207 N.W.2d 272 | Minn. | 1973
Defendant appeals from a conviction for unlawful possession of marijuana and lysergic acid amide (LSD). He was sentenced on July 13, 1971, to a term not exceeding 20 years and paroled on May 26, 1972. The issues are whether the evidence should have been suppressed and whether the trial court in sentencing defendant was bound by an unaccepted offer by the state to recommend probation in return for a plea of guilty.
Defendant complains that the evidence found on his person should not have been received in evidence since the officers had neither an arrest warrant nor a search warrant. We need not decide the merits of this contention. Although defendant was apprehended while violating Minneapolis Code of Ordinances, §§ 854.060 and 4.010, which prohibit drinking beer on a public sidewalk,
The state offered to recommend probation if defendant pled guilty. He declined to do so and now asserts that under the rule adopted in State v. Holmes, 281 Minn. 294, 161 N. W. 2d 650 (1968), the court was limited to the sentence proposed by the state. This contention is patently fallacious. No plea agreement was reached to bind the court, and no prior sentence had been imposed to make the Holmes rule applicable. The judgment of conviction is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.
Minneapolis Code of Ordinances, § 854.060, states in part: “Drinking on Highways. No beer shall be sold or served for consumption, or consumed, upon any public highway or in any vehicle upon any public highway.”
Minneapolis Code of Ordinances, § 4.010, defines street as: “Any public way, highway, street, avenue, boulevard, alley or other public thoroughfare. Each of said words shall include the others, and if the context permits, shall also include ‘sidewalks.' ”
See, also, State v. Cross, 296 Minn. 16, 206 N. W. 2d 371 (1973).