Court Opinion

ID: 6327539
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-03-28 23:01:24.444357+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:26.452251
License: Public Domain

Filed 3/28/22
                      CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

       IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                        FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                DIVISION TWO

 THE PEOPLE,
         Plaintiff and Respondent,
                                             A160142
 v.
 ANDREW HOLIMAN,                             (Solano County
                                             Super. Ct. No. FCR331055)
         Defendant and Appellant.

       Defendant Andrew Holiman was found in possession of illegal drugs
and a handgun during a traffic stop initiated based on his failure properly to
signal a right-hand turn he made after stopping at a stop sign, while the
arresting officer’s patrol car was stopped directly behind him. Holiman did
signal the turn, but the basis for the traffic stop was that he did not turn on
his signal blinker early enough: for the 100 feet he drove before coming to a
stop. The arresting officer cited him for violation of Vehicle Code
section 22108.
       The trial court denied his motion to suppress the seized evidence,
following which he pled guilty to two felony drug charges and was sentenced
to a prison term. He now appeals, arguing (1) the warrantless seizure of the
evidence violated the Fourth Amendment because the police lacked an
objectively reasonable suspicion that the manner in which he signaled his
right-hand turn violated Vehicle Code section 22108; and (2) even if he did
violate the Vehicle Code, the police violated his rights to equal protection

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under the federal and state constitutions because the traffic stop was the
result of racial profiling.
      We do not reach the equal protection issue because we agree the traffic
stop was not supported by reasonable suspicion. Holiman’s turn did not
violate the Vehicle Code, and no reasonable police officer could think that it
did. Therefore, we will reverse the judgment.
                                 BACKGROUND
      On the afternoon of June 19, 2017, rookie police officer Laura Bellamy
was driving in her patrol car in downtown Vallejo, California. She had been
a member of the police force for only one month and was on patrol
accompanied by a field training officer for mandatory on-the-job training. It
would be another three months before she would complete her training and
be ready to go on patrol unaccompanied. She had not yet completed the
traffic phase of her training.
      Officer Bellamy first saw Holiman’s car when her patrol car came to a
stop at another intersection, not at issue here. At that first intersection, she
saw Holiman’s car come to a stop at a stop sign on the cross-street to her
right, and then make a left-hand turn in front of her patrol car and onto the
street she was stopped on, in the opposite direction her patrol car was facing.
Two years later at the suppression hearing, she testified that as Holiman
made the left turn, she saw him “look[] at me and then quickly look[] away as
if to want to hide his face” which she “found . . . curious,” and “so I turned
around and followed him,” details not noted in her contemporaneous police
report because she believed they had no “evidentiary value.” After the
“furtive glance,” she did a U-turn and began following the car to “assess his
driving behavior.” She followed him for about two short city blocks until the
two cars reached another intersection with a three-way stop sign. Holiman

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came to a full stop, and then he proceeded ahead and made the right turn.
There, she testified, he turned on his turn blinker “[j]ust prior” to making the
right-hand turn.
      Officer Bellamy did not immediately initiate a traffic stop. Rather, she
continued following Holiman’s car for about four more minutes, at a distance
of nearly a mile, before activating her emergency lights and pulling the car
over at a gas station. After stepping out of her patrol car, she approached the
driver’s side of his car with her hand on her gun, which was something she
often did but did not always do during traffic stops. Her field training officer
also got out of the patrol car, walked around to the other side of the car and
leaned over, peering inside the front passenger side window.
      Holiman disclosed he was on parole (for armed robbery) and, after
Officer Bellamy confirmed he was subject to search terms, she searched his
person and found a pill bottle and some cash, and then placed him in
handcuffs in the backseat of her patrol car. In the ensuing search of his car
she found a loaded semiautomatic handgun, a baggie containing
methamphetamine and a jar containing marijuana. On his phone were texts
indicating his involvement with possible drug sales. He was then arrested.
      From the time Officer Bellamy began following Holiman until she
stopped him, many other motorists in plain view committed traffic
infractions, both before and after she observed Holiman make the right turn
at issue here, and Bellamy did not stop any of them.
      The People charged Holiman with five felony counts (four weapons
offenses and one drug possession offense), together with allegations of a prior
strike conviction. He moved to suppress the evidence seized from the car,
arguing that the stop and search violated the Fourth Amendment of the
United States Constitution. He also moved to dismiss the charges against

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him, on the ground that the traffic stop violated the equal protection clause of
the United States Constitution because Officer Bellamy had singled him out
from dozens of other motorists she also saw violate the traffic laws that day,
because he is Black. After a hearing at which Officer Bellamy testified and
video footage from the dashboard camera of her patrol car was admitted into
evidence, the trial court received supplemental briefing and then denied both
motions at a subsequent hearing.
      The trial court ruled Officer Bellamy had a reasonable suspicion that
Holiman had violated the Vehicle Code and thus the stop was lawful. It
explained the basis for its ruling as follows:
      “I find, while whether or not there was a Vehicle Code violation,
because the way the road bends, the short time span for this action, there
could be an argument as to whether or not there was, in fact, a Vehicle Code
violation under the reasonable doubt standard.[1] There’s little argument
that there wasn’t reasonable suspicion to believe that a Vehicle Code
violation had occurred. [¶] All of the incidences in terms of the way the road
bends or the entire block was at a certain speed, those go to whether the law
was violated, not whether or not an officer had reasonable suspicion of there
being a violation which was enough to begin the stop.
      “Then the officer saw what, in my notes I indicated was a furtive glance
or perhaps a suspicious look.· If the standard is objective, but we don’t look
beyond the objective standard, the fact that the officer saw the Vehicle Code
violation, the officer can then use that Vehicle Code violation to follow the

      1 The court’s comments concerning a bend in the road appear to be a
reference to an alternative argument pressed by the defense below, not
reprised on appeal, that there was no Vehicle Code violation because, given
the shape of the road, no actual turn was made but, rather, defendant had
simply yielded.

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vehicle to see if his subjective hunch turns out. [¶] It’s also possible that a
defendant on parole, with what turns out to be guns and drugs within his car
when he made the stop—he made the furtive glance, under the current
standard of looking at this objectively, the Court denies the motion, as the
officer had reasonable suspicion to believe that a Vehicle Code violation had
occurred, and when the officer pulls the defendant over, it turns out he’s
on . . . [¶] [p]arole. . . . and the officer could conduct the search.”
      The trial court also implicitly denied Holiman’s nonstatutory motion to
dismiss. 2
      Holiman then pleaded no contest to two drug-related charges and
admitted the prior strike allegation, and the remaining charges were
dismissed. The trial court subsequently imposed sentence (a prison term of
seven years and four months). Holiman timely appealed, and the trial court
granted his request for a certificate of probable cause to challenge the denial
of his non-statutory motion to dismiss.
                                   DISCUSSION
      The parties agree that if the traffic stop was invalid, the contraband
found in Holiman’s possession should have been suppressed. Holiman
asserts two reasons the stop was unlawful but we reach only one, namely the
Fourth Amendment violation.
      As summarized by our Supreme Court: “ ‘A defendant may move to
suppress evidence on the ground that “[t]he search or seizure without a

      2 Although the court did not make any express findings or rulings
about the motion, it said it had considered the parties’ arguments and then
made oral comments from the bench rejecting some of the legal authorities
Holiman had relied upon in support of his claim of selective enforcement, and
the People do not make any claim that the trial court failed to rule on this
issue.

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warrant was unreasonable.” ([Veh. Code,] § 1538.5, subd. (a)(1)(A).[3]) A
warrantless search is presumed to be unreasonable, and the prosecution
bears the burden of demonstrating a legal justification for the search.
[Citation.] “The standard of appellate review of a trial court’s ruling on a
motion to suppress is well established. We defer to the trial court’s factual
findings, express or implied, where supported by substantial evidence. In
determining whether, on the facts so found, the search or seizure was
reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, we exercise our independent
judgment.” ’ ” (People v. Suff (2014) 58 Cal.4th 1013, 1053 (Suff).) “In cases
where the facts are essentially undisputed, we independently determine the
constitutionality of the challenged search or seizure.” (People v.
Durant (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 57, 62 (Durant).) No party argues the
relevant facts here were in conflict, and thus we deem the traffic stop’s
reasonableness to be essentially a question of law.
      To satisfy the Fourth Amendment, “a detention must be supported by
reasonable suspicion the person is involved in criminal activity.” (People v.
Zaragoza (2016) 1 Cal.5th 21, 56.) Reasonable suspicion means “ ‘ “the
detaining officer can point to specific articulable facts that, considered in
light of the totality of the circumstances, provide some objective
manifestation that the person detained may be involved in criminal
activity.” ’ ” (Suff, supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 1053; accord, Heien v. North
Carolina (2014) 574 U.S. 54, 60 (Heien) [officer conducting traffic stop must
have “ ‘a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the particular
person stopped’ of breaking the law”].) “ ‘Ordinary traffic stops are treated as
investigatory detentions for which the officer must be able to articulate

      3All further statutory references are to the Vehicle Code unless
otherwise indicated.

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specific facts justifying the suspicion that a crime is being committed.’
[Citation.] The motivations of the officer are irrelevant to the reasonableness
of a traffic stop under the Fourth Amendment. [Citation.] ‘All that is
required is that, on an objective basis, the stop “not be unreasonable under
the circumstances.” ’ ” (Suff, at p. 1054.) If the detaining officer’s
justification for a traffic stop is based on a mistake—either factual or legal—
then the resulting search or seizure is lawful under the Fourth Amendment
as long as the officer’s mistake is objectively reasonable. (Heien, at pp. 57, 60-
61, 67.) “To be reasonable is not to be perfect, and so the Fourth Amendment
allows for some mistakes on the part of government officials, giving them ‘fair
leeway for enforcing the law in the community’s protection.’ ” (Id. at pp. 60-
61.) At the same time, “an officer can gain no Fourth Amendment advantage
through a sloppy study of the laws he is duty-bound to enforce.” (Id. at p. 67.)
      Holiman argues the traffic stop violated his Fourth Amendment rights
because he did not violate the Vehicle Code, and thus Officer Bellamy lacked
a reasonable suspicion to believe that he did and, thus, to stop him. He
argues, citing People v. Carmona (2011) 195 Cal.App.4th 1385, 1391
(Carmona), which on this point has been implicitly abrogated by the United
States Supreme Court (see Heien, supra, 574 U.S. at p. 60 [holding
reasonable suspicion can be based on reasonable mistake of law]), that a
police officer’s mistaken belief that the law has been violated is irrelevant.
The People respond there was no Fourth Amendment violation because
Holiman did violate the law, and that even if he did not, Officer Bellamy had
an objectively reasonable basis to think the law required Holiman to signal
his right-hand turn sooner than he did and thus at worst made a reasonable
mistake of law in interpreting the relevant statutes. In reply, Holiman
concedes that a reasonable mistake of law can justify a warrantless search

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but contends it was not objectively reasonable for Officer Bellamy to think his
right-hand turn violated the law. We agree with Holiman.
      Here, two sections of the Vehicle Code are relevant. Section 22107
provides: “No person shall turn a vehicle from a direct course or move right
or left upon a roadway until such movement can be made with reasonable
safety and then only after the giving of an appropriate signal in the manner
provided in this chapter in the event any other vehicle may be affected by the
movement.” (Italics added.) Section 22108 provides: “Any signal of intention
to turn right or left shall be given continuously during the last 100 feet
traveled by the vehicle before turning.” (Italics added.)
      These two statutes do not impose separate and independent
obligations. It has been the law for more than a decade, since People v.
Carmona, supra, 195 Cal.App.4th 1385, that the requirement of signaling
continuously for 100 feet before a turn (§ 22108) is not a distinct traffic
offense; that section applies only if another driver would be affected by the
vehicle’s movement within the meaning of section 22107. (Carmona, at
p. 1394.) The People acknowledge this on appeal. Section 22108 “does not
specifically command a person to do or refrain from doing anything. Rather
it describes the required duration of a turn signal . . . .” (Carmona, at
p. 1393.) “[S]ections 22107 and 22108 must be read together so that when a
motorist is required by section 22107 to give a turn signal, that signal must
be given continuously during the last 100 feet traveled by the vehicle before
turning.” (Id. at p. 1392.) That said, there is a legal question of first
impression (which the parties have briefed on appeal) as to whether, when a
signal is required by section 22107 for a turn executed from a full stop at a
stop sign, the 100-foot signaling requirement under section 22108 applies; or
whether it is sufficient, instead, to signal such a turn in the manner Holiman

                                        8
did here (i.e., after stopping). But we need not decide that issue. Regardless
of whether the 100-foot signaling requirement under section 22108 applies to
such a turn, Holiman concedes that a reasonable officer could have thought
that it does. Thus, the narrow question before us is whether Officer Bellamy
had an objectively reasonable basis to believe a turn signal was required at
all under section 22107—or, in other words, to believe another vehicle could
be “affected by” the right-hand turn that Holiman made. (See Durant, supra,
205 Cal.App.4th at p. 63 [“When assessing the reasonableness of a traffic
stop, the question is not whether appellant actually violated the Vehicle
Code, but whether there was some ‘ “objective manifestation” that [he] may
have’ violated the Vehicle Code”].)
      Holiman argues there is not. The People argue that Officer Bellamy
reasonably could have believed that her own patrol car, which was stopped
behind Holiman’s car, could have been affected by the right-hand turn, thus
supplying a reasonable suspicion to stop him when he failed to signal the
turn in a manner she reasonably thought the law required (i.e., for the last
100 feet), even if ultimately she was mistaken about the law.
      The first difficulty we have with the parties’ arguments is that the
People ask us to uphold the traffic stop based solely on theories they never
asserted below. In the trial court, the People never sought to justify the
traffic stop on the grounds that Officer Bellamy made a mistake of law or
that Holiman’s turn required a proper turn signal because it potentially
affected Officer Bellamy’s car. They argued only that Holiman actually
violated the Vehicle Code because he insufficiently signaled a turn when
there were other vehicles at the intersection, and presented no evidence that

                                       9
the turn could affect any vehicle, including Officer Bellamy’s. 4 Nor did the
trial court address any of those questions. The People have changed their
theory on appeal (and have abandoned any theory that Holiman’s turn could
have affected a car other than Officer Bellamy’s), and in this situation we are
hesitant to consider the issues they ask us to address because we cannot be
certain the record is fully or adequately developed. (See Robey v. Superior
Court (2013) 56 Cal.4th 1218, 1242-1243 [cautioning against considering new
Fourth Amendment theories for first time on appeal when new theory is not
supported by the record or when defendant had no notice nor opportunity to
present evidence in opposition].) But Holiman does not ask us to deem the
People’s arguments forfeited. And so we will not.
      Assuming the People’s sole justification for the search is properly
considered for the first time on appeal, we nevertheless reject it. No
published authority cited by the parties addresses whether section 22107
applies in the circumstances here: namely, a turn made after coming to a

      4  Specifically, when Holiman moved to suppress the seized contraband,
he argued it was the People’s burden to justify the stop. In response, the
People’s only argument was that Holiman had actually violated the law
because he “failed to activate his right turn signal” as he approached the
intersection, “there were several other vehicles at the intersection,” and
Holiman then “proceeded to make a right turn without activating his signal.”
“Therefore,” the People argued, “Officer Bellamy possessed specific
articulable facts to stop defendant’s vehicle.” No specific citation to the
Vehicle Code was given, and no argument was made that the turn potentially
affected any car, much less Officer Bellamy’s patrol car. The People
reiterated the same legal theory again in supplemental briefing, even after
Officer Bellamy testified at the suppression hearing and after Holiman
specifically argued that the police report had alleged he violated Vehicle Code
section 22108. And, at oral argument below, the People submitted on their
briefing.

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complete stop at a stop sign with another car behind. 5 Nevertheless, the
answer is not difficult. The People have proffered neither evidence nor
explanation of how Officer Bellamy’s patrol car, which presumably also would
be stopping at the stop sign, could have been affected by Holiman’s turn and
thus have shown no violation of the Vehicle Code. More importantly, they
have presented no objectively reasonable basis for an officer in Bellamy’s
position to think her car could have been affected, and thus have failed to
show an objectively reasonable mistake, whether one of fact or of law. As
Holiman argues, the undisputed dash cam video footage shows that Officer
Bellamy’s patrol car came to a full stop behind Holiman’s car and that, given
the width of the road, there was no physical way for the patrol car to have
proceeded around Holiman on the right to attempt to make a right-hand turn
and potentially collide with Holiman’s car while he was making the turn.
      We acknowledge the absence of published authority addressing this
specific factual scenario, that other cases have concluded that motorists to a
driver’s rear could, in circumstances not present here, potentially be affected

      5  Compare Carmona, supra, 195 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1390-1391, 1394
(no signal required for right-hand turn, because only motorist nearby was
patrol car approaching from opposite direction) with Suff, supra, 58 Cal.4th
at pp. 1051, 1055-1056 (signal required for right-hand turn made suddenly by
van after stopping at red light and without moving over toward the curb,
because motorcycle stopped behind the van “was clearly in a position to be
affected by defendant’s turn; had [motorcyclist] decided to proceed to the
right of defendant’s van to make a right turn, he would have done so without
knowing that defendant was planning to turn right into the same path”);
People v. Logsdon (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 741, 743-746 (Logsdon) (signal
required for lane change made while traveling in front of another car in same
lane, because other car could not know if lane change was unintentional and
thus could not predict if driver would make a “very sudden over-correction”);
see also Durant, supra, 205 Cal.App.5th at pp. 61, 63, 64 (declining to decide
whether turn signal was required for left turn made on green arrow light
from dedicated left turn lane, with oncoming motorists stopped at red light).

                                      11
by the driver’s unsignaled turn or lane change (see Suff, supra, 58 Cal.4th at
pp. 1051, 1055-1056; Logsdon, supra, 164 Cal.App.4th at pp. 743-746), and
indeed that “the primary benefit of the signal requirement is for the vehicles
to the rear of the signalling vehicle.” (People v. Miranda (1993)
17 Cal.App.4th 917, 930.) But “the actual language in Vehicle Code section
22107 is clear and unambiguous.” (Logsdon, at p. 746.) It is unclear to us
how any reasonable person reading its plain text could think there was even
a potential hazard to a car in Officer Bellamy’s position. That is, that there
could be a potential hazard posed to a full-size car approaching a stop sign on
a narrow one-lane street behind another full-size car, where it is physically
impossible to pass to the right of the car ahead of it, if the car ahead, after
stopping, were to make a right-hand turn rather than proceed in another
direction. (Compare People v. Gerberding (2020) 50 Cal.App.5th Supp. 1, 10
[officer’s mistaken interpretation of municipal code held unreasonable despite
the absence of any prior published authority because “its language is
straightforward”; “ ‘ “Heien does not support the proposition that a police
officer acts in an objectively reasonable manner by misinterpreting an
unambiguous statute” ’ ”]; with Heien, supra, 574 U.S. at pp. 67-68 [traffic
stop based on mistake of law held valid, because statute had never previously
been construed by state appellate court, and officer’s construction of it was
consistent with how “everyday reader of English” would understand the
statute’s plain text]; id. at p. 70 [“[i]f the statute is genuinely ambiguous,
such that overturning the officer’s judgment requires hard interpretive work,
then the officer has made a reasonable mistake. But if not, not”] [conc. opn.
of Kagan, J.]; People v. Campuzano (2015) 237 Cal.App.4th Supp. 14, 20-21
and fn. 8 [defendant held lawfully stopped based on officer’s mistaken
interpretation of city ordinance because ordinance was ambiguous, had never

                                        12
previously been construed, and presented an issue that “highlights the
sometimes difficult task for lawyers and judges of determining the meaning
of statutes by way of statutory construction”].)
      Also true, as the People assert, the Supreme Court has held that a
motorcycle could potentially be affected by a right-hand turn made by a car
stopped ahead of it (thereby necessitating a turn signal), because motorcycles
are small and can move in and around and past the cars in front of them.
(See Suff, supra, 58 Cal.4th at pp. 1055-1056.) But that situation is
fundamentally different. When evaluating a potential traffic hazard, no
reasonable person could equate the maneuverability of, and risks posed to, a
motorcycle behind a car making a turn from a one-lane road with those of
full-size car.
      Citing Suff, Logsdon and Carmona, the People argue that “the
language in those cases reasonably furnished Officer Bellamy a basis for
believing that appellant had violated the Vehicle Code, and no caselaw would
have led a reasonable officer to predict a contrary outcome in this case.”
(Italics added.) But the People do not explain why those cases furnished a
reasonable basis to think that Officer Bellamy’s patrol car could have been
affected by Holiman’s right-hand turn. The statute at issue here is not
ambiguous, the only question is whether the facts justified its application.
Fundamentally, the People presented no evidence on the issue and have not
even attempted to explain why it was objectively reasonable for an officer in
Officer Bellamy’s situation to think there was a potential danger posed to her
patrol car in this circumstance. (See Heien, supra, 574 U.S. at p. 70 [“the test
is satisfied when the law at issue is so ‘doubtful in construction’ that a
reasonable judge could agree with the officer’s view”] [conc. opn. of Kagan,

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J.].) Holiman did not violate section 22107, and Officer Bellamy did not have
a reasonable basis to think that he did.
      No matter how well-intentioned Officer Bellamy’s efforts to enforce the
traffic law in this instance might have been, the traffic stop was not
supported by reasonable suspicion that Holiman’s right-hand turn violated
the law. The trial court therefore erred in denying Holiman’s motion to
suppress the evidence seized in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights.

                               DISPOSITION
      The judgment is reversed, and the matter is remanded to the trial court
with directions to set aside its order denying the motion to suppress, enter a
different order granting the motion, and allow appellant to move to withdraw
his no contest plea.

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                                         STEWART, J.

We concur.

RICHMAN, Acting P. J.

MAYFIELD, J. *

People v. Holiman (A160142)

     *  Judge of the Mendocino County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief
Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.

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Trial Court: Solano County Superior Court

Trial Judge: Hon. William J. Pendergast III; Hon. Jeffrey Kauffman

Counsel:

Gordon S. Brownell, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
Defendant and Appellant.

Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Jeffrey M. Laurence, Assistant Attorney General, Donna M.
Provenzano, Amit Kurlekar, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
Respondent.

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