Court Opinion

ID: 4570185
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-09-28 07:14:58.516979+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:46:57.201552
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                                     OF TEXAS

                                        NO. PD-0722-19

                           BRADEN DANIEL PRICE, Appellant

                                                v.

                                  THE STATE OF TEXAS

              ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
                   FROM THE FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS
                              BEXAR COUNTY

                K ELLER, P.J., filed a dissenting opinion.

       The court of appeals, the Court’s opinion, and one of the dissenting opinions have

misunderstood the nature of our holding in Lalande v. State,1 though in different ways. The holding

in Lalande had nothing to do with the inevitable-discovery doctrine or the search-incident-to-arrest

doctrine. Rather, Lalande was based on the inventory-search doctrine and on the proposition that

the Fourth Amendment permitted the police to do on the scene what they were authorized to do at

the station. Accordingly, the search of Appellant’s suitcase might have been valid as a legal

       1
           676 S.W.2d 115 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984).
                                                                             PRICE DISSENT — 2

accelerated inventory search.

       In Lalande, the defendant complained that the search of his bag could not be a valid search

incident to arrest because his companion was carrying the bag.2 We concluded that Judge Clinton,

in a concurring opinion in Stewart v. State,3 anticipated the problem of determining what is

“immediately associated” with an arrestee, and we adopted his solution.4 This solution was a

workaround, relying on an entirely different Fourth Amendment doctrine involving “searches of

items accompanying the detainee into confinement.”5            In his concurrence, Judge Clinton

unequivocally rejected any application of the search-incident-to-arrest doctrine to the search at issue

because it was too remote in time and place from the arrest.6         Rather, he made clear that his

proposed rationale for upholding the search derived from the inventory-search doctrine: “Whatever

vestiges of privacy remained would soon be lost through routine property inventory preceding

confinement. In this thoroughly different context of a state of detention, the officers were entitled

to do some of that which was shortly to be effectuated.”7 Judge Clinton further elaborated that the

search of the defendant’s purse was authorized “not because it is ‘immediately associated with the

person of the arrestee,’ but since it is to accompany the detainee into confinement or be inventoried

       2
           Id. at 118.
       3
           611 S.W.2d 434 (Tex. Crim. App. 1981).
       4
         Lalande, 676 S.W.2d at 118 (also citing citing People v. Bullwinkle, 105 Cal. App. 3d 82,
164 Cal. Rptr. 163 (1980)).
       5
Id.
       6
           Stewart, 611 S.W.2d at 439-40 (Clinton, J., concurring).
       7
Id. at 441.
                                                                             PRICE DISSENT — 3

and held as personal property during confinement.”8 The California Bullwinkle case, cited by both

Lalande and Judge Clinton’s concurrence in Stewart,9 held that searches of effects of a prisoner

booked into jail were permissible to prevent illicit materials from being introduced to the jail and

to safeguard the prisoner’s property.10 The California court further held that the same type of search

prior to booking was permissible (“not render[ed] . . . illegal”) because “no additional or greater

intrusion on the privacy of the suspect is involved.”11

       So, Lalande, Judge Clinton’s concurrence in Stewart, and the California Bullwinkle case

based their rationale on the inventory-search doctrine and held that law enforcement did not have

to wait for an item to arrive at the usual inventory place if the item was destined to arrive there. In

essence, because an inventory search at the station was inevitable, officers were permitted to conduct

the same search at an earlier time. This was not, however, an application of the inevitable-discovery

doctrine, where the search is illegal but the fruits are admissible because they would have inevitably

been discovered.12 Instead, the search at issue was held to be legal because “once it becomes

unequivocally clear that the item is to accompany the detainee, the right of inspection accrues

       8
Id. (citing Bullwinkle, see supra at n.4).
       9
            See supra at nn. 4, 8.
       10
            Bullwinkle, 105 Cal. App. 3d at 87, 164 Cal. Rptr. at 166.
       11
Id.
       12
            See Nix v. Williams, 467 U.S. 431, 444 (1984) (“It is clear that the cases implementing the
exclusionary rule ‘begin with the premise that the challenged evidence is in some sense the product
of illegal governmental activity.’ Of course, this does not end the inquiry. If the prosecution can
establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the information ultimately or inevitably would have
been discovered by lawful means—here the volunteers’ search—then the deterrence rationale has
so little basis that the evidence should be received.”) (citation omitted).
                                                                             PRICE DISSENT — 4

immediately, and is not limited to inspections carried out within the station itself.”13

       There is still the question of whether the requirements of the inventory-search doctrine would

have been met if a search had been conducted at the station. In order for police to validly search a

closed container during an inventory search, the arresting agency must have a policy or established

routine authorizing such a search.14 The court of appeals’s statement that “the fact that the suitcases

would have been inventoried when they accompanied Price to jail did not authorize their search at

the airport office”15 seems to assume that a valid inventory search would have been conducted, but

the court of appeals does not appear to have actually addressed the issue. I would remand the case

to the court of appeals to do so.

       I respectfully dissent.

Filed: September 23, 2020
Publish

       13
            Lalande, 676 S.W.2d at 118.
       14
Fla. v. Wells, 495 U.S. 1, 4-5 (1990) (“In the present case, the Supreme Court of
Florida found that the Florida Highway Patrol had no policy whatever with respect to the opening
of closed containers encountered during an inventory search. We hold that absent such a policy, the
instant search was not sufficiently regulated to satisfy the Fourth Amendment and that the marijuana
which was found in the suitcase, therefore, was properly suppressed by the Supreme Court of
Florida.”).
       15
         Price v. State, No. 04-18-00628-CR, 2019 Tex. App. LEXIS 3697, *7 (Tex. App.—San
Antonio May 8, 2019) (not designated for publication).