These.two indictments, respectively for breaking and entering in the nighttime and for possession of burglarious implements (G. L. c. 266, §§ 15, 49), were tried before a judge sitting without jury. At the trial, which was made subject to G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G, as amended, the defendant was convicted of both crimes, and has appealed. The errors assigned and argued are (1) to the denial of a motion to suppress evidence made before trial and heard by the same judge who presided at the trial; (2) to the denial of the same motion when renewed at the trial; and (3) to the denial of the defendant’s request in each case for a finding of not guilty on all the evidence as matter of law.
Officer Fitzsimmons then arrested the defendant for being abroad in the nighttime. See G. L. c. 41, § 98, as amended through St. 1957, c. 688, § 1, entitled “Powers and Duties of Police Officers,” which reads in part: “During the night time they may examine all persons abroad whom they have reason to suspect of unlawful design, and may demand of them their business abroad and whither they are going .... Persons so suspected who do not give a satis
The defendant argues that the denial of the motion was error, because Gr. L. c. 41, § 98, is unconstitutional in so far as it authorizes a police officer to make an arrest for being abroad in the nighttime. This, it is contended, is contrary to the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, as permitting an arrest “on suspicion.” It is also argued that § 98 “is unconstitutionally vague” as affording no guidance to the police officer, who is the sole judge as to whether a person gives a satisfactory account of himself. We shall not decide these questions because there was probable cause for arrest for breaking and entering. To be sure, the police officer, who was a layman and not a legal technician, did not state this to be the ground of arrest during the nighttime encounter on the city streets. But the citizens of the Commonwealth, whom the police are organized and exist to protect, and the Commonwealth should not be conclusively bound or limited by the officer’s choice of words made subjectively in the active execution of his duties. A police officer in the solution of a crime and in the presence of one he thinks committed it is not a judge with time for mature consideration. On the contrary, his position more nearly resembles that of a sentry at his post in time of war. Upon his alertness and judgment depends the
are of opinion that the combination of facts known to Officer Fitzsimmons reasonably permitted such a conclusion. He had learned of a recent break from his superiors and at once went to the house. He was told that a female occupant had seen a man in a heavy dark coat run out of the back door and onto and across the adjacent golf links toward Fuller Street. Soon after, while searching in the vicinity of the Fuller Street entrance to the golf course, he had come upon the defendant attired in a heavy dark coat. He could reasonably conclude that not many men would be abroad that night in that vicinity attired in an article of clothing so unsuited to a temperature of eighty-five to ninety degrees. He followed the elementary and highly reasonable course of attempting to interrogate the defendant by way of a brief threshold inquiry. See
Commonwealth
v.
Lehan,
The defendant does not argue that it was. In fact he argues both motions simultaneously.
The renewed motion was rightly denied.
3. The bag, the articles in it, and the silver dollar were discovered in a reasonable search incident to a lawful arrest.
Commonwealth
v.
Holmes,
4. The defendant contends that Marjory M. Alberts testified that the house and the articles taken were hers. The indictment for breaking and entering charges that the house and articles belonged to Sidney Alberts, her husband. This was not a variance. See Gr. L. c. 277, §§ 25, 35; c. 278, § 9. The property, both real and personal, could be found to have been in the actual or constructive possession of the husband.
Commonwealth
v.
Binkiewicz,
5. The requests for findings of not guilty were rightly denied.
Judgments affirmed.
