35 N.Y.2d 351 | NY | 1974
Lead Opinion
The defendant was arrested and taken into custody for criminal trespass without a warrant. The contents of an attaché case in his possession, seized during a contemporaneous search of his person, furnish the basis for this prosecution for criminally possessing stolen property. A motion to suppress the contents of the attaché case was denied, after which the defendant pleaded guilty. The Appellate Division reversed and granted the motion. We must decide whether the warrantless search and seizure were constitutionally reasonable. We hold that they were and, accordingly, reverse the order of the Appellate Division.
The facts, as accepted by the Appellate Division on appeal to that court, reveal that on May 31, 1969, at about 5:00 p.m., two police officers on foot patrol entered a parking garage at 25 West 39th Street, Manhattan. The garage, which the officers knew had been vandalized numerous times in the past, was closed and had a locked chain across the entranceway. The defendant was seated in a parked Austin Healy sports car which one of the officers recognized as belonging to a local restaurateur, Sal Cirella. Asked what he was doing in the car, the defendant replied that he was waiting for ‘ ‘ Frank ’, and had his permission to be there. In Ms possession was a closed black attaché case. The defendant, carrying the attaché case, then accompanied the officers to Cirella’s restaurant at 39th Street and Fifth Avenue. Cirella denied having given the defendant permission to be in the car. He then accompanied the officers and the defendant back to the parking garage. The defendant was still carrying the attaché case. Cirella determined that nothing was missing from the vehicle and drove it away. The defend
The Appellate Division, relying on People v. Marsh (20 N Y 2d 98) and People v. Adams (32 N Y 2d 451), reasoned that the warrantless search of the attaché case could not be justified in the interest of protecting the officers’ safety, nor by a need to secure fruits or instrumentalities of the crime.
Reliance on Marsh and Adams is, however, misplaced. Those cases dealt with the right to search incident to a custodial arrest for an offense arising under the Vehicle and Traffic Law. In Marsh, reasoning from the legislative design as well as the Federal and State constitutional guarantees against unreasonable searches and seizures, we said that without more a mere custodial arrest for a traffic offense will not sustain a contemporaneous search of the person (20 N Y 2d, at pp. 101-102). Adams is to the same effect (32 N Y 2d, at p. 455). However, under the Federal Constitution, as subsequently interpreted by the Supreme Court in United States v. Robinson (414 U. S. 218), the right to search, incident to a valid custodial arrest, is, of course, substantially broader. Hence, insofar as the holdings of Marsh and Adams are predicated on the Federal Constitution, they must be read with the Supreme Court’s decision in the Robinson case.
Clearly, this is not a traffic matter and, hence, the search incident limitation recognized in Marsh and Adams for traffic related arrests does not apply. Here, the defendant was arrested for criminal trespass — a violation or a misdemeanor (Penal Law, former §§ 140.05, 140.10, 140.15) — and the contemporaneous search of his person derives its justification from the fact of the custodial arrest.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the action remitted to that court for a determination of the facts. (CPL 470.40, subd. 2, par. [b]; 470.25, subd. 2, par. [d].)
The Appellate Division assumed, as do we, that the arrest was predicated on probable cause.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). The defendant was searched incident to a lawful arrest and the only question is whether the search was otherwise prohibited by the rule established in People v. Marsh (20 N Y 2d 98) recently expanded in People v. Adams (32 N Y 2d 451). In those cases we simply held that an arrest for a traffic violation does not in itself justify a full search of the person or his belongings (People v. Marsh, supra) even when the offense is defined as a misdemeanor, i.e., a crime, under the Vehicle and Traffic Law (People v. Adams, supra). Since the defendant in the case now before us was arrested for criminal trespass — and not for a traffic offense — I agree that the Marsh principle does not preclude the incidental search.
However, I would emphasize one point which Judge Jasen has alluded to in his opinion. It now appears that the Fourth Amendment may not require a police officer effecting a traffic arrest to exercise the same degree of restraint that we required in Marsh (see United States v. Robinson, 414 U. S. 218). Although our holding in that case was influenced, in part, by
Chief Judge Bbeitel and Judges Gabbielli, Jones and Rabin concur with Judge Jasen ; Judge Waohtleb concurs in result in a separate opinion; Judge Stevens taking no part.
Order reversed and the case remitted to the Appellate Division, First Department, for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein.