*932 Opinion
Appellant was convicted of possession of marijuana in violation of Health and Safety Code section 11530. The marijuana was found in appellаnt’s automobile after he consented to a search of the vehicle. Appellant presents two main points for reversal: that the officer whо stopped the vehicle did not have probable cause to do so or to detain appellant, that a search made pursuant to cоnsent immediately following an illegal detention is invalid.
The facts are undisputed. Appellant, a 20-year-old youth, was stopped by Officer Winfrey while driving an automоbile on McHenry Avenue in Modesto at about 1:15 in the morning. There were two passengers in the car, appellant’s 15-year-old brother and his 10-year-old cоusin. As Officer Winfrey approached the automobile, he noticed that there was no key in the ignition. The officer mentioned this fact to appellant and was told that appellant had lost the key about two weeks earlier and that he had to “hot wire” the vehicle to start it. Winfrey asked appellаnt’s permission to search the automobile and permission was granted; he found two burnt cigarettes in the glove compartment. Officer Winfrey then asked to see the vehicle registration slip, and when he discovered that the car was registered to a Lillian Lackus in Rosemead, California, placed aрpellant under arrest. Appellant was searched, and a rolled cigarette was found in his shirt pocket. All three cigarettes contained marijuana.
It is of course true, as respondent maintains, that the provocation required to permit a police officer to temporarily detain a рerson for questioning is not the same as that required for a valid arrest or a lawful search
(People
v.
Mickelson,
Applying these principles to the instant case, we arе impelled to conclude that Officer Winfrey did not have legal cause to stop appellant’s automobile. Appellant was driving within the legal speed limits, not erratically, and there were no visible operational defects on the vehicle. Furthermore, although the officer observed two young рassengers in the vehicle, he saw no furtive or suspicious movements and he had no information that the youths were being kidnaped, detained or molested in any manner. In fact, the only reason given by Winfrey for stopping appellant was that appellant was driving a vehicle along the streets of Modesto аt 1:15 in the morning with two young passengers and that he did not look old enough to be their parent or guardian. Clearly, even if we should assume that what the officer obsеrved constituted unusual activity, and it is difficult to make such an assumption in this modem age, the activity alone did not suggest that it was related to criminality.
The Attorney Genеral argues that Officer Winfrey had reasonable cause to stop appellant’s vehicle on suspicion that appellant was aiding and abеtting his two young passengers to loiter in violation of the municipal ordinance of the City of Modesto.
1
However, driving along city streets, even at 1:15 in the morning, is not “lоitering.”
(In re Cregler,
We are not insensitive to the numerous problems which face police officers on patrol in a mechanized nation. As we statеd in
Bramlette
v.
Superior Court,
Having decided that Officer Winfrey did not have probable cause to stop appellant’s vehicle in the first instance, it follows that the subsequent search was unlawful, even though consented to by appellant, and that all evidence adduced therefrom was the product of an unlawful search. As our Supreme Court said in
People
v.
Haven,
The judgment is reversed.
Ginsburg, J., * concurred.
Respondent’s pеtition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied Mtarch 26, 1971. Burke, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Section 4-7 p. 201 of the Modesto Municipal Code as discussed in the reporter’s transcript provides: “It shall be unlawful for any minor under the age of 18 years to loiter on a public street or in or аbout any public place in the City between the hours of 11 o’clock P.M. and 5 o’clock A.M. . . . unless accompanied by a parent, guardian, or other adult person having legal control. . . .”
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
