7) Garbutt often arrived early at work.
In reviewing the first two factors, the court concluded that they were “wholly unrelated” to Garbutt’s right to access Shelton’s office. Specifically, the security cameras only monitored the comings and goings of individuals into the building, were not monitored by Garbutt, and he had no access to the video feed. Similarly, the only persons authorized by office policy to conduct searches of the workplace were the Security Deputy and the Deputy or supervisor of the affected employee. Garbutt was not the Security Deputy, a Deputy, nor was he Shelton’s supervisor. As a result, the court held that neither the security cameras nor the workplace search policy gave Garbutt any right of access to Shelton’s office.
Concerning the remaining factors, the court acknowledged that anything that Shelton knowingly exposed to Garbutt when he was present as a business invitee to her office would not be subject to Fourth Amendment protection. However, the court held that Garbutt far exceeded the limits of his access as a business invitee when he gathered the documents from Shelton’s office.
First, the fact that Garbutt “passed by” Shelton’s office on his way to visit Elgin did not weigh in favor of the district court’s finding that her office was so open to visitors that she lacked any reasonable expectation of privacy in it. Even if some visitors passed through Shelton’s office in order to visit Elgin, there was no evidence that Shelton’s office was so open that members of the public could wander in. In fact, there was a separate waiting area outside of Shelton’s office for outside visitors, and the most direct paths for employees and other visitors to meet with Elgin bypassed Shelton’s office.
Next, there was also no evidence that other employees, including Garbutt, entered Shelton’s office for anything other than limited purposes as business invitees. Finally, there was no evidence that Garbutt collected this evidence when he was in Shelton’s office as a business invitee; for example, when he dropped items off on Shelton’s chair, signed the time-keeping sheet, passed by to see Elgin, or stopped in to visit Shelton herself. Instead, Garbutt searched Shelton’s office “more often than not, very early in the morning” before anyone arrived at the office, a task Garbutt could not have accomplished during working hours.