Court Opinion

ID: 4967940
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 16:25:51.780003+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:16:20.856310
License: Public Domain

Justice EAKIN,
concurring.
I agree with Chief Justice Castille that a more direct explanation of our holding as it pertains to Commonwealth v. Walsh, 314 Pa.Super. 65, 460 A.2d 767 (1983), and Commonwealth v. Danforth, 395 Pa.Super. 1, 576 A.2d 1013 (1990), would clarify our rule going forward. Whatever the proper interpretation of those cases, certain language in Walsh could easily be expanded upon by our courts if we do not make our disapproval clearer. Indeed, I believe this was the case in Danforth, which, despite first explaining the analysis is one considering the totality of the circumstances, went on to cite Walsh for the proposition that, where a defendant “ ‘can establish that he had no notice of the criminal investigative purpose of the blood test, his consent would be invalid.’ ” Danforth, at 1023 (quoting Walsh, at 773).
This overstates the rule in two ways, and such overstatement should be expressly rejected herein. First, it implies a defendant must have a subjective knowledge of the purpose of the search, an issue properly rejected by the majority. Second, when read in isolation from the balance of Walsh, it implies objective awareness of the purpose of the testis an absolute requirement for valid consent. While the majority correctly notes “this Court has been clear that no one fact or circumstance can be talismanic in the evaluation of the validity of a person’s con-sentí],]” Majority Op., at 572 (citing Commonwealth v. Gillespie, 573 Pa. 100, 821 A.2d 1221, 1225 n. 1 (2003); Commonwealth v. Smith, 470 Pa. 220, 368 A.2d 272, 277 (1977)), I would directly address and dispel the above-quoted language from Walsh.
The majority states: “Accordingly, to the extent the Superior Court held that police officers must explicitly inform drivers consenting to blood testing that the results of the test may be used against them in criminal prosecutions in order for the consent to be valid, it went too far.” Id. Not only did the Superior Court err here by requiring a police warning of the purpose of the test before consent can be deemed valid, but its prior holdings implying such an understanding (even an objective one gleaned without an explicit warning) is required for valid consent were also in error. Rather, an objective understanding of the purpose of the test is merely one element a court may consider when analyzing the voluntariness of consent under the totality of the circumstances, just as one’s knowledge of the right to refuse consent is merely a single factor to be considered, and not a requirement.