OPINION ON STATE’S MOTION FOR REHEARING
Withdrawn is the opinion on original submission by which the Court reversed the judgment of the conviction after finding that a search of an automobile being driven by appellant was not within the scope permitted by
Chimel v. California,
Houston Police Officer C.G. Malone was on patrol on February 12, 1979. At the intersection of Old Katy Road and Sherwood Forest Drive Officer Malone observed the appellant driving a green Pontiac sedan. As appellant turned left in front of the police vehicle, Malone noticed the rear license plate on the Pontiac had expired. Officer Malone stopped appellant to give him a traffic ticket. Appellant, who was alone, got out of his car and came back towards the officer who parked behind appellant’s vehicle. Appellant produced a driver’s license. He appeared nervous to
Malone and kept walking back towards his car. Malone instructed appellant to stand beside him while he wrote the ticket. There was no evidence that appellant was intoxicated or under the influence of drugs. There was no testimony that Officer Malone frisked or searched appellant’s person. Malone saw a car window was down and approached appellant’s car. He observed “a brown canvas zipper bag laying open in the front seat — in the middle of the front seat.” Malone reached in and pulled the bag over and looked at it. The bag contained “. .. I think like a knife, and some jewelry-looking stuff,” and “a little black film canister.” Malone removed the canister from the bag and opened it. The canister contained pills. A chain of custody was established and a chemist testified 20 of the pills were hydro-morphone.
The Supreme Court granted certiorari in
Belton v. New York,
supra, “to consider the constitutionally permissible scope of a search in circumstances such as these,”
id.,
Revisiting principles applied in
Chimel v. California,
supra,
“Our holding today does no more than determine the meaning of Chimel’s principles in this particular and problematic content. It in no way alters the fundamental principles established in the Ghi-mel case regarding the basic scope of searches incident to lawful custodial arrests.” Id.,453 U.S. at 460, n. 3 ,101 S.Ct. at 2864, n. 3 .
Applying its holding to Belton himself the Supreme Court took pains to point out, “It is not questioned that the respondent was the subject of a lawful
custodial arrest
on a charge of possessing marihuana,”
id.,
The
Belton
opinion does not define “custodial arrest” for us, but in a similar context the Supreme Court has upheld a “full search of the person” of one subjected to a “lawful custodial arrest.”
United States v. Robinson,
The Supreme Court further demonstrated its own delineation of the meaning of “lawful custodial arrest” effected in both cases by distinguishing a scenario alluded to by the Court of Appeals, viz:
“The opinion of the Court of Appeals also discussed its understanding of the law where the police officer makes what the court characterized as ‘a routine traffic stop,’ i.e., where the officer would simply issue a notice of violation and allow the offender to proceed. Since in this case the officer did make a full-custody arrest of the violator, we do not reach the question discussed by the Court of Appeals.” Robinson, supra,414 U.S. at 236, n. 6 ,94 S.Ct. at 477, n. 6 .
Whatever its impact in other factual situations, we find that the “bright line” rule
*675
drawn in
Belton
is not applicable in the case at bar “because appellant was not in ‘custodial arrest’ at the time of the search in question,”
Adams v. State,
This Court has discerned from
United States v. Robinson
and
Gustafson v. Florida,
both supra, that “the arrest that justifies a search incident must now qualify as a ‘custodial’ one,”
Christian v. State,
“The search of appellant’s automobile was not a search incident to arrest.. .. [Ajppellant was being detained while a traffic ticket was being written and was not placed under arrest until after the pills were found. Cf. Wussow v. State, Tex.Cr.App.,507 S.W.2d 792 . Appellant was not in custody at the time of the search, and thus the search was not incident to arrest for the traffic violation. Cf. U.S. v. Robinson,414 U.S. 218 [94 S.Ct. 467 ,38 L.Ed.2d 427 ],...”
Accordingly, searches of the brown canvas zipper bag and of the little black film canister within the bag are not within the scope of a search permissible under the “bright line” rule of New York v. Belton, supra. 4
The judgment of conviction is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court.
Notes
. The cause was submitted November 17, 1982 on original briefs sans supplementation by either party and without oral argument. In short, application of the Belton formulation was not addressed in the initial stages of this appeal.
. All emphasis is added by the writer of this opinion unless otherwise indicated.
. The Supreme Court noted the testimony of a District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department Training Division instructor that “a full custody arrest” is one where an officer “would arrest a subject and subsequently transport him to a police facility for booking,” and observed that “such operating procedures are not, of course, determinative of the constitutional issues presented,”
Robinson,
supra,
. Appellant did not claim the intrusions are barred by our own law of search and seizure bottomed on Article I, § 9 of the Bill of Rights and 1.06, V.A.C.C.P., so we have no reason to address that question. Nor do we decide that the Belton rule is consistent with State law. Our conclusion simply is that the rule is not applicable to the facts of this cause.
