THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
JOSEPH PAUL MARCHESE, Defendant and Respondent.
California Court of Appeals. Second Dist., Div. One.
Thоmas C. Lynch, Attorney General, William E. James, Assistant Attorney General, Evelle J. Younger, District Attorney, Harry Wood and Maurice H. Oppenheim, Deputy District Attorneys, for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Patten, Faith & Sandford and Jules Sandford for Defendant and Respondent.
LILLIE, J.
The Peoplе appeal from order dismissing an information on defendant's motion under section 995, Penal Code. Defendant was charged with one count of possession of marijuana and two counts оf possession for sale of dangerous drugs.
[1] Around 4:40 a.m. on September 8, 1968, defendant, driving a 1967 Mercury Cougar, ran into a building; Officer *1008 Gibson arrived on the scene at about the same time. He saw the cаr on the wrong side of the street resting against the building; defendant, the sole occupant, was seated behind the wheel; the Cougar had major front end damage. The officer asked him if he was hurt; defendant said he was not but that he was drunk; the officer told him to get out of the vehicle but he was unable to do so unassisted. Defendant seemed to be unsteady and in a dazed condition, his eyes аppeared to be watery and glassy and a strong odor of alcohol emanated from his breath; the officer concluded that he was intoxicated. Defendant was arrested for drunk driving ( 23102, subd. (a), Veh. Code) and advised of "applied [sic] consent," and his constitutional rights; defendant chose a blood analysis and Officer Gibson took him to St. Luke's Hospital for a blood test and then booked him.
Officer Scannell, who arrived at about the same time as Officer Gibson, saw defendant seated behind the steering wheel and observed that he seemed dazed; defendant had a slurrеd accent and his balance was such that Sergeant Teal had to assist him in getting out of the vehicle; the officer was present when defendant was arrested and knew that Officer Gibson was tаking him to the hospital for a blood alcohol test. After defendant was removed Officer Scannell remained at the scene to make out the accident report and impound the vehicle; as a check list he used the Highway Patrol Check Sheet Form 180 to record anything of value found in the vehicle; he proceeded to inventory the contents of the interior оf the car; when he came to the spare tire he was to check, he discovered the trunk was locked and the key to it was not in the car; he passed over this item and continued with the inventory; before he completed it the tow truck arrived and while the driver, Mr. Clark, was sweeping the debris off the street, Clark found in the debris the key to the trunk. Officer Scannell then opened the trunk аnd saw a closed duffel bag which he unzipped and in which he found several plastic bags containing miscellaneous cigarettes and leafy material, measuring spoon with a burned bottom, сorn cob pipe and pill containers containing capsules and pills; in the trunk he also found a colander, sifter with marijuana residue, plastic container and Zig Zag papers. It was established that the duffel bag contained marijuana and dangerous drugs--8 hand-rolled marijuana cigarettes, 6 grams marijuana, 1 gram hashish, 400 amphetamine tablets and 135 sodium secobarbital caрsules.
Viewing the totality of circumstances (People v. Williams,
Around five minutes after the accident occurred, immediately upon defendant's removal from the scene and before the tow truck arrived, preparatory to impounding the vehicle, Officer Scannell proceeded to take inventory of its сontents. "While Upton [People v. Upton,
A review of the entire record convinces us of the officer's good faith in making an inventory clearly preparatory to impounding the vehicle. First, Officer Scannell throughout his testimony consistently clаimed that the inventory was made in connection with impounding the Cougar; there is no evidence to the contrary. Second, it is readily apparent that the officer was not engaged in thе process of "ferreting out evidence" to be used in a criminal prosecution; nothing indicates he was seeking contraband or anything else. His sole intention was to inventory the contеnts of the vehicle for his own protection as well as for the protection of the owner and the garageman, and take for safekeeping anything of value. This was entirely proрer. (People v. Jones,
Of course, the conduct оf Officer Scannell in looking in the trunk and bag cannot be constitutionally justified by the fact that it uncovered the contraband (People v. Brown,
For the foregoing reasons the order is reversed.
Wood, P. J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
NOTES
Notes
[fn. 1] 1. Section 22651, subdivision (h), Vehicle Code, provides that an officer may remove a vehicle "When an officer arrests any person driving or in control of a vehicle for an alleged offense and the officer is by this code or other law required or permitted to take and does take the person arrested before a magistrate without unnecessary delay." Section 40302, subdivision (d), Vehicle Code, provides that whenever any person is arrested for any violation of the Vehicle Code not declared to be a felony he shall be taken without unnecessary delay before a magistrate "When the person arrested is charged with violating Section 23102 ...."
