Opinion
In the trial court, appellant brought a motion to suppress evidence pursuant to Penal Code section 1538.5. He contended that evidence obtained during the search of a motel room pursuant to a search warrant should be suppressed because the warrant was issued without probable cause and the searching officer did not act in good faith. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, the parties did not litigate the validity of the search warrant. Instead, evidence was presented that appellant was subject to a probation search condition, of which the searching officer was unaware. The trial court denied the motion and appellant pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to sell heroin and one count of possession of heroin for sale. (Pen. Code, § 182; Health & Saf. Code, § 11351.) Appellant also admitted an enhancing allegation that he possessed more than 14.25 grams of a substance containing heroin. (Health & Saf. Codе, § 11352.5, subd. (1); Pen. Code, § 1203.07.) He was sentenced to three years in state prison. He appealed to this court, contending the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress. This court affirmed the judgment, relying on
In re Tyrell J.
(1994)
BACKGROUND
In October 2000, after watching appellant conduct several hand-to-hand transactions at a shopping center on different days, and following him to the Economy Inn Motel, Watsonville police officers obtained a search warrant. *861 Searching room 139 where they found appellant, the police discovered heroin, packing materials, injecting paraphernalia, and almost $600 in cash. Appellant was arrested, and he admitted to the police that he sold heroin for another person to support his оwn habit.
Appellant waived preliminary examination and filed a motion to suppress. Appellant challenged the sufficiency of the affidavit in support of the search warrant. He also argued that the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule as stated in
United States v. Leon
(1984)
The prosecution filed opposition to apрellant’s motion, arguing the affidavit was sufficient and the searching officer acted in good faith. Two weeks later, the prosecution filed supplemental opposition stating, “Case law holds that trying, but faffing, to record a telephonic warrant complies with the Constitution. [Citation.] However, no case has upheld a telephonic warrant where there was no attempt at compliance with their specific procedures. Accordingly, the People concede the warrant was invalid.”
The prosecution defended the search on the basis of a probation search condition. The prosecution introduced documentary evidеnce establishing that, in January 2000, following appellant’s misdemeanor convictions for violating Health and Safety Code section 11550 (being under the influence of a controlled substance) and Penal Code section 148.9, subdivision (a) (giving false identification), the trial court had imposed a “conditional sentence.” One condition of this sentеnce ordered appellant to “[s]ubmit [his] person, residence, vehicle, and areas under [his] dominion and control to search and seizure at any time of the day or night with or without a warrant—drugs and narcotics.” In its opposition to appellant’s motion to suppress, “given the long periods of surveillance, and the fact the оfficer received two search warrants (despite Defendant’s arguments of invalidity), leads [¿ic] to the clear conclusion this search was neither for the purpose of harassment, nor arbitrary.” Thus, under
In re Tyrell supra,
At the hearing on appellant’s motion, the court said, “This is on for a motion to suppress, and it’s based at this time on the search clause[.]” Defense counsel said, “It’s my understanding . . . that the prosecution is now solely seeking to justify the search that took place in this matter based upon the search clause and that they are not relying upon the search warrant.” The court said, “But the search wаrrant was in fact secured by a magistrate, although it was done in a manner that was not consistent with a telephonic search warrant that is the requirement as needed, and that it was subsequently *862 then signed several days later apparently, based on what you told me. So that there is at least no bad faith on the part of the officer as far as at least attempting to secure a search warrant; however, the procedure was not proper. Is that accurate?” Defense counsel responded, “That’s correct. And I understand also that the officer after getting the search warrant, the second search warrant signed, interspersed some of the pages from the second into the first and took the search warrant that was signed the second time and put it on the affidavit that was the first one presented to Judge Barton and then interspersed some other additional pages into that. And there w[ere] some problems that were created with regard to the preservation of the actual search warrant itself and that’s why, it’s my understanding of the totality of the circumstances, the district attorney is only now relying upon the search clause as the basis for justifying the search.”
The prosecutor stated, “[Defense counsel] is correct in stating that the paperwork and procedures in relation to original dupliсate and original copy were not followed in securing a telephonic search warrant, nor was it recorded. However, the officer did have verbal permission from a judge to search this location prior to searching it, which reaches the bad faith issue that was discussed.”
Defense counsel argued that there was rеason to believe the California Supreme Court was retreating from its holding in
In re Tyrell J., supra,
DISCUSSION
In
People v. Sanders, supra,
In
In re Tyrell
J.,
supra,
Becausе of his conditional sentence, appellant was subject to an informal probation search condition rather than a parole search condition as in
Sanders.
Respondent asserts that this difference makes the holding of
Sanders
“inapplicable” here. Citing
People v. Reyes
(1998)
In
People v. Reyes, supra,
*864
In
People v. Bravo, supra,
In both
Reyes
and
Bravo,
the search was justified under the consent exception to the warrant requirement because the searching officer was aware of the search condition and thus aware of the defendant’s advance consent. In
Sanders,
the cоurt said, “[Wjhether a search is reasonable must be determined based upon the circumstances known to the officer when the search is conducted. ‘[A]lmost without exception in evaluating alleged violations of the Fourth Amendment the Court has first undertaken an objective assessment of an officer’s actions in light of the facts and сircumstances
then known to him.’
[Citation.]”
(People
v.
Sanders, supra,
When
Reyes
and
Bravo
are read with
Sanders,
the distinction between a parole search condition and a probation search condition becomes irrelevant, and the logical, unremarkable proposition emerges that a search is not justifiable as a consent search when the officer is not undertaking the search pursuant to that consent.
2
This is consistent with the body of law regarding the consent exception to the warrant requirement. “The Fourth Amendment generally prohibits the warrantless entry of a person’s home, whether to make an arrest or to search for specific objects. [Citations.] The prohibition does not apply, however, to situations in which voluntary consent has been obtained . . . .”
(Illinois
v.
Rodriguez
(1990) 497 U.S.
177,
181 [
To further the deterrent effect of the exclusionary rule, the
Sanders
court suppressed evidence found during a search of a residence that the officer “had no reason to believe was lawful.”
(People v. Sanders, supra,
We lack an adequate evidentiary record on which to decide the suppression motion on any theory other than the probatiоn search justification advanced below. As stated in
People
v.
Minor
(1980)
DISPOSITION
Our prior opinion in this cause filed on June 6, 2002, is vacated. The judgment is reversed and remanded to the superior court with directions to сonduct a hearing on appellant’s motion to suppress filed November 28, 2000. If the court grants the motion to suppress, it shall vacate the judgment and afford appellant an opportunity to withdraw his plea. If the superior court denies the motion to suppress, it shall reinstate the judgment. (See
People v. Torres
(1992)
Rushing, P. J., and Premo, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 13, 2004. Baxter, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Subsequently, the grant of review in Moss was dismissed as improvidently granted.
Recently, the First District said, “[A]n officer performing a search without knowledge that a suspect is either a parolee or a probationer is not acting pursuant to
any
applicable search conditions. Therefore, in neither case can the search be justified by those search conditions, whether they derive from parole or probation.”
(People v. Bowers
(2004)
