Defendant appeals from judgment of conviction of possession of narcotics, rendered after a nonjury trial. He was arrested in the lobby of the Chelsea Hotel at 504 South Bonnie Brae Street, Los Angeles, while under the influence of a narcotic, and his room in the hotel was forthwith searched, revealing seven caрsules of heroin and a hypodermic outfit.
Appellant’s counsel asserts as the sole point on appeal the following •. ‘ ‘ Where the accused is arrested in the lobby of his hotel for being under the influence of narcotics, to search his hotel room without warrant as an incident to the arrest and use the contraband thеrein seized to convict the accused of possession of narcotics is unreasonable, illegal and violative of” his constitutional rights.
It appears from the evidence most favorable to respondent that the police officers who effected the arrest on October 22, 1959, had received information and observed facts concerning appellant which justified a robust suspicion that he was engaged in possessing and selling narcotics; that he was himself an addict and probably was living in the Chelsea Hotel. On the afternoon of October 22nd Officers Dorrell and Pessler went to that hotel and exhibited to the clerk on duty a photo *354 graph of defendant and the clerk said he lived in the hotel; at that moment descending footsteps on the stairs were heard and defendant appeared some 3 to 5 feet away from the officers. He was carrying the key to room 143. Officer Dorrell testified: “At that time he appeared to be under the influence of narcotics. . . . Well, his mouth was partly open, his eyes appeared to be partly closed, as if he was in a stuporous condition.” Also: “He was a known user of narcotics to me, because I had examined him on July the 5th, 1959 and found, by the examination of his legs, that he was using narcotics. And he also stated to me at that time that he was a user of narcotics. And at the time I arrested him on October 22,1 knew him as a user of narcotics and the symptoms that I observed coupled with the knowledge of his background, I was of the opinion that he was under the influence of narcotics at that time. ’ ’ Asked by the officer whether he lived in the hotel defendant said “No.” The clerk in answer to а similar question said, “Yes, he is in room 143,” and that he was registered as Sinatra (which, of course, was a false name). Defendant, in the immediate presence of the clerk and the officers, made no response to this. Though they had no warrant of any kind they then arrested defendant, took the key from his hand, escorted him up one flight of stаirs and thence 20 to 30 feet down the hall to room 143, unlocked it with defendant’s key and searched the entire room, finding the narcotics above mentioned. Defendant himself testified that he was then living in room 143. Neither he nor the clerk gave the officers permission to enter it.
After being brought into room 143 defendant told the officers that that was his room but they would not find anything; “ ‘Go ahead and search it.’ ” (He was at that time under arrest and in handcuffs.) Search they did, finding the seven capsules in a suitcase. Asked if they were his and if there were more, defendant said, “ ‘That is all there is. I don’t have any more.’ ” Then a box containing two capsules of heroin was found and defendant said, “ ‘That is all there is, I don’t have any more.’ ” When entering the police station: “ ‘I have got some more stuff wrapped up with that hype outfit.’ ” Unwrapping the hypodermic outfit Dorrell found a rubber containing more heroin, and defendant observed, “ ‘There is about three and a half grams there. I bought it yesterday, I paid $55 for it. ’ He said he had just had a fix about аn hour before that. He said he used about three or four caps of narcotics a day.”
In a discussion of a defense objection to receipt in evidence *355 of the heroin and hypodermic outfit which had been revealed by the room search, the prosecutor said: “... and in addition, Officer Dorrell’s observation оf the defendant's condition on the date of this arrest, all these things gave them probable cause to make an arrest on October 22, 1959.” The court: “Counsel has agreed to that. Now, go one step further and tell me what the answer is.” Defense counsel made no response to this but he later said: “I realize that the officers have testified that they saw the defendant in this hotel lobby, it appeared to them he was under the influence of narcotics. Now, it is probable that that would be in my opinion probable—I will concede for this argument here at least—well, without conceding I will say it could be interpreted to be probable cause for arresting him at that time.” Appellant’s brief on appeal makes no claim that the arrest itself was illegal and proceeds upon the tacit assumption that it was lawful.
Counsel comes to rest always upon the proposition that it was violative of appellant’s constitutional rights to make a search at a distance from thе place of arrest—up one flight of stairs and down the hall 20 to 30 feet.
Appellant’s chief reliance is
Agnello
v.
United States,
United States
v.
Rabinowitz,
People
v.
Ingle,
The following factors are usually determinative,— whether the search is actually incidental to the arrest in point of both time and place, whether arrest and search form part of a continuous transaction, whether the place of search is under the actual or probable control of the suspect. The truth of the foregoing statement is exemplified by the following cases.
People
v.
Dixon,
People
v.
Gorg,
More specifically, the problem of distance has been dealt with in
People
v.
Cicchello,
Cicchello, supra, involves an arrest made more than one-half block from defendant’s apartment, which the officers promptly searched. The court said, at page 162 [157 Cal.App. 2d] : “We do not think the fact that defendants were apprehended in their car at some distance away affords any ground for a tenable distinction. The officers’ information and observations all related to defendants’ activitiеs in a specific place. The apartment was their headquarters and their scene of operations. They used the car for transportation to and from their place of business and also to store unused envelopes and betting markers which they might need in the future. *358 The arrest and search were contemporaneous and part of a single, continuous transaction.”
In the Vice case, supra, it appeared that narcotics were found in defendant’s hotel room and he was arrested in the west end of Sacramento (presumably many blocks away); the search preceded the arrest by a half hour or so but it was held to be part of a single transactiоn and valid.
People
v.
Baca, supra,
Narrowing the discussion to the instant situation. Aleria was arrested in the hotel lobby and taken to his room, up one flight of stairs and 20 tо 30 feet down the hall. That room was his rented abode and obviously under his control. Exclusive possession or control by the suspect is not essential to a valid search.
(People
v.
Flores,
In the Vice case,
supra,
it is said: “In regard to the question
*359
of exclusive control when the hotel also had access to the room, it has been held that where there was testimony that the defendant admitted the narсotics in the room belonged to him, there was no merit in the argument that unlawful possession might not be sustained for the reason that the evidence showed that another person had equal right and facility of access to the premises.
(People
v.
Gallagher,
We have here no lapsе of substantial time or distance,— close proximity in both respects.
Treating of a similar situation, Judge Kerrigan in the District Court for Northern California, in
United States
v.
Charles, 8
F.2d 302, answered affirmatively the following question propounded by him: “The question here presented is: May narcotic officers, who have arrested the proprietor of a hotel for a violation of the narcotic laws (Comp. St. § 6287g et seq.) committed in its lobby within their presence, and who immediately thereafter search his living quarters and storeroom for evidence of similar violations, seize intoxicating liquors found by them while so engaged?” At page 302 it was said: “The rule is thoroughly settled, that ‘a lawfully arrested person may be searched for instruments, fruits, and evidences of the crime; and, if taken in commission of the crime in a building, the latter may be likewise searched to the extent that the offender’s control and activities likely extended’. [Citations.] The absence of a search warrant in this case therefore is immaterial, and the only question is as to the extent of the right, not to search, but to seize. ’ ’ This case was cited with apparent approval in
People
v.
Dixon, supra,
The Vice case, supra, involves the search of a hotel room made a half hour after the arrest of its occupant and made across the city of Sacramento from the place of arrest, but it was upheld.
It appears plain to us thаt whatever the factors of the particular problem may be, it is requisite to a valid search and seizure (absent consent) that there be shown a substantial nexus between the arrest and the search such that they may be held a continuous transaction. Here the defendant appeared in the hotel lobby while police were *360 showing his photograph to the clerk at the desk. -He came close to the police, carrying his room key, 143, in his left hand, being obviously under the influence of a narcotic. Asked if he lived there, he said “no”; the clerk said he lived in number 143 under the name Sinatra; he made no denial; the key was taken from his hand by the police who arrested and handcuffed him and ushered him upstairs to his room, opened it with his key and made a fruitful search. There is no occasion to evaluate the “consent” given by defendant after entering the room, under arrest and in handcuffs. Concatenation of the above facts discloses an umbilical cord connecting arrest and search which is plain for all to see.
Judgment affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and McMurray, J., pro tem., * concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 23, 1961.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
