People v. Suennen
People v. Suennen
Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 194 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 195
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 196 OPINION
Appellant Leo Suennan entered pleas of guilty to charges of burglary (Pen. Code, §
The following facts are pertinent to the search and seizure issues raised on appeal: On the evening of February 26, 1979, Officer Jerry Hummel of the Concord Police Department observed that a 1970 Pontiac Bonneville approaching a stop sign appeared to be modified below rim height in violation of Vehicle Code section
Officer Hummel approached the automobile and asked the driver, appellant, for his license and registration; codefendant Ronald Hohstadt was sitting in the front passenger seat on the right side. Identification obtained from the occupants indicated they were from Vallejo.
As the officer stood at the driver's side, he observed, in plain sight, the following: a large (eight-inch blade) knife in a sheath on the seat between the two occupants; a pair of dark leather gloves; two cans of beer (at least one of which was open); and a large partially filled pillowcase placed upright on the right front floorboard at the feet of the passenger.
In response to Officer Hummel's inquiry, the occupants said they were coming from Pittsburg. However, the officer testified appellant's route of travel on Matheson Road indicated the two were coming from a residential area in Concord.
Based upon his observations of the partially full pillowcase, the weapon and the gloves, and his knowledge that the defendants were from outside the area, Hummel suspected that a burglary had just been committed — particularly since he had previously received information during police-briefing sessions concerning a recent series of evening, residential "pillowcase burglaries" in the Concord area.
While appellant was being escorted to the rear of the car, a "cover" officer (Foley) arrived at the scene. Hummel immediately informed Officer Foley to remove the passenger and pat-search him for weapons. The pat-search of Hohstadt uncovered two flashlights and two screwdrivers *Page 198 which were seized. No weapons or contraband were found as the result of a pat-search of appellant.
Once appellant was removed to the rear of the vehicle, and prior to writing a traffic citation, Officer Hummel — at approximately 7:56 p.m. — requested warrant checks on each suspect. At 7:59 p.m. he was advised by dispatch of an outstanding traffic warrant for the arrest of appellant. Once confirmation of the warrant was received at 8:04 p.m., appellant was arrested, handcuffed and placed in the patrol car.
Officer Hummel then proceeded to appellant's vehicle to seize the alcohol containers, remove the weapon, and "examine the contents." The officer removed the two beer cans in plain sight, and then pushed the pillowcase slightly to check behind it for additional alcohol. He noted that the pillowcase "contained numerous objects, was approximately half full."
After removing the beer cans, Officer Hummel returned to the vehicle and opened the pillowcase. The pillowcase was merely folded over rather than tied or otherwise secured; Hummel simply lifted the fold to look inside. He observed therein "numerous items, boxes of jewelry, boxes of coins, a stamp collection, rings, a box of .22 caliber ammunition; and there were some personal belongings in there, some socks, mouthwash, toiletry items."
The officer also uncovered a loaded .22 caliber pistol under the right front (passenger) seat.
Hohstadt was thereupon arrested for possession of a concealed, loaded gun and the officers took custody of the pillowcase, gun, gloves, beer and knife, and locked appellant's vehicle. The trunk was also searched, but no evidence pertinent to the present appeal was found.
On these facts, appellant asserts that the detention and search of his vehicle and its contents were unlawful. Appellant contests neither the original traffic stop nor the officer's request that appellant alight from the vehicle — both of which we think were unquestionably proper. Appellant's first claim is, instead, that the pat-search of passenger Hohstadt by Officer Foley was improper.
(1) "That officers have the right to conduct a pat-down search, under proper circumstances, cannot be denied." (People
v. Craig (1978) *Page 199
This basic legal standard, enunciated in Terry v. Ohio
(1968)
(2) Officer Hummel's observations following the traffic stop, coupled with his prior knowledge, provided sufficient cause for conducting a pat-search. He was aware of recent local pillowcase burglaries from briefings and station house discussions. The plain view observation of a half-filled pillowcase and dark gloves on the vehicle floor, along with the conflict between appellant's account of his whereabouts and the officer's knowledge of the area, gave rise to a reasonable suspicion that the suspects may have been involved in a burglary. Officer Hummel had also observed beer cans, at least one of which had already been opened, and a large buck knife in the vehicle within easy reach of the occupants. Moreover, it was dark, and two officers did not outnumber the suspects so as to negate any threat or danger.
Based upon the officer's reasonable suspicion that he may have been dealing with burglars, and his knowledge that the suspects had at least one weapon within reach, the pat-search of passenger Hohstadt was justifiable self-protection. (People v. Remiro
(1979)
(3) Citing the recent California Supreme Court holding inPeople v. McGaughran (1979)
We recount the evidence in chronological sequence: the traffic stop was made at 7:54 p.m., the warrant check was requested at 7:56 p.m. (just as Officer Hummel was preparing to issue the vehicle citation), information from dispatch as to the outstanding traffic warrant was received at 7:59 p.m., and the warrant was confirmed at 8:04 p.m. Appellant claims thatMcGaughran dictates suppression of all subsequently seized evidence because the traffic warrant procedure would have taken only "two to three minutes" to complete.
In People v. McGaughran, supra,
The court recognized, however, that a detention which furnishes sufficient cause to prolong the investigation beyond the time required to issue a traffic citation may properly continue while a warrant check is run. The basis of the court's suppression ruling was that ". . . [when the officer] extended the detention beyond the period necessary to perform his duties arising from the traffic stop, he did not do so on `specific and articulable facts' that would support a rational suspicion that defendant and his companion were involved in some activity relating to crime." (People v. McGaughran, supra,
McGaughran does not condemn all traffic detentions which are prolonged by the time required to obtain a response on a warrant check, but only those which are not justified by "specific and articulable facts" justifying a "rational suspicion" of criminal activity. Such facts were lacking in McGaughran; they are present in the case at bench. *Page 201
First, the open alcohol container justified a further detention and search of the vehicle, as appellant concedes. Of greater importance, the observations and information which justified the pat-search, along with the flashlights and screwdrivers which were the product of that lawful intrusion, clearly supported an additional period of detention for the purpose of allowing the officer to investigate his "rational suspicion of criminal activity." (People v. Burnett (1980)
Appellant next argues that even if the detention and pat-search were lawful, the search of the vehicle was not supported by probable cause. We disagree.
(4a), (5) (See fn. 2.) Following the detention and lawful pat-search, Officer Hummel was in possession of the following facts: (1) there had been a number of recent pillowcase burglaries in the area,2 (2) a half-filled pillowcase was observed on the right front floorboard of appellant's vehicle along with dark gloves, beer containers and a knife, (3) passenger Hohstadt was in possession of two flashlights and two screwdrivers, (4) the suspects were from outside the area, and (5) appellant claimed to have come from Pittsburg, while the officer's knowledge of the area and appellant's direction of travel told him that the suspects had come from a residential area. *Page 202
The officer also testified that it was a dark but relatively warm night (for gloves), which further aroused his suspicions. We note, however, that Hummel had not seen the suspects before, and had no report of a pillowcase burglary that night.
(6) The test for probable cause to search is well established and was recently reiterated by the California Supreme Court as follows in Cleaver v. Superior Court (1979)
Appellant concedes that Officer Hummel had sufficient cause to seize the beer cans. The officer's right to conduct a further examination of the vehicle to ascertain whether additional open beer cans were in the car cannot be questioned. (People v.McNeal (1979)
We are of the opinion that the seizure of the pillowcase was also supported by sufficient cause. The presence of burglar tools in the vehicle in the possession of passenger Hohstadt, along with the pillowcase, the weapon, and Officer Hummel's knowledge of prior pillowcase burglaries, furnished the latter with sufficient facts to entertain a strong suspicion that the fruits of a burglary would be found in the pillowcase. The officer's dual sources of knowledge — his information regarding prior burglaries, reinforced by his observations on the scene — supplied the requisite probable cause for the search. (SeePeople v. Superior Court (Torres), supra,
Appellant relies on People v. Mickelson (1963)
The trial court's ruling on the probable cause issue is supported by substantial evidence, and will therefore be sustained.
Appellant's final contention is that even if the seizure of the pillowcase was proper, the search and subsequent examination of its contents were improper. He cites in this respect recent California Supreme Court decisions in People v. Dalton (1979)
In Minjares, the court declared invalid the search of luggage found in an automobile because the luggage was already in the exclusive control of the police. Reliance was placed upon the United States Supreme Court decision in United States v.Chadwick, supra,
Shortly thereafter, in People v. Dalton, supra,
The full dimensions of the Minjares/Dalton rule have been precisely defined. (7) It is clear that closed "personal effects" otherwise lawfully seized from a vehicle may not be searched in the absence of exigent circumstances. However, nothing in these recent cases grants protected status to all
closed containers in plain view seized in an automobile. Such constitutional protection is only accorded those closed containers in which an objectively reasonable expectation of privacy might be claimed. As explained in People v. Diaz
(1980)
More significantly, a pillowcase — save for occasional use as a laundry bag — is not commonly used as a receptacle for items in which a strong privacy interest is manifest. Moreover, the totality of the circumstances observed by the arresting officers at the arrest scene rendered unlikely the intended use of the pillowcase for any important or private or confidential purpose. (People v. Robbins (1980)
Although the line at which containers become "personal effects," complete with "privacy interests," is "perplexing at best" (People v. Diaz, supra,
Accordingly (based both upon the reduced expectation of privacy and the presence of exigent circumstances), we find that the "closed container" rule does not render the instant search unlawful.
And, finally, since we find no merit in appellant's contentions that the vehicle and pillowcase searches were unlawful, we also conclude that any subsequent admissions made by appellant to Parole Officer Bellman were not the fruits of impermissible police activity and were properly admitted in evidence.
The judgment is affirmed.
Racanelli, P.J., and Grodin, J., concurred.
Appellant's petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 25, 1981.
The Harvey/Madden rule cited by appellant requires the source of information transmitted to the officer to testify. However, a"Harvey" objection must be raised at the trial level, not for the first time on appeal. (See People v. Sutton (1976)
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The People, and v. Leo Suennen, And
- Cited By
- 16 cases
- Status
- Published