Collaborating state and federal law enforcement officers were told by an allegedly reliable but unidentified informer that narcotics could be found in a hotel room which appellant was and had been occupying for several days in El Centro, California. Without a warrant or permission of any kind these officers gained entrance to and searched appellant’s room, discovering and seizing some narcotics. Eng was subsequently arrested, tried and convicted for violating 21 U.S.C.A. § 174 (unlawful concealment and reception of narcotics). It is admitted that appellant moved in the trial court to suppress the introduction of the narcotics as evidence. The motion was denied. Appellant has appealed and claims that the ruling constituted reversible error.
The United States defends the lower court’s refusal to suppress on the grounds that the officers had probable cause to believe that there were narcotics in appellant’s hotel room and that the circumstances of the case entitled them to enter and search the room even though they had neither a warrant nor an intention to arrest appellant. It may be added that the officers knew that appellant was not in the room at the time they entered and searched it. Appellant has claimed ownership of the seized narcotics and his standing to move for suppression is not challenged.
One circumstance which the United States contends justifies the actions of its agents in this case is that the invaded premises consisted of a hotel room rented by appellant as a transient guest. The evidence showed that appellant had occupied the room for but a few days and was planning to leave town soon after the hour when the officers made their entry. The government’s argument is that the constitutional inhibitions upon a search without a warrant apply with less stringency to a hotel room transiently occupied than to a residence adopted with some degree of permanence.
Concededly, “probable cause .for belief that certain articles subject to seizure are in a dwelling cannot of itself justify a search without a warrant.” Jones v. United States, 1958,
The United States also urges that since appellant was about to vacate his hotel room and leave town, thereby rendering the narocties subject to imminent removal, a search without a warrant was justified. See United States v. Jeffers, supra,
Since, even assuming that the officers had probable cause to enter and explore appellant’s hotel room, the search violated the Fourth Amendment, we need not examine the problem of the informer’s reliability. We hold that appellant’s motion to suppress was wrongfully denied. His conviction is reversed.
