Opinion
Defendant was charged by information with first degree burglary. (Pen. Code, §§ 459, 460.) After his motion to suppress the evidence under Penal Code section 1538.5 was denied, he entered a plea of guilty and a judgment of conviction was pronounced. In this appeal he challenges only the trial court’s adverse ruling on his motion to suppress (Pen. Code, § 1538.5, subd. (m)), claiming that his arrest was illegal and the evidence seized incident thereto must be excluded.
It is conceded that defendant was arrested without a warrant inside his place of residence. In
People
V.
Ramey
(1976)
The facts are undisputed, and their chronology is important to our resolution of the points at issue. 1
At 12:40 a.m. on the night in question defendant was surprised in the act of committing a burglary in the home of Mrs. Nancy Lane in the town of Elk Grove, a community in Sacramento County. He was discovered by Stephen Gage, a guest in the Lаne home; defendant immediately ran from the house, and Gage began the chase on foot. Defendant then entered an older model maroon Pontiac and drove off, and Gage followed closely in his own car. After turning a few corners, defendant brought the Pontiac to a stop, jumped out, and ran behind the Native Sons Hall. Gage chased defendаnt around the building in his car, but finally lost sight of him. Gage then attempted to disable the Pontiac by letting the air out of a tire, but soon abandoned the idea as impractical. Instead he took the car’s registration card, drove back to the Lane home, *805 and telephoned the sheriff". In that call Gage gave the dispatcher the information on the registration card and described defendant as being a male of small or medium build, about five feet eight inches in height, with black hair, and wearing an unusual striped shirt.
At 12:53 a.m. Deputy Sheriffs Dillon and Dixon, on patrol in their radio car, received a message advising them of the burglary. They drove to the Lane home, arriving within five minutes. After taking Gage’s description of the events they went directly to the Nativе Sons Hall but the Pontiac had gone. They reported this fact over the radio and requested additional sheriff’s units to search the area. In the meantime, however, the dispatcher had transmitted the registration information to the Department of Motor Vehicles and learned the Pontiac had recently been sold to defendant Escudero, whose address was given as a ranch on Sloughhouse Road. The dispatcher broadcast this fact over the radio; Officers Dillon and Dixon received the broadcast, and immediately proceeded towards the ranch.
At 1:25 a.m. the dispatcher also telephoned the owners of the ranch, Mr. and Mrs. Perham, and verified that defendant worked there and owned a maroon Pontiac. Mrs. Perham first told the dispatcher that defendant was not home; but her son, who was also on the line, corrected her and informed the police that defendant had returned to the ranch. Upon request, Mrs. Perham gave a physical description of defendant, and it matched that of the burglar furnished by Gage. Following the telephone call Mrs. Perhаm noticed that defendant’s Pontiac was indeed parked at the ranch.
Within 10 or 15 minutes thereafter—i.e., by 1:40 a.m. at the latest— three sheriff’s cars with a total of six officers arrived at the Perham ranch. There were two residences on the property, a large house occupied by the Perhams and a separate dwelling known as the foreman’s house where defendant lived. The officers explained to Mr. Perham that defendant was suspected of committing the Lane burglary. Perham promptly entered the foreman’s house, told defendant that sheriff’s deputies were there and wanted to talk to him, then returned outside and said to the officers, “Ray is dressed, go on in.” He held the door open for the officers, and they entered immediately without asking defendant’s consent.
The officers found defendant seated in the front room of the house, wearing the same distinctive shirt that Gage had seen on the burglar. *806 They advised defendant of his rights, questioned him for a few minutes, then placed him under arrest.
I
The People contend that the warrantless entry by the deputy sheriffs into the house occupied by defendant was justified by the consent thereto given by Perham. There is no doubt Perham thought that the mere fact he owned the foreman’s house gave him the absolute right to invite anyone he pleased to enter it, including the police.
2
The question, however, is not what Perham thought, but whether the officers reasonably and in good faith believed that Perham in fact had the authority to consent to their entry into the foreman’s house.
(People
v.
Carr
(1972)
The burden could have been discharged by the introduction of “objective evidence” that Perham had “joint control [of] or access to the places or items to be searched”
(People
v.
McGrew
(1969)
Moreover, the true relationship of the parties aрpeared when Perham further admitted on cross-examination that defendant’s right to reside in the foreman’s house “was part of the arrangement [I] had with him as an *807 employee.” In other words, as part of the compensation for his labor defendant was allowed to live on the property in housing owned by his employer, and the latter in turn agreed to acсept a portion of that labor in lieu of rent. This type of landlord-tenant relationship is not uncommon between agricultural employers and farmworkers in California. (3) The issue is whether the relationship is exempted from the general rule that a landlord has no authority to consent to a police entry of premises occupied by a tenant.
As it has dеveloped in the cases, the rule is as broad as necessary to protect the privacy interests at stake. To begin with, the principle does not turn on the character of the demised premises: it applies not only when the tenant leases an entire detached house
(Chapman
v.
United States
(1961)
That privacy, of course, is not absolute: the cases also recognize that the tenant is generally deemed to give implied consent to reasonable entries by the owner or his agents, but only for certain narrowly limited
*808
purposes relating to the owner’s interest in the property. For example, it is settled that a hotel guest is deemed to impliedly consent to hotel employees’ entering his room at reasonable times to perform janitorial, maid, or repair services; but neither the employee nor the owner has implied consent to enter for the purpose of personally searching for contraband, weapons, or evidence of crime—and because he lacks that authority, he has no power to consent to an entry by the police for the same purpose. (See, e.g.,
Stoner
v.
California, supra,
It follows that an agricultural employer who provides housing for his farmworkers as part of the compensation for their labor has no right to give the police permission to enter such housing for law enforcement purposes while it is lawfully occupied, whether or not the tenant or his family are present at the time. The People failed to show that the arresting officers in the case at bar reаsonably believed the contrary. 4
II
In successfully opposing the motion to suppress, however, the People also urged that the failure of the officers to obtain a warrant was justified by the fact they were in “hot pursuit” of defendant throughout the events in question. The record supports this claim.
The cases have recognized that in appropriate circumstances the fresh pursuit of a fleeing felon may constitute a sufficiently grave emergency to justify an exception to the warrant requirement and make it constitutionally reasonable for the police to enter a private dwelling without prior authorization of a magistrate. (See, e.g.,
Coolidge
v.
New Hampshire
(1971)
The record herein shows without contradiction that Gage surprised defendant in the act of committing a burglary and the chase began immediately, first on foot and then by automobile. Although Gage eventually lost sight of defendant, he promptly gave the police defendant’s description and the registration information from the abandoned getaway car. That information in turn produced defendant’s address, which was then broadcast оver police radio. Officers who were already actively following the leads in the case heard the broadcast and went directly to defendant’s residence. Defendant had reached the premises only a short time earlier. The officers entered, observed defendant’s distinctive shirt, and after brief questioning placed him under arrest for the burglary. The entire sequence of events took approximately one hour.
On these facts the propriety of the warrantless police entry is established by our decisions in
People
v.
Gilbert
(1965)
In
Smith
a similar scenario occurred. There Smith and his accomplice Walker attempted to cash a fictitious check at a Sears, Roebuck store but were detained for investigation; Smith drew a gun and shot his way out of the store, killing two police officers, and escaped in his car. Other police arrived on the scene, arrested Walker, and found her driver’s license in her purse; in response to their questions she admitted that Smith also lived at the address shown on the license. Two officers were then dispatched to the address; failing to obtain a key from the landlord, they entered through a window, learned the premises were unoccupied, and found incriminating evidence. Again no warrant had beеn obtained. We unanimously upheld the entry and search, reasoning that although Smith had escaped from the scene of the crimes “the manhunt began immediately. It was reasonable for the police to believe he might stop at his house before continuing his flight, to obtain clothes, money, or ammunition.” (
These decisions demonstrate that although “fresh pursuit” of a fleeing felon must be substantially continuous and afford the law enforcement authorities no rеasonable opportunity to obtain a warrant, it is not necessary that the suspect be kept physically in view at all times. They also refute defendant’s contention that his presence at the ranch negated any inference of flight because if he were truly attempting to escape it is “unlikely” he would have returned to his house after the burglary. 6 Finally, the cases are not distinguishable on the ground, urged by defendant, that the officers herein assertedly had no reason to believe he was armed and dangerous. Throughout the events in question the police were pursuing a man whom they suspected of having *811 broken into an occupied private home in the middle of the night to commit a burglary.; this is a serious crime, with an ever-present potential for exploding into violent confrontation. The need to prevent the imminent escape of such an offender is clearly an exigent circumstance within the doctrine here invoked. 7
As with all exceptions to the warrant requirement, the courts must ever be on their guard to keep the “hot pursuit” justification within firm and narrow bounds: “the exception must not be permitted to swallow the rule”
(People
v.
Smith
(1972)
The judgment is affirmed.
Bird, C. J., Tobriner, J., Clark, J., Richardson, J., Manuel, J., and Newman, J., concurred.
Notes
The facts are taken solely from the transcript of the hearing on the motion to suppress. The transcript of the preliminary examination was not offered into evidence at that hearing, and the trial court therefore correctly declined to rely on it.
Thus Perham testified on direct examination:
“Q. Was the second building, the foreman’s house, also your property? A. That is correсt.
“Q. You had complete control over that building, is that correct? A. That is right.
“Q. Did you give [the police] consent to enter that building? A. I certainly did.”
Although
Krauss
was overruled in part in
People
v.
Cook
(1978)
No different result is required by the additional fact that Perham testified he still had some items of personal property stored in the foreman’s house on the night in question. Under the foregoing rule an owner who stores goods on demised premises with the knowledge of his tenant may have implied consent to enter at reasonable times for the limited purpose of exercising his dominion- over the goods, e.g., by removing some or all of them; but for the reasons stated, this circumstance does not give him carte blanche to invite the police in for the purpose of interrogating the tenant or searching the premises.
We distinguished
Stoner
v.
California
(1964)
supra,
Nor is there any relevance to defendant’s claim that tie was not in possession of “readily disposable evidence, such аs narcotics . . . .” The hot pursuit doctrine is *811 designed to prevent the escape of fleeing felons; a consequential seizure of evidence, disposable or otherwise, is merely incidental to that purpose. In any event, the distinctive shirt worn by the burglar herein was not significantly less “disposable” than narcotics or other contraband.
The same authorities refute defendant’s final complaint, i.e., that the arresting officers failed to comply with Penal Code section 844 before entering his house. (Gilbert, at p. 707 of 63 Cal.2d; Smith, at p. 797 of 63 Cal.2d.)
