delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellant claims that his constitutional right to be secure from an unreasonable search and seizure was violated when a police officer, without a search warrant, invaded his privacy while he was in a locked men’s room in a gas station and secured evidence of his guilty control of heroin and narcotic paraphernalia. 1
The evidence at trial showed that on December 7, 1968 at 9:30 p.m., Officer Ronald Arnold went to the gas station in response to a call for assistance from the station attendant. Upon arrival, he met the attendant who told him “there were three males in the restroom, and they had been in there for approximately thirty minutes, and didn’t know whether anything was wrong with them or not.” Arnold testified that the attendant handed him a key, and while he (Arnold) didn’t know whether there was anybody in the rest room, “I went around to the restroom, and I unlocked the door.” Upon entering, Arnold observed three men standing inside with their backs to the door. 2 While he was told by one of the men that the rest room was being used, he immediately noticed appellant place a needle and syringe into his coat pocket, and one of the other men drop an Anacin tin (later found to contain opium) into the corner of the room. The men were then arrested.
Appellant’s motion to suppress the incriminating evidence was denied by the trial judge, who stated: “* * * he [the officer] had a perfect right to enter; and, in fact, he did it by invitation of the man in charge of the filling *567 station who gave him the key and asked him to enter. He seemed to be concerned about what might be wrong with —or perhaps the three young men were ill or something else had happened to them, because they had been in there an abnormally long time, 30 minutes. So, the officer was simply doing what the person in charge of the premises asked him to do. Once he opened the door, he had a right to look around, the policeman is not required to close his eyes, and so if he happened to see the object dropped on the floor by one of the persons there, he had a perfect right to pick it up, abandoned property.”
On the facts of this case, we think the motion to suppress was properly denied.
In
Hoffa v. United, States,
“* * * the security a man relies upon when he places himself or his property within a constitutionally protected area, be it his home, or his office, his hotel room, or his automobile. There he is protected from unwarranted governmental intrusion. And when he puts something in his filing cabinet, in his desk drawer, or in his pocket, he has the right to know it will be secure from an unreasonable search or an unreasonable seizure.”
In
Katz v. United States,
In
Mancusi v. DeForte,
It was with these principles in mind that'we decided
Brown v. State,
“* * * a person who enters an enclosed stall in a public toilet, with the door closed behind him, is entitled, at least, to the modicum of privacy its design affords, certainly to the extent that he will not be joined by an uninvited guest or spied upon by probing eyes in a head physically intruding into the area.”
That there may be circumstances, as in
Brown;
where a person is afforded Fourth Amendment protection from unwarranted governmental intrusion into
particular areas
within a public rest room, does not mean that an individual who may intend to avail himself of exclusive occupancy of the whole of such a public facility is thereby constitutionally insulated for as long as he wishes from unwelcome scrutiny of his actions.
See Bielicki v. Superior Court,
Judgments affirmed.
