Opinion
Following a denial of his Penal Code section 1538.5 motion, defendant pled guilty to a violation of section 496 of the same code, receiving a stolen Titan .25 caliber pistol. He appeals from the resulting judgment of conviction complaining of the denial of his suppression motion which followed consideration of the preliminary hearing transcript supplemented by additional testimony.
*627 Facts
A warrant was issued for the search оf the person of the defendant and of premises described as 2219 River Boulevard, Bakersfield, California, based upon an affidavit which related a “tip” from a confidential informant that the defendant, who allegedly resided at the premises, had bragged that he had “just ripped off a cop.” The affidavit for the warrant further established the existence of a burglary report of a victim, Wade C. Snyder, who was a deputy sheriff for Kern Cоunty. Included in the list of things taken from Snyder’s residence was a Titan .25 caliber pistol.
At 9:45 p.m. on December 29, 1978, the same date as the tip (but before the issuance of the warrant), Sheriff’s Deputy John Diederich began a surveillance at the River Boulevard residence. He was acting on the instructions of Investigator Hamilton who advised him that law enforcement was in the process of obtaining a search warrant for the premises. Hamilton furthеr advised that there might be a 1966 blue Chevrolet parked there, partial license plate number TBW, which, if it were moving, might be occupied by defendant. Further, Hamilton informed Diederich that the defendant might be armed with a .25 caliber pistol in his pocket. When Diederich took up his position of surveillance, he noted the Chevrolet in the driveway.
The search warrant was secured at 12:55 a.m. on December 30. Meanwhile, the Chevrolet had bеen driven away. Deputy Diederich intercepted it on a nearby street and turned his vehicle around to effect a stop. 1 The Chevrolet drove into a store parking lot and parked. Diederich conducted a weapon search of the two occupants, one of which was the defendant—the driver. No weapons were found. Shortly thereafter fellow officers arrived with the search warrant for defendant’s person, displayed same and then searched the Chevrolet for the specific purpose of finding the gun. At the time of the search of the vehicle there were seven or eight officers present and the defendant was in the back seat of one patrol car and the other occupant, his cousin, in the back seat of another. The Titan .25 caliber pistol was found under foam padding tucked under the driver’s seat. It was not in plain view. Because the gun was described in the search warrant as an item taken in the burglary of the Snyder residence, defendant was arrested.
*628 The search warrant authorized the search of the defendant’s person and the “premises located at and described as 2219 River Blvd., Bakersfield .. . and including . .. surrounding grounds including all garages, storage areas and outbuildings of any kind, attached or unattached, located thereon.” Thе officers did not ask for nor receive a warrant authorizing a search of the Chevrolet.
The Search of the Chevrolet
Although the search warrant included the surrounding grounds of the River Boulevard premises and any outbuildings thereon, it did not include the Chevrolet, although sufficient information was available for the required specificity. (See
People
v.
Dumas
(1973)
It is thus necessary to determine whether the People have sustained their burden of proving that the circumstances of the case justified a warrantless search.
(Badillo
v.
Superior Court
(1956)
The search was not incident to a lawful arrest because the deputies did not have probable cause for an arrest at the time of the search and because defendant had been removed from the Chevrolet, handcuffed and placed in a patrol car.
A warrantless search of an automobile is lawful if it is supported by probable cause coupled with exigent circumstances. We have no difficulty in finding probable cause. The unchallenged testimony was that the defendant might be armed with a .25 caliber pistol in his pocket. Also, it was known that defendant had boasted about burglarizing the house of a “cop,” and that Deputy Snyder had suffered such a loss during which a Titan .25 caliber pistol was taken. This is sufficient information to create a “strong suspicion” of the presence of the gun.
*629
(Wimberly
v.
Superior Court
(1976)
Before a warrantless automobile search may be made, however, there must be more than probable cause, there must be exigent circumstances. As noted earlier, the two occupants of the Chevrolet were placed in patrol cars. There were either six or seven officers present. The officers took control of the vehicle to the extent necessary to move it so that it would not be in the store patrons’ way. It seems apparent that they could have secured the vehicle pending 'the issuance of а search warrant. Likewise, the People are not assisted by the fact, as they were in
People
v.
Dumas, supra,
Unlike Wimberly, our case does not involve the search of a trunk. It involves a search underneath the seat of a person whom the police had every right to believe might be in possession of a pistol. The seаrch was for that pistol, not for drugs or other contraband. We are confronted with the question of whether because of the lesser expectation of privacy that one has for the passenger compartment of his car, and of the necessity of removing firearms from vehicles, the threshold of “exigency” is lower. A spate of recent Court of Appeal cases so indicates.
In
People
v.
Odom
(1980)
People
v.
Vodak
(1980)
And in
People
v.
Superior Court
(Rhinehart) (1980)
Finally, in
People
v.
Weston, supra,
Standing against this considerable body of intermediate appellate opinion is
People
v.
Gott
(1979)
The decision in Gott, which involved a warrantless trunk search, is based on two factors. The first is that there were six officers surrounding the car, so there was no reason to believe that it would be moved or tampered with while a warrant was obtained. Although it may not be disputed that a number of officers eases the task of securing or impounding a vehicle, it is questionable whether this factor should be a deciding one. If the number of police present is important, why is not the response time of a tow truck to impound it? 3 Or the number and activities of police within reasonable geographic proximity? Or whether the police have a cage car in which they could place the occupant or occupants while they arrange for impoundment? Or whether a “paddy wagon” is available for transportation of the suspects to jail? Is it neces *631 sary to graft onto the search and seizure law one more hairsplitting distinction to be guessed at by police officers or a deputy district attorney aroused from bed to give an off-the-pajama-cuff opinion?
The other basis of the
Gott
decision is
People
v.
Minjares
(1979)
There is a great difference between a tote bag (Minjares) and two metal boxes
(Dalton)
which “could have been safely transported to the police station”
(People
v.
Dalton, supra,
We see nothing in Minjares or Dalton which compels the holding in Gott.
Defendant relies on
People
v.
Jochen
(1975)
Odom, Vodak, Rhinehart
and
Weston
are grounded on ample precedent.
People
v.
Laursen
(1972)
As noted above, the California Supreme Court has granted a hearing in People v. Rodriguez (Cal.App.) [June 19, 1980, Crim. 21522] which involves a search of an automobile trunk. Hearings have also been *633 granted in People v. Superior Court (Valdez) (S.F. 24183) and Sharp v. Superior Court (L.A. 31279). They may furnish needed clarification in this confusing and murky corner of the law. Absent further direction in this area, we see nothing in the recent pronouncements of the California Supreme Court which leads to a conclusion away from the validity of the search in the instant case.
Nor has such direction come from the Supreme Court of the United States.
United States
v.
Chadwick
(1977)
In
Arkansas
v.
Sanders
(1979)
*634
The California Supreme Court in
People
v.
Minjares, supra,
The courts have restricted exceptions to the requirement of a warrant to a handful of circumstances—all carefully drawn and circumscribed. In delineating them, societal costs of obtaining a warrant, such as danger to officers or risk of loss or destruction of property are the prime considerations.
(Arkansas
v.
Sanders, supra,
442 U.S. at pp. 759-760,
From the practical standpoint of an arrested defendant, such as Gott, if probable cause exists, a warrantless search of a trunk at the scene of the stop is far superior to an impoundment of the vehicle and search after a warrant is secured. (See fn. 2, ante.)
We recognize a defendant may avoid impoundment by consent to a search. Such consent, however, forfeits the right to later claim no probable cause existed for the search, a defense a knowing defendant may not wish to lose.
*635 Conceding that the matter is not free of doubt, we find the following facts suffiсient to justify the warrantless search of the Chevrolet: the object of the search was an inherently dangerous object—a pistol; the place of the search was not in the trunk of the vehicle but the passenger compartment, more specifically under the very seat occupied by appellant; and the police had reasonable cause to believe that appellant might be armed with a stоlen weapon which he could have easily secreted when he observed the patrol car.
We go no further than to hold that once a legal stop has been made, if the police have probable cause to believe that a dangerous weapon is secreted in the passenger compartment of a vehicle, the latter’s inherent mobility, coupled with the inherent danger of the existence of the weapon, are sufficient exigent circumstances so that a warrantless search is reasonable.
Denial of the Penal Code Section 995 Motion
Defendant argues error on the part of the trial court in refusing to dismiss counts one through four of the information pursuant to his Penal Code section 995 motion below. The issue concerns the validity of a search of a residence.
While Penal Code section 1538.5, subdivision (m), allows appeal from a denial of a section 995 motion, notwithstanding a guilty plea, appellant’s section 995 motion was to set aside counts one, two, three and four. He neither pled guilty to, nor was convicted of any of the charges in those counts. They were dismissed in return for his guilty plea to receiving stolen property (a Titan .25 caliber weapon) pertaining to count five.
The matter is analogous to the holding in
People
v.
Punchard
(1980)
In
People
v.
Punchard,
supra,
Similar reasoning holds true in the instant case, since the gun appellant pled guilty to receiving was seized in an auto he was driving as opposed to the residence. Any issues relating to the search of the residence are moot.
The judgment is affirmed.
Brown (G. A.), P. J., and Hanson (P. D.), J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 26, 1981, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
No contention is made on appeal that either the stop or the short detention until the search warrant arrived was illegal.
The evidence was as strong as that found in
People
v.
Fraijo
(1978)
In Gott, unlike our case, the car occupants were validly arrested prior to the search. Since impoundment was available to the officers—see footnote 5, post—the distinction as to the number of police officers becomes almost irrelevant.
People
v.
Minjares,
supra,
The high court has held that, as a general rule, an auto stopped on the highway may be searched without a warrant when police have probable cause to believe it contains contraband or evidence of a crime.
(Carroll
v.
United States
(1925)
Impoundment of a motor vehicle involves considerable inconvenience and expense to the owner. A private tow truck is called. (Veh. Code, §§ 22651, subd. (h), 22850;
Penaat
v.
City of San Jose
(1972)
In the instant case, seizure and immobilization of the Chevrolet was available to the officers; impoundment was not, as there could be no valid arrest prior to the discovery of the pistol. (Veh. Code, § 22651, subd. (h).)
