Appellant Jay William Marden was convicted of robbery in a Florida state court. His direct appeal was unsuccessful and it is agreed that available state remedies have been exhausted. His petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 was denied without hearing by the court below. On appeal, he persists in assertions made below that his motion to suppress evidence in state court was improperly denied and that a post-arrest identification procedure was unconstitutional.
By way of a cross-appeal, the State maintains that its motion to dismiss for want of federal jurisdiction was improperly denied. This contention is based on the “in custody” requirement of section 2254: At the time appellant filed his petition in the court below he was free on cash bond and was not truly in the custody of the sheriff to whom the petition was directed. We agree with the district court that the use of habeas corpus is not restricted “to situations in which the applicant is in actual, physical custody”, Jones v. Cunningham, 1963,
Appellant’s first contention is that the fruits of the crime discovered in a search of his person should have been suppressed by the state court because the arrest was illegal. The relevant facts are that shortly after the robbery appellant was arrested in an unincorporated area of Dade County, Florida by officers of the Miami Shores Police Department. The robber had been described to the officers by the victim, who was in charge of a realty office, and a nearby liquor store operator as a man wearing tennis shoes and a blue windbreaker. About 500 yards from the scene of the crime, they came upon a man fitting this description. Appellant immediately raised his arms in surrender, revealing a gun under his windbreaker as he did so. He was arrested instantly. An arrest warrant signed three days later by one of the officers recited that the arrest was for “possession of a weapon without a permit.” The problem created by the face of the warrant — a problem which led a justice of the peace to grant a motion to suppress at a preliminary hearing— is that Miami Shores policemen have no authority to arrest a person in an unincorporated area of Dade County for carrying a weapon without a permit. So far as this offense was concerned, the officers were outside their jurisdiction. But after a hearing in the state trial court, the trial judge denied the motion to suppress on the basis of testimony by one of the officers to the effect that the arrest was for “carrying a concealed weapon.” This offense comes under a Florida breach-of-the-peace statute which gives arrest power to any police officer or even a private citizen.
*786 We are unable to agree with appellant that he is entitled to an evidentiary hearing in federal court on the reason for his arrest. There was a full evidentiary hearing in the state trial court and the decision of the court below was based on the transcript of that hearing. Both trial judges concluded that the arrest was legal because undisputed evidence established probable cause to arrest appellant for carrying a concealed weapon and an officer testified that this was the basis for the arrest. We are in agreement with the court below that no purpose would be served by an additional hearing: Certainly the fact that the police saw a gun under appellant’s windbreaker when he raised his arms gave them probable cause to make an arrest for carrying a concealed weapon and the officer was unequivocal in his testimony that this was the reason for the arrest. If given an additional hearing, appellant could do no more than fall back on the recitation in the arrest warrant that he was arrested for possession of a weapon without a permit. This recitation, which must be explained either as a mistake or an afterthought on the part of the officers, is not of sufficient magnitude to taint the arrest when undisputed evidence shows that the officers had probable cause for a legal arrest.
After making the arrest, the officers drove appellant back to the scene of the crime where he was identified by the victim and the liquor store operator. In challenging this identification, appellant recognizes he cannot argue that he should have been advised of his right to counsel prior to the identification because United States v. Wade, 1967,
Affirmed.
Notes
. United States v. Wade was held to be prospective in Stovall v. Denno. Rivers v. United States is based on Wade.
