89 A.D.2d 549 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1982
Lead Opinion
Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Wingate, J.), entered April 28, 1982, granting motion to suppress physical evidence, reversed, on the law, and the motion to suppress is denied. On April 28,1981 two detectives observed the defendant enter a subway station without paying a fare. In response to a question the defendant admitted that he did not have a pass. He was then asked whether he was wearing a bullet-proof vest and falsely responded that it was his T-shirt. One detective drew his gun, and the defendant was escorted to the porter’s room. A briefcase he was carrying was taken from him by a detective who opened it and found within a loaded .38 caliber pistol, handcuffs and other items. Almost simultaneously the defendant was handcuffed. Although finding credible the testimony of the detectives, the hearing court granted defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence in the briefcase on the view that the search was unlawful. Relying upon United States v Chadwick (443 US 1), the court held that “the warrantless search of luggage or other property seized at the time of an arrest cannot be justified as incident to that arrest if no exigency occurs.” He also found, in what appears to have been an inadvertent error, that the defendant was in handcuffs before the briefcase was opened. We disagree with the court’s conclusion that the search of the briefcase was unlawful and accordingly reverse the order appealed from by the People and deny the motion to suppress. The central question presented is whether, incident to a lawful arrest, the police may contemporaneously search the inside of a briefcase, package, or the like, carried by the arrested person or effectively in his possession, after the object has been removed so that the arrested person no longer has ready access to it. In the wake of the three Belton decisions (People v Belton, 50 NY2d 447; New York v Belton, 453 US 454; People v Belton, 55 NY2d 49), the answer to that question is unclear. The precise issue before us appears never to have been specifically addressed by the United States Supreme Court (see Arkansas v Sanders, 442 US 753, 764, n 11), and the most recent of the decisions of the New York Court of Appeals, relevant to the question, People v Caldwell (53 NY2d 933), in any event distinguishable on its facts, was decided before the decision of the United States Supreme Court in New York v Belton (supra), which puts in doubt its continued viability. The underlying difficulty has its genesis in the formulation of the governing rule by the United States Supreme Court in Chimel v California (395 US 752). Addressing the right of the police to make a warrant-less search of a home incident to a lawful arrest, the court said (at p 763): “There is ample justification, therefore, for a search of 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.” This formulation left open two questions which have given rise to a variety of judicial approaches. One involved the question as to what was embraced in the term “ ‘within his immediate control’ ” or “grabbable” area, as it has come to be called. The second was whether the right to search within the defined area was limited by the stated reasons and whether the right survived even where no practical possibility existed that the arrested person could secure a weapon or destroy evidence. In People v Darden (34 NY2d 177), the Court of Appeals squarely sustained as lawful the search of an attaché case carried by the defendant, removed from him, and not within his effective power at the time of the search. This principle was confirmed under similar circumstances in People v De Santis (46 NY2d 82). In People v Belton (supra), the Court of Appeals explicitly disapproved the holdings in Darden ardDe Santis.
Concurrence Opinion
concurs in a memorandum as follows: I concur in the result only because of the factual finding that the seizure and search of the briefcase was contemporaneous with the arrest.