Defendant was found guilty by a jury of violation of Health and Safety Code section 11500, possession of narcotics. He appeals from the judgment entered on the jury verdict.
After keeping defendant and the place of his residence undеr surveillance for some time, law enforcement officers obtained a warrant to search the premises, and a separate warrant to search the person of defendant. The officers went to the door of the house, demanded admittance, but received no reply. Upon hearing what sounded to them like rushing water inside the premises and suspecting that someone within the house was flushing contraband down the drain, they tried the door, found it locked, and forсed an entry. No one was there. The officers searched the premises and found marijuana in the kitchen, in the bathroom, and beneath the gas meter outside the house.
Two days later, while defendant was at the office of his parole officer in Fresno, state narcotics agents arrested him. One of the officers advised defendant he was being arrested *425 pursuant to a felony warrant of arrest. A search of defendant’s person revealed fragments of marijuаna in his clothing. Defendant, without being advised of his constitutional rights, was questioned by the arresting officers and admitted living at the premises which previously had been searched. In addition to admitting that he lived in the house, defendant said that he used the bathrоom and that he had seen cigarette papers and a matchbox there, but he denied any knowledge of the presence of marijuana.
The premises were rented by one Bobby May Nealy, who was charged, along with defendаnt, with possession of narcotics, violation of Health and Safety Code section 11500.
At the preliminary hearing the narcotic substances were received in evidence, and defendant and Bobby May were bound over for trial. On the morning оf trial, Bobby May changed her plea to guilty. As a defense witness she testified that although defendant lived in her house, he was merely a roomer, that he occupied the back bedroom, and that the only other part of the house to whiсh he had access was the bathroom. She also testified that the marijuana on and in defendant’s clothing was sprinkled there by her to “get even with him" for consorting with another woman. Additionally, she said that she purchased all the marijuana discovered on the premises where defendant lived, that she placed it where it was found, and that defendant had no knowledge of its presence. Defendant did not testify in his own behalf at the trial.
Reversible error is asserted in the admission of the marijuana seized in the search of the house in which defendant lived, and the introduction of the marijuana fragments taken from his clothing. The record reflects that defense counsel made no objection to the introduction of the evidence at either the preliminary hearing or at the trial, and he cannot now raise it for the first time on appeal.
(People
v.
Ibarra,
The search of defendant’s person at the time of his arrest was valid since the arrest was made pursuant to a warrant of arrest.
(People
v.
Winston,
Defendant next argues that the evidence is insufficient to prove his knowledge of the presence of, and his dominion or сontrol over, the marijuana found at the house where he resided. Both of these elements of the crime of violation of Health and Safety Code section 11530 can be proved by circumstantial evidence.
(People
v.
Redrick,
Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to respondent, as we must
(People
v.
Sweeney,
The circumstantial evidence of defendant’s possession of the marijuana and knowledge of its narcotic character is sufficient to sustain the judgment. As an appellate court we are not bound to review the evidence according to the rule of reasonable doubt; that rule applies to the trial court. Our duty is to review the record to determine if there is any substantial evidence to sustain the jury’s verdict; it need not satisfy us beyond a reasonable doubt. (See People v. Redrick, supra, pp. 289-290.)
The only provocative question raised by defendant’s appeal is whethеr, under the rule of
People
v.
Dorado,
In
People
v.
Atchley
(1959)
We are not here concerned with whether the questioning was investigative or accusatory, since defendant was arrested pursuant to a felony warrant of arrest before he was interrogated. Our problem is whether use in evidence of a statement taken in violation of defendant’s rights under the Sixth Amendment constitutes reversible error, ipso facto, and if not, when is the error reversible? Perhaps the problem is more poignantly expressed if the question is framed conversely: when is the use of such a statement not reversible error?
Massiah and Lopes leave no doubt that reversible error results from the use of a statement that admits either an essential element of the crime charged, оr a fact necessary to establish defendant’s guilt. The vexing question is how should statements that fall short of these two types of admissions be tested for reversible error. Such statements might well be irrelevant or inconsequential, and if introduced into еvidence they would in no way prejudice a defendant nor prevent a fair trial. In such circumstances any error resulting from their use should not constitute reversible error.
It seems to us that when a statement is something less than an admission of an еssential element of the crime or a fact necessary to establish the defendant’s guilt, it must be viewed in the light of all of the circumstances surrounding the trial to determine whether its use in evidence constituted reversible error. In short, it is a question of fact to be determined in each case; a determination that must rest upon whether the error prejudices the defendant and prevents him from having a fair trial.
(People
v.
Reese,
We believe it clear from Atchley, Massiah and Lopez that the introduction into evidence of confessions and ad *429 missions of either an essential element of the crime or a fact necessary to establish the defendant’s guilt cоnstitutes reversible error. This accords with the fundamental and motivating principle expressed in Lopez (p. 368) that such statements are excluded to discourage any attempt to obtain a confession or an admission by coercion. At the same time, to hold that whether the use in evidence of “lesser statements” constitutes reversible error is to be determined as a question of fact, is consistent with another observation expressed in Lopez (p. 378) that “ 'It is not the purpose of the еxclusionary rule to protect the guilty. ’ ”
Looking at the statements before us, defendant made no confession, nor did he admit an essential element of the crime or a fact necessary to establish his guilt. Our review of the record discloses that defendant admitted to the officers that he lived at the premises, but this fact was established by the surveillance and the testimony of Bobby May. He admitted use of the bathroom, a fact also established by Bobby May. Defendant denied knowledge of the presence of marijuana in the bathroom, or anywhere else. Bobhy May corroborated him as to this statement. The essential elements of the crime, the presence of marijuana, defendant’s knowledge of its presence, and his knowledge of the narcotic character of the substance, were established by circumstantial evidence, not by any admission of defendant.
We conclude that defendant’s statements, taken by officers without first advising him of his constitutional rights, can hardly be classified as incriminating, and that they were an inconsequential factor in the outcome of the case. Therefore no reversible error resulted from the introduction into evidence of the statements made by defendant at the time of his arrest.
The judgment is affirmed.
Conley, P. J., and Brown (R M.), J., concurred.
