Court Opinion

ID: 5141254
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-28 23:07:26.538887+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:17:42.354309
License: Public Domain

12/28/2021

                               SYNOPSIS OF THE CASE1                                         Case Number: DA 20-0382

2021 MT 324, DA 20-0382: STATE OF MONTANA, Plaintiff and Appellee, v.
QUINCY SMITH, Defendant and Appellant.

        The Montana Supreme Court held today that a deputy sheriff violated a Montana
resident’s constitutional right to privacy when he continued to question the resident in front
of his own home regarding a suspected traffic violation after the man told him to leave and
come back with a warrant.
        A Ravalli County Deputy Sheriff driving on a rural residential road after dark passed
Quincy Smith, who was driving 17 mph over the speed limit. The deputy started his police
lights and turned around to pull Smith over. Within seconds, Smith pulled into a 350-foot
driveway and stopped the car near the residence. The deputy pulled in behind him and saw
Smith and his passenger standing outside the car. The deputy explained that he had stopped
them for speeding and asked both for their identification. The two men explained that they
lived there and that the officer was on private property. They refused to cooperate and told
the deputy to leave and come back with a warrant. The deputy did not leave and continued
to attempt to question them, suspecting that Smith was under the influence after the deputy
smelled alcohol on him. The deputy called for a backup officer when the two men refused
to provide any information. Smith was arrested for DUI, speeding, resisting arrest, and
obstructing a peace officer.
        The Supreme Court held that Smith had a right to privacy in the driveway of his
residence under the Montana Constitution. The nature of the property itself did not give
him an expectation of privacy because the home had no gate at the entrance to the driveway
and no “No Trespassing” signs posted or any other barriers to entry. But Smith had an
actual and reasonable expectation of privacy once he communicated his expectation of
privacy to the deputy. The privacy of the home is at the “very core” of constitutional search
and seizure protections. Society would recognize Smith’s actual expectation of privacy as
reasonable when he refused to answer a law enforcement officer’s questions outside his
own home absent a warrant.
        The Court said the deputy acted appropriately when he followed Smith into the
driveway to complete a traffic stop the deputy initiated on a public road. The deputy’s
initial questions to determine who lived at the home and whether Smith was the driver were
minimally intrusive and necessary to inform him whether he should continue or seek a
warrant for further investigation. But once Smith explicitly invoked his right to privacy

1
 This synopsis has been prepared for the convenience of the reader. It constitutes no part of the
Opinion of the Court and may not be cited as precedent.
and demanded that the officer get a warrant, the constitution required that the deputy stop
his questioning unless and until he determined he needed a warrant.
       The Court pointed out that there were no other circumstances to indicate urgent
reasons not to get a search warrant. When Smith asked him to leave, the officer knew only
that Smith had been speeding. He had seen no sign of impaired driving and did not suspect
that Smith was under the influence until several minutes later. There was no evidence that
Smith presented any danger or risk of harm. As a result, the State did not show any of the
circumstances that would allow a criminal investigation to proceed without first obtaining
a search warrant.
       Agreeing with the Court, Justice Rice emphasized that the deputy was justified in
following Smith’s vehicle up the driveway because he could not have known Smith was
heading to his residence rather than simply trying to flee or hide up a random road. Justice
Rice agreed that once Smith asserted a privacy right at his own residence, the deputy could
not engage in further warrantless investigation. But he could have completed the traffic
stop he started by issuing Smith a Notice to Appear on the speeding violation. If at that
time the officer saw signs of intoxication, he would have had to retreat from the property
and obtain a warrant in order to conduct a DUI investigation, which he likely could have
done over the telephone from the bottom of the driveway.

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