Opinion
In this case we consider the applicability of the contain-. er decisions to wrapped and sealed packages arriving by overseas mail which are opened by customs officials, resealed, delivered in a controlled delivery with a search warrant for the residence of the addressee, seized in a vehicle approximately 100 miles from that residence, returned to the city of the addressee, and subsequently opened by law enforcement officers without first obtaining a search warrant to open the packages. We conclude that while the seizure was proper, the warrantless search was not.
In the instant case Riegler pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana for sale after his motion to suppress was denied. He appeals asserting error in denial of the suppression motion.
The facts are these:
On November 8, 1977, a customs inspector at JFK Airport in New York City notified John Huber, a special agent with the Drug Enforce *583 ment Administration, that a detector dog had alerted the inspector to two packages sent from Germany and when the inspector opened them up he observed what he believed to be hashish.
Chemical analysis confirmed that the substance was hashish.
The packages were addressed to Selma and Mike Fortner, 1130 W Street, Merced, California.
The packages were resealed by the customs agent and Huber sent the packages to Patrick Dorn, a United States postal inspector in Fresno who received them on November 21, 1977.
Dorn brought the packages to Merced and contacted a Lieutenant Moore who was in charge of specialized manpower assigned to crime control (SMACC) in Merced County. Huber also had contacted Moore on November 21, 1977, and told him about the packages.
The plan was to have a controlled delivery and Agent Atkins with SMACC obtained a search warrant on November 22, 1977, for the premises at 1130 W Street.
On November 22d, Lieutenant Moore and other agents tоok up surveillance at the Fortner residence. At approximately 1:30 Dorn gave the parcels to the regular mail carrier who delivered the parcels at approximately 1:40 and Michael Fortner took them.
About 10 to 15 minutes after the delivery of the packages a red Volkswagen pulled into the driveway at the Fortner residence.
Lieutenant Moore testified that between 1:40 and 2:11, when Riegler drove the Volkswagen away with the packages, nothing prevented Moore from going into the residence to execute the warrant. He did not immediately serve the warrant because he wanted to wait for the occupants to have time to open the package. He was also interested in where the hashish was going if it left the residence. He wanted to ascertain who else was involved in the case and whether he could arrest more people. He would follow suspects wherever they went, including on a plane.
*584 Before the vehicle left, the packages were placed in the Volkswagen but a SMACC agent could not tell if both packages were put in.
After the Volkswagen left, the warrant was executed and sеrved on Mike Fortner at 2:30, and the house searched, but nothing incriminating was found. Agent Austin overheard Michael Fortner on the phone say that a couple of packages came for Bob and “I gave them both to Bob.”
The search warrant was apparently restricted to the premises, structures, rooms and receptacles of the Fortner residence at 1130 W Street, Mercеd, and did not provide for the search of any vehicle or persons.
When the vehicle left the Fortner residence SMACC agents including Moore, along with Postal Inspector Dorn, followed. Although several opportunities existed to detain the occupants, the officers chose not to do so until approximately 4:05 p.m., at which time the vehicle was stopped in Contra Costa County approximately 100 miles from the Fortner residence. The reason for the stop then was the fear of losing surveillance in East Bay traffic.
Riegler and a codefendant (Bannister) exited the vehicle and were arrested. Moore observed two packages in the back seat of the Volkswagen. The packages were identified as being the same ones previously seized, opened, rewrapped and delivered. The packages did not appear to have been opened after delivery to the Fortner residence. The seized packages were taken to the SMACC office in Merced where they were photographed and opened and found to contain hashish valued at approximately $100,000. No search warrant wаs obtained before the opening. Moore testified that when he took the packages back to the Merced office, he had no fear that something would happen to the packages.
Relying on
United States
v.
Chadwick
(1977)
We reject the contention that Riegler had a lesser expectation of privacy in the packages on the theory that the packages were initially
*585
subject to customs search. The packages were securely wrapped and sealed with no labels or markings to indicate the character of their contents. As the United States Supreme Court said in
Walter
v.
United States
(1980)
At the very least in this case there was an expectation that when the packages arrived at the Merced address the contents would remain private. The partial invasion of privacy by customs did not automatically justify a total invasion. In the words of
Walter
(
Of course, the expectation of privacy means more than a subjective expectation. The expectation must be reasonable. Under the present standards enunciated in
Chadwick, Sanders, Minjares, Dalton (United States
v.
Chadwick, supra,
Rather than placing on the law enforcement officer on the street the difficult, if not impossible burden, of carrying a list of “searchable parcels,” we believe that the standard to be followed by the officer is the one which was succinctly stated by federаl Judge Higginbotham in Rivera, supra, idem, as follows: “. . . [I]f the contents of a sealed package or parcel are not revealed by the package and you have exclusive control with no fear of harm from its contents—obtain a warrant.” (Italics added.)
The packages were no longer subject to a warrantless search once they were delivered. (See
People
v.
Whyte
(1979)
The Attorney General argues that the warrant obtained for the house should be adequate to authorize the opening of the sealed packages. We are not persuaded. The warrant which was obtained did not authorize (and properly could not so authorize under the Fourth Amendment) seizure of the packages at any place where found.
Nor do we believe thаt the police were entitled to search the seized packages without a warrant because “their contents can be inferred from their outward appearance.” (Arkansas v.
Sanders, supra,
442 U.S. at pp. 764-765 [
*587 The meaning of the somewhat cryptic 3 footnote in Sanders need not concern us in this case. This is factually not a situation where the packages “by their very nature cannot support any reasonable expectation of privacy because their contents can be inferred from their outward appearance.”
The vehicle here was propеrly stopped and the packages were properly seized. However, the fact that the packages were lawfully seized does not validate a warrantless search of the contents. While there was ample probable cause for the police officer’s belief that the packages contained contraband, there were no exigent circumstаnces justifying the failure to secure a warrant for the search of those packages.
Some may consider the warrant requirement to be unnecessary surplusage in this situation. However, “a warrantless search must be ‘strictly circumscribed by the exigencies which justify its initiation.’”
(Mincey
v.
Arizona
(1978)
The same viewpoint is set forth by our Supreme Court in
People
v.
Dalton, supra,
In examining the record in this case, we find no exigent circumstances that would authorize a warrantless search of the packages. The motion to suppress should have been granted. Whether or not there remains sufficient evidence to retry Riegler is a matter initially for the prosecution, and we express no opinion thereon at this time.
The Attorney General argues that the suggested procedure in
People
v.
Haybron
(1980)
In light of our conclusion we need not consider any other contention of error made by Riegler.
The judgment is reversed.
Brown (G. A.), P. J., concurred.
I concur because of the authority of People v. Whyte (1979)
The majority in this case holds that the seizure of the packages was proper, but that a subsequent search of the contents could only follow the issuance of an additional warrant. The People’s argument that defendant had a lesser expectation of privacy because the packages were subject to a customs search is rejеcted. It is difficult to understand why. Once it was determined that the material was contraband, the packages could move through the United States mail only by virtue of governmental authorization.
If it were not for
Whyte,
I would argue that the packages were in the constructive possession of law enforcement from the time of the opening of them at JFK Airport until the stop in Contra Costa County. For an example of this approach, see
United States
v.
DeBerry
(2d Cir. 1973)
I think that the approach in DeBerry would simplify the task of law enforcement without derogating from the values protected by the *590 Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. 1
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 25, 1980, Andreen, J., was of the opinion that the pеtition should be granted. Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 24, 1980. Mosk, J., Clark, J., and Richardson, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
The United States Supreme Court
(California
v.
Riegler
(1981)
Notes
Walter
was á five-to-four opinion. In
Walter
there had been an interstate shipment of several secured sealed packages containing eight-millimeter films apparently depicting homosexual activities. This shipment was mistakenly delivered by a private carrier to a third party rather than the consignee. Employees of the third party opened each of the packages. Inside were individual film boxes on one side of which were suggestive drawings and on the other expliсit descriptions of the contents. The Federal Bureau of Investigation was notified and picked up the packages. The films were viewed with a projector without first obtaining a warrant. Mr. Justice Stevens joined by Mr. Justice Stewart concluded that the government’s unauthorized screening of the films without a warrant violated the Fourth Amendment. Mr. Justice White joined by Mr. Justice Brennan concurred but also held thаt the subsequent screening by the government was an independent governmental search without regard to the previous private screening and agreed that even if the private parties had projected the films before turning them over to the government, the government still would have been required to obtain a warrant for its subsequent screening of them. (See conc. opn. 447 U.S. at. p. 661 [65 L.Ed.2d at рp. 420-421,
The footnote reads: “Not all containers and packages found by police during the course of a search will deserve the full protection of the Fourth Amendment. Thus, some containers (for example a kit of burglar tools or a gun case) by their very nature cannot support any reasonable expectation of privacy because their contents can be inferred from their outward appearance. Similarly, in some cases the contents of a *587 package will be open to ‘plain view’ thereby obviating the need for a warrant. [Citation.] There will be difficulties in determining which parcels taken from an automobile require a warrant for their search and which do not.” (Italics added.)
It is not clear from the Sanders footnote whether or not the United States Supreme Court in the italicized sentence (seе fn. 2, ante) is really making an exception to the requirement of a warrant substantially different from the “plain view” exception. Perhaps, it is merely an extension of the “plain view” exception.
One of the citations in
Dalton
is to the United States Supreme Court opinion in
Johnson
v.
United States
(1948)
““My basic premise is that Fourth Amendment doctrine, given force and effect by the exclusionary rule, is primarily intended to regulate the police in their day-to-day activities and thus ought to be expressed in terms that are readily applicable by the police in the context of the law enfоrcement activities in which they are necessarily engaged. A highly sophisticated set of rules, qualified by all sorts of ifs, ands, and buts and requiring the drawing of subtle nuances and hairline distinctions, may be the sort of heady stuff upon which the facile minds of lawyers and judges eagerly feed, but they may be ‘literally impossible of application by the officer in the field.”” LaFave, ‘Case-by-Case Adjudication’ versus ‘Standardized Procedures’: The Robinson Dilemma, 1974 Sup.Ct.Rev. 127, 141 (footnotes omitted), quoting
United States
v.
Robinson,
