SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-1895-96T2
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
JAMES T. WHITE,
Defendant-Appellant.
__________________________________________________
Submitted October 20, 1997 - Decided November
21, 1997
Before Judges Petrella, Skillman and
Wertheimer.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Essex County.
Carl H. Hadigian, attorney for appellant.
Peter Verniero, Attorney General, attorney
for respondent (Nancy Peremes Barton, Deputy
Attorney General, of counsel and on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PETRELLA, P.J.A.D.
After his suppression motion was denied, defendant James T.
White entered a retraxit plea of guilty to third degree receiving
stolen property (N.J.S.A. 2C:20-7). White was sentenced to two
years of probation, and assessed a Victims of Crime Compensation
Board penalty of $50 and a Safe Neighborhood Services Fund fine
of $75.
On appeal, permitted pursuant to R. 3:5-7(d) despite his
plea of guilty, White asserts that the Law Division judge erred
in ruling that police officers from the City of Orange were
authorized to conduct a warrantless search of a residence in the
City of Newark, notwithstanding their investigation of a crime
that had been committed in the City of Orange and the consent of
the owner of the residence. Accordingly, White contends that the
stolen property seized at the premises should have been
suppressed as the fruit of the poisonous tree. See Wong Sun v.
United States,
371 U.S. 471,
83 S. Ct. 407,
9 L. Ed.2d 441
(1963).
The suppression hearing was conducted essentially based on a
submission of the following facts to the trial court by the
parties. Officers of the Orange Police Department were
conducting an investigation of a June 21, 1995 burglary and theft
from premises in the City of Orange. During the investigation
the police obtained a written statement from a witness that led
them to suspect an individual named Eugene Baxter was involved in
the incident. Baxter was arrested on July 26, 1995, and gave an
inculpatory statement to the police in which he named White as an
individual who purchased some of the stolen property from him.See footnote 1
Baxter provided the Orange police with White's address and
directions to his residence in Newark.
As a result of that statement, the same day the City of
Orange police officers went to White's residence in Newark where
they identified themselves as law enforcement officers to White's
mother. At the time the Orange police officers went to White's
residence, they were not accompanied by any Newark police officer
or representative of the prosecutor's office. At the officers'
request, White's mother consented to a search of her residence
and signed a form captioned "ORANGE POLICE DEPARTMENT" and
"CONSENT TO SEARCH."See footnote 2 The search of the premises yielded
several items which the officers suspected had been stolen in the
burglary in the City of Orange and those items were seized by the
officers.
On July 28, 1995, White gave a statement at the Orange
Police Department in which he identified photographs of the
subject property as items which codefendant Dwayne Rufus Brown
sold to him. White was arrested for receiving stolen property
and subsequently pleaded guilty after his suppression motion was
denied. At the plea hearing, he said that two men, Baxter and
another whom he knew as Balal, had approached him and offered to
sell him a computer, an air conditioner, and an answering
machine. Although the low price led him to believe that the
items might have been stolen, he nevertheless bought them. It
was stipulated that the property purchased was of a value in
excess of $500.
White argues that the City of Orange police officers lacked
statutory authority to investigate and seize property outside of
their jurisdiction. This argument was rejected by the Law
Division judge on the suppression motion. There was no challenge
there or here to the consent given by White's mother for the
search on the basis of any form of coercion.
Defendant asserts that N.J.S.A. 40A:14-152, which defines
the powers of police officers and constables, essentially should
be read to prohibit all police action outside a municipality for
which they have been appointed, other than those specified in
other statutory exceptions.See footnote 3
We reject White's argument. N.J.S.A. 40A:14-152 states:
The members and officers of a police
department and force, within the territorial
limits of the municipality, shall have all
the powers of peace officers and upon view
may apprehend and arrest any disorderly
person or any person committing a breach of
the peace. Said members and officers shall
have the power to serve and execute process
issuing out of the courts having local
criminal jurisdiction in the municipality and
shall have the powers of a constable in all
matters other than in civil causes arising in
such courts.
Our reading of the relevant statutes satisfies us that the
Legislature contemplated that police officers may at times be
called upon to go beyond the boundaries of their municipality in
the performance of their official duties. Indeed, N.J.S.A.
40A:14-152.1 and 40A:14-152.2 implicitly recognize this.
N.J.S.A. 40A:14-152.1 gives a municipal police officer authority
to arrest for a crime committed in the officer's presence
anywhere within the State. See State v. Montalvo,
280 N.J.
Super. 377, 381 (App. Div. 1995); State v. O'Donnell,
192 N.J.
Super. 128 (App. Div. 1983). N.J.S.A. 40A:14-152.1 extends
certain immunities statewide to police acting outside of their
municipalities.
Although a crime was not committed in the officer's
presence, and hence the provisions of N.J.S.A. 40A:14-152.1 were
not triggered, the issue is whether the statute precludes or
prohibits extraterritorial exercise of jurisdiction in the
absence of statutory authorization constituting exceptions to the
local jurisdiction. Nothing in the cited statute either
expressly precludes on the one hand or authorizes on the other
hand a police officer from the jurisdiction in which a crime
occurred from conducting an investigation outside of the
territorial boundary of the officer's express jurisdiction. Few
cases have addressed the issue of police investigations beyond
the territorial limits of a police officer's express
jurisdiction. Other jurisdictions have considered the issue and
have approved such investigations. See Parker v. State,
362 So.2d 1033, 1034 (Fla. Ct. App. 1978), cert. denied,
373 So.2d 460 (1979) (despite municipal police officer not being authorized
to arrest outside of his jurisdiction, absent hot pursuit,
nonetheless officer may conduct lawful investigation outside
territorial jurisdiction); State v. Calderon,
678 P.2d 1245 (Or.
App. 1984); People v. Harvey,
199 N.E.2d 236 (Ill. App. 1964).
The Oregon court considered extraterritorial investigations
in State v. Calderon,
678 P.2d 1245 (Or. App. 1984). In
Calderon, the defendant was involved in an accident in Polk
County. A deputy sheriff was called to the scene, and arrived
there after the defendant was removed to a hospital in Marion
County. The sheriff saw beer cans in the car and, based upon
that and other evidence, went to defendant's hospital room. The
sheriff asked the attending physician to draw a blood sample;
defendant later contested this search on several grounds,
including a contention that the search exceeded the officer's
authority because it occurred outside his jurisdiction. Id. at
1247-1249. The court specifically considered the narrow question
which has been posed to this court:
may an officer from one jurisdiction make a
warrantless seizure in another jurisdiction
when he does not have the authority to make a
warrantless arrest or no local officer is
present and assisting in the seizure?
Id. at 1249.
Noting that "[a] warrantless search is by its nature based on the
necessity of quick action that does not allow the officer to
apply for a warrant ..." the court pronounced that "any police
officer may ... conduct a search without a search warrant in any
jurisdiction within the state." This was apparently on the basis
that all warrantless searches have an exigency element.
The Illinois court was presented with a factually similar
case in People v. Harvey,
199 N.E.2d 236 (Ill. App. 1964). In
that case, the defendant's house in Bridgeview was searched upon
his wife's consent to Chicago police officers to search the
premises without a warrant. Id. at 237. The court summarily
dismissed the appellant's argument that this was outside the
officers' authority, noting:
The officers were investigating the
commission of a crime and had the power to
seek the fruits ... especially where their
actions and conduct, as shown here, were open
and sincere. It was within their powers to
seek and protect the property taken in the
commission of a crime.
[Id. at 238-239].
The court in Harvey refused to consider the rights that the
defendant would have had if a private citizen had conducted the
search. Id. at 239.
Likewise, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania rejected a claim
that a municipal police officer could not investigate a crime
outside the territorial limits of his own jurisdiction in
Commonwealth v. O'Shea,
523 Pa. 384,
567 A.2d 1023 (1989), cert.
denied,
498 U.S. 881,
111 S. Ct. 225,
112 L. Ed.2d 180 (1990).
In O'Shea Pittsburgh police detectives went to defendant's
residence in another township to interrogate him concerning a
homicide that occurred in Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh detectives
did not obtain consent for the investigation in the municipality
where defendant resided. The defendant was not home when the
detectives arrived, but they identified themselves and explained
the purpose of their visit to defendant's brother and sister-in-law who owned the house. They gave the Pittsburgh detectives
permission to enter and look around. When they did, the
detectives observed in plain view certain items which they
subsequently seized. Defendant arrived while the detectives were
still present and voluntarily accompanied them back to Pittsburgh
where he waived his constitutional rights and gave an inculpatory
statement. Id. at 1028-1029. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court
considered its statute and the specific situations allowing
extraterritorial jurisdiction in
six specific situations wherein an officer
can go outside of his or her primary
jurisdiction to make arrests, serve warrants
and perform other official functions such as:
where the officer is acting pursuant to court
order; service of arrest and search warrants
with consent of local law enforcement
agencies; acting in hot pursuit; acting upon
the request of a local law enforcement
officer, and where an officer views a felony
or has probable cause to believe that a
felony has been committed and makes a
reasonable effort to identify himself as a
police officer.
[Id. at 1028, citing 42 Pa. C.S.A. §
8953(a)(1)-(6)].
Although the Pennsylvania statute did not authorize police to
investigate in another jurisdiction, the court noted that it was
equally clear that the act did not prohibit such investigation.
Id. at 1029. The court observed that if a Pittsburgh detective
had telephoned defendant in his township of residence and asked
him to come to Pittsburgh, the Pennsylvania statute would
likewise neither authorize nor prohibit such an act. The O'Shea
court stated:
Similarly, we do not believe [the Act (42 Pa.
C.S.A. § 8953)] prohibits police officers
from leaving their primary jurisdiction to go
into other jurisdictions to ask questions
therein, or to enter a residence therein,
upon the consent of its owners (and full
disclosure of the officers' purpose) and
observe what they observe therein. Such
unobtrusive police conduct is outside the
scope of [the Act] and is not illegal. Any
citizen of the Commonwealth could do what
[the detectives] did herein, namely drive to
the O'Shea residence, ask them questions,
enter into their home with their consent, and
look around. In the absence of explicit
legislative directives to the contrary, we
will not prohibit police officers from doing
that which a private citizen could do. [Id.
at 1029].
Alternatively, the O'Shea court concluded that, even if
there had been a violation of the jurisdiction act, automatic
exclusion of the evidence obtained by searches accompanied by
relatively minor infractions of criminal procedure rules would be
a remedy out of all proportions to the violation. Id. at 1030.
See also Commonwealth v. Saul,
346 Pa. Super. 155,
499 A.2d 358
(1985).
We find these cases persuasive and agree that the Orange
police could investigate an offense committed in Orange by going
to another municipality to question persons with relevant
knowledge. In coming to this conclusion we note that the United
States and New Jersey Constitutions protect the right of the
people to freedom from unreasonable searches. U.S. Const. amend
IV, N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 7. Aside from searches conducted under
a valid warrant, there are exceptions which allow a warrantless
search. One of those exceptions is when there is a valid
consent. See State v. Suazo,
133 N.J. 315, 319 (1993). See also
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
412 U.S. 218, 219,
93 S. Ct. 2041,
36 L. Ed.2d 854 (1973), on remand to Bustamonte v. Schneckloth,
471 F.2d 1047 (9th Cir. 1973).
In this case, the Orange police officers did not go to
White's residence to execute an arrest or a search warrant, but
only to investigate. Although police officers normally exercise
their powers within the confines of the jurisdiction which
employs them, State v. Cohen,
73 N.J. 331, 342 (1977),
investigation is not a power inhering just in the office of
police officer and is not exclusive to police officers.
Here, White's mother consented to the search. There is no
basis in the record to seek to go behind that consent. Of
course, consent includes knowledge by the person involved of a
choice in the matter. State v. Johnson,
68 N.J. 349, 354 (1975).
This would normally be a fact question, but that issue is not
present in this case. Here, the consent was given by White's
mother to uniformed police officers who exhibited badges. The
issue of their authority or whether they were acting as officers
or private citizens was not directly raised, and the record does
not reflect whether White's mother believed she gave her consent
to a Newark police officer, or whether that would have made a
difference.
Defendant relies on State v. Williams,
136 N.J. Super. 544,
548 (Law Div. 1975), in which Judge Schiaffo rejected an
alternative basis of consent to search in a motor vehicle stop.
There a motorist was stopped for a motor vehicle violation by a
Park Ridge police officer in Montvale. Williams does not support
White's position in this case. There, although the judge
rejected the State's argument that the officer could have acted
as a private citizen when he observed the disorderly persons
infraction, stopped defendant's van and asked for consent to
search, the rejection was based on the comment that defendant
"believed he gave his consent for a search of his vehicle to a
uniformed police officer, not to a private citizen." 136 N.J.
Super. at 548. However, the fact that a defendant might believe
that he gave his consent to search to an officer as opposed to a
citizen does not mean that the consent would be involuntary under
the Fourth Amendment.
Moreover, the State's contention in Williams may also have
been rejected because "consent was given justifying the search,
if the officer had the authority to stop the van." 136 N.J.
Super. at 547. Williams rejected the State's argument based on a
determination that the officer, as a private citizen, would not
have had the authority to stop the van, as opposed to lacking the
authority to request the consent to search.
In White's case, however, the Orange police officers were
merely investigating a crime and no motor vehicle stop was
involved. The arrest and search in Williams was actually
validated under N.J.S.A. 39:5-3. This situation differs from the
one before us which was simply an investigation and the informing
of a non-party of the subject of the investigation and requesting
consent.
Even if we considered the officers' actions here a
procedural violation of the statute, it would not require
exclusion of the evidence obtained pursuant to the investigation
beyond the borders of the officers' jurisdiction or the consent
search because it did not rise to the level of a constitutional
violation. See State v. Gadsden,
303 N.J. Super. 491, 503-505
(App. Div. 1997). The same applies to the seizure of the
evidence. Id. at 503; Commonwealth v. O'Shea, supra (567 A.
2d at
1030).
As indicated in the consent form, signed by the owner of the
premises, it was signed without any threats or pressure and with
a statement that she had the right to refuse to consent and if
she did no search would be conducted. The caption of the consent
to search form in fairly large print indicates that it is from
the City of Orange and is a consent to search.
It is only "unreasonable investigative procedures which are
searches and seizures within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment
that are proscribed by the constitutional provisions." State v.
Citta,
265 N.J. Super. 208, 212 (Law Div. 1990), aff'd sub nom
State v. Fuhs,
265 N.J. Super. 188 (App. Div. 1993), certif.
denied,
134 N.J. 486 (1993); see State v. Zapata,
297 N.J. Super. 160, 171 (App. Div. 1997). Because of the consent obtained, this
search was not unreasonable.
Under the circumstances, the Orange police officers could
properly investigate in another municipality and obtain voluntary
consent to search in connection therewith.See footnote 4 The information
given to White's mother that she had a right to refuse consent
and the language of the consent form were adequate here to
authorize the search.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1Baxter subsequently pleaded guilty to an accusation
charging him with the offense.
Footnote: 2The consent to search form read:
I, BENNIE WHITE , HEREBY DO FREELY
AND VOLUNTARILY EXTEND DETECTIVE(S), DET.
WEBSTER, LT. SMITH , Det. Dvs., OF THE
ORANGE POLICE DEPARTMENT THE RIGHT TO SEARCH
MY RESIDENCE FOR STOLEN PROPERTY . THIS
CONSENT IS GRANTED WITHOUT ANY PRESSURE OR
THREATS, DIRECT OR INDIRECT BEING PLACED ON
ME AND WITH THE FULL REALIZATION THAT I HAVE
THE RIGHT TO REFUSE TO CONSENT AND, THAT IF I
SO REFUSE, NO SEARCH WILL BE CONDUCTED. I AM
AWARE THAT THE OFFICER(S) CONDUCTING THIS
SEARCH ARE SEEKING EVIDENCE PERTAINING TO A
VIOLATION OF THE CRIMINAL LAWS OF THE STATE
OF NEW JERSEY,...
At the bottom of the page there was an itemized list of the articles taken as evidence which included a Fedders Air Conditioner found in the second floor window; an IBM wheelwriter found in the first floor hallway; a Compudyne monitor, found in the first floor living room, and an answering machine in the second floor bedroom. Footnote: 3Exceptions include authority of full-time permanently appointed officers to arrest for any crime committed in their presence within the State (N.J.S.A. 40A:14-152.1); authority to assist in an emergency in another jurisdiction if requested by competent authority, (N.J.S.A. 40A:14-156); and authority to arrest for certain motor vehicle violations committed in the officer's presence (N.J.S.A. 39:5-25). See State v. O'Donnell, 192 N.J. Super. 128 (App. Div. 1983). See also the Fresh Pursuit Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:156-1 et seq. Footnote: 4Although we hold that the investigation was appropriate here, it would appear to be advisable police procedure for investigating officers of another jurisdiction to be accompanied by a representative of the police department in the jurisdiction of the person sought to be investigated. See State v. Gadsden, 303 N.J. Super. 491, 503, 506 (App. Div. 1997). We recognize that time constraints and manpower considerations may not make this entirely feasible under all circumstances.