E.D.Tenn.: Merely putting up a “no trespassing” sign and the officer ignoring it is not a Fourth Amendment violation

Defendant put six “no trespassing” signs at his gate and on the road to his house which is not visible from the road. An officer came to the door to do a knock-and-talk. No meter readers come to his house, but the mailman [and presumably FedEx and UPS] could come from the road to the house with a letter or package that needed to be signed for. Merely putting up a “no trespassing” sign and the officer ignoring it is not a Fourth Amendment violation, and Jardines lends no support. United States v. Denim, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 123269 (E.D. Tenn. August 26, 2013):

It is defendant’s argument that his No Trespassing signs constituted an explicit revocation of the implied license discussed by Justice Scalia [in Jardines].

Respectfully, that argument stretches the Jardines opinion too far. Justice Scalia went on to say that there was no societal implied invitation for anyone to bring a drug-sniffing dog onto the curtilage. For this court to conclude that No Trespassing signs amount to an across-the-board revocation of the implied societal consent necessarily would require a court to conclude that society is ready to recognize as reasonable the expectation of privacy which that revocation entails. As an example, it is impossible for this court to believe that society is prepared to accept as reasonable a right of privacy that would deny a law enforcement officer the right to enter upon property to investigate an anonymous complaint that a child was being abused on that property. To be sure, a court could carve out an exception for anonymous complaints of child abuse on the theory that they amount to an exigent circumstance, but then it becomes a matter of degree. Is an anonymous complaint of child endangerment a sufficient exigency, but a citizen’s loss of his valuable property not enough? A crime is a crime, and the police are allowed to enter upon property to conduct a knock and talk. If the resident is unwilling to talk, that ends it, but most citizens assuredly would be willing to talk to a police officer, and this is why society is not prepared to go as far as defendant asks in this case.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.