Opinion by
Appellant, Herman Miller Davenport, was convicted by a jury of murder in the first degree for the killing of Milton Hawkins on January 11, 1970. Sentence of life imprisonment was imposed, and appellant brought the instant appeal. For reasons which follow, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
*238 I
At the end of the second day of trial, the Commonwealth called to the stand appellant’s co-felon, William Clifford Bartlett. In response to defense counsel’s request for an offer of proof, a side-bar conference was held. The district attorney informed the court that Bartlett had earlier given a confession to the police implicating appellant, and that the Commonwealth hoped he would repeat the substance of this statement in the jury’s presence. Bartlett’s attorney was in court and informed the trial judge at side-bar that several hours earlier his client had expressed his intention to invoke the Fifth Amendment. 1 The district attorney admitted that “there is a strong possibility, probability, that if Mr. Bartlett did take the stand he would take the Fifth Amendment. I am hoping he wouldn’t. There is no way, I think, anyone can be sure until the man is put to the test.” 2 Over the strenuous objection of appellant’s counsel, the Commonwealth’s call of Bartlett to the stand was allowed. With the exception of questions relating to the name and address of the witness, all questions were met with a claim of privilege. A requested cautionary instruction that the jury not draw an adverse inference from the alleged co-conspirator’s refusal to testify was refused.
In
Namet v. United States,
The Commonwealth alleges that no error was committed in this case because when Bartlett was called to the stand, the prosecution believed in good faith that his right to invoke the Fifth Amendment had been lost by his earlier trial and conviction. 4 As we said in DuVal, *240 however, a case where the Commonwealth asserted that by testifying on prior occasions the witnesses had waived their Fifth Amendment rights, the validity vel non of the claim of privilege is immaterial. It is a question which can and should be settled outside the presence of the jury. It is also clear, as in DuVal, that the district attorney had actual notice of Bartlett’s intention to take the Fifth Amendment; we therefore need not explore what steps, if any, the Commonwealth should be required to take in advance in order to ascertain the willingness of a witness to testify.
II
The proceedings below were infirm, for a second reason. On January 20, 1970, at the instigation of the police, the Montgomery County Coroner extracted a blood sample from appellant to type and compare with that of the deceased. This action was taken without prior judicial authorization and while appellant was confined in the local jail. We conclude that appellant’s rights under the Fourth Amendment were violated and that his timely motion to suppress should have been granted. A new trial must therefore be ordered on this ground also.
That the taking of blood is a search and seizure subject to the protections of the Fourth Amendment was firmly established in
Schmerber v. California,
To circumvent the warrant requirement, the Commonwealth argues that appellant consented to the procedure that was employed. The suppression testimony of the Coroner fails to bear out this position: “Q. Now what happened when Herman Davenport came into the room? A. I said we wanted to take a blood test of him. Q. Did he say anything? A. He did not. Q. What did he do, if anything? A. He sat there until we got the syringes and tubes ready, and the corpsman, or whoever the man is that works in the dispensary, asked him to put out his arm and took the blood sample. Q. Did he put out his arm? A. Yes. Q. Did he say anything during this period of time, do you recall? A. Not that I recall.” In
Bumper v. North Carolina,
Since a new trial will be required, we turn to a consideration of one other issue which will necessarily be involved in future proceedings. 6
*243 Ill
Appellant contends that the seizure of certain articles of blood-stained clothing linking him to the murder of Hawkins should have been suppressed as violative of the Fourth Amendment. On Monday, January 19, 1970, armed with an arrest warrant, 7 a large contingent of police officers representing Philadelphia, Montgomery County and Cheltenham Township, proceeded to appellant’s rooming house. Ascending the stairs to the third floor, they spotted appellant coming out of his room. He was immediately placed under arrest and frisked for weapons in the doorway to his one-room apartment. Wearing only pants and a T-shirt, appellant asked to be allowed to finish dressing before being escorted to the police station. According to uncontradicted testimony at the suppression hearing, appellant went back into his room accompanied, however, by four or five policemen. The room was approximately 9x12 feet, furnished only with a bed and dresser. While retrieving appellant’s shoes, socks, and shirt, one Detective Vance noticed and seized a pair of trousers from the bed, some rags from atop the bureau, and a denim jacket hanging from a hook on the open closet door, all noticeably stained with blood. 8
Appellant contends that because the police had both probable cause and time to obtain a search warrant, and failed to do so, the articles seized at his apartment should have been suppressed. We disagree. In
Harris v. United States,
It is, of course, well settled that the police are justified in searching, incident to a valid arrest, “the arrestee’s person and the area ‘within his immediate control’ —construing that phrase to mean the area from within which he might gain possession of a weapon or de
*245
structible evidence.”
Chimel v. California,
Judgment of sentence reversed; case remanded for a new trial.
Notes
Bartlett had already been tried by a jury and convicted of first degree murder for his complicity in the slaying of Hawkins. His post-trial motions were then pending and sentence had not as yet been imposed. Subsequently, the motions were denied and Bartlett was sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, we affirmed.
Commonwealth v. Bartlett,
The record of the side-bar conference indicates that Bartlett’s counsel suggested that his client be questioned personally by the court outside of the jury’s presence to ascertain whether or not he would invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege. The trial judge declined to do so.
Following
Namet,
this Court in
Commonwealth v. Greene,
Whether in fact Bartlett had lost his Fifth Amendment privilege as a result of the earlier conviction presents an interesting question. Interpreting a legislative grant of immunity for witnesses compelled to testify before federal grand juries investigating alleged violations of the federal narcotics laws, the Supreme Court of the United States in
Reina v. United States,
At appellant’s suppression bearing the district attorney, no doubt realizing the tenuous legal foundation for the original blood seizure, presented a search warrant application to the court for a second blood sampling. Although admitting that probable cause existed and that the results of the second test would be identical to those of «the first, defense counsel nevertheless opposed this application as prejudicial, since it was made after the motion to suppress and so close to trial. The court deferred its ruling on this application pending resolution of the motion to suppress. As the initial search was ultimately upheld, the warrant never was considered. Whether or not the warrant is valid is, of course, not a question on this appeal.
In addition to the three issues discussed in the text, appellant also alleges as error (1) the overruling of his demurrer to the evidence and motion for a directed verdict, and (2) the introduction of certain photographs taken from inside the deceased’s house looking out so as to show the lighting in the street. We have carefully examined these contentions and find both to be without merit.
The probable cause supporting this arrest warrant was not challenged. It was issued, inter alia, on the basis of William Bartlett’s statement, referred to earlier in the text, implicating appellant in the murder.
Testimony at the suppression hearing showed that as a precautionary measure, appellant was told to remain seated on his bed while the police retrieved these items of clothing.
While the language quoted above is taken from Mr. Justice Stewart’s plurality opinion in Ooolidge, it is clear from the separate opinions of Justices White and Black that the plurality treatment of the “plain view” doctrine and the Fourth Amendment was more restrictive than that favored by the rest of the Court, who would not impose any “inadvertence” limitation on the doctrine. As there is no dispute that the officers in this case did not have any advance notice that the bloody clothing would be found in appellant’s apartment and did discover it “inadvertently”, it is clear that the division among the members of the Supreme Court of the United States does not affect our disposition today.
Appellant’s argument that the plain view doctrine applies only to inherently contraband goods is without merit. In
Warden v. Hayden,
