Opinion by
Appellant, Charles Strickland, age 19, was convicted by a jury of murder in the first degree. After denial of appellant’s post-trial motions, appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment. This appeal followed. 1 We vacate and remand.
*633 At trial appellant sought to have certain evidence suppressed as unconstitutionally seized. 2 The trial court ruled that appellant lacked standing to contest the search, and therefore did not decide the Fourth Amendment issues. Appellant challenges the trial court’s conclusion that he lacked standing to question the legality of the search. 3
At a suppression hearing conducted to determine the admissibility of the evidence in question, appellant testified that at the time of his arrest he maintained two residences. He related that during the week he lived with his grandmother at 707 East Jessup Street, Philadelphia, the searched premises, because of that location’s proximity to his place of employment. He also stated that he spent weekends with his mother who lived at 5049 Hatfield Street, Philadelphia. Appellant contends he is protected by the Fourth Amendment at the searched premises due to his regular use of that residence.
The suppression court made no finding as to the credibility of appellant’s claim to be a weekday resident at 707 East Jessup Street. The court apparently assumed that one is entitled to the protection of the Fourth Amendment only at one’s principal residence. Relying upon the fact that appellant had given as his address 5049 Hatfield Street both when he was arrested and when he made his formal statement, the court decided that appellant’s principal residence was *634 not the East Jessup Street address. The court reasoned that appellant was merely a “temporary guest” there, and thus lacked standing to challenge the search.
To conclude, as did the trial court, that one is protected by the Fourth Amendment at only his principal home is directly contrary to the rationale of
Katz v. United States,
Our Court has followed this rationale. In
Commonwealth v. Swanger,
These precedents make clear that the trial court erred in basing its analysis upon a determination that appellant was merely a “temporary guest” rather than a “resident.” Fourth Amendment issues cannot be adequately resolved by the use of conclusory labels that
*635
presuppose a result. Compare
Jones v. United States,
Other jurisdictions have held that a person is protected by the Fourth Amendment at any residence where he has a reasonable expectation of privacy. For instance, in
Mitchell v. State,
We therefore hold that a person is entitled to the protection of the Fourth Amendment at any residence where he has a reasonable expectation of privacy.
*636
This holding is consistent with our pre-Nate decision in
Commonwealth v. Raymond,
Here, appellant alleges that his grandmother’s house was more than a place at which he occasionally spent the night. In contrast to the facts in Raymond, appellant claims he lived at the searched residence five nights a week, every week. In these circumstances, appellant’s claim of regular and frequent use, if true, is sufficient to establish a justifiable expectation of privacy.
The trial court also concluded appellant was without standing because there was no evidence the letter was seized from the room in which appellant claims he slept. The court’s assumption that appellant could not contest the constitutionality of a seizure from other areas of the residence is in conflict with the holding of the United States Supreme Court in
Bumper v. North Carolina,
The Commonwealth argues that even assuming appellant had at one time lived at the East Jessup Street *637 address, he was not residing there at the time of the search and thus no reasonable expectation of privacy of his was violated by the police. Appellant’s absence from the premises was due to his arrest and detention pending trial. Absence due to arrest and incarceration while awaiting trial is not of itself a sufficient basis upon which to conclude that the accused has abandoned any reasonable expectation of privacy in his home. To hold otherwise would make permissible warrantless searches of the homes of those awaiting trial and unable to post bond.
The Commonwealth also contends that appellant lacked standing because he had no interest in the item seized. In
Alderman v. United
States,
It must be concluded that the trial court employed an improper standard in determining appellant’s standing. 5
*638 We therefore remand for a suppression hearing to determine the admissibility of the seized evidence. Upon remand, if the court decides that appellant has standing, it should then consider appellant’s challenge to the constitutionality of the search. If it .concludes that the search was improper, a new trial shall be awarded. Should the court hold the challenged evidence admissible, the judgment of sentence shall be reinstated.
In any appeal that may ensue the parties may raise any issues presented and undecided in the instant appeal.
Commonwealth v. Weeden,
Judgment of sentence vacated and the cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
The Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act of 1070, Act of July 31, 1970, P.L. 673, art. II, § 202(1), 17 P.S. § 211.202(1) (Supp. 1974), is the source of our jurisdiction.
The challenged evidence was a letter to a cousin appellant had written while in Jail awaiting trial. In the letter, appellant made what may be a guilt-suggesting reference to a weapon matching the description of the gun used in the murder.
Appellant also alleges he was not promptly arraigned as required by Pa. R. Crim. P. 118 (now 130), and that therefore the statement obtained by the police prior to arraignment should be suppressed.
Commonwealth v. Futch,
In
Roberson,
the court stated: “The [Fourth Amendment does not] limit its protection to a single house or home. It is not unusual for a man to own two different houses, each of which is used by him at intervals as his home. The full purpose of the immunity for unreasonable search and seizure would be lost if the protection shifted from one home to another as the owner moved from one house to another, either in the regular pursuit of his business or for his own convenience or pleasure.”
On this record, we cannot agree with the trial court that the admission of the challenged evidence was error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Chapman v. California,
386 U.S.
18, 87 S. Ct.
*638
824 (1967);
Commonwealth v. Davis,
