The Commonwealth appeals from the allowance of the defendants’ motion to suppress evidence obtained in a warrantless search of a social club that they operate. We transferred the appeal here on our own motion and now affirm the оrder allowing the motion to suppress.
We summarize the motion judge’s findings of fact. The defendant D’Onofrio is the treasurer, and the defendant Cadoret is a member of the board of directors, of The Loft *149 Twenty-One Association, Inc. (The Loft), a nonprofit corporation that operаtes the club on Stanhope Street in Boston. The defendants operate the club, in effect, as its managers. The club’s members pay an аnnual fee for access to its facilities. On paying a $5 fee, each member may bring one guest at each visit. The Loft operates between 1a.m. and 5a.m., when members may socialize, dance, and purchase soft drinks. The Loft does not have a victualler’s license. The Loft premises are on the second floor of the building; the defendants live on the third floor. Typically, when the club is open, members and guests “check in” at the second floor landing, where D’Onofrio monitors a sign-in sheet and membership list.
On July 5, 1981, a Sunday, Detective John J. Mulligan, a member of the Boston police department’s vice control unit, visited The Loft, as he had every weekend in recent months. He had no search warrant. He knew thаt The Loft did not have a liquor license, a victualler’s license, or a license permitting entertainment on a Sunday. At the second floor landing, D’Onofrio told Detective Mulligan that, if he did not have a warrant, he did not have permission to search. Detective Mulligan nevertheless inspеcted the second and third floors. On the second floor he saw some people dancing to recorded music. On the third floor, he saw fоod, arranged buffet style, but no indication that it was being offered for sale. In the dimly lit room he saw individuals sitting alone, as well as couples, some in sexual embraces.
On July 6, 1981, Detective Mulligan sought complaints against the defendants, charging them with being unlicensed common victuallers, operating an unlicensed Sunday dance, and keeping a house of ill fame.
In this appeal, the Commonwealth argues that Detective Mulligan was lаwfully on the premises, that he did not need a search warrant, and that what he observed, leading to the complaints, was in plain view. There is nо claim that he was justified in entering the premises because of some exigent circumstance. Detective Mulligan testified that he did not pay a $5 fee on his entry into The Loft, and the Commonwealth has argued the case on that assumption.
*150 The judge concluded that the search viоlated the defendants’ privacy rights. The issue is whether the defendants, as a matter of law, had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the circumstances.
The judge’s findings of fact must stand unless they are clearly erroneous.
Commonwealth
v.
Accaputo,
The Commonwealth argues that it met its burden (see
Commonwealth
v.
Antobenedetto,
However, Fourth Amendment protection frоm unreasonable searches and seizures extends to commercial premises (see
G. M. Leasing Corp.
v.
United States,
The fact that premises are maintained as a club with a membership policy is not conclusive in favor of the club. Failure to enforce limitations on admittance would warrant the conclusion that the persons operating the club had no reasonable expectation of privacy. See
Ouimette
v.
Howard,
Order allowing motion to suppress affirmed.
Notes
See
Commonwealth
v.
Laudate,
We note that the record suggests that the police had probable cause to obtain a search warrant prior to the warrantless entry.
