OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendants, Robert and Francis Catalano, have been indicted for criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree and other crimes. They are charged with possession of cocaine with intent to sell the same and possession of a hypodermic needle and syringe.
Defendants have moved for suppression of the physical evidence seized from the car in which they were riding. The parties, agreeing on the essential facts, submitted affidavits and memoranda of law and waived a hearing.
FACTS
The car in which defendants were stopped had been rented by their father, Frank Catalano, on September 12, 1985. The rental agreement provided that the vehicle should not be operated by anyone except the customer and, among others not relevant here, members of his immediate family who permanently reside in his household. The vehicle was to be returned by September 26, according to the rental agreement, but defendant’s father has submitted an affidavit that he had been told that only if he kept it longer than 30 days would he be notified to return it or to change the agreement. The court finds that even though Hertz may have been justified in reporting the car stolen, it had not done so by October 11.
On October 11, Frank Catalano telephoned the home of his estranged wife, where both sons lived. He asked Robert to return the car. Later that day, Robert was driving the car and Francis and another man were riding as passengers. Robert’s driving the car violated the rental agreement between Hertz and his father, since he was not a permanent resident in his father’s household. While Robert was driving it in Manhattan the car was stopped by the police. When defendants got out of the car, the police saw a bullet in plain view on the front seat and proceeded to search the car and find the contraband. They then arrested defendants.
Originally, the People took the position that the stop was justified because the car had been reported stolen. It has transpired, however, that the car, a 1985 Volvo, with license plate No. 560ZLA had not been reported stolen but that a
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
standing. The People contend that "as defendants were wrongfully riding in the rental automobile, they have no standing to protest its seizure by the police”. Since a Hertz agent could have taken the car from them, it is argued, defendants had no legitimate expectation of privacy against a "momentary seizure” by the police. The People rely further on Rakas v Illinois (
What is basic is " 'the right of every individual to the possession and control of his own person, free from all restraint or interference of others, unless by clear and unquestionable authority of law.’ ” (Terry v Ohio,
Against the foregoing the People’s reliance upon the fact that the car was being driven in violation of its rental terms and that a Hertz agent could have taken the car from defendants on the spot is unconvincing. Whatever might be the effect on their standing of a more serious illegality in their use of the car — the Appellate Division for the Second Department has recognized standing to challenge the stop and its fruits even on the part of a thief driving a stolen car (see, People v Gittens,
Finally, the People rely on Ocampo (supra) which denied standing to five defendants in three cases, even assuming that the stops therein violated the constitutional rights of the defendants, because the discovery of the evidence sought to be suppressed was not the direct result of the illegal seizure. In the instant case, however, discovery of the bullet and the consequent search of the rental car were the direct result of the stop; defendants took no active role in revealing the seized evidence (see, People v Boodle,
the reasonableness of the stop. Citing two warrant cases, defendants contend that the police error in transmitting the license plate number of the wanted car compels suppression. One memorandum concludes: "When police violate fourth amendment rights, they do so at their peril and if the information which they act upon is erroneous * * * the exclusionary rule must be invoked”. But leaps of logic between the warrants clause and the "unreasonable searches and seizures” clause of the 4th Amendment are also made at one’s peril. People v Jennings (
It is patent that the officers affecting the stop did have at least a reasonable suspicion that defendants’ rented 1985 Volvo, license plate 560ZLA, was a stolen car and that its
No facts have been stipulated as to who received the stolen car report in the department or who made it. Nevertheless, since the parties have agreed to a decision on the motion papers, affidavits and memoranda of law, since defendants have raised no questions with respect thereto, and since the description originally given to the police, if otherwise properly given, clearly would have justified any officer in stopping defendants’ car despite the one-digit difference in license plate numbers, the court finds that the People have carried the burden of going forward to show the legality of the police conduct and that the defendants have not carried their burden of proof of the illegality of the seizure of the contraband.
Defendants’ motions to suppress physical evidence are in all respects denied.
Notes
In United States v Leon (
