On Nоvember 12, 1974, appellant and a co-defendant, David Garrell, were arrested by the Clearfield Borough Police on a charge of violating the Drug, Device and Cosmetic Act. 1 Garrell pleaded guilty and is not a party to this appeal. Appellant was tried by a jury and found guilty on June 2, 1975. On Novеmber 6, 1975, the lower court sentenced appellant to pay one dollar and costs and to a term of thirty days to one year in prison. This appeal followed.
On November 12, 1974, Officer Ronald Smith of the Lawrence Township Police Department saw an automobile operated by appellant go through a stop sign and into a gas station. Since the gas station was in Clearfield Borough, Officer Smith radioed the Clearfield Borough Police, requesting that they meet him and his partner at the gas station. Before the Clearfield Borough Police arrived, Officer Smith saw appellant and another man get out of the automobile and walk towards the restroom of the gas station. Officer Smith testified that the two men walked in a “suspicious manner.” When the men reached the restroom, *255 they both entered it. Shortly thereafter, Officer Jury and Assistant Chief Mohney of the Clearfield Bоrough Police arrived at the gas station. Officer Smith related the recent occurrences to Officer Jury. It will be necessary to consider later just what Officer Smith told Officer Jury, but for the moment it is enough to say that he explained that the suspicious manner with which the two men had entered the restrоom caused him to believe that they were possibly “up to something.” Officer Smith’s partner, Officer Collins, knew the two men by name and told Officer Jury who they were. Officer Jury recognized appellant’s name, as he had once arrested appellant on a marihuana charge. Officer Jury climbed onto the roof of a shed located beside the restroom in order to look into a window located directly above the door of the restroom. From this vantage point, Officer Jury was able to observe Garrell hold a syringe up to the light and push the plunger of the syringe in a slow mаnner, causing fluid to spurt from the end of the needle. As Officer Smith attempted to climb onto the shed, he made some noise. Hearing this noise, appellant and Garrell started to leave the restroom. As they began to open the door, officers standing outside confronted them. Officer Jury, still on top of the shed, observed appellant throw a syringe into the corner of the restroom and Garrell put his syringe into his right rear pocket. Both appellant and Garrell were apprehended by the officers standing outside the restroom. Officer Jury alighted from the shed and retrieved thе syringe that appellant had discarded; he also removed the syringe from Garrell’s. pocket. Appellant and Garrell were then taken to the Clearfield Borough Police Station. After identifying information was obtained from them, they were released. Analysis showed the substance contаined in the syringes to be morphine, which is classified as a Schedule II drug under the Drug, Device and Cosmetic Act. 2
Appellant filed a motion to suppress evidence. In support of the motion, appellant argued that he was the subject of an unreasonable search when Officer Jury obsеrved his *256 activity through the restroom window. Following a hearing, the motion was denied by the lower court and the case proceeded to trial. After being found guilty, appellant reiterated in post-verdict motions, and now argues on appeal, that his- Fourth Amendment rights were violated. We agree. 3
Whether the Fourth Amendment applies at all to this case depends on whether appellant had a justifiable expectation of privacy when he entered the gas station restroom.
Katz v. United States,
Whether appellant’s expectation of privacy was unreasonably violated depends on whether Officer Jury had probable cause to invade that privacy by climbing onto the shed and peering into the restroom. We hold that he did not.
In the first place, Officеr Jury’s testimony regarding what he was told by Officer Smith is too incomprehensible to support a finding of probable cause.
Q. You explain it to us as best you can, okay, the suspicious manner?
A. The two individuals walking close together, in other words not at a normal pace as if two peoplе were walking side by side, but rather front to front, and they had, like, their arms together sort of elbows pinned to the side, and proceeded in the restroom in that manner.
Q. So, now, you say they’re walking — he told you they’re walking face to face rather than side by side?
A. Well, somewhat face to facе. They weren’t walking sideways as they go in the restroom.
Q. Like, their arms at their side?
*257 A. As if to conceal something close to their body, right.
Suppression Hearing, N.T. 14-15.
In the second place, even if this testimony were comprehensible it could not support a finding of probable cause, for whatever the officer was told, he was not told it until after he had peered into the restroom:
THE COURT: Is that what he told you on the night of November the 12th, 1974?
THE WITNESS: That night, he told me they went in in that suspicious manner. And I asked him briefly what the suspicious — what does he mean suspicious manner. He said it looked like they tried to hide something. But he didn’t demonstrate to me that night, in other words, go into complete detail like he did at the hearing.
MR. NADDEO:
Q. Okay, if I understand your testimony, Officer, he didn’t actually dеmonstrate as you have demonstrated to me and to the Court; he just said it was in a suspicious manner as though they were trying to hide something; is that basically—
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Is that right?
A. Yes, sir. To the best of my knowledge what I remembered he told me that night, yes.
Q. Now, on the basis of that, and your prior knowledge of the individuals, is that what you’re сontending?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. You knew that they had been involved with drugs before?
A. Yes, sir..
Q. By reputation?
A. No, sir. I’ve made arrests on Mr. Demchak.
Q. For what type of drug?
A. Possession of marijuana.
Q. Okay, on that basis you felt that you were justified in climbing up on the ice chest and looking into the window; is that correct?
*258 A. Yes, I did.
Q. And you did do that?
A. Yes, I did.
Suppression Hearing, N.T. 15-16.
Thus, all the officer knew was (1) that another officer had told him that two men had walked into the restroom “in a suspicious manner”, and (2) that he had arrested one of the men fоr possession of marihuana. This did not give the officer probable cause to invade the men’s privacy.
See Commonwealth
v.
Davis,
The evidence seized in the search here discussed should have been suppressed. The judgment of sentence is therefore vacated, and the case remanded for a new trial.
VAN der VOORT, Judge, dissenting:
While I substantially agree with the statement of facts as set forth by the Majority, I find that I must reach a different conclusion.
Appellant initially contends that his Fourth Amendment rights were violated as a result of an unreasonable search and seizure. It is well settled that the reasonableness of any search and seizure must be determined from the facts and
*259
circumstances of each particular case.
Commonwealth
v.
Anderson,
The facts in the present case indicated thаt Officer Jury was informed by Officer Smith that the two individuals
*260
upon leaving the car walked in a very suspicious manner towards the restroom. The uncontradicted testimony of Officer Smith was that the two walked sideways facing each other with their arms extended between themselves and in a hurried manner. It is quite aрparent that this type of behavior is not that usually displayed by two men entering a public restroom. A person would not. have to be experienced in the field of law enforcement to be justifiably suspicious of the two individuals. In addition to the manner with which they entered the restroom, Officer Jury’s susрicions were raised when he was informed of the identity of the two. He had personal knowledge of the appellant, stemming from a prior arrest for violating the Drug, Device and Cosmetic Act, and he knew of Mr. Garrell’s involvement with illegal drugs from various informants. Finally, Officer Jury testified that he was familiar with the restroom that the two individuals entered. The room contained one sink and one toilet facility, and was large enough to accommodate only one person. I am not prepared to say that any one of these considerations, taken by itself, is sufficient to establish probable cause. However, probable cause need not be established by only one element. Whether or not probable cause exists, so as to vitiate the unreasonableness of a search, is a question that can only be answered by examining all of the factors within the knowledge of the officer at the time he made the search. With respect to prior criminal activity, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has held that, “[wjhile, clearly his past criminal history alone would not justify a finding of probable cause regardless how similar the circumstances, it clearly can be considered as one of the factors leading to that determination.”
Commonwealth v. Gullett,
In conclusion, I find after reviewing all the information available tо Officer Jury at the time he was confronted with deciding whether or not to view the appellant through the window that he did act on the basis of probable cause and therefore the search was not unreasonable.
Appellant also contends that testimony offered during the trial which сoncerned his prior arrest for a drug violation had no probative value and that its admission constituted reversible error. It is true that a defendant cannot be convicted of one crime by the use of evidence of another crime.
Commonwealth v. McGonigle,
Notes
. Act of 1972, April 14, P.L. 233, No. 64, 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(16).
. Act of 1972, April 14, P.L. 233, No. 64, 35 P.S. § 780-104(2).
. Because we reverse on this, ground we shall not discuss appellant’s claim that the lower court erred in allowing the Commonwealth to introduce testimony concerning his prior criminal record.
. Our conclusion in
Davis
that a recent arrest did not, either alone or in combination with other factors, furnish probable cause is not undermined by
Commonwealth v. Gullett,
