Pеtition for writ of mandate to compel the Butte County Superior Court to annul its order suppressing certain evidence.
Question Presented
Was the opening by a postman of the contents of a mailed first-class package, where the outer carton had broken by chance, an unlawful search requiring application of the exclusionary rule ?
Record
Real party in interest, Flynn (hereinafter referred to as defendant), was charged in an information filed in Butte County Superior Court with the crime of possession of marijuana.. After certain other proceedings, 1 defendant moved to *491 suppress evidence. The motion was granted. This petition followed, seeking appellate review pursuant to Penal Code section 1538.5, subdivision (o).
Pacts
On the morning of July 27, 1968, Grant J. Magill, a United States postman for 11 years, was delivering mail in the City of Chico. When he opened a bundle of mail to put it into his satchel, a first-class package fell out onto the seat of his car. The package measured 4 x 3½ x 5 inches in size. The outside wrapping was addressed from San Francisco to defendant at his Chico address. When the package fell out on the seat the outside wrapping came apart, as did a Carnation Instant Breakfast box wrapped in it, and a brown paper bag fell out of the box. The bag was not sealed in any way. Magill opened the bag and, looking in, saw two plastic bags, each containing green leafy material, which turned out to be marijuana. Magill had not seen any green leafy material until he opened the paper bag. He removed some of this material from the plastic bags and then put the package back together again. Going to the address shown on the package, he asked the man who answered his knock on the door if his name was Flynn. When the man said it was, Magill handed him the package.
Magill went with a police officer to the police station аnd turned the marijuana over to the police. He then made a written statement and described defendant. Magill was not a police officer or working for the police, nor was he a postal inspector or any kind of law enforcement officer. No one had asked him to watch defendant’s home or mail, nor to look inside the package or remove any of its contents. His only instruction was to deliver loose articles found in the mail to his supervisor. No police or postal authorities had instructed him what to do if he found contraband in the mail.
Officer Reese, to whom Magill talked and to whom he gave the written statement, testified that Magill had said that when the package broke open some green substance had fallen out and that the portion which he gave Reese had fallen out. Magill, although he testified he could have so stated, did not *492 recall so stating. In any event, it seems conceded that the marijuana had not fallen out.
Officer Reese then sought a search warrant, signing an affidavit setting forth that the package had been broken in handling, that part of the “contents” had spilled out, and that Magill, looking into the package, had observed a green leafy substance containing seeds. The affidavit further stated that Reese believed that at defendant’s home there were two plastic Baggies containing bulk marijuana. A search warrant was issued.
Knocking at defendant’s door, which was opened by defendant, Reese handed defendant the search warrant and supporting affidavit and searched defendant’s apartment, finding a small amount of marijuana near a Carnation Instant Breakfast carton, a brown wrapping paper bearing a postmark and defendant’s name and address, and a brown paper bag containing three plastic bags which contained marijuana.
Is the Exclusionary Rule Applicable?
With exceptions not here applicable, federal law (hereinafter cited) prohibits a postal employee from looking into a first-class mail package. Defendant attacks the validity of the search warrant on the ground that it was based upon an unlawful search and seizure.
A search warrant is invalid if it is obtained upon information which was the product of an unlawful search.
(People
v.
Carswell
(1959)
In
Byars
v.
United States
(1927)
Section 1538.5 Penal Code provides for a pretrial motion to suppress on the ground, among others, of “viоlation of federal or state constitutional standards” (subd. (a)(2) (v)). The superior court is required to determine “the validity of a search or seizure de novo on the basis of the evidence presented at a special hearing” (subd. (i)). Under this section “a full hearing is held on the issues before the superior court sitting as a finder of fact.”
(People
v.
Heard
(1968)
Honorable J. F. Good, the judge below, found in effect that, from the postman’s statement to Reese, the latter was justified in believing that when the package broke open, marijuana spilled out and that the portion obtained by the postman was recovered from the seat of the vehicle rather than as a result of the explоratory invasion into the contents of the bag, and that Reese acted in good faith in the allegations he made in the affidavit for the search warrant.
Because Magill opened the paper bag, the judge found that the marijuana in question was not accidentally discovered, but was discovered by an act in clear violation of the federal statutes and postal regulations protecting the privacy of first-class parcels and letters. The judge then said: ‘ ‘ The thrust of the Fourth Amendment is not aimed solely at the police or law enforcement agencies of government; it is a guaranty against invasion by any governmental agency of the right of privacy guaranteed *494 therein. ’ ’ The court concluded that sound public policy requires holding that postal employees are included in the Class intended to be included in the exclusionary rule insofar as they violate the law and postal regulations in opening first-class mail.
There can be no doubt that, in view of the judge’s finding as to what Magill told Officer Reese and the finding that Reese acted in good faith in making the affidavit for the search warrant, probаble cause for the issuance of that warrant existed and was shown. The question we have to determine is whether that probable cause is so tainted by being based upon information obtained by a postal employee’s illegal act that contraband obtained through such act must be excluded in a criminal prosecution.
The record fails to disclose Magill’s рurpose in looking into the paper bag—whether for idle curiosity, or because he felt it necessary to know how fragile its contents were for rewrapping, or for some other reason. In view of a lack of explanation, his action in peering into the bag was prima facie illegal, and the'prosecution had the burden of proof of justifying the warrantless search by the postman.
(Badillo
v.
Superior Court
(1956)
The protection against unreasonable search and seizure of one’s papers or other effects, guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment, extends to their presence in the domestic mails. Thus, first-class mail packages moving entirely within the United States cannot be seized and retained, nor opened and searched, without the authоrity of a search warrant.
(Ex parte Jackson
(1878)
It has been held that the true purpose of the exclusionary rule as a deterrent to unconstitutional searching practices is 11... to compel respect for the constitutional guaranty in the only effectively available way—by removing the incentive to disregard it.”
(Elkins
v.
United States, supra,
In
Oliver
v.
United States, supra,
While there is a difference between the facts in
Oliver, supra,
and those in the instant case, it is a difference without a distinction. In
Oliver,
the postman was a narcotics agent as well as a postman (although that fact was not usеd as a basis for the decision), while in the instant case Magill had no police connections. In
Oliver,
the postman did not open the mail package. He merely alerted the postal superintendent, who opened the package, and the ruling is based upon the one fact that the superintendent violated the law and the postal regulations by opening the package. In the case at bench, although there is no indication that Magill suspected the contents of the paper bag, he nevertheless opened it. The opening of the bag was a search. (See
People
v.
Marshall
(1968)
Petitioner contends that the exclusionary rule is applicable only where the illegal search is made or instigated by police or other law enfоrcement officers or their agents, whose purpose is to obtain evidence in aid of law enforcement or for use in criminal prosecutions. No authority is cited by petitioner which adopts such rigid limitations. Prior to the evolution of the federal policy of excluding unlawfully seized evidence
(Weeks
v.
United States, supra,
Although neither
Camara
nor
See
nor
Parrish
talked in terms of the exclusionary rule as well as in terms of constitutional illegality, it was held in
Knoll Associates, Inc.
v.
Federal Trade Com.
(7th Cir. 1968)
Schwimmer
v.
United States
(8th Cir. 1956)
Petitioner contends that the immediate end sought when Magill opened the bag could have been (1) to satisfy his 'curiosity, (2) to see if the contents had been damaged, (3) to see if the repackaging contemplated and effeсted would cause further damage to the contents, (4) to do amateur detecting on his own initiative, or (5) to assist law enforcement officers at their request in detecting contraband in the mails. If the motive had been in either the second or third category, there probably would have been no violation of law and we might not have been confronted with any problem. But аs we herein-before stated, Magill did not claim either motive, and it must therefore be taken as established for the purposes of this proceeding that he violated the law. (Badillo v. Superior Court, supra, 46 Cal.2d at pp. 272-273.)
Petitioner claims that a postal employee is in the same situation as regards the exclusionary rule as a private citizen (as to whom it has been held that the exclusionary rule does not apply) if he makes what, if made by a police officer, would be an unreasonable search and seizure, provided, of course, that he is not acting under direction of a peace officer.
(People
v.
Botts
(1967)
While California is not bound to follow all of the federal rules as to searches and seizures “if the federal cases indicate needless limitations on the right to conduct reasona
*498
ble searches and seizures or to secure warrants”
(People
v.
Cohan
(1955)
In summary, our decision herein rests upon the prosecution’s failure to show legal justification for the postman’s search. Absent such evidence, that search was unquestionably prоscribed by the Fourth Amendment and by federal law.
Oliver
v.
United States, supra,
The order to show cause is discharged; the temporary stay which issued herein on February 26, 1969, is ordered terminated ; and the -petition for writ of mandate is denied.
Friedman, Acting P. J., and Regan, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s application for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 1,1969.
Notes
Retired Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Defendant moved the superior court to set aside the information pursuant to Penal Code section 995, practically on the same grounds as urged *491 in the motion hereinafter discussed. The motion was denied. Defendant, after pleading not guilty, filed a petition in this court for a writ of prohibition on substantially identical grounds to restrain further prosecution of the charge against him. The petition was denied without hearing October 30, 1968, 3 Civil No. 12140. Petition for hearing in the California Supreme Court was denied November 27, 1968.
