Opinion
Fоllowing denial of his motion to suppress evidence (Pen. Code, § 1538.5), defendant entered a negotiated plea of guilty to the charge he was an ex-felon in possession of a gun (Pen. Code, § 12021). Hе appealed, contending the trial court erred in denying his suppression motion. We previously disagreed and in a published opinion filed January 20, 1983, affirmed the judgment. Subsequently, the Supreme Court granted а hearing and retransferred the cause to this court for reconsideration in light of the decision in
People
v.
Carney
(1983)
We have considered the rationale and conclusion of Carney and find that decision to be factually inapplicable to the circumstances of this case and again conclude that the vehicle search was proper.
At approximately 3:20 a.m. one morning Sacramento Police Officers Peters and Olsen, while on patrol in an areа where a number of recent car burglaries had taken place, saw a Ford van parked facing the wrong way. Officer Peters approached the passenger door and saw an individuаl (later identified as Ross Wardlaw) sitting in the passenger seat. When the officer shined his flashlight into the van toward the console area to determine if the radio had been tampered with, he observеd an open cigar box with a plastic bag containing a green leafy material along with some cigarette rolling papers. Wardlaw immediately reached over and closed the lid tо the box. Peters then assisted Wardlaw from the van and placed him under arrest for possession of marijuana. While doing so he heard a rustling noise coming from behind the van’s front bucket seat and glimpsed a hurried movement. The officers investigated and found defendant, who was removed and arrested. A pat-down search of Wardlaw produced a hypodermic syringe.
*724 After both suspects were secured in the police vehicle, the officers searched the van and found a sawed-off shotgun and 10 rounds of ammunition under a makeshift couch, a muzzle-loading handgun beneath the cushion of a chаir, and a .38 Remington automatic pistol in a makeshift chest of drawers.
The trial court found that the plain-view observation of the marijuana coupled with the rustling in the van gave rise to the inference “that there was other contraband in there being secreted, . . . [giving] the officer probable cause to go find that contraband. ” It held that the immediate search was proper because of “the mobility aspects of a vehicle.”
Defendant challenges that ruling on appeal. He contends the search (1) was made without probable cause and exigent circumstances, and (2) violated his privacy expectations. We disagree.
The plain-view observation of marijuana, followed by the removal of Wardlaw and the simultaneous rustling from the back of the van, wherе defendant was discovered, established probable cause to believe there might be additional contraband in the van. The United States Supreme Court in
United States
v.
Ross
(1982)
In determining whether a state Constitution provides greater protection than its federal counterpart, we are guided by the Cаlifornia Supreme Court’s pronouncement in
People
v.
Teresinski
(1982)
However, defendant claims this case is factually distinguishable from Ross and the ordinary automobile exception case. His premise is that those traveling in motor homes and truck campers have a greater expectation *725 of privacy than those traveling in ordinary motor vehicles, reasoning that the former are more akin to a home than a motor vehicle designed and used principally for transportation. A similar argument was recently considered in People v. Carney, supra, 34 Cal.3d at pages 606-607. That case involved a motor home. With respect to the privacy determination made, the California Supreme Court found a “motor home” search invalid; in that opinion the court stated, “In the present case, we are called upon to apply this reasoning to a hybrid—a motor home—which has the mobility attribute of an automobile combined with most of the privacy characteristics of a house. Defendant maintains that the factors discussed above that dilute the expectation of privacy in automobiles do not so affect the privacy interests in a motor home. We agree.
“First and foremost, unlike an automobile the primary function of a motor home is not transportation. Motor homes are generally designed and used as residences; their essential purpose is to provide the occupant with living quarters, whether on a temporary or a permanent basis. Both Vehicle Code section 396 and Health and Safety Code section 18008 refer to a mobile home not as a vehicle but as a transportable ‘structure. ’ The motor home at issue here was equipped with at least a bed, a refrigerator, a table, chairs, curtains and storage cabinеts. Thus the contents of the motor home created a setting that could accommodate most private activities normally conducted in a fixed home. The configuration of the furnishings, togethеr with the use of the motor home for all manner of strictly personal purposes, strongly suggests that the structure at issue is more properly treated as a residence than a mere automobilе.
“Homes are afforded the maximum protection from warrantless searches and seizures.
(People
v.
Ramey
(1976)
The rationale applied to the motor home in Carney is not apposite in the instant proceeding. In this case, a van, not a motor home, was involved. A van may be generally defined as a motor vehicle, usually enclosed, which is used for the transportation of goods and animals as well as people, and which is not designed as a place of human habitation. (See Health & Saf. Code, § 18010; Webster’s New Internat. Dict. (3d ed. 1961) p. 2531.) The van used here falls within that definition. It was not designed for *726 use as a residence, did not resemble a vehicle used as a residence, nor was it equipped as such. The evidence does not reveal the existence in the van of “at least a bed, a refrigerаtor, a table, chairs, curtains and storage cabinets” as did the mobile home in Carney. The subject vehicle was in all respects and appearances what it was designed to be used for, purely а means of transportation, not a place of residence.
Ross
makes palpably clear that it is the mobile characteristics of motor vehicles that justify their immediate warrantless search based upon probable cause. As first explained in
Carroll
v.
United States
(1925)
Ross
held the permissible scope of the search extended to every part of a vehicle and its contents that might contain the object of the search. (456 U.S. at pp. 821, 823-824 [72 L.Ed.2d at pp. 591, 592-593].) This was so even though a рerson could have a well-manifested expectation of privacy in luggage or packages contained in the car; the court stated that these interests “must yield to the authority of а search.”
(Id.,
at p. 823 [
Defendant’s van was parked on a publiс street. There is nothing in the record to indicate it was identifiably immobile and, unlike a motor home, nothing about its appearance to indicate it was used as a residence as well as a motor vehicle. It may be that subjectively defendant may have had a greater expectation of privacy than someone driving, say, a convertible. However, that does not remove him from the ambit of the automobile exception.
The rationale of Ross is applicable.
*727 The judgment (order) is affirmed.
Puglia, P. J., and Sparks, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied December 19, 1983.
Notes
Both
People
v.
Minjares
(1979)
