Orem City v. Santos , 304 P.3d 883 ( 2013 )


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    2013 UT App 155
    _________________________________________________________
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    OREM CITY,
    Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    ELBA VIRGINIA SANTOS,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Memorandum Decision
    No. 20120316‐CA
    Filed June 20, 2013
    Fourth District, Spanish Fork Department
    The Honorable Donald J. Eyre Jr.
    No. 101201159
    Kelly Ann Booth, Attorney for Appellant
    Robert J. Church, Attorney for Appellee
    JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN authored this Memorandum
    Decision, in which JUDGES WILLIAM A. THORNE JR. and
    STEPHEN L. ROTH concurred.
    CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:
    ¶1      Defendant Elba Virginia Santos appeals her conviction for
    retail theft, a class B misdemeanor. See Utah Code Ann. § 76‐6‐
    602(1) (LexisNexis 2012). Santos argues that the trial court erred in
    not suppressing her written and verbal statements, which were
    obtained by Costco employees during a shoplifting investigation.
    We affirm.
    ¶2     On July 16, 2010, Santos was shopping with several other
    individuals at the Costco located in Orem, Utah. Three Costco
    employees observed certain behavior that led them to believe that
    Santos was attempting to commit retail theft. Among other things,
    the Costco employees observed Santos taking several items from
    Orem City v. Santos
    her shopping cart and placing them behind a diaper bag that was
    located in a storage compartment underneath a baby stroller.
    ¶3     After observing this behavior, the Costco employees
    approached Santos and escorted her to the main office of the store.
    While in the main office, the employees asked Santos whether she
    had merchandise in her possession for which she had not yet paid
    and, if so, what she intended to do with that merchandise. The
    employees also searched Santos’s purse and stroller. The
    employees then requested Santos’s identification and informed the
    Orem City Police Department (the OCPD) of her detention. Upon
    the arrival of a police officer at the Costco store, the employees
    surrendered Santos to the officer’s custody.
    ¶4      Santos was subsequently charged with retail theft. Santos
    later filed a motion to suppress the statements she made to the
    Costco employees. Santos argued that the Costco employees acted
    as agents of the government in conducting a search when they
    detained her in Costco’s main office and subjected her to an
    interrogation, thereby violating her Fourth Amendment rights. The
    trial court denied Santos’s suppression motion, and the case was
    thereafter tried to a jury. The jury found Santos guilty, and she
    appeals her conviction.
    ¶5     Santos does not challenge the trial court’s factual findings,
    but instead challenges the trial court’s legal conclusions supporting
    its denial of her suppression motion.1 We therefore accept the trial
    court’s findings of fact and review the court’s denial of Santos’s
    motion to suppress for correctness. See State v. Tripp, 
    2010 UT 9
    ,
    ¶ 23, 
    227 P.3d 1251
     (“A trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress
    1. Although Santos seems to challenge the trial court’s findings of
    fact in her opening brief, she explicitly states in her reply brief that
    she challenges only the trial court’s legal conclusions.
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    Orem City v. Santos
    is reviewed for correctness, including its application of the law to
    the facts.”).
    ¶6     Santos argues that the Costco employees with whom Santos
    interacted were engaged in state action during her interrogation
    and detention. Thus, she contends, as state actors, the Costco
    employees’ interrogation and detention were subject to the
    constraints of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the United
    States Constitution. See U.S. Const. amends. IV, V. As “[t]he party
    objecting to the evidence,” Santos “has the burden of establishing
    the agency relationship,” i.e., that “a private individual acts as an
    agent of the government in conducting a search.” State v. Koury, 
    824 P.2d 474
    , 477 (Utah Ct. App. 1991).
    ¶7     When a private party acts as an agent of a government
    authority, any search performed by that private party becomes
    subject to state and federal constitutional protections. See State v.
    Watts, 
    750 P.2d 1219
    , 1221 (Utah 1988). To determine whether a
    private party has acted as an agent of the government, our supreme
    court has adopted the two‐part test set forth by the Ninth Circuit
    Court of Appeals in United States v. Walther, 
    652 F.2d 788
     (9th Cir.
    1981). See Watts, 750 P.2d at 1221–22; Koury, 
    824 P.2d at 477
    .
    ¶8      To satisfy the Walther test, “[t]he government must be
    involved either directly as a participant or indirectly as an
    encourager of the private citizen’s actions before we deem the
    citizen to be an instrument of the state.” Walther, 
    652 F.2d at 791
    . To
    determine the extent of the government’s involvement, we first
    consider “whether the government knew of or acquiesced [in] the
    search,” and then, second, we “consider the person’s intent and
    purpose in conducting the search and decide whether the person
    was acting in the person’s own interest or to further law
    enforcement.” Koury, 
    824 P.2d at 477
    ; Watts, 750 P.2d at 1221–22.
    More precisely, the party claiming governmental action by a
    private party must show that the private party “‘acted with the
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    Orem City v. Santos
    intent to assist the government in its investigatory or
    administrative purposes and not for an independent purpose.’”
    State v. Ellingsworth, 
    966 P.2d 1220
    , 1223 (Utah Ct. App. 1998)
    (quoting United States v. Attson, 
    900 F.2d 1427
    , 1432–33 (9th Cir.
    1990)).
    ¶9     In analyzing Santos’s case under the Walther test, and to
    determine whether the government knew of or acquiesced in the
    search, we first look to the OCPD’s involvement in the questioning
    and detention of Santos by the Costco employees. Santos argues
    that the State, and specifically Utah law, authorizes and encourages
    these employees to act on the State’s behalf. She points to Utah
    Code section 77‐7‐12(1), which provides,
    A peace officer, merchant, or merchant’s employee,
    servant, or agent who has reasonable grounds to
    believe that goods held or displayed for sale by the
    merchant have been taken by a person with intent to
    steal may, for the purpose of investigating the
    unlawful act and attempting to effect a recovery of
    the goods, detain the person in a reasonable manner
    for a reasonable length of time.
    Utah Code Ann. § 77‐7‐12(1) (LexisNexis 2012).2
    2. In its denial of Santos’s motion to suppress, the trial court relied
    on a similar statute, Utah Code section 76‐6‐603, to conclude that
    the Costco employees had probable cause to reasonably detain
    Santos. See Utah Code Ann. § 76‐6‐603(1)(a)–(e) (LexisNexis 2012)
    (“Any merchant who has probable cause to believe that a person
    has committed retail theft may detain such person, on or off the
    premises of a retail mercantile establishment, in a reasonable
    manner and for a reasonable length of time for all or any of the
    following purposes: (a) to make reasonable inquiry as to whether
    (continued...)
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    Orem City v. Santos
    ¶10 Santos argues that the government knew of and acquiesced
    in the Costco employees’ questioning and detention because the
    statute provides private employees with “quasi‐law enforcement
    status.” In support of this proposition, Santos cites Romanski v.
    Detroit Entertainment, LLC, 
    428 F.3d 629
     (6th Cir. 2005), which
    stated, “Where private security guards are endowed by law with
    plenary police powers such that they are de facto police officers,
    they may qualify as state actors . . . .” 
    Id. at 637
    . Santos also relies
    on People v. Zelinski, 
    594 P.2d 1000
     (Cal. 1979), which held that a
    search conducted by store employees was not conduct “of . . .
    private citizen[s] acting in a purely private capacity.” 
    Id. at 1006
    .
    The Zelinski court explained that “[a]lthough the search exceeded
    2. (...continued)
    such person has in his possession unpurchased merchandise and
    to make reasonable investigation of the ownership of such
    merchandise; (b) to request identification; (c) to verify such
    identification; (d) to make a reasonable request of such person to
    place or keep in full view any merchandise such individual may
    have removed, or which the merchant has reason to believe he may
    have removed, from its place of display or elsewhere, whether for
    examination, purchase, or for any other reasonable purpose; [and]
    (e) to inform a peace officer of the detention of the person and
    surrender that person to the custody of a peace officer.”). In her
    motion to suppress, Santos did not challenge the propriety of her
    detention under section 76‐6‐603 or section 77‐7‐12(1), as the trial
    court’s decision would seem to indicate. Rather, she argued below,
    as she does on appeal, that the Costco employees were engaged in
    state action, which implicated the protections of the Fourth
    Amendment. We affirm the trial court’s denial of Santos’s motion
    to suppress on different grounds. See infra ¶ 16; See also State v.
    Tueller, 
    2001 UT App 317
    , ¶ 23, 
    37 P.3d 1180
     (“It is a well‐
    established rule that we may affirm a judgment of the trial court on
    grounds other than those used as the basis for its decision.”).
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    Orem City v. Santos
    lawful authority, it was nevertheless an integral part of the exercise
    of sovereignty allowed by the state to private citizens.” 
    Id. ¶11
     We find these cases inapposite. In Romanski, Michigan law
    endowed the private security officers with plenary power to make
    arrests. See Romanski, 
    428 F.3d at 638
    –39. In contrast, Utah Code
    section 76‐6‐603 and section 77‐7‐12(1) provide merchants with the
    authority only to detain a retail theft suspect. See Utah Code Ann.
    § 76‐6‐603 (LexisNexis 2012); id. § 77‐7‐12(1). In Zelinski, employees
    searched a suspect’s person and effects for goods that were not in
    plain view, which overstepped the bounds of the authority
    prescribed in the California statute authorizing a merchant’s
    privilege. See Zelinski, 
    594 P.2d at 1003
    –04.3
    ¶12 More to the point, as explained above, we analyze this issue
    under the two‐part Walther test. See supra ¶¶ 8–9. Walther
    explained, “Mere governmental authorization of a particular type
    of private search in the absence of more active participation or
    encouragement is . . . insufficient to require the application of
    fourth amendment standards.” United States v. Walther, 
    652 F.2d 788
    , 792 (9th Cir. 1981). Moreover, in State v. Watts, 
    750 P.2d 1219
    (Utah 1988), the supreme court held that although the police had
    previously told an informant that they might dismiss their criminal
    3. We further note that the California Supreme Court’s decision in
    People v. Zelinski, 
    594 P.2d 1000
     (Cal. 1979), has since been
    abrogated by amendment of the California Constitution. See Collins
    v. Womancare, 
    878 F.2d 1145
    , 1154 (9th Cir. 1989) (“[T]he continuing
    validity of Zelinski has been called into doubt by the enactment of
    Proposition 8, which amended California’s Constitution to prohibit
    California courts, in the absence of express statutory authority,
    from exclud[ing] evidence seized in violation of either the state or
    federal Constitution unless exclusion is compelled by the federal
    Constitution.” (second alteration in original) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted)); see also Cal. Const. art. 1, § 28(f)(2).
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    Orem City v. Santos
    case against him if he assisted with their investigation of the
    defendant, “the ‘offer’ given to the informant was ‘far too vague
    and general to constitute governmental knowledge’” of the
    informant’s search of the defendant’s premises. 
    Id. at 1223
     (quoting
    United States v. Bazan, 
    807 F.2d 1200
    , 1203 (5th Cir. 1986)). Thus, the
    “[police] did not in any sense know of or acquiesce in the
    informant’s conduct.” 
    Id. ¶13
     Similarly, although Utah law authorizes a merchant’s
    employee to reasonably detain a person suspected of theft, this
    legal authorization does not equate to the government’s knowledge
    of or acquiescence in the search that occurred here. See Utah Code
    Ann. § 76‐6‐603; id. § 77‐7‐12(1). Santos does not point to any
    evidence in the record, nor did the trial court find, that the OCPD
    knew of or acquiesced in the Costco employees’ questioning of
    Santos regarding her suspected shoplifting, at least prior to the
    time the Costco employees called the OCPD to inform them of
    Santos’s detention. Thus, there is no indication that the OCPD had
    knowledge of or acquiesced in the Costco employees’ investigatory
    conduct.
    ¶14 Furthermore, to prevail on the second element of the Walther
    test, a defendant must show that the private party conducting the
    search or seizure had “‘no other purpose but to aid the government’s
    investigatory or administrative functions.’” State v. Ellingsworth,
    
    966 P.2d 1220
    , 1223 (Utah Ct. App. 1998) (quoting Wallace v. Batavia
    Sch. Dist. 101, 
    68 F.3d 1010
    , 1013 (7th Cir.1995)) (concluding that
    Workers’ Compensation Fund agents investigated the defendant’s
    claims to determine his eligibility for benefits and that this purpose
    was “completely independent of law enforcement[’s]” prosecution
    of the defendant for workers compensation fraud).
    ¶15 In support of her claim that the primary purpose for the
    Costco employees’ investigation was to aid prosecution of
    suspected shoplifters, Santos refers only to the Costco employees’
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    Orem City v. Santos
    testimonies that they routinely require suspected shoplifters to
    complete Costco’s investigation forms to promote criminal
    prosecution of those suspects. Although Santos makes much of this
    testimony, she does not refer to the employees’ other testimony as
    to their reasons for requiring suspected shoplifters to complete
    those forms. For example, the employees’ testimonies reveal that
    Costco also has business purposes for using the forms, such as for
    training, record keeping, and defending potential civil lawsuits.
    Finally, the trial court found that the employees acted “with the
    primary purpose of protecting Costco assets,” and Santos does not
    challenge the trial court’s factual findings on appeal. See supra ¶ 5
    & note 1.
    ¶16 Moreover, this court has determined that a private person
    does not become an agent of law enforcement simply because the
    private person desires that someone be arrested or prosecuted. See
    State v. Koury, 
    824 P.2d 474
    , 478 n.2 (Utah Ct. App. 1991). In this
    case, the Costco employees who interacted with Santos certainly
    may have had an interest in the successful prosecution of Santos for
    shoplifting. But we cannot say that those employees did not also
    have a separate interest in protecting the store’s assets. Simply
    because the Costco employees ultimately participated in Santos’s
    eventual criminal prosecution does not cancel out the legitimate
    business reasons for their investigation. Therefore, the court did
    not err in concluding that the employees were protecting Costco
    assets.
    ¶17 Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Santos’s
    motion to suppress.
    20120316‐CA                      8                
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