Opinion
The trial court having granted a motion to suppress evidence pursuant to Penal Code section 1538.5, the People have applied for a writ of mandate to review that determination.
Facts
At 12:15 a.m., on November 17, 1968, Officer Robert E. Kimball of the Los Angeles Police Department saw Ronnie Lawson, a juvenile, drop a handrolled cigaret. Kimball retrieved the cigaret and determined that it appeared to be marijuana. Hе then arrested Lawson. Lawson, after having been advised of his rights, admitted that the cigaret contained marijuana and agreed to show the police where he had obtained the contraband. Lawson’s reliability аs an informer was untested.
Lawson, accompanied by uniformed police officers, went to a multiple dwelling similar to an apartment house at 1615 St. Andrews. The officers had no arrest or search warrant. Lawson”went to the door of the building while the officers remained around a corner of the building, a distance about 8 feet away from the door. Lawson knocked on the door. A woman’s voice *112 answered, “Who’s there?” Lawsоn said, “I want to buy some stuff1 for my friends. I want to talk to my man James or Otis.” The woman’s voice replied, “How much do you want?” Before Lawson answered, the door was opened by the woman who said, “Come on in.” Lawson entered the building and the officers followed without knocking, identifying themselves or stating their purpose.
Inside the entry of the dwelling at 1615 St. Andrew, there is a hallway. A doorway leads from the hallway into the living room of the premises occuрied by real party in interest Allie Proctor. The officers saw Miss Proctor and the other real party in interest, Newbon, in the living room. They arrested Miss Proctor and Newbon for furnishing marijuana to a minor. A search of the aрartment conducted incident to the arrest discovered 21 wax-paper bags containing marijuana.
Real parties in interest moved in the trial court to suppress evidence of the marijuana discovered in the apartment. The trial court, while accepting the testimony of the officers as credible and as establishing the controlling facts, granted the motion to suppress upon the basis of a failure of the police to comply with Penal Code section 844. The People then filed their petition for a writ of mandate seeking action of this court reviewing and annulling the trial court’s suppression of evidence.
Issue
The evidеnce of the marijuana which was suppressed by the trial court is the product of a search conducted prior to the decision of the United States Supreme Court in
Chimel
v.
California,
Section 844
Penal Code section 844 provides in pertinent part: “To make an arrest, ... a peace officer, may break open the door or windоw of the house in which the person to be arrested is, or in which [he has] reasonable grounds for believing him to be, after having demanded admittance and explained the purpose for which admittance is desired.” Whilе section 844 is phrased in permissive terms, it is construed as codifying a common law exception to a general rule which precludes a breaking by police officers in order to effect an arrest.
(People
v.
Rosales,
1Translated from street language, “stuff” means marijuana.
*113
The exclusionary rule based upon a failure of compliance with the provisions of Penal Code section 844 applies only where there has been a breaking. The word “break” in the context of section 844 is a term of art which includes more than the physical breaking of a door оr window. It thus encompasses the opening of an unlocked screen door
(People
v.
Rosales,
We conclude that the facts present in the record of the case at bench do not disclose a “breaking” within the expanded definition of the term. Our conclusion is impelled by analysis of decisional law and by the rationale of the rule excluding illegally obtained evidence.
Decisional Law
Within the past year, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has considered a factual situation strikingly similar to that present in the case at bench.
(Ponce
v.
Craven,
*114 The record in the case at benсh discloses that the officers had probable cause to arrest the occupants of the building before its door was opened. They had been informed by the juvenile whom they had arrested that those occupants had supplied him with marijuana. The information from the juvenile was confirmed while it was still fresh by the conversation through the door of the premises ultimately searched. The response from within “How much do you want?” to thе juvenile’s statement: “I want to buy some stuff” was itself sufficient to raise a strong suspicion in a reasonable man that the responding occupant of the building possessed marijuana for sale.
The officers possessed of probable cause to arrest the occupant of the building were then authorized to employ a strategem not involving force or a “breaking” to obtain entry irrespective of the provisions of Penal Code section 844. Once the door was opened in response to the strategem, compliance with section 844 would have been an idle act, one not required by the statute.
(See People
v.
Carrillo,
The facts of the case at bench distinguish it from
People
v.
Reeves,
The case at bench is also distinguishable factually from
People
v.
Bradley,
The elements of surprise and possibility of violence present in the method of entry employed in the case at benсh are of a totally different character from those present in Bradley. Here the surprise was not that someone had entered the dwelling but rather that the someone was a uniformed police officer rathеr than a customer for marijuana. Here, also, the possibility of *115 violence was only that inherent in any arrest of a felony suspect and not that flowing from the discovery by a sleeping occupant that an unidentifiеd person is in his room.
Rationale of Exclusionary Rule
The rule which excludes evidence obtained in an improper search is not designed to protect an innocent suspect against an unjust accusation. The doctrine has been developed as a means of enforcing Fourth Amendment rights of privacy and seeks to deter violations of those rights by penalizing society in its enforcement of the criminal law where a violation occurs.
(Mapp
v.
Ohio,
The right protected by Penal Code section 844, while substantial, is of a lesser magnitude than that protected by the more general requirement of probable cаuse for a search. The section in essence requires that the occupant of premises be given notice before the police break into it. Its purpose is to minimize “the consequences of an unannounced intrusion” and the consequent “resistance to the intruders and violent death or injury to them or others including innocent third parties.”
(People
v.
Bradley,
Let the peremptory writ of mandate issue requiring the respondent superior court to annul its ruling оf February 13, 1969, suppressing evidence in the criminal prosecution of the real parties in interest.
Wood, P. J., and Lillie, J., concurred.
Notes
The rule requiring notice and explanation prior to a breaking in to accomplish an arrest is, however, not an absolute one, and compliance with the notice and demand requirement is excused if exigent circumstances are present.
(People
v.
Maddox,
