Appellant Rupert Baca was convicted of two counts of Burglary. On this Appeal he contends that the Court erred in permitting the introduction of evidence which he claims was obtained by an illegal search and seizure.
On the evening of January 21, 1963, a physician parked his car on the Y.M.C.A. parking lot in Phoenix, leaving exposed in the car a physician’s bag. The next morning he discovered his car had been broken into and the bag as well as other items were missing. On the night of January 22, 1963, the Capitol School in Phoenix was also burglarized of two typewriters and a radio.
Officer Newton, of the Phoenix Police Department testified that on the evening of January 22, 1963, he received a telephone call at about 10:00 P.M. from an informer whose name was disclosed at the trial, whose information the officer had acted upon in the past and had proven to be reliable. Said informer told Officer Newton that the defendant and two other men had shortly before been at a local bar, and had told the informer they had burglarized a school and that they had two typewriters *17 and a radio. Said informer advised the officer that the defendant had also told him that he had a doctor’s bag that had been stolen from a car. Thе informer further informed the officer that he had accompanied the three men to the defendant’s house and the items had been placed in а storage room at the rear of the house. The informer also told the officer that the men would attempt to sell the items next morning in second hand stores, and the defendant would be in a blue 1950 or 1951 Chevrolet car with red wheels.
On the way to work the next morning (January 23, 1963) at approximately 8:30 A.M. Officer Newton heаrd a report on his car radio that a police car was being dispatched to investigate a burglary at the Capitol School. Later he lеarned that two typewriters and a radio were taken from the school. Upon receipt of the last information Officer Newton and two others wеnt to the defendant’s house and were met by a young lady who identified herself. They then made an unproductive search, without a warrant, of the storage room in the rear of his house. This was about 10:00 A.M. ■ They then proceeded to downtown Phoenix, where they saw defendant and two others getting out of a blue Chevrolet car with red wheels. The officer questioned the defendant about the possible possession of certain stolen articles in his car, to which thе defendant denied all knowledge; that he asked the defendant if he could look into his car, to which the defendant replied “yes”; that he found nothing in the seats. The officer then asked.if he would open the car trunk, to which the defendant replied that he could not; that it would not work. The officer then walked to the trunk, pulled the latch and the trunk opened, revealing the stolen items. The defendant, with the others, was then placed under arrest and taken to thе Police Station. The property seized from the automobile was later admitted (over timely objection and a motion to suppress) in evidence at the trial.
The prior decisions of our Supreme Court permitting evidence obtained in violation of the constitutional guarantees were overruled and we are now committed to the law that evidence obtained in violation of these rights is not admissible in our Courts in prosecutions against individuals, whоse rights have been violated. State v. Pina,
The State defends the search of defendant’s automobile upon the grounds that the circumstances were such that the police officer had probable cause to search the automobile without a warrant.
The Constitution of the United States (Amendment IV) and the Arizona Constitution (Article II, Sec. 8, A.R.S.) do-not prohibit all searches and seizures, but only those that are unreasonable. What constituted a reasonable search and seizure must be decided on the facts ancj circumstances of each particular case, rather than-by a fixed standard or formula. United States v. Rabinowitz,
For years the federal courts adhered to the rule that only evidence which would be competent in the trial of the offense before a jury was sufficient as a basis for probable cause. The authority chiefly cited for this proposition was the dictum in Grau v. United States,
“The officers had a reasonable ground to arrest Leeper. Having good information that she was in possession of the gun, they were entitled to arrest her for carrying a concealed weapon 'without a warrant at any time of the day or night/ A.R.S. § 13-911 (B).'
“As an incident of a legal arrest the search was lawful and not within the ambit of the Fourth Amendment of the U. S. Constitution.”
Before opening the trunk the arresting officer had information from a reliable informer that certain burglaries in which the defendаnt was implicated had been committed and that the defendant, along with two others, would be driving a 1950 or 1951 blue Chevrolet with red wheels and would be attempting to sell the stolen items around second hand stores. The information of the crimes and the property taken had been verified by monitoring a police rаdio call that morning and checking it with investigating officers. He had knowledge that crimes had been committed in which the defendant was implicated and saw thе defendant in the described car and in an area where he was previously informed that the defendant would be. At this time, consistent with his duty as a good officеr, he took the defendant in hand to question him. At that point there existed probable cause to conduct an immediate search without a warrant of the automobile. Although the search may have preceded the taking of the defendant to the Police Station, it was incident to his lawful arrest. Immediаte necessity to search without a warrant exists where the object, (such as an automobile) might shortly be removed or where it might presently be destroyеd and there is probable cause to search. McDonald v. United States,
We hold that the information in possession of the officer was sufficient to show probable cause and reasonable grounds to believe the defendant had cqmmitted the crime. The arrest was lawful and the attendant search and seizure having been made incident thereto was legal and valid.
The Judgment is affirmed.
