Opinion
Defendant was charged with possession of marijuana (§ 11530, Health & Saf. Code). Also alleged was a prior felony (narcotic)
Around 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 4, 1969, Officer Brown, while on patrol in a police vehicle, observed defendant in a 1950 Chevrolet bearing Florida license plates drive west on Sunset Boulevard, approach Vine Street and turn through the intersection without stopping for the red traffic signal; he activated his red lights and pulled defendant to a stop on Vine Street. The officer requested defendant to produce a driver’s liсense; defendant could not do so and told the officer he did not have one, nor could he furnish any other valid identification. Thus Officer Brown placed defendant under arrest (§ 40302, Veh. Code) for running a red light. When defendant pulled over at the request of the officer, he parked his vehicle in a red zone on Vine. Although there had been passengers in the vehicle, they immediately left the scene leaving defendant alone; thus the officer proceeded to impound the vehicle. It was his intention to complete the inventory of the vеhicle and then transport defendant to Hollywood station where he could be booked and admitted to bail. Accordingly, he proceeded to fill out the impound sheet; in the course of the inventory he opened the trunk of the car; the trunk and its contents howevеr, were accessible from the passenger portion of the vehicle and could be reached without opening the trunk since there was no back seat. In the trunk was an unlocked suitcase containing a plastic bag of marijuana.
Appellant’s claim of error for reversal of the order is two-fold, (1) defendant’s vehicle was lawfully in possession of the officer, and (2) the routine police inventory of the vehicle as part of the procedure of removal and storage and resulting in discovery of the contraband wаs proper. In connection with the second claim,
Mozzetti
v.
Superior Court, 4
Cal.3d 699 [
Appellant seeks to justify the custody and control of dеfendant’s vehicle
Defendant had committed a simple traffic violation (going through a red light) and could present no driver’s license or other valid identification; there was not the slightest suspicion that he had committed any other offense. Thus originally he was arrested under section 40302, Vehicle Code, which provides that one arrested thereunder is to be taken before a magistrate who shall either fix bail or release him on his own recognizance (§ 40305, Veh. Code). Section 40307 provides that if the magistrate is' unavailable the officer shall take the arrestеe before the clerk of the magistrate who shall admit him to bail or the officer in charge of the county or city jail or other place of detention who shall admit him to bail or release him on his own recognizance. (See
People
v.
Dukes,
In
Virgil
v.
Superior Court,
“. . . The other group of cases (see e.g.
Preston
v.
United States
(1964)
The burden was on the prosecution to explain the necessity for taking defendant’s vehicle into police custody.
(Virgil
v.
Superior Court,
Defendant in cooperative response to the red light of the police vehicle promptly and properly pulled his car over to the curb and stopped it in the first available space which happened to be a red zone, and the officers per-
As applied to the circumstances of this case we conclude that pоlice custodial care of defendant’s vehicle was neither necessary nor proper, thus there was no legal justification for taking what appellant asserts to be an inventory of its contents. On the state of the record, therefore, the foregoing conclusion gives the officer’s examination of the interior of defendant’s vehicle the stature of a search, the justification for which was the burden of the prosecution
(Badillo
v.
Superior Court,
The order is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 4, 1971, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 7, 1971.
Notes
Section 22651, subdivision (h), Vehicle Code, provides: “Any member of the California Highway Patrol or . . . any regularly employed and salaried officer of a police department in a city in which a vehicle is located, . . . may remove a vehicle from a highway under the following circumstances:
"
“(h) When an officer arrests any person driving or in control of .a vehicle for an allegеd 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.”
It is obvious that by the use of this term the officer referred not “to the process of impounding a vehicle as evidence pending forfeiture, as in
Cooper
v.
California
(1967)
supra,
People
v.
Gil,
