Appellant brings this appeal from the denial of his motion to suppress marijuana seized during a warrantless search of his automobile. We affirm.
1. Appellant was stopped for "excessive speed” by a highway patrolman and was asked to present his driver’s license. The officer inquired as to the reasons why appellant had been driving in excess of the speed limit and, after some discussion, he approached the front of appellant’s car to check for a valid inspection sticker. It was then that the patrolman "noticed in the seat and on the floor board what appeared to be marijuana seeds.” Appellant was then placed under arrest for speeding and possession of marijuana, handcuffed and placed in the patrol car. The officer returned to appellant’s car and, after a thorough search, discovered marijuana in a bag under the passenger’s seat.
Appellant first urges that his motion to suppress should have been granted because the search and seizure of the marijuana cannot be upheld as "incident to an arrest” because at the time the contraband was discovered he was restrained in the patrol car and not "within the immediate control” of the area searched. See Chimel v. California,
This appeal falls within that category of cases in which "the circumstances justifying the arrest also furnished probable cause for the search.
[Cits.]” Phillips v. State,
2. Appellant next argues that the motion should have been granted because the marijuana seeds, the basis for probable cause to conduct the more thorough search of his automobile, were not introduced into evidence. Appellant cites no authority for the proposition that where the state relies upon physical evidence to show probable cause it must be produced on the hearing of a motion to suppress. Appellant’s argument on this point, however, may be summarized by stating that he denied the existence of marijuana seeds in his car and that his testimony was in conflict with the officer’s testimony that the seeds were in "plain view;” he also urges that the patrolman’s testimony with reference to the seeds was contradictory. The officer testified that the seeds were in "plain view” and were readily identifiable to him as contraband. He also testified that he removed seeds from the car and placed them into the bag which contained the marijuana; thus, there was testimony that the seeds
were
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included in the evidence sought to be suppressed. In short, there was a conflict in the evidence as to whether the contraband was in fact within the officer’s "plain view” and the trial judge resolved this conflict by finding that the seeds were in such "plain view.” It was not error to deny appellant’s motion to suppress the evidence.
State v. Swift,
Judgment affirmed.
