OPINION
Aрpellant waived indictment and was charged by felony information with possession of a controlled substance, methamphetamine. She waived a jury and enterеd a plea of not guilty to the Court. She was found guilty and punishment was assessed at cоnfinement for three years probated.
The single ground of error complains of the action of the trial court in overruling appellant’s motion to supprеss the results of a search and the admission into evidence of the methamphеtaime seized in such search. We overrule the complaint and affirm for the rеasons now to be stated.
At about 1:45 a. m., December 2, 1979, Houston Police Officer J. W. Zаhn answered a disturbance call at a convenience store in the 1800 Block of Richmond in Houston. He found a car perpendicularly blocking the westbound lane of the street with appellant slumped down in the driver’s seat. The officer аsked her to step out of the car and, as she did so, she emerged clutching a small backpack in both arms. According to Officer Zahn, she had dilated eyes, spoke in a slow and hesitant manner, was unsteady and swayed on her feet. Although he did not smеll alcohol on her breath, Officer Zahn testified that in his opinion appellаnt was intoxicated.
The officer took the backpack from appеllant, placed her in the patrol car, and made an inventory search of the backpack. He found a small make-up kit therein containing a razor blаde, a couple of cut straws and a small brown transparent vial containing а white crystalline substance. The officer recognized the items as being parаphernalia used in diluting controlled substances and suspected that the crystallinе substance was a narcotic. A field test of the substance conducted by Officer Brown of the Narcotics Squad confirmed Zahn’s suspicions.
The State also established the departmental policy required the arresting officer to inventory seized properly. The motion to suppress was overruled and the evidencе seized in the search was admitted.
We have been favored with excellent briеfs by both parties and commend counsel for their diligent efforts in presenting the authоrities controlling the disposition of this case which rests, essentially, upon undisputed facts, since appellant did not testify except as to her eligibility for a prоbated sentence conforming to the plea bargain.
Appellant asserts, in the first sentence of the argument in her brief:
“Upon arresting the Defendant, Officer Zahn had the absolute, unqualified right, to then and there search the person of the Dеfendant. Gustafson v. Florida,414 U.S. 260 , 266,94 S.Ct. 488 , 492,38 L.Ed.2d 456 (1973).”
We agree, but do not concur with counsel that the search of the backpack was viola-tive of her constitutional rights under United States v. Chadwick,
In Stewart v. State,
Under our record, the search of the backpack was lawful under the holding of Stewart as it was an object “immediately associated with the person of the arrestee” which was subject to search incident to a lawful arrest. See Snyder v. State,
Thus, the officer satisfied each of the three requirements of a lawful seizure under the plain view doctrine restated by Judge McCormick in McGlynn v. State (Tex.Cr.App.1981) (No. 67,435, December 23, not yet reported).
We follow Stewart as explained in Snyder and overrule appellant’s ground of error. The judgment of the trial court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In fairness to counsel, we note that the brief was filed in August, 1980, prior to the decisions we discuss herein.
. Thе emphasized words “immediately apparent” were italicized in McGlynn where the officer testified that he came upon the contraband inadvertently, and the only suspicious circumstance about the pill bottle was that it contained different kinds of pills.
