COOPER v. CALIFORNIA.
No. 103
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued December 8, 1966. Decided February 20, 1967.
386 U.S. 58
Albert W. Harris, Jr., Assistant Attorney General of California, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Thomas C. Lynch, Attorney General, and Edward P. O‘Brien, Deputy Attorney General.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner was convicted in a California state court of selling heroin to a police informer. The conviction rested in part on the introduction in evidence of a small piece of a brown paper sack seized by police without a warrant from the glove compartment of an automobile which police, upon petitioner‘s arrest, had impounded and were holding in a garage. The search occurred a week after the arrest of petitioner. Petitioner appealed his convic
We made it clear in Preston that whether a search and seizure is unreasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment depends upon the facts and circumstances of each case and pointed out, in particular, that searches of cars that are constantly movable may make the search of a car without a warrant a reasonable one although the result might be the opposite in a search of a home, a store, or other fixed piece of property. 376 U. S., at 366-367. In Preston the search was sought to be justified primarily on the ground that it was incidental to and part of a lawful arrest. There we said that “[o]nce an accused is under arrest and in custody, then a search made at another place, without a warrant, is simply not incident to the arrest.” Id., at 367. In the Preston case, it was alternatively argued that the warrantless
Here, California‘s Attorney General concedes that the search was not incident to an arrest. It is argued, however, that the search was reasonable on other grounds.
Our holding, of course, does not affect the State‘s power to impose higher standards on searches and seizures than required by the Federal Constitution if it chooses to do so. And when such state standards alone have been violated, the State is free, without review by us, to apply its own state harmless-error rule to such errors of state law. There being no federal constitutional error here, there is no need for us to determine whether the lower court properly applied its state harmless-error rule.2
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR. JUSTICE FORTAS concur, dissenting.
When petitioner was arrested, his auto was seized by officers, pursuant to the
The California District Court of Appeal held that the piece of paper bag was the product of an illegal search, 234 Cal. App. 2d 587, 44 Cal. Rptr. 483. First, the state court held that the State could not rely on the subsequent forfeiture to justify the search. It realistically noted that the State‘s title could not relate back to the time of the seizure until after a judicial declaration of forfeiture. Since the forfeiture judgment was not entered until after petitioner‘s trial, the State could not rely on it to justify the search. Id., at 596-597, 44 Cal. Rptr., at 489-490. Second, the court held that although the automobile was in the lawful custody of the officers at the time of the search,
Hence the fact that the car was being held “as evidence” did not as a matter of state law give the officers more dominion over it than the officers in Preston v.
In Preston, petitioner and others were arrested for vagrancy after they failed to give an acceptable explanation of their presence in a parked car late at night. They were taken to the police station, and the car was taken first to the station and then to a garage. After the men were booked, police officers went to the garage, searched the car without a warrant, and found evidence incriminating petitioner and the others of conspiracy to rob a federally insured bank.
In the instant case petitioner was arrested, his car taken to a garage and searched a week after his arrest, likewise without a warrant. As in Preston, the search cannot be justified as incidental to a lawful arrest. Nor can this case be distinguished from Preston on the ground that one car was lawfully in police custody and the other not. In Preston, the fact that the car was in lawful police custody did not legalize the search without a warrant. Since the California court held that the Health & Safety Code did not authorize a search of a car impounded under its provisions, the case is on all fours with Preston so far as police custody is concerned. If custody of the car is relevant at all, it militates against the reasonableness of the search. As the Court said in Preston: “[S]ince the men were under arrest at the police station and the car was in police custody at a garage, [there was no] danger that the car would be moved out of the locality or jurisdiction.” 376 U. S., at 368. Moreover, the claim that the search was not illegal because the car had been forfeited to the State is foreclosed by the state court‘s holding that, under the circumstances, the forfeiture could not relate back to the date of the seizure. The state court‘s interpretation of its own statute will not be upset by this Court. Guaranty Trust Co. v. Blodgett, 287 U. S. 509.
I see only two ways to explain the Court‘s opinion. One is that it overrules Preston sub silentio. There are those who do not like Preston. I think, however, it states a healthy rule, protecting the zone of privacy of the individual as prescribed by the Fourth Amendment. These days police often take possession of cars, towing them away when improperly parked. Those cars are “validly” held by the police. Yet if they can be searched without a warrant, the precincts of the individual are invaded and the barriers to privacy breached. Unless the search is incident to an arrest, I would insist that the police obtain a warrant to search a man‘s car just as they must do when they search his home.
If the present decision does not overrule Preston, it can perhaps be rationalized on one other ground. There is the view that when the Bill of Rights is applied to the States by reason of the Fourteenth Amendment, a watered-down version is used. In that view “due process” qualifies all provisions of the Bill of Rights. Today‘s decision is perhaps explicable in those terms. But I also reject that view. “Unreasonable searches and seizures” as used in the Fourth Amendment, “self-incrimination” as used with reference to the Fifth, “freedom of speech” as used in the First, and the like, mean the same in a state as in a federal case.2
