Opinion by
The first “search and seizure” question to reach this Court since the decision in
Mapp v. Ohio,
On July 10, 1961,
1
at approximately 10:30 p.m., a burglary occurred at a wholesale jewelry store in Philadelphia in the course of which some watches and jewelry were stolen. The police were notified and they entered upon an investigation of the store and its immediate neighborhood, meanwhile requesting persons in that area to report to detective headquarters any person seen “with watches”. On July 11, 1961, about 6:00 p.m., a telephone call from an undisclosed source
2
was received at detective headquarters and referred to De
Immediately pursuant to this call, Detective Kelly, with a Detective gabarro, visited the described taproom but found no one there who answered the description of the person referred to in the telephone call. However, in a nearby taproom, located across the street from the burglarized store, the detectives found a man named Frank Bosurgi who fully answered the description. Bosurgi, seated at a table, was directed to stand up and Detective Kelly “turned the man around”, “patted him down from the back”, and, when he reached the trousers’ pockets, “felt objects there, bulky objects” which felt like watches. From Bosurgi’s trousers’ pockets Detective Kelly removed ten watches, eight of which were later identified as part of the stock taken from the burglarized store.
While removing the watches from the trousers’ pockets, Detective Kelly noticed “particles in there, pieces of bits of glass, little pieces of ringlets, possibly from a bracelet.” 3 Bosurgi was immediately taken to police headquarters where he was requested to and did remove his trousers; the trousers were vacuumed and glass particles, similar to those previously obtained, were found therein.
It is an undisputed fact that the detectives had no warrant either to arrest or search the person of Bosurgi.
After a hearing in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia County before the Honorable Bernard J. Kelley, that court granted the motion to suppress the evidence; from that order, the Commonwealth appealed to the Superior Court which reversed the order of the Court of Quarter Sessions. 4 We granted an allocatur.
Two principal questions are raised: (1) the right of the Commonwealth to appeal from the pretrial order suppressing the evidence and (2) the legality of the search of Bosurgi and the seizure of this evidence.
Initially, we determine whether the Commonwealth has the right of appeal from this order. Parenthetically, it may be noted that, without the suppressed evidence, the Commonwealth has no other evidence against Bosurgi and, if the' suppression order is upheld, the prosecution of Bosurgi will necessarily terminate.
The position of the federal courts as to the right of the Government to appeal from a pretrial order directing the suppression of evidence obtained, allegedly, as the result of an illegal search and seizure is now clear. Appealability from orders entered on
post-indictment
motions was denied to the Government in
Carroll v. U.
S.,
We have held, consistently, that the Commonwealth may appeal, in certain areas, from an adverse ruling in a criminal case where the question involved is purely one of law but cannot appeal where the reason for the adverse ruling is an admixture of law and facts:
Commonwealth v. Melton,
On occasion, the Superior Court has considered, in slightly different posture, the Commonwealth's right of appeal from pretrial orders in criminal cases. In
Commonwealth v. Montanero,
In the wake of
Mapp
new impetus has been given to the practice of filing by defendants of motions to suppress evidence seized in allegedly illegal searches. In this Commonwealth, such motions, save in exceptional circumstances, are
now required
to be made
in advance
From the point of view of the Commonwealth, two possible situations may arise: (a) the order of suppression will result in a termination and conclusion of the prosecution or (b) while the order of suppression will not result in a termination or conclusion of the prosecution, it will result in a prosecution wherein the Commonwealth is substantially handicapped because it cannot present
all
its available evidence. In the first situation, the element of finality inherent in the order of suppression is apparent and sufficient to render the order appealable. In the second situation, although the element of finality in the order is not so apparent, it is nevertheless present. Without a right of appeal in the Commonwealth in the second situation, the Commonwealth is completely deprived of
any opportunity
to secure an appellate court evaluation of the validity of the order of suppression which forces the Commonwealth to trial without
all
of its evidence. The evidence suppressed may well mark the difference between success and failure in the prosecution; to deny the Commonwealth its only opportunity of securing an appellate review to determine whether the evidence was properly suppressed is highly unfair to the Commonwealth and the interests of society which it represents. In our zeal to protect and preserve for the accused every constitutional right to which he is entitled we
The right of appeal by a defendant stands upon an entirely different footing. The denial of a defendant’s motion for the suppression of evidence does not deprive; a, defendant of an appellate review, of the validity of that order. At trial, the defendant still has full opportunity to object to the introduction into evidence of the allegedly improper evidence and, in the event of his conviction, he will then have an opportunity to secure an appellate evaluation of the propriety and admissibility of such evidence. Therefore, unlike the Commonwealth, an adverse pretrial disposition of a motion to suppress, evidence does not deprive the defendant of his only opportunity for appellate review. Under such circumstances, the element of finality, which is the basis of appealability, is lacking in an order denying suppression and the defendant should have no right of appeal from such order.
We next direct our attention to the validity of the order which suppressed the production of the watches, and glass particles as evidence.
As we read
Mapp,
its decisional point is that “all evidence obtained .by searches and seizures in violation of the Constitution is, by that same authority, inadmissible in a state court”, (p. 655), such rule of exclusion being “. . . an essential part of both the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments . . . .” (p. 657) The Fourth Amendment protects and preserves “ff|he
In passing upon the "reasonableness" of a search and seizure, a preliminary, and most important, question is whether Mapp requires that state courts determine the "reasonableness" of such search and seizure in accordance with federal or state standards. To that question Mapp gives no direct answer. However, a study of Mapp would indicate that, at least by implication, 8 state courts are still free to apply their own, rather than the federal, criteria of "reasonableness".
The "reasonableness" of a search and seizure must be determined on an ad hoc basis, i.e., on the facts and the circumstances of each particular case. In
U. S. v.
Rabinowitz,
Under the instant circumstances, did the search of Bosurgi’s person and the seizure from his person of the watches and glass particles constitute a reasonable search and seizure?
The Commonwealth makes no claim — nor could it on this record — that the police officers had a warrant to arrest Bosurgi or to search his person. The absence of such a warrant, however, does not per se vitiate the arrest or the search. Under both federal and state authorities, a police officer is authorized to arrest without a warrant where he has reasonable or probable cause to believe that a felony has been committed and that the person to be arrested is the one who committed the felony:
Draper v. U. S.,
Although the Fourth Amendment does not prohibit arrests without warrants, it limits and restricts the circumstances under which an arrest without a warrant may be made to offenses committed in the presence of the officers or where the officers have reason
“Reasonable” or “probable” cause, difficult as those terms are of exact definition, are exceedingly difficult in their application to the facts and circumstances of a particular case. The recent language of Mr. Justice Rutledge in Brinegar v. U. S.,338 U.S. 160 , 175,69 S. Ct. 1302 , 1310, may well act as a guide: “In dealing with probable cause . . .as the very name implies, we deal with probabilities. These are not technical; they are the factual and practical considerations ofeveryday life on which reasonable and prudent men, not legal technicians, act.”
If an arrest, even without a warrant, is lawful, then a search and a seizure incidental thereto are valid:
Wilson v. Schnettler,
Was Bosurgi under arrest at the time of the search of his person? Officers are not required to make any formal declaration of arrest or use the word "arrest"
(Commonwealth v. Holmes,
Taking into consideration all the surrounding circumstances we are of the view that the arrest of Bosurgi, even though without a warrant, was valid and based
The arrest, in our view, being valid, the officers had not only the right, but the duty, to search Bosurgi. In
U. S. v. Rabinowitz,
supra (p. 432), the Court said: "Yet no one questions the right, without a search warrant, to search the person after a valid arrest. The right to search the person incident to arrest always has been recognized in this country and in England. [citing cases]. Where one had been placed in the custody of the law by valid action of officers, it was not unreasonable to search him." The officers, in the case at bar, ordered Bosurgi to stand, searched him to ascertain if he was armed — not only a proper but a highly necessary protective procedure — and, in the course of so doing, located on his person the watches and glass particles. The language of Judge (later Justice) CARDOZO in
People v. Chiagles,
In our view, the police officers had reasonable grounds and probable cause to believe that Bosurgi had committed this burglary and their subjection of him to custody constituted a valid arrest. The search of his person, incidental to this valid arrest, was entirely proper and the watches and glass particles found in his pockets were not illegally seized within the constitutional prohibition.
We fully agree with the majority of the Superior Court. “The maintenance of a proper balance between the right of the individual to privacy and that of society in the apprehension of crime does not require a suppression of the evidence as obtained by unreasonable search and seizure in this case. Nor does the Mapp decision compel a conclusion that the search and seizure here were unreasonable . . . .”
Notes
Three weeks subsequent to the Mapp decision.
The record indicates that the caller had not given information to the police in the past, the informant’s reliability was assumed and the call was taken “for what it was worth”.
The rear window and plate glass showcase doors in the store had been smashed and glass particles were all over the store floor.
This decision (reported in
DiBella’s
rationale would seem to be that the Government is no more prejudiced by a pretrial order suppressing evidence than it is as the result of an adverse ruling on evidence during trial. See also:
Rule 2001 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure (adopted March 7, 1963). See also: Rules 100, 101 of the Rules of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia County.
Emphasis supplied.
Mapp
singles out for recognition the action of California in 1955 in its adoption of the exclusionary rule
(People v. Cahan,
Cf: Restatement. Torts, §121.
Such submission to arrest does not equate a consent to be searched. Furthermore, such submission cannot form a basis for a probable cause to arrest: U. S. v. Di Re, supra.
