delivered the opinion of the Court.
Our decision today to reverse the conviction *
1
in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County of Paul Monroe Howell, petitioner, for possession of marihuana (Maryland Code (1957, 1971 Repl. Vol.), Art. 27, § 287) discovered by the police in a warrantless search of his automobile conducted incident to his lawful arrest turns on the fact that the record, in certain critical parts, is replete with the “sounds of silence.” We conclude that the State has failed to satisfy its burden of demonstrating
on the record
that the facts and circumstances of the incident bring this search within the dictates of
Chimel v. California,
According to Adrian Merryman’s largely uncontroverted testimony, he returned to his Brooklandville home in the early afternoon of May 16, 1972 to find an intruder in the kitchen stealing his television set. Surprised by the homeowner’s return, the intruder fled after abandoning the television and physically assaulting Mr. Merryman. Armed with the victim’s photographic identification of Howell as his assailant, Corporal James Raymon of the Baltimore County Police obtained a warrant for the petitioner’s arrest. Thereafter, a police teletype was sent out that requested the apprehension of Howell and which contained a description of the getaway car (a bluish-green Ford displaying Maryland license tag number LK 9218).
On the basis of this teletype, at approximately 12:50 p.m. on May 19, three Baltimore City detectives detained Howell and his motor vehicle in the parking lot of a fast food restaurant located on Reisterstown Road in Baltimore County, very near the city-county line. Corporal Raymon arrived at the scene by 1:10 p.m., a short time after two other county policemen had converged on the parking lot, and he immediately observed the petitioner leaning against the Ford. The corporal promptly served Howell with the arrest warrant and then placed a female who wras seated in the front on the passenger side of the automobile under arrest. 2 A search of the vehicle ensued which led to the discovery, beneath the right front seat, of a pistol as well as a package containing marihuana, both of which were seized by the police.
At his trial, the petitioner moved, under the authority of
Mapp v. Ohio,
In overruling its previous decisions, such as
United States v. Rabinowitz,
“When an arrest is made, it is reasonable for the arresting officer to search the person arrested in *382 order to remove any weapons that the latter might seek to use in order to resist arrest or effect his escape. Otherwise, the officer’s safety might well be endangered, and the arrest itself frustrated. In addition, it is entirely reasonable for the arresting officer to search for and seize any evidence on the arrestee’s person in order to prevent its concealment or destruction. And the area into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or evidentiary items must, of course, be governed by a like rule. A gun on a table or in a drawer in front of one who is arrested can be as dangerous to the arresting officer as one concealed in the clothing of the person arrested. There is ample justification, therefore, fo^a search of the arrestee’s person and the ¡ja’rfea ‘within his immediate control’ — construing that phrase to mean the area from within ¡which he might gain possession of a weapon or dtestructible evidence.”
395 U. S. at 762-63 .
This principle has bfeen at least implicitly reaffirmed in all of the subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court which have considered the question.
Gustafson v. Florida,
In
United States v. Day,
As the appellant in
Commonwealth v. Ceravolo,
*384
In
Madeley v. State,
The Court of Special Appeals of Maryland has also considered cases in which the State relied on the
Chimel
doctrine to justify an automobile search.
Soles v. State,
Corporal Raymon was the only witness at the trial who in any way undertook to describe the events which took place at the time of the petitioner’s detention and the subsequent search of his automobile. This testimony was confined to what he observed after coming upon the scene. The trial court, therefore, had no information (and neither do we) as to what took place prior to the witness’s arrival at the restaurant parking lot (other than that the petitioner was being detained by the Baltimore City police), though this crucial evidence undoubtedly could have been supplied had the State called at least one of the Baltimore City policemen who had originally apprehended Howell. Instead, we learn from Corporal Raymon only that a woman was seated on the front passenger side of the automobile, and the petitioner was under the control of the county and city police in the restaurant parking lot “leaning up against the car as if he had just priorly been searched” with “his hands . . . not in the air,” when this officer arrived and served Howell with an arrest warrant and then proceeded to search the motor vehicle. 4 From this meager evidence, we have no idea where Howell was actually positioned and, therefore, what was within his lunge, his reach, or his grasp or, more importantly, whether the marihuana seized by the police was within this area. He could have been by the front door; however, it is just as likely that he was by the front or back fender, by the radiator or the trunk, or by the headlights or taillights. Additionally, we are not informed whether a window or door, if in fact one was within his reach, was open or closed, locked or unlocked. We are left in the dark as to where the police were standing and whether Howell was *386 shackled or free to move about. Clearly, evidence that an arrestee was discovered leaning somewhere against the getaway car is simply not enough in and of itself to justify a warrantless search of a motor vehicle which was made incident to a lawful arrest under the Chimel doctrine. In addition, the record does not disclose when or where the arrest took place or by whom, the first step in detecting what was incident to it. In passing upon issues which are of constitutional dimension, a court can neither fill gaps in the record with conjecture nor substitute surmise for positive proof. Consequently, care should be taken by the State in presenting its case to insure that there will be sufficient evidence, if any exists, placed in the record to justify the execution of a warrantless search incident to a lawful arrest. We do not mean to imply that ail or any one of the details mentioned as being absent here must be specifically accounted for in every case. No list can be formulated by this or any other court which would account for the uniqueness of each case and we are not attempting to accomplish this task here. However, what we do require is that the State meet its burden of showing on the record that the items seized incident to a lawful arrest without a search warrant, and offered into evidence, were obtained in accordance with the dictates of Chimel. Such was not accomplished here.
Judgment of the Court of Special Appeals and the Circuit Court for Baltimore County in Indictment No. 44354 reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
Costs to be paid by the County Council of Baltimore County.
Notes
. Howell was convicted by Judge Walter R. Haile, sitting without a jury, in a consolidated trial under indictment No. 44352 which included, among others, counts charging daytime housebreaking and assault with intent to murder, as well as under No. 44354 containing one count charging possession of marihuana. He thereafter took an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals in which he raised several legal questions in an effort to overturn each of these judgments. That court, however, affirmed his convictions; Howell v. State,
. Unlike Howell, there was no outstanding warrant for this woman’s arrest. The record in this case does not show any reason for her apprehension other than the fact that she was seated in the automobile.
. In issuing the writ of certiorari in this case “limited to the question as to whether the marihuana was the fruit of an unconstitutional search and seizure” we inadvertently did not specify that we intended to consider only the “search incident exception” as we had recently discussed the “automobile exception” in Mobley and King v. State,
. The conclusion of the Court of Special Appeals that the marihuana found beneath the passenger seat was within the legitimate search perimeter was based on its determining that the evidence showed that Howell was standing unshackled and by the door. We cannot find support in the record for either of these determinations.
