Opinion
The issue presented on this appeal is whether the police officer involved had reasonable cause to detain defendant and investigate
We conclude that reasonable cause did exist and that the ensuing arrest was proper and, therefore, affirm the judgment.
The facts are not in dispute. Police Officer James Buchanan of the Santa Clara Police Department testified at the hearing on the motion that on February 8,1985, he was on patrol in the area of Stevens Creek and Saratoga and “[a]s I had been driving southbound on Saratoga approaching Stevens Creek, I was hailed by a motorist in the lane beside me. He informed me that the car behind him was being driven by what he believed to be a drunk, quote, unquote. I looked behind him and saw Mr. Willard’s car. Upon looking back at the witness, I saw that he was pointing directly at Mr. Willard’s car. The witness then drove off, and I pulled in behind Mr. Willard’s car and made a traffic stop.”
He testified that he stopped defendant solely on the basis of what the motorist told him, that he allowed defendant’s car to pass him, pulled in behind defendant, followed him through the intersection of Stevens Creek and Saratoga, then put on his lights and “pulled him over,” and that his “main concern was if he made another block, he would be very near a freeway on-ramp.”
It is implicit that the officer noticed no erratic driving which formed the basis for the stop. Defendant stopped his vehicle partially in a restaurant driveway, but this fact had no bearing on the officer’s decision to stop defendant, which had already been made.
The officer noted defendant had glassy eyes and the odor of alcohol. He administered field sobriety tests, then placed defendant under arrest for the subject violation.
The officer did not know the motorist who described defendant as a drunk, and the motorist’s identity was not learned, it appears, until after the stop was made.
Defendant’s contentions on this appeal are: 1) the motorist was an anonymous informer and, therefore, not presumptively reliable, and 2) that in any event, the statement of the motorist that the car behind him was being driven by what he thought to be a “drunk” was a mere conclusion and did not contain specific and articulable facts upon which the officer could base a rational conclusion that some activity relating to crime was occurring and that defendant was involved in that activity in accordance with the require
1. Was the Motorist a Reliable Citizen Witness?
We conclude that the motorist here was clothed with all the indicia of a reliable citizen witness to crime and that the officer could reasonably rely on what the motorist told him, and further, that in the circumstances here, the fact that the officer did not get the motorist’s name and address before detaining defendant did not affect the motorist’s reliability. We do not regard the language in People v. Ramey (1976)
2. Did the Officer Obtain Sufficient Information From the Motorist to Justify the Detention?
We conclude that he did, and that the facts here satisfy the requirements of In re Tony C., supra.
The specific and articulable facts which led the officer here to suspect that criminal activity was taking place and that defendant was involved in that activity were: (1) the reliable statement of the motorist that defendant’s car was being driven by a “drunk,” and (2) the officer’s own concurrent observations of the defendant in the act of driving a vehicle on a public highway.
The information of a reliable citizen witness may be taken as true or at “face value” (People v. Baker (1970)
Furthermore, it is well established in California that a police officer may detain and question a citizen under circumstances short of probable cause to arrest: “The accepted guideline for temporary stopping for questioning is whether a reasonable man in the same circumstances would believe such conduct necessary to a proper discharge of duties. [Citation.] The strength of the information an officer should have to engage in questioning is necessarily much less than it would be for an arrest. [Citation.] The Supreme Court ‘stop and frisk’ cases, as summarized in Terry v. Ohio . . . have not abolished the California rule permitting a temporary detention for questioning where the officer can point to reasons beyond a mere hunch, for questioning the suspects. ” (People v. Stephenson (1969)
Here, defendant relies on the language in People v. Ramey, supra, to the effect that the rule regarding the reliability of a citizen witness “. . . does not, of course, dispense with the requirement that the informant—whether
Defendant overlooks the fact that the court in Ramey was speaking specifically to the issue of probable cause to arrest, not detain, which, of course, requires sufficient information to lead a reasonable person to believe: (1) that a crime has been committed, and (2) that defendant is guilty thereof, and the court in Ramey found probable cause to arrest solely on the information furnished by an informant.
The court in In re Tony C., supra,
The court points out that reasonable cause to believe that a crime has in fact been committed and defendant is guilty thereof is not required in detention, and that indeed a person properly detained may be guilty of no offense, and a salient holding of In re Tony C., supra,
In this case, the officer had reliable information on which he could base a rational suspicion: (1) that criminal activity was in progress (the
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Chapman, P. J., and Komar, J., concurred.
