Opinion by
On the morning of June 28, 1968, a police officer of the Pittsburgh narcotics squad obtained a warrant to search the first-floor apartment of Merle Bedford and Mary Hughes, at 226 Dinwiddie Street in Pittsburgh, for narcotics. The affidavit for the warrant recited information received that Bedford and Hughes were packaging and selling narcotics from the apartment; that the informant had provided information in the past which resulted in arrest, and seizure of narcotics; 1 and that addicts were seen entering and leaving the apartment after short stays.
Having this warrant in his possession, affiant and three other police officers, all of whom were on the narcotics squad and had vast experience in narcotics investigations, began a surveillance of the apartment house at 226 Dinwiddie Street. The apartment house was two and one-half to three stories high with apartments on each floor. Appellant occupied two rooms in the rear, on the first floor, from which a door opens *183 into a common hallway. This common hallway is entered from the outside by a door on the front porch which gives access to the whole building.
At approximately 11:30 p.m. on June 28, the officers, still undertaking their surveillance, observed a woman known by them to be a drug addict, enter the front entrance to the apartment building. The officers followed the woman and observed the appellant meet the woman at the entrance and open the door for her. The woman then appeared to hand something to appellant. When the first officer was several feet away from the woman, appellant saw him and ran through the hallway to the rear of the hall. The officer went through the open door and followed her. Appellant ran up a flight of stairs and entered a lighted bathroom on the second floor. The officer was in close pursuit behind her.
The bathroom was a communal one used by the tenants of all the apartments located in the building. When appellant entered the bathroom she threw a change purse, which was in her left hand, under a bathtub. The officer who was just entering the room observed this action. He then grabbed appellant by both arms to restrain her and directed a second officer, who had just entered the room, to retrieve the change purse. The purse was easily located under the tub and was found to contain six glassine bags of white powder and six capsules. An additional capsule was found at appellant’s feet and a $10 bill was seen in her right hand. Upon analysis, the six glassine bags were found to contain heroin and the seven capsules were found to contain cocaine.
Appellant was indicted for possession of narcotic drugs, a felony. Prior to trial, she filed a motion to suppress the evidence which was seized. This motion was denied and she was later found guilty in a jury trial. In this appeal, she contends that there was no *184 probable cause for either the arrest or the search and, therefore, the evidence of the heroin and cocaine should have been suppressed. 2 We feel that the police had probable cause to arrest, and the search being incident to a valid arrest was proper. We, therefore, affirm the judgment of the court below.
To be lawful, an arrest without warrant must be based on probable cause.
Commonwealth v. Negri,
*185
The search warrant in this case was not valid. The validity of a search warrant obtained by use of an informer’s tip must be measured by the two-prong test set forth in
Aguilar v. Texas,
The fact that the informer’s hearsay allegations do not furnish probable cause for the issuance of the warrant, however, does not mean that the allegations cannot be taken into consideration when determining whether there was probable cause for an arrest on view. Acts which the police themselves observe may be used to confirm what the police have been told.
United States v. Soyka,
In Soyka, federal agents received information from a previously reliable informant which they felt established probable cause for the issuance of a warrant. Preparatory to obtaining the warrant, they went to the location of Soyka’s apartment to verify the location. While one of the agents was in the hallway out *186 side the apartment, Soyka walked out of his apartment and saw the agent who was not in uniform. Soyka got a startled, alarmed expression on his face and jumped hack into the apartment. The agent then grabbed and arrested him. The agents proceeded to search the apartment. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals, assuming that the information given by the informant would not establish probable cause for a search warrant because the informer did not give sufficient underlying facts, still held the arrest and subsequent search valid. Speaking for seven members of a nine-judge en bcmc panel, Judge Friendly stated: “We are not, however, required to decide whether a magistrate or commissioner, told of all the Government here knew about Soyka, could not rationally have found this to be enough to justify the issuance of a warrant. A new set of facts was thrown on the scales when the agents’ proper reconnaissance was interrupted by the appearance of Soyka who, seeing Agent Waters in the hall near his apartment, ‘jumped back toward the inner recesses of the apartment’ . . . his conduct afforded impressive confirmation of what the agents had been told. . . . Finding that Soyka’s physical appearance tallied precisely with the informant’s description and that he acted as a narcotics seller normally would upon encountering law enforcement officers, Agent Waters had reason to conclude from this ‘cumulation of instances’ that the information about Soyka was right. . . . Reading the Fourth Amendment as requiring a law enforcement officer, armed with the reasons for belief in guilt that Agent Waters possessed, to allow a suspect to retire and destroy the evidence of his crime, would ignore that only ‘unreasonable’ searches and seizures are banned. . . Id. at 453-54.
Thus, if sufficient other facts observed by police officers substantiate the information received from the informant, probable cause exists for an arrest on *187 view. Before tbe officers began their surveillance in the instant case, they knew, from facts given by the informant, that (1) appellant was said to be selling and packaging narcotics from her apartment, (2) she lived in a first-floor apartment, and (3) a large supply of narcotics was previously found in the apartment in which appellant lived with Merle Bedford. After the surveillance began, the following occurred: (1) a known narcotics user met appellant at the front door of the apartment building and handed her something, 3 (2) at the sight of the police, appellant turned and ran, (3) appellant did not run to her first-floor apartment which could be locked, but started upstairs, 4 (4) appellant entered a bathroom which could not be locked, but which is a convenient location for disposing of nar *188 cotics, (5) appellant threw some article under a tub. This ‘cumulation of circumstances’ is more than enough to convince experienced police officers that the information they had received about appellant was correct. It cannot be doubted that, as in Soy lea, the appellant acted as a narcotic seller would upon seeing the police. “Just as words acquire a special meaning in context ... so do actions.” United States ex rel. Cunningham v. Follette, 5 supra. Certainly all of the circumstances within the officers’ knowledge would warrant a reasonable man in believing an offense was being committed. Thus, probable cause existed for a. warrantless arrest.
A search and seizure is proper under the Fourth Amendment standards if it is made pursuant to a lawful arrest.
Commonwealth v. Negri,
supra.
Chimel v. California,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
One of the seizures mentioned In the affidavit occurred at the apartment of Merle Bedford, which was the same apartment Mary Hughes occupied and the same apartment for which the warrant was issued.
In her brief to this Court, appellant also contends that the trial judge erred in permitting police to testify that the woman who knocked on appellant’s door was “a known narcotics addict.” The use of this phrase was not objected to at the suppression hearing, and was not raised in post-trial motions. Thus, it cannot now be considered.
In
Sibron v. New York,
Appellant contends that the common hallways and stairs of the apartment were constitutionally protected areas which the police had no right to enter. Based on this contention, she argues that facts (3), (4), and (5) should not be considered in determining whether there is probable cause since the police would have no knowledge of them if the constitutionally protected area had not been invaded. This argument has no merit. As stated in
People v. Seals,
In Ounniwjliam, the Court held that to any experienced narcotics officer the act of- defendant in handing a brown paper bag to a lady companion in a bar at 1:00 a.m. when strangers enter, might contribute in a great measure to a reasonable inference.
