounded. The State cited Wilford
v. State, in which our Supreme Court explained that such warrantless searches
are permissible as long as both the impoundment and the inventory are
reasonable. 50 N.E.3d 371 (Ind. 2016). The State argued that the decision to
impound Levy’s SUV was “lawful” because he did not have insurance and that
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the subsequent search was proper because “the Elkhart Police Department has a
valid inventory policy, and the Officers followed their Department’s inventory
polic[y][.]” Appellant’s App. Vol. II p. 54. The State also argued that Levy
was lawfully arrested for carrying the gun without a license and that the
marijuana was discovered as the result of a proper search incident to that arrest.
[6] A bench trial and a hearing on Levy’s motion were scheduled to be held on the
same morning, with the motion “to be heard prior to the Bench Trial.” Id. at
63. By the scheduled day, however, the parties had agreed that the trial
evidence would largely duplicate the evidence relevant to Levy’s motion and
that therefore all the evidence should be heard at one time. They also agreed
that the outcome of the trial would turn on the court’s ruling on the motion to
suppress—if denied, Levy would be found guilty; if granted, Levy would be
found not guilty.
[7] The State’s first witness was Corporal Roundtree. When asked about the
decision to impound the SUV, he initially testified, consistently with the State’s
written response to Levy’s motion, that it was based on the fact that Levy “did
not have insurance.” Tr. p. 24. In a subsequent exchange with the prosecutor,
however, Corporal Roundtree addressed the location and manner in which the
SUV was parked:
Q: So just to be clear uhm, a vehicle that does not have
insurance, can that be driven on an Indiana roadway?
A: No.
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Q: So in this case why did you decide to impound the vehicle?
Q: The vehicle was on – the vehicle was parked on a public
roadway. Even though it was in front of the One Stop
Shop uhm, you have to have permission from the owners
to keep that vehicle parked. Given the fact that it was on
roadway [sic] and the parking spot was short, we had no
other choice but to tow the vehicle.
Id. at 35. Corporal Roundtree also testified that he is “trained on the EPD’s
policies and procedures for impounded a vehicle [sic]” and that when he
impounds a vehicle he does so “pursuant to an EPD policy[.]” Id. at 24.
Neither Corporal Roundtree nor Corporal Gruber provided any additional
testimony about an Elkhart Police Department policy on the impoundment of
vehicles.
[8] A month later, the trial court issued an order agreeing with the State that the
warrantless search of Levy’s SUV was a valid inventory search. The court
concluded that the decision to impound was proper, though not on the grounds
stated by Corporal Roundtree (lack of insurance and inconvenience to nearby
businesses). Instead, the court found that Levy parked his SUV “at a distance
from the curb that created a potential hazard.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II p. 47.
The court also concluded that the subsequent search of the SUV was
reasonable. Accordingly, the court denied Levy’s motion to suppress and found
him guilty as charged.
[9] Levy now appeals.
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Discussion and Decision
[10] Levy contends that the search of his SUV was not a valid inventory search
under the Fourth Amendment and that the trial court therefore erred by
admitting the gun and the marijuana into evidence.1 Because the facts relevant
to this issue are undisputed, we review the matter de novo. Kelly v. State, 997
N.E.2d 1045, 1050 (Ind. 2013) (“The constitutionality of a search or seizure is a
question of law, and we review it de novo.”).
[11] Before considering Levy’s argument, we need to address the State’s claim that
he waived the argument by failing to object when the State moved to introduce
the gun and the marijuana into evidence. In making this claim, the State
actually relies in part on Levy’s appellate attorney, who noted in her brief that
“counsel for the Defendant did not object to any of the evidence submitted by
the State, as required to do in order to properly preserve a suppression issue for
appeal.” Appellant’s Br. p. 7 n.1. In fact, Levy’s appellate attorney goes so far
as to suggest that Levy may have an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim
against his trial attorney. See id. at 10 n.2.
[12] We are troubled by this mutual mischaracterization of the record. In the trial
court, it was abundantly clear to all involved—judge, prosecutor, defense
1
Levy also argues that using his 2008 cocaine-dealing conviction as the basis for the unlawful possession of a
firearm by a serious violent felon conviction and as the basis for elevating the marijuana charge from a Class
B misdemeanor to a Class A misdemeanor constitutes an impermissible “double enhancement.” Because we
reverse his convictions on Fourth Amendment grounds, we need not reach that issue.
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counsel—that Levy objected to the admission of the gun and the marijuana. In
fact, Levy’s challenge to the impoundment and subsequent search was his only
defense. This is why the parties agreed to a bench trial and then agreed that the
trial should be held in conjunction with the suppression hearing. See Tr. p. 4
(judge noting parties’ agreement that he “would hear all the evidence at one
time and make a decision with respect to the Motion to Suppress Evidence”).
Levy’s attorney confirmed the reason for the combined trial/hearing in the first
line of his opening statement, when he said, “[W]hy we are here contesting this
case – is not so much contesting elements of the underlying crime, but the
actual stop and the search of the vehicle.” Id. at 6. In this sense, the entire
proceeding served as one long objection by Levy. Because that was the shared
understanding of the participants, there was no need for Levy to voice
additional objections when the gun and the marijuana were introduced. We
therefore turn to the merits of Levy’s argument.
[13] The outcome of this appeal is controlled by our Supreme Court’s decision in
Wilford, the impoundment case the State mentioned in its response to Levy’s
motion to suppress. The Wilford Court began its analysis by alluding to three
basic principles: (1) the Fourth Amendment prohibits “unreasonable” searches
of private property, (2) a search, to be considered reasonable, generally must be
authorized by a valid warrant, and (3) a warrantless search is reasonable only if
it falls within a recognized exception to the warrant requirement. 50 N.E.3d at
374. When the State seeks to rely on evidence obtained during a warrantless
search, and the defendant objects, the State bears the burden of proving the
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applicability of an exception. Id. One such exception, the Court explained, is
the inventory search, “since it serves an administrative, not investigatory,
purpose—because when police lawfully impound a vehicle, they must also
perform an administrative inventory search to document the vehicle’s contents
to preserve them for the owner and protect themselves against claims of lost or
stolen property.” Id. As we noted earlier, for this exception to apply, the State
must show that both the decision to impound and the search itself were
reasonable. Id.
[14] Here, Levy does not dispute the reasonableness of the search itself; he
challenges only the initial decision to impound his SUV.2 In Wilford, the Court
explained that law enforcement officers enjoy some measure of discretion in
deciding whether to have a vehicle impounded “in order to protect the car and
community from hazards” (as part of the so-called “community-caretaking
function”) but that such decisions “are vulnerable to constitutional
reasonableness challenges because of their potential for misuse as pretext for
warrantless investigative searches under the guise of inventory.” Id. at 375.
Given the potential for pretext, the State must satisfy the “strict two-prong
standard” set forth in Fair v. State, 627 N.E.2d 427 (Ind. 1993), specifically, that
(1) the impounding officer believed, consistent with objective standards of
sound policing, that the vehicle posed a threat of harm to the community or
2
For this reason, the State’s reliance on Weathers v. State, 61 N.E.3d 279 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016), is misplaced.
In that case, the defendant challenged the search but not the decision to impound. See id. at 285 (“Weathers
does not . . . contest Deputy Andre’s decision to impound the vehicle.”).
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was itself imperiled and (2) the officer’s decision to impound “adhered to
established departmental routine or regulation.” Wilford, 50 N.E.3d at 375-76.
If the State fails to satisfy either element, the impoundment and inventory
search will be declared unreasonable, and any contraband found during the
search is inadmissible “poisoned fruit.” Id. at 375.
[15] Applying this standard to the facts before it, the Wilford Court skipped over the
threat-of-harm prong of Fair and went straight to the impoundment-policy
prong. When the officer in Wilford was asked why he decided to have a car
impounded, he testified that it was damaged, that the driver was being arrested
for driving with a suspended license, and that the driver was not the owner of
the car. He then added, “[W]ith our procedures in that situation, we towed the
vehicle.” Id. at 377. The State did not present any further evidence of the
police department’s alleged impoundment policy. The Court held that while
officer testimony regarding an impoundment policy can suffice when there is no
evidence of a written policy, such testimony is adequate only if it “outlines the
department’s standard impound procedure and specifically describes how the
decision to impound adhered to departmental policy or procedure[.]” Id. at
376-77. The Court concluded that an officer’s passing reference to “our
procedures in that situation” does not satisfy that standard. The Court
explained:
On this record, we know literally nothing about the substance of
the “procedures” the officer referenced, let alone how his actions
adhered to those procedures. Without these “particulars,” then,
we cannot evaluate whether this impoundment was a reasonable
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exercise of the community-caretaking function and not merely
pretext for an inventory search. In sum, absent more detail, [the
officer’s] testimony provided inadequate evidence of established
departmental routine or regulation, making impoundment
unreasonable under Fair’s second prong and rendering the
handgun found during the subsequent inventory search
inadmissible “poisoned fruit.”
Id. at 377-78.
[16] Here, the trial court found that Levy’s SUV was parked “at a distance from the
curb that created a potential hazard” and that impoundment was therefore
proper. Notably, however, neither officer testified that the SUV was parked too
far from the curb, and the video of the stop casts significant doubt on the trial
court’s conclusion. In any event, even if we were to hold that the trial court got
it right on Fair’s threat-of-harm prong, the court made no mention of the
impoundment-policy prong, and the State’s evidence on that issue is woefully
inadequate. The State did not present any evidence of a written policy.3
Moreover, Corporal Roundtree testified only that he is “trained on the EPD’s
policies and procedures for impounded a vehicle [sic]” and that he impounds
vehicles “pursuant to an EPD policy[.]” Tr. p. 24. We see little difference
between this testimony and the testimony found insufficient in Wilford.
3
The State introduced a copy of the Elkhart Police Department’s policy on the “Inventory of Impounded
Vehicles,” see Ex. 4 p. 10, but that policy simply says that “lawfully impounded” vehicles must be inventoried
and describes how inventories are to be conducted. The policy does not provide any guidance as to when
impoundment is “lawful,” and the State makes no argument that it constitutes an “impoundment policy” for
purposes of Fair and Wilford.
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Corporal Roundtree neither outlined a standard impound procedure for his
department nor specifically described how his decision to impound Levy’s SUV
adhered to any such procedure.
[17] In an attempt to explain the lack of evidence of an impoundment policy, the
State notes that Levy did not specifically “raise an objection to the officer[s’]
decision to impound the vehicle before or during the officer[s’] testimony.”
Appellee’s Br. p. 9. The State asserts, “If Levy had raised an objection to the
officer’s decision to impound, while the officer was testifying, it is possible that
additional evidence could have been offered concerning the Elkhart Police
Department policy the officer referred to regarding the decision to impound a
vehicle[.]” Id. at n.1. We see two problems with the State’s position.
[18] First, as with any exception to the warrant requirement, the burden was on the
State to prove the applicability of the inventory-search exception. See Wilford,
50 N.E.3d at 374. That includes the burden of showing that the decision to
impound was reasonable. Id. The State took on this burden the moment it
decided to rely on the inventory-search exception; no objection by Levy,
beyond his motion to suppress, was necessary.
[19] Second, the suggestion that the State did not think the reasonableness of the
impoundment was at issue is belied by the record. The prosecutor spent the
bulk of his closing argument trying to convince the judge that the decision to
impound Levy’s SUV was reasonable. He spoke at length about Wilford, which
deals solely with the reasonableness of impoundments. When the judge pressed
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the prosecutor about the decision to impound the SUV—“Is there any evidence
that this was anything other than a public street where anyone could park for
whatever length of time they wanted?” Tr. p. 82—the prosecutor did not argue
that Levy had waived any objection to the reasonableness of the impoundment,
nor did the prosecutor ask the court for an opportunity to present additional
evidence about an impoundment policy. Likewise, the prosecutor did not
object when Levy’s attorney attacked the reasonableness of the impoundment
during his closing argument. The prosecutor clearly believed that Levy was
challenging the decision to impound, and he therefore had every incentive to
present evidence about the purported impoundment policy.4
[20] Levy’s failure to specifically object to the reasonableness of the impoundment
did not relieve the State of its burden on that issue. And given the lack of
evidence that the decision to impound adhered to established department
routine or regulation, the subsequent inventory search was necessarily
unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment.5 Therefore, the gun and the
4
The State also notes the following passage from the opening statement of Levy’s attorney: “What happens
after the stop? Mr. Levy is very honest, he says, look I don’t have any insurance on this vehicle. We
understand at that point the car uh, the car could have been impounded.” Tr. p. 7. While the State would
have been justified in treating this language as a concession that the impoundment was reasonable, there is
no indication that it actually did so. If the State truly believed that Levy had conceded the issue, surely it
would have begun its closing argument by saying so. Instead, as just described, the State (and the judge)
proceeded as if the reasonableness of the impoundment was still very much in dispute.
5
Levy argues that the search was also unreasonable under Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution.
We agree. See Wilford, 50 N.E.3d at 378 (“Our conclusion that this impoundment was unreasonable applies
under the Indiana Constitution as well.”).
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marijuana are inadmissible, and we must reverse Levy’s convictions.6 We
remand this matter to the trial court, where, presumably, the State will dismiss
the charges against Levy. See Tr. p. 97 (trial court explaining that “I think we’re
all in agreement that if the Court grants the Motion to Suppress evidence the
case is over.”).
[21] Reversed and remanded.
Mathias, J., and Crone, J., concur.
6
While the marijuana was not found during the search of the SUV, but rather during a search incident to
arrest, that arrest was the direct result of the search of the SUV. As such, the marijuana is no more
admissible than the gun. The State does not argue otherwise.
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