Mrs. Randolph called police about a marital dispute. She told officers that the problems were caused by her husband's cocaine use, and said he had drugs in the house. Mr. Randolph expressly refused consent to search. But his wife consented, taking the officers upstairs and pointing out some evidence. The state supreme court ruled the wife's consent invalid as against her husband's objection, and the state appealed.
The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the state ruling suppressing the evidence. The court emphasized that in all of its previous cases allowing third-party consent, the co-occupant against whom the evidence was used was not immediately present to voice an objection. But because of the carefully guarded sanctity of the home, the court said that when both occupants are present and one objects, the other does not have the authority to "override" a co-occupant's refusal to consent:
"A warrantless search of a shared dwelling for evidence over the express refusal of consent by a physically present resident cannot be justified as reasonable as to him on the basis of consent given to the police by another resident."
This new ruling nullifies the decisions in many state and federal cases that have held that consent is valid if given by any responsible co-occupant, even over the objection of another occupant.
The court pointed out that this new rule only applies if the nonconsenter is present at the doorway and expressly objects. If he or she happens to be nearby or is absent from the home (without evidence of police contrivance aimed at preventing objection), or if the suspect-occupant acquiesces in the co-occupant's consent, the consent of one occupant would still be valid.