A peace officer may seize any evidence which he observes by use of one or more of his senses from a lawful vantage point. [2] If an officer is on a premises lawfully and observes items believed to be illegal, it is lawful for him to seize the items. [3]
For example, police may enter into a house on the basis of preserving property and the public peace, and if on entering they discover stolen property in the household, it may be considered evidence under the plain view doctrine. [4] Without a lawful search or lawful entrance, there can be no basis for the doctrine. [5]
Plain view observations of only segments of an item of evidence can be sufficient to establish grounds of arrest. The officer should not move obstructions from their view. [6]
There are generally three requirements for the plain view doctrine: [1]
It has been suggested that there is an additional step between the second and third step, requireing that "the evidence was in plain view in the sense that it was detected through the unaided use of the officer’s senses." [2]
The first step requires that the officer "must be lawfully in the place and acting lawfully in the exercise of police powers when the officer discovers the evidence." [3]
The requirement of "inadvertence" means that "it is not discovered by unauthorized search, but rather, because it is in the open when the police are lawfully in the place where it is visible, and lawfully exercising police duties". It does not apply where "officers discover the item through an unauthorized search." [4]
The requirement of "immediately apparent" means that the office has "probable cause to associate the discovered property with criminal activity." [5]
Plain View vs s. 489(2)
Under s. 489(2), where an officer is in the execution of their duties, may without a warrant, seize anything that the officer has reasonable grounds to believe is obtained by, used for, or will afford evidence towards an offence. This power is separate and apart from the common law doctrine of plain view seizure. [6]
The doctrine does not apply to circumstances where police rely upon third-party reports of the contents of places otherwise protected by privacy. For example, a security guard reporting the contents of a bus station locker to police. [7]
Exploratory vs Seizure Power
The doctrine is not an exploratory search power, but rather is a seizure power. [8]
Lands accessible to the public--i.e. "open fields"--do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy and so are not protected by the Charter where illegal items are found in it. [9] However, the "open fields" doctrine does not encompass all open air private properties. [10]
It does not stretch so far as to include a bag found in a locker at a public bus station. [11]
The plain view doctrine does not permit an officer to open a gun case to examine the contents of the case while assisting a sheriff in executing a valid eviction order. [12]
Police returning a stolen safe cannot be said to inadvertently discover documents found within that were immediately apparent to relate to tax fraud. [13]
Detecting a smell in the basement of a house an officer is lawfully in cannot justify entry into the basement without warrant on the basis of plain view. [14]
The doctrine cannot be used to avoid the requirement of reasonable and probable grounds to search or seize evidence. [15]
Observations should be made without violation of the law. Police making observations by trespassing at night is not permitted. [1]
An officer cannot use information gained through a perimeter search in an ITO. [2] Nor can they use information obtained by trespass. [3]
An officer may trespass upon a person's property for the purpose of communicating with the resident. [4] They may also approach the door, knock on it and speak to anyone who chooses to speak with them. [5]
The use of thermal imaging known as Forward Looking Infared Radar (FLIR) is not a form of search. The heat radiating from the house provides limited information about what is going on inside and virtually no information about the person core biographical information. The emanations exist on the outside of the house and so are exposed to the public. [1]
The use of a sniffer dog amounts to a "search" in law. The use of the sniffer dog is almost exclusively in the realm of drug investigations.
A drug sniffer dog may be used to search on the basis of the lower standard of "reasonable suspicion." [1]
The police cannot seize property and then subject it to an x-ray scan without a warrant where it is not in the normal course of airport screening. [1]
When police are invited into a residence they are not engaged in a search. However if they begin to look around for evidence, particularly going into different rooms of the residence, that may about to a search. [1]