Opinion
Defendant was charged with possession for sale of a restricted dangerous drug (Health & Saf. Code, § 11911). Her motion to suppress evidence under section 1538.5, Penal Code, was submitted on the transcript of the testimony taken at the preliminary hearing, and denied. Thereafter the cause was submitted on the same transcript and defendant was found guilty as charged. She appeals from the judgment. 1
Around 10:20 a.m. on December 5, 1970, plain clothes Officers Sisak and Anderson, assigned to the investigative bureau (narcotics patrol) and driving an unmarked police vehicle, observed a Volkswagen proceeding at “a high rate of speed” in a residential аrea in which the posted speed limit was 25 miles an hour; they clocked the vehicle at 35 to 37 miles an hour; they also noticed that the brake lights did not work when the car stopped and that it did not have a front licensе plate. After following the Volkswagen for a few blocks they activated the police red and spot lights and directed it to pull over; defendant was the driver. Officer Anderson proceeded to the driver’s side аnd Officer Sisak to the passenger’s side of the vehicle. Officer Anderson asked defendant for her driver’s license and after a brief search through her wallet she told him she could not find it; he then asked her for the registratiоn to the vehicle and she said she did not have one; asked by the officer for some form of identification, she produced a social security card. At this time Officer Sisak went back to the police car аnd by radio ran a registration check on the Volkswagen’s license plate—HAJ 348; he was informed that HAJ 348 had been issued to a 1962 Ford registered in La Puente; he then returned to the car and asked defendant if she had a registrаtion for the car whereupon she *1035 checked the front pocket on the driver’s door and removed a temporary registration in the name of Mary Jean Keller of Venice. Defendant was placed under arrest “for a violation of the speed limit, for a violation of faulty brake lights, no driver’s license in possession and having the wrong license plate on that type of vehicle.” Officer Sisak testified that at that timе it was his feeling that the Volkswagen was a stolen vehicle. Defendant was escorted to the police vehicle; “a tow for impounding was called” and Officer Anderson began a routine search in preparation of taking inventory. Lying on the front seat next to the driver was a brown paper sack in an open, unfolded condition; it contained miscellaneous items and about seven full clear sandwich-type Baggies сontaining 5,800 “Mini bennies.” It was stipulated that after having been advised of her Miranda rights defendant told Sergeant Legerski that she borrowed the car and had no knowledge of the items in the bag.
Defendant did not take the stand and offered no defense.
Appellant’s sole contention is that there was no probable cause for her arrest; that her arrest was invalid because there was no statutory authority therefor in that the offenses for which she was taken into custody did not justify arrest.
Originally defendant was arrested for driving without a driver’s license in her possession (§ 12951, Veh. Code), speeding (§ 22350), faulty brake lights and having a license plate on the Volkswagen that belonged to another vehicle (§ 4462), all minor traffic violations; also, the Volkswagen had no front license plate (§ 5200). While it is true that the officer could not arrest defendant under Penal Code section 833 et seq. for the foregoing Vehicle Code infractions
(People
v.
Wohlleben,
Probable cause for the officers to believe that defendant had taken and/or driven the Volkswagen without consent of the owner, a felony (Veh. Code, § 10851; Pen. Code, § 836, subd. 3), is established by the evidence. Defendant was speeding in a residential area; the Volkswagen had faulty brake lights; there was no license plate on the front, and the plate on the rear of the vehicle had been issued to another car—a 1962 Ford in Lа Puente; upon request of Officer Anderson defendant presented to him no driver’s license and no “other satisfactory evidence of [her]
*1036
identity for examination”;
2
and at first, when asked for the registration to the Volkswagen, she said she had none but upon being asked again, produced a temporary registration in the name of someone else—Mary Jean Keller at an address in Venice. Officer Sisak'was asked, “Officer, was it your feeling at the time [оf arrest] that the vehicle was a stolen vehicle?” and he testified, “Yes.” In
People
v.
Nebbitt,
At the time he arrested defendant for the several minor traffic violations, Officer Sisak believed that thе Volkswagen was a stolen vehicle, and so testified. He did not arrest her for the felony but under the facts and
*1037
circumstances facing him at the time he would have been justified in doing so. Inasmuch as there was probable сause to arrest defendant for a felony and the officer at the time believed the Volkswagen to be a stolen vehicle, the validity of her arrest was not affected by the fact that Officer Sisak told her he was arresting her for the minor traffic violations and, in fact, did so.
(People
v.
Kelley,
The paper bag was in plain sight on. the passenger seat immediately next to the driver, and while it was unfolded and open there is no evidence that the сontents were open to view; nor is there any evidence that the officers suspected that the bag contained contraband. However, it cannot be seriously contended that the paper bag fоund beside the driver immediately upon her arrest was the product of an illegal search and seizure. The search of the vehicle, concededly without a warrant, meets the test of reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment, United States Constitution, rendering the evidence obtained as a result thereof admissible.
(People
v.
Burke,
On still another ground the search and seizure were valid. “When officers, incidental to a lawful arrest, seize an automobile or other object in the reasonable belief that such object
is itself evidence
of the commission
*1038
of the crime for which such arrest is made, any subsequent examination of said object undertaken for the purpose of determining its evidentiary value does not constitute a ‘search’ within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.”
(People
v.
Teale,
The judgment is affirmed.
Thompson, J., and Clark, J., concurred,
Notes
Defendant was also charged with another violation of section 11911, Health and Safety Code, in that on December 12, 1970, she had in her possession for sale amphetamine (case No. A 062224). The preliminary hearing in that case was had at the same time as the preliminary hearing in the instant one; ultimately she was convicted and filed her notice of appeal. The appeal herein does not include her appeal from the judgment of conviction in No. A 062224.
Appellant contends that a social security card is satisfactory evidence of her identity under section 40302, subdivision (a), Vehicle Code, and argues that a woman of limited economic means, possibly unemployed and not possessing any credit cards, would be discriminated against if she possessed no identification other than her social security card. The latter argument is not sound because if she did not have a driver’s license she should not be driving on the рublic highways regardless of her financial condition, and even if she could not secure credit or was a person of limited means she could have obtained an identification card from the department of motor vehicles for a nominal charge (§ 13000 et seq., Veh. Code). Appellant compares her social security card with the selective service card presented to the officer by defendant in
People
v.
Van Sanden,
