Lead Opinion
Opinion
—By information, defendant Harwood was charged with offering to sell, on July 22, 1976, cocaine, a controlled substance, in violation of Health and Safety Code section 11352, subdivision (a).
Defendant entered a plea of not guilty. His motion to suppress evidence, made pursuant to Penal Code section 1538.5, was denied. Thereafter, defendant withdrew his plea of not guilty and entered a plea of guilty as charged.
Criminal proceedings were suspended; defendant was granted probation for five years, on condition (among others) that he serve six months in the county jail and pay a fine of $1,000. Defendant was declared ineligible for county parole.
Defendant has appealed from the judgment of conviction. We reverse.
Police Officer Donald Smith, one of the officers in conversation with Judith, told her that there might be cocaine or money from a previous cocaine sale by Brown located in the apartment on Gladys. When Brown was apprehended he had no cocaine on his person. Smith asked Judith for consent to search the apartment for cocaine and money; he further advised her that she did not have to give permission for the search, but that if she did not, an attempt would be made to secure a search warrant.
Judith Marshall was on probation at this time for selling marijuana. She knew that she had a small stash of marijuana in the Gladys apartment, but was fairly certain a search would not turn up cocaine. She was primarily intent on concluding her contact with the officers so that she could address herself to securing Brown’s release on bail. Judith told the assembled officers about the marijuana, and was assured there would be no difficulty about that. She orally consented to the search.
Judith permitted the officers to use her key and five police officers were admitted to the small one-bedroom apartment. Judith testified that the telephone rang; that she reached to answer it, but was stopped from doing so by Officer Smith, who picked up the phone. Officer Smith testified that he could not recall how many telephone calls were received before he intercepted calls from Paul Harwood, the present defendant. Judith testified that she objected to the interception of phone calls to the premises. But, Officer Smith, when asked whether Judith in any manner objected to his answering the telephone, stated that “[s]he made no statements to any objection that I know of.”
While the record is not entirely clear, it appears that at least two incoming telephone calls were answered by the officers after entrance into the apartment, and before Judith signed the written consent form for the search. The document entitled “Consent to Search” was handed to Judith by Officer Smith. That document, which Judith read before signing, provided for “a complete search of the premises or vehicle under my control”—and was duly executed by Judith.
Defendant makes three contentions on this appeal.
The first relates to defendant’s “standing” to make a constitutionally-based objection to Officer Smith’s seizure of incoming telephone calls to the Brown-Marshall apartment on Gladys.
California long ago adopted the broad application of the exclusionary rule, allowing those affected by an allegedly unconstitutional search and seizure from a third person to challenge its legality in a court of law. (People v. Martin (1955)
The decisional law, therefore, compels the conclusion that defendant Harwood may challenge the legality of the police officer’s interception of telephone calls made by him to the Brown-Marshall premises and his resultant conviction of selling cocaine.
The record reveals somewhat conflicting evidence on this point. We cannot reweigh it. (People v. Superior Court (Keithley) (1975)
Defendant’s primary contention is that the searching officers extended their intrusion at the Gladys apartment beyond the consent given, thereby violating defendant’s right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure, guaranteed by the United States Constitution (Fourth Amendment) and the California Constitution (art. I, § 13).
While these constitutional guarantees preclude warrantless searches such as this one, there are recognized exceptions to the constitutional limitations, and a consensual search is one of them. (Schneckloth v. Bustamonte (1973)
It was cogently stated in Blair v. Pitchess (1971)
Similarly, it is the government’s burden to prove that a warrantless search was within the scope of the consent given. People v. Superior Court (Arketa) (1970)
Other instances where the scope of consent has been limited may be found in the decisional law. In People v. Bracamonte (1975)
Thus, despite initial authorization—whether by warrant, probable cause, or consent—police officers may exceed the boundaries of the power conferred upon them and create illegality for their actions. Limitations may exist due to the specifications of the warrant (Lohman) or by constitutional mandate (Chimel v. California (1969)
In United States v. Dichiarinte (7th Cir. 1971)
A principle to be adhered to and encouraged is stated in Dichiarinte as follows: “Courts have not looked with favor on the practice of substituting consent for the authorization of a search warrant. The Supreme Court, in Terry v. Ohio,
The situation in Dichiarinte was not unlike that in the case at bench. Here, there was an understanding between Judith and the police officers that her premises would be searched for cocaine and money. The scope of the consent to search was thus a limited one. Here, the officers exceeded that scope by the interception of telephone calls to the premises. There is absolutely nothing contained in the oral or written
The Attorney General contends that the interception of incoming calls in the case at bench falls squarely within People v. Sandoval (1966)
In the case at bench, all that the officers suspected about the Gladys apartment was that there still was contraband in the premises and possibly some proceeds from a prior sale of cocaine. This was the designated purpose revealed to Judith and the basis upon which her consent to search was sought. Had the officers had any reason to believe that Roger Brown normally conducted his narcotic transactions after telephone calls to his residence, they might have sought from Judith a broader consent to include the interception of phone calls. But they neither had any such information nor did they secure any such broader consent.
We hold, therefore, that neither a general consent to search particular premises nor a consent to search for specific items includes the right to intercept telephone calls to the premises involved. In the instant case the arrest of defendant for offering to sell cocaine and the obtaining of cocaine from defendant were the direct result of the constitutionally
The judgment is reversed.
Kingsley, J., concurred.
Notes
In James, supra, the California Supreme Court observed that in a warrantless search, “the burden was on the People to establish justification under a recognized exception to the warrant requirement. [Citation.]” (
We are also cited to People v. Warner (1969)
Concurrence Opinion
—I concur in the judgment upon the ground that the search exceeded the reasonable expectations of the person consenting.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied January 4, 1978.
