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Opinions of The and the Court of Appeals To be used in
conjunction with the CPS Criminal Procedure Textbook |
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CPS Commonwealth
Police Service, Inc. and the Law Office of Patrick Michael Rogers |
Commonwealth v. McDevitt,
Middlesex.
Present: Beck, Gelinas, & Kantrowitz, JJ.
Martin
F. Kane, II, for the defendant.
Jane L. Fitzpatrick, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
KANTROWITZ, J.
May the police validly engage in a
"well-being check" on a vehicle stopped in the breakdown lane of a
highway when there were previous tips that the same car was driving erratically
and the police had already commenced an investigatory search for the car? We
hold that when the well-being check arises out of objective circumstances, they
may.
Facts. Jeffrey Paul Morrill, a State trooper, found the defendant, James J.
McDevitt, at approximately
Following a jury trial, the defendant was found guilty of operating a motor
vehicle while under the influence of alcohol.[1] The defendant's motions
for a required finding of not guilty and a new trial were denied. He was
sentenced to two years in the house of correction with nine months to serve,
the balance suspended for two years.[2]
Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss,[3] claiming
that the Commonwealth was unable to establish either the basis of knowledge or
the reliability required of anonymous informants under the Aguilar-Spinelli
test. See Aguilar v.
At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, the arresting officer, Trooper
Morrill, testified as the sole witness for the Commonwealth. On the night of
Morrill waited for approximately ten minutes and, when the suspect car did not
pass, he reversed his direction, hoping to locate it. While traveling
westbound, he observed a car, fitting the description previously given, in the
breakdown lane of the eastbound side. Morrill once again reversed direction. In
accordance with standard safety policies, he activated his blue lights as he pulled
behind the stopped car, in which two men were seated. Morrill, flashlight in
hand, approached the driver's side where he encountered the defendant.[4]
Morrill further testified that he would have reversed direction to check on the
car, regardless whether it matched the reported description, because it was his
duty under State police and Massachusetts Turnpike Authority policies. His
one-page report, which did not mention a "well-being check," was
admitted in evidence at the defendant's request. The judge, finding Morrill's
testimony credible, denied the motion to dismiss, concluding that Morrill was
performing a caretaking function and not a motor vehicle stop.
On appeal the defendant argues that (1) the stop was investigatory in
nature, based upon unreliable information from unidentified sources; and
(2) the Commonwealth's claim that Morrill was engaged in a
"well-being check" was not grounded in the evidence presented, but
was rather an excuse to circumvent the heightened requirements of the Aguilar-Spinelli
test. We affirm.
Discussion. "'Not all personal intercourse between police [officers] and
citizens involves "seizures" of persons. Only when the officer, by
means of physical force or show of authority, has in some way restrained the
liberty of a citizen may we conclude that a "seizure" has occurred.'
Commonwealth v. Leonard, 422
The decision to make a well-being check must be reasonable in light of an
objective basis for believing that the defendant's safety and well-being may be
in jeopardy.
Morrill's approach to the defendant's car in the breakdown lane falls within
this community caretaking function. It was after
That Morrill might have harbored a subjective belief, even a compelling one,
that the operator was engaged in illegal behavior does not affect our decision.
"[A]n officer's motive [does not] invalidate[] objectively justifiable
behavior." Commonwealth v. Murdough, 428
An officer may check on a stopped motor vehicle in the breakdown lane of a
highway.
The defendant rightly asserts that when the police rely on anonymous
information to conduct an investigatory stop, the burden is on the Commonwealth
to establish the basis of knowledge and reliability of the informant.
Commonwealth v.
Here, two drivers of two cars approached Morrill, while he was anticipating the
approach of the defendant's car, and placed their anonymity at risk by stopping
at the officer's marked police vehicle and talking to the trooper face-to-face.
Both individuals were potentially traceable via their license plates, even
though they were not actually traced. Morrill, the record indicates, did not
obtain identifying information because of concerns for their safety, being
stopped by the side of the highway, not because of a request by the individuals
to remain anonymous. "[T]he nature of the situation, together with the
reliability of the citizen witness[es], gave the State police a reasonable
basis for stopping the defendant's vehicle." Commonwealth v. Love,
Judgment affirmed.
Order of the single justice
affirmed.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] This was the only charge presented to the jury.
The defendant also originally was charged with operating a motor vehicle with a
suspended license, to which the defendant pleaded guilty and was given an
agreed-upon sentence of ten days, suspended, in the house of correction;
operating an uninsured motor vehicle with a suspended registration, which was
dismissed; and speeding and marked lanes violations, for which the defendant
was found not responsible. After the verdict, the defendant was found guilty,
in a jury waived trial, of operating a motor vehicle under the influence of
alcohol (third offense).
[2] The defendant's motion for stay of execution of
sentence pending appeal was denied. The defendant appealed that decision to a
single justice of our court, where it was once again denied. The defendant
appealed that decision. At oral argument, the defendant waived the issue.
[3] The proper motion should have been one to
suppress.
[4] At trial, Morrill testified that, when he
approached the car on the driver's side, he smelled alcohol through the
driver's open window. Morrill asked the defendant for his license and
registration two times, requests to which the defendant did not respond. He
then asked the defendant where he was coming from. The defendant answered
[5] While the majority of the case law has thus far
grounded the community caretaking function on concern for the safety of the
vehicle's occupants, concern for the safety of the public using the roadway is
equally compelling. "If the community caretaking
function . . . means anything, surely it allows a police officer
to determine whether a driver is in such a condition that if he resumes
operation of the vehicle, in which he is seated at a highway rest stop, he will
pose such an extreme danger to himself and others." Commonwealth v.
Murdough, 428
[6] We disagree with the defendant's characterization
of the witnesses as anonymous. "
[7] As in Love, the basis of knowledge test was
readily met. "In this case, there is no issue as to the 'basis of knowledge'
prong, as the source of the tip was a citizen witness who obtained his
information through personal observation."