Opinion
An information charged defendant with unlawfully possessing heroin for sale. (Health & Saf. Code, § 11500.5.) At a special pretrial hearing he moved to suppress evidence on the ground that it was obtained by an unreasonable, search without a warrant. (Pen. Code, § 1538.5.) The superior court denied his motion. He then filed a timely, formally sufficient petition for a writ of prohibition to review the superior court’s ruling. The Court of Appeal summarily denied the petition by minute order without opinion and defendant’s petition for hearing was denied by this court.
At defendant’s ensuing trial the parties waived a jury and the superior
Section 1538.5 provides that the defendant may seek pretrial appellate court review of the superior court’s order denying his motion to suppress evidence by petitioning for a writ of mandate or prohibition
1
and that he “may seek further review of the validity of a search or seizure on appeal from a conviction.”
2
The Assembly Interim Committee Report on Search and Seizure which was before the Legislature in 1967 when it enacted the statute
3
and the history of the Senate bill which eventually became section
In accord with the holding of
People
v.
Werber, supra,
Important incidents of the right to appeal from a superior court’s judgment are the right to present oral argument in the appellate court (see Pen. Code, § 1254; Cal. Rules of Court, rules 22, 30) and the right to a written opinion pursuant to the state constitutional requirement that “Decisions of the Supreme Court and courts of appeal that determine
It is settled law that an appellate court’s action denying without opinion a petition for a writ of mandate or prohibition is not the determination of a “cause” requiring oral argument and a written opinion. Rather, such minute order denials are made in chambers in the absence of the parties. Only when the appellate court issues an alternative writ or order to show cause does the matter become a “cause” which is placed on the court’s calendar for argument and which must be decided “in writing with reasons stated.”
(Funeral Dir. Assn.
v.
Bd. of Funeral Dirs.
(1943)
Nevertheless the People urge that the sole possible ground of the appellate court’s denial of defendant’s petition for prohibition was on the merits and that the determination against him is therefore conclusive under
However, we cannot accept the People’s contention that the sole possible ground for denying defendant’s petition for the writ was a determination against him on the merits. We have continued to recognize that the writs of mandate and prohibition are “extraordinary” and “prerogative” and that therefore their use for pretrial review may and in some circumstances should be confined to questions of first impression and general importance.
(See Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1970)
When the record of the pretrial hearing indicates that the defendant unsuccessfully moved to suppress several items of evidence, some of which appear to have been seized validly and others invalidly, an appellate court may deny the petition without opinion in anticipation that the People will not insist on using inadmissible evidence at trial. It may take the view that the use of relatively minor items of evidence will be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, and it may consider that the picture of the entire case developed at trial will enable it to make a better informed appraisal of the harmless error problem on appeal from a judgment of conviction. Such appraisal on appeal may result in a determination favorable to the defendant
In light of the various considerations which may impel appellate justices to vote to deny a defendant’s petition for a pretrial writ under section 1538.5 without opinion, we believe that giving such a minute order conclusive effect on an appeal from a subsequent judgment of conviction would amount to improper conjecture and surmise as to the theoretically possible mental processes of the justices. (Cf. Note (1945) 18 So.Cal.L. Rev. 287, 289.)
The foregoing considerations do not apply to invocation of the doctrine of the law of the case on an appeal from a judgment of conviction after an appellate court has denied a defendant’s application for pretrial writ review under section 1538.5 by a written opinion which decides the merits of a search and seizure contention. (See
People
v.
Werber, supra,
In view of the express language of section 1538.5, application of the doctrine of res judicata to give conclusive effect on appeal from a judgment of conviction to an appellate court’s earlier decision denying defendant’s application for a pretrial writ would be inappropriate even when the denial of the writ is by an opinion demonstrating adjudication of the merits. The statute permits the defendant to seek further review of the validity of the challenged search on appeal from a judgment of conviction, a concept totally at variance with application of the doctrine of res judicata.
On May 26, 1969, Police Sergeant Wanek was advised by other officers with whom he was engaged in a narcotics investigation that they had information that defendant was selling quarter-ounce packages of heroin at 1439 Pico Street, his mother’s residence, and that a narcotics suspect in a black Buick might be on his way to that address. About 1 p.m. Sergeant Wanek parked his police car near the residence. He saw Steven Khoury arrive in a black Buick. Wanek left his police car and hid beside a house at the rear of the lot where the mother’s residence was located. There was no fence or other barrier between the two houses, and a fence on the side of the lot was only two or three feet high. Wanek saw Khoury meet defendant and hand him what appeared to be rolled currency. Khoury then walked out of Wanek’s view. Defendant walked to a cement slab at the back entrance to his mother’s house, lifted a rock from the slab, removed a plastic bag containing balloons of various colors, took out one orange balloon, replaced the bag under the rock, and walked to the front of the house and out of the officer’s view. Wanek, who had special training and experience as to narcotics trafficking, believed that the balloons contained heroin.
Wanek returned to his police car, saw Khoury leave in the black Buick, and informed fellow officers by radio of the transaction he had observed. He drove about two miles to an address which he believed was Khoury’s destination. Other officers there had just arrested Khoury, who had an orange balloon in his hand when he was apprehended. (At the hearing on the motion to suppress the parties stipulated that there was probable cause for Khoury’s arrest and that the orange balloon contained heroin.)
Wanek, with other officers, returned to 1439 Pico. They arrived there about 20 minutes after Wanek had observed defendant’s transaction with Khoury. Defendant and another man were sitting on the front lawn. The officers placed them under arrest. Sergeant Wanek at once went to the cement slab, which was about 20 feet from the place where the other officers had defendant in custody. Within 15 to 30 seconds the sergeant found the rock which concealed defendant’s cache. He removed the plastic bag from beneath the rock. In the bag were eight balloons of various colors. (At trial it was stipulated that the balloons contained heroin.)
Sergeant Wanek’s personal observations prior to his seizure of the eight
The search which defendant challenges met the requirements of Cruz. It was contemporaneous with the arrest. It took place on the premises where defendant was arrested and was reasonable in scope as it was conducted only 20 feet from the place of arrest at a location over which the officer had observed defendant exercising control 20 minutes before. It was not exploratory but was directed to a definite object, the seizure of the balloons which Wanek had seen defendant conceal at that location and which Wanek had reasonable cause to believe contained heroin.
Defendant relies on the rule that the mere existence of probable cause to believe that a search will disclose contraband does not justify a search without a warrant. (See
Chapman
v.
United States
(1961)
The judgment is affirmed.
McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Burke, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
“(i) . . . After the special hearing is held in the superior court, any review thereafter desired by the defendant prior to trial shall be by means of [a petition for] an extraordinary writ of mandate or prohibition filed within 30 days after the denial of his motion at the special hearing.”
The bracketed phrase “[a petition for]” was omitted from the statute by obvious inadvertence. (Cf. the provision of subdivision (o) that “Within 30 days after a defendant’s motion is granted at a special hearing in the superior court, the people may file a petition for writ of mandate or prohibition, seeking appellate review of the ruling regarding the search or seizure motion.”)
“(m) The proceedings provided for in the section [and other enumerated Penal Code sections not pertinent here] . . . shall constitute the sole and exclusive remedies prior to conviction to test the unreasonableness of a search or seizure where the person making the motion for . . . suppression of evidence is a defendant in a criminal case and the property or thing has been offered or will be offered as evidence against him. A defendant may seek further review of the validity of a search or seizure on appeal from a conviction in a criminal case notwithstanding the fact that such judgment of conviction is predicated upon a plea of guilty. ...” (Italics added.)
The report included three proposed drafts of section 1538.5. The section as enacted differs from each of these proposals but includes provisions adapted from each of them.
Like the version of section 1538.5 which was enacted, each of the three proposals provided for pretrial appellate court review of an order denying defendant’s motion to suppress evidence in a felony case “by means of an extraordinary writ of mandate or prohibition” (a remedy which the Assembly committee described as “a preliminary appeal”) and each expressly recognized that further review might be had on appeal from a judgment of conviction.
The committee’s report pointed out that, whatever version of the proposed legislation might be enacted, the legislators should consider “the question of whether a
The first several versions of Senate Bill 88, which was enacted as section 1538.5 after a series of amendments, provided that any pretrial review of the superior court’s denial of a defendant’s motion to suppress “shall be by means of an extraordinary writ of mandate or prohibition” and that “further review can be had only on an appeal from a conviction, in the criminal case.”
An interim amendment added the provision that “Such review on appeal may be obtained by the defendant . . . even if he entered a plea of guilty. ...”
Finally the provision as to further review on appeal was amended to the form found in the statute as enacted; i.e., subdivision (m) quoted in footnote 2, supra.
The requirement of written opinions has been in existence as to this court since the adoption of the state Constitution of 1879 (former art. VI, § 2) and as to the Courts of Appeal since their creation in 1904 (former art. VI, § 24). Although the requirement has been the subject of much criticism repeated proposals to limit or abolish it have been rejected. (See Strauss, Written Opinions (1964) 39 State Bar J. 127; Gibson, Judicial Article of California Constitution (1956) 29 So.Cal.L.Rev. 389, 395; Radin, The Requirement of Written Opinions (1930) 18 Cal.L.Rev. 486.)
The denial without opinion of a petition for a writ of mandate or prohibition is not res judicata except when the sole possible ground of denial was on the merits or it affirmatively appears that the denial was intended to be on thé merits.
(People v. Pipes
(1960)
Normally the doctrine of the law of the case requires adherence to an appellate court’s statement
in its opinion on appeal
of a rule of law necessary to its decision.
(Tally
v.
Ganahl
(1907)
California courts long ago recognized the use of the extraordinary writs of mandate and prohibition to afford nonstatutory appellate review of interim orders of trial courts in cases not yet disposed of by an appealable judgment. Illustrations of this use of prohibition in criminal cases are found in Witkin, California Criminal Procedure (1963) section 778.
In addition to Penal Code section 1538.5 statutory examples of such use of the writs include Penal Code section 999a and Code of Civil Procedure sections 400 and 418.10. (See 5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Extraordinary Writs, §§ 84, 85, 187, 209.)
Chimel
limits the permissible scope of a search without a warrant incident to a lawful arrest to “the arrestee’s person and the area ‘within his immediate control’— construing that phrase to mean the area from within which he might gain possession of a weapon or destructible evidence.” (
