Opinion
After a court trial, in which the preliminary transcript was the sole evidence, defendant was found guilty of possession of marijuana (Health & Saf. Code, § 11530). He was sentenced to 18 0 days in the county jail, execution suspended conditioned upon two years’ summary prоbation and a fine of $150. Defendant is appealing from the judgment.
The notice of appeal also purports to appeal from the sentence and the order granting probation. Mention of the sentence is redundant, for the sentence is thе judgment. The order-granting probation might be appeal-able as an order made after judgment, but defendant is not attacking the рrobation order. We therefore deem that part of the appeal abandoned.
The sole issue argued is the legаlity of the search which produced the marijuana.
*175 On February 17, 1968, at about 12:05 a.m. at 11243 Emelita Street, Officer Bagdonis arrested a juvenile named Quinn, suspected of theft from an automobile. The boy appeared to be under the influence of a drug. While being interviеwed at the police station, the boy told the officers that his car was parked in front of a friend’s house on Emelita and that the keys were in the house. The officer, the boy and the boy’s father then drove along Emelita until they observed the boy’s car in front of defendant’s. home at 11259 Emelita. The officer and the boy’s father went up to the house “to retrieve the subject’s identification and the keys to his vehicle.”
The officer knocked and defendant opened the door. Defendant said he lived there and knew Quinn. As they talked the officer smelled an odor of marijuana smoke in the house. Officer Bagdonis told defendant he was coming in, and did. Apprоximately 4 feet inside the door he saw a partially smoked handrolled cigarette. The officer then arrested defendant. (Subsеquent examination by a chemist established that this cigarette contained marijuana.) A further search of the house turned up more marijuana, all of which was seized and used in evidence.
One other person was found in the house at the time of the arrest and search.
It was stipulated that the officer did not have a warrant.
The odor of marijuana justified the officer’s belief that marijuana was in the house.
(Vaillancourt
v.
Superior Court
(1969)
*176 As an alternative ground of arrest, the officer had reasonаble cause to believe that defendant was, in his presence, violating Health and Safety Code section 11556, which makes it a misdemeanor to be in a place where narcotics are being used or smoked.
The ground of arrest existed as soon as Offiсer Bagdonis smelled the smoke, prior to his entering the house. It is immaterial that his entry preceded the arrest.
(People
v.
Cockrell
(1965)
Defendant’s brief relies principally upon
Johnson
v.
United States
(1948)
The opinion states (at p. 13 [
In answering the government’s contention that the search was valid as incident to a lawful arrest, the Supreme Court began its analysis with this statement (at p. 16 [
The opinion then points out that the knowledge that defendant was alone was gained only by the officers’ illegal entry, and thus could not be relied upon to support the arrest.
More recent deсisions have demonstrated that it was not (or, at least, is not now) necessary for the government to concede that there was no cause to arrest the occupant of the room until it was learned that she was the sole occupant. Courts havе recognized that it is reasonable for an officer to infer that the person in apparent possession of a dwelling рlace is in possession of the narcotics found there, even though that possession may be shared with someone else. (See, e.g.,
People
v.
White, supra,
*177
The crux of the decision in
Johnson
is the distinction between a warrantless entry to seize contraband and a warrantless entry to make an arrest. The latter may be permissible on probable cause, but the former is not. This distinction was recently pointed out again by the California Supreme Court in
People
v.
Marshall
(1968)
In the case at bench, the officer’s sense of smell told him a crime was being committed by someone, and the defendant, by acknowledging his occupancy of the premises, identified himself as the probable offender. The officer thus had legal cause to arrest, and to search and seize the contraband as incident to that lawful arrest.
The judgment is affirmed. The appeal from the order granting probation is dismissed.
Kingsley, J., and Dunn, J., concurred.
