Thе Commonwealth appeals from an order of a Superior Court judge suppressing evidence gathered in a warrantless search of premises leased by the defendants.
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We conclude that the search was permissible
Wе summarize the evidence presented at the suppression hearing. In 1975, the defendants were tenants of one unit in a two-unit commercial building on Main Street in Med-ford. The building consisted of one floor at street level and a cellar, and was divided at both levels by a wall which separated the defendants’ two-level unit from the two-level unit reserved to the trustee owner (owner). On November 22, 1975, the owner was informed of a fuel oil smell emanating from the building. The next day he went to the building with his “oil man” and discovered water with oil floаting on it on the cellar floor of his unit. He failed to find the source of the water and oil in his unit.
Pursuant to an oral agreement, the owner had retained a key to the defendants’ half of the building to be used in an emergency. The owner used the key to gain access to the defendants’ unit at the street level. After entering and finding the cellar door padlocked, the owner and his oil man looked through an existing opening in the floor and saw water and oil on the cellar floor.* *
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They broke the padlock and opеned the door to the cellar, where they found four plastic jug-like containers on a landing immediately inside the cellar door. The owner smelled gasoline in the onе container on the landing that he investigated, and saw four more containers spread apart from one another on the cellar
Upon making these observations the owner telephoned the fire department, which promptly sent firefighters to the premises. Shortly after viewing the scene in the cellar, one of the firefighters telephoned the police. Several police officers came, and, under the joint supervision of the fire and police departments, the fire department removed the сontainers to the fire státion. 5 No warrant was obtained.
It is elementary that when a search is conducted without a warrant, the burden is on the Commonwealth to show that the search falls within the class of рermissible exceptions justifying the warrantless search.
Commonwealth
v.
Saia,
The judge below concluded that there were no exigent circumstances sufficient to justify a warrantless search. This finding as to exigent circumstances is a legal conclusion and is therefore open to review by an appellate court, especially since it is of constitutional dimension.
Commonwealth
v.
Accaputo,
The circumstances which occasioned the owner’s call to the fire department — thе combination of the cellar floor being covered with a volatile liquid and forty gallons of an explosive liquid being stored in partially open containers in proximity tо the homemade incendiary device and the oil burner
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— quite clearly presented an emergency situation requiring immediate action for the protection of life and property. See Model Code of Pre-arraignment Procedure
The order suppressing the containers, their contents, and the testimony concerning the results of chemical analysis of thе contents is vacated. An order is to be entered in the Superior Court denying the motions to suppress evidence.
So ordered.
Notes
The defendants, charged with conspiracy to burn insured property in violation of G. L. c. 274, § 7, and G. L. c. 266, § 10, each made a mo
After inspecting the cellar, the owner and his oil man found that the oil was leaking from a loose fitting in the oil line to the oil burner which was situated in the defendants’ cellar.
Subsequent chemical analysis revealed that the liquid in the eight five-gallon containers was gasoline.
Unlike
Michigan
v.
Tyler,
No evidence was presented concerning whether the oil burner was operating or operational, nor whether the electricity in the unit was on. However, this is not fatal. “[Wjhether an exigency existed, and whether the response of the police was reasonable and therefore lawful, are matters to be evаluated in relation to the scene as it could appear to the officers at the time, not as it may seem to a scholar after the event with the benefit of leisured retrospective analysis.”
Commonwealth
v.
Young,
