This intermediate appeal from an order of the circuit court, Second Judicial Circuit, Minnehaha County, South Dakota, concerns the suppression of certain evidence; a film canister which contained controlled substances. The trial court suppressed this evidence under the Fourth Amendment as an “unlawful, unreasonable search.” We reverse and remand.
On September 21,1981, the appellee (Anderson) ran a red light in the City of Sioux Falls. The violation was observed by police officer Cose (Cose), who then pulled him over. Anderson walked to Cose’s vehicle and entered it while Cose wrote a traffic citation. During this time, Cose noted a strong odor of burnt marijuana on Anderson. After writing the ticket, Cose went to Anderson’s partially open car window and looked in. From that position Cose noticed some suspicious items including what he determined to be marijuana seeds among some ashes. Thereupon Cose entered the Anderson car and seized several items within his plain view. While in the car, Cose observed a black and grey plastic film canister located in an open console between the driver’s and the passenger seats. The console’s interior was also in his plain view. Cose seized the canister. From experience, Cose knew it probably contained controlled substances. He shook the canister and heard a sound indicating that it contained something other than film. Then Cose opened the canister and discovered “plant material.” Up to this point, Anderson was not in his car, had not consented to a search and had not been arrested.
The suppression motion was submitted to the trial court on the transcript of the preliminary hearing conducted by a law-trained magistrate. Therefore, the clearly erroneous scope of review does not apply to the circuit court’s determination because the evidence consisted entirely of nonverbal communication. On review, we can fully examine all the evidence submitted to the trial court.
Ayres v. Junek,
Anderson’s motion to suppress evidence alleged:
VIII
That the officer then, without probable cause, exigent circumstances or a warrant, seized the film container and proceeded to shake it; further, that he concluded from the audible sounds made while shaking the film canister that the canister probably did not have film in it.
IX
The officer then opened the film container, without probable cause, exigent circumstances or a warrant.
The trial court announced from the bench,
I would suppress the material and the film container. I believe that the search was unlawful, unreasonable. I don’t believe that the officer had any basis upon which to open it up and see what was in it. He could listen to it, at least he did, but I think he went too far certainly when he found out what was in there without a search warrant.
The court decision, though not a model of clarity, obviously ordered the suppression only upon the grounds that the officer improperly opened the canister. In effect, it approved the aural search accomplished by shaking the container. 1
*107
The State argues that the search of the canister was justified by
State v. Burk-man,
Shortly after our decision, the U, S. Supreme Court held that the
Carroll/Chambers
exception did not apply to a search of luggage seized from the passenger compartment of a motor vehicle.
Arkansas v. Sanders,
Sanders,
Not all containers and packages found by the police during the course of a search will deserve the full protection of the Fourth Amendment. . .. There will be difficulties in determining which parcels taken from an automobile require a warrant for their search and which do not. Our decision in this case means only that a warrant generally is required before personal luggage can be searched and that the extent to which the Fourth Amendment applies to containers and other parcels depends not at all upon whether they are seized from an automobile.
Chadwick
and
Sanders
caused confusion among the courts and police, but slowly a “nature of the container” or “worthy container” test developed. The key inquiry in this test is the degree to which the container is protected by the owner’s reasonable expectation of privacy. Any container which lacks such an expectation is subject to search upon probable cause. When the container manifests an expectation of privacy, such as containers “whose fundamental character is a repository for personal private effects,”
Arkansas v. Sanders,
The film canister in this instance in and of itself did not manifest an expectation of privacy. First, it was not specially sealed. The container was found placed in an open console of a car adjacent to a pipe commonly used for smoking marijuana. The car reeked of burnt marijuana and Cose was *108 aware that similar canisters were often used to hold marijuana. The container easily manifested that it did not contain film. No other apparent receptacle for marijuana was in view. The officer certainly had probable cause, after combining his observations and knowledge, to conclude that the film canister contained illegal substances and to search it without a warrant.
We do not agree that
Robbins v. California,
Justice Powell concurred in the result of Robbins but specifically rejected a new “bright line” rule because of the precedent established in Sanders. He effectively reiterated his belief in the reasonable expectation of privacy rationale of Chadwick and Sanders. Chief Justice Burger merely concurred in the judgment. Justices Black-mun, Rehnquist and Stephens dissented.
The lack of a clear-cut majority opinion overruling the precedent of Chadwick and Sanders leaves us to view the Robbins decision as dispositive of that case only, and accordingly we reject appellee’s argument that it overrules Chadwick/Sanders. We reverse and remand for trial.
Notes
. Anderson did not seek review of the propriety of the aural search.
. In
Chadwick,
the container was doubly locked. The defendant in
Sanders
had locked the container inside a car trunk.
Robbins
concerned a defendant’s effort in wrapping contraband in opaque material and sealing the package with tape.
New York v. Belton,
