The State appeals the suppression of evidence discovered in defendant's bedroom during the search of a residence, pursuant to a search warrant which did not name the defendant nor specify the particular room where the evidence was seized. The State contends the trial court applied the incorrect rule of law to determine the legality of a search of what appeared to be a single family residence occupied by three individuals who shared the common facilities of the residence. We reverse and remand.
The pertinent facts are gleaned from the trial court's unchallenged findings of fact. On February 19, 1983, Cow-litz County Sheriff's Officers obtained a warrant to search the residence of Wayne Alexander, located at 319 Cypress St., Longview, Washington. Both parties have stipulated that this warrant was valid. Before obtaining the warrant, the deputy sheriffs did not know that two other tenants, including defendant, also shared the residence. The building's exterior and interior indicated that it was a single family residence. During the search of the residence, the officers became aware that persons other than the person named in the search warrant also resided at the residence. Detectives first searched a bedroom in which they found marijuana and identification belonging to Mark Richard Hurlbert. Detectives then went into another bedroom and found identification belonging to defendant. After finding this identification, detectives continued to search this bedroom and found LSD.
The trial court suppressed the LSD on the basis that the search of the defendant's bedroom exceeded the scope of the search warrant, stating that once the officers became aware they were searching a multiple-occupancy residence and that they were in a bedroom of one other than the one named in the warrant, they should not have searched the bedroom any further.
A search warrant for a multiple-occupancy building will
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usually be held invalid if it fails to describe the particular subunit to be searched with sufficient definiteness to preclude a search of one or more subunits indiscriminately. 2 W. LaFave,
Search and Seizure
§ 4.5(d), at 78 (1978); Annot.,
Search Warrant: Sufficiency of Description of Apartment or Room To Be Searched in Multiple-Occupancy Structure,
In contrast to the multiple-unit exception, the community living unit exception applies where several persons or families occupy the premises in common rather than
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individually, as where they share common living quarters but have separate bedrooms. In the community living unit situation, the courts have held that a single warrant describing the entire premises so occupied is valid and will justify a search of the entire premises.
E.g., State v. Hymer,
Some of these decisions may be seen as simply another illustration of the [multiple unit] rule, which has sometimes been explained on the ground that requiring police to determine multiple occupancy when there are no external signs of such occupancy would be "analogous to requiring the enforcement officers to determine if a daughter or son pays rent while residing in the same house as their parents and if their use of the house is restricted." However, there is a broader justification for treating cases of community occupation differently: where a significant portion of the premises is used in common and other portions, while ordinarily used by but one person or family, are an integral part of the described premises and are not secured against access by the other occupants, then the showing of probable cause extends to the entire premises. For example, if three persons share an apartment, using a living room, kitchen, bath and hall in common but holding separate bedrooms which are not locked, whichever one of the three is responsible for the described items being in the apartment could have concealed those items anywhere within, including the bedrooms of his cotenants.
(Footnotes omitted. Italics ours.) LaFave, at 81.
Here, the trial court applied the "multiple unit" rule in suppressing the LSD found in defendant's bedroom on the basis that (1) once the officers were aware that the residence was a multiple-occupancy residence, they were thereafter required to limit their search to those areas that *156 they knew were controlled by the person named in the search warrant; and (2) at the time the LSD was found, the officers knew they were in the separate bedroom of one other than the person named in the warrant.
Although the multiple-unit rule previously has been adopted in Washington, State v. Chisholm, supra, no Washington appellate court has yet had the opportunity to adopt the community living unit rule nor pass upon the issue presented in this case. We agree with the State that the search in this case is more appropriately governed by the community living unit rule rather than the multiple-unit rule. Even though the residence was occupied by a number of individual tenants, such occupancy should not result in the residence being characterized as a multiple-unit residence.
"* * * [A] multiple-occupancy structure is not automatically a multiple-unit structure. The essential ingredient regarding specificity requirements for search warrants in this context relates not to the number of occupants but to the existence of separate units or subunits within a structure. The mere fact that a structure contains several residents who are not related to one another does not automatically convert its rooms into 'subunits.'"
State v. Coatney,
at 18, quoting
State v. Willcutt,
Here, there is no indication that defendant had sole and exclusive control over his bedroom, and the person named in the warrant could have concealed items anywhere within the residence, including the defendant's bedroom. Therefore, we adopt the "community living unit" rule and hold that the officers' search of defendant's bedroom in this case was justified and did not exceed the scope of the search warrant. Accordingly, we reverse the suppression of evidence found in defendant's bedroom during this search, set aside the dismissal, and remand for trial.
Reed, A.C.J., and Alexander, J., concur.
Notes
Under the community living unit exception, knowledge of the multiple occupancy of the residence before application for the warrant appears to be immaterial.
See State v. Coatney,
