The State appeals the granting of a defense motion to suppress evidence in the second-degree burglary prosecution of Michael and Dwayne Grundy.
The issues presented are:
1. May the State raise the issue of standing for the first time on appеal, and if so, do the defendants have standing to challenge the search?
2. When police officers detain persons under suspicious circumstances but lack probable cause to arrest, may they make a warrantlеss search of a nearby locked footlocker for the purpose of determining its ownership?
3. If the search of the footlocker was unlawful, was the seizure of a previously observed amplifier a lawful plain view seizurе or the fruit of an illegal search?
On May 27, 1978, at about 4:45 a.m., an officer of the Seattle Police Department was on patrol and observed an illegally parked car with its hood and trunk up. As he slowed his car, the defendants told him thеy were having gas problems with their car. Driving on, the officer noticed the license plate, "Mr. Penn," which he associated with a family he believed to be involved with burglaries. He also noticed what appeared to be sterеo equipment in the open trunk. As the officer returned to investigate, one of the suspects honked the horn, moved quickly to the rear^ofíthe car and shut the trunk.
The officer asked for identification but both suspects said they had nonе. They identified themselves as Michael Grundy and Dino, and said they had just left a party around the corner. The officer associated the name "Grundy" with the Penn family.
At the officer's request, the car was started, and the officer concludеd that nothing was wrong with the car. He inquired about the party, and the suspects could not give him an address or a location, but said they had to leave the freeway at 130th to get there. The officer knew 130th was 3 miles north of their location. "Dino" then stated that his name was Thomas and that he was visiting from Portland. However, the officer heard Michael refer to him as Dwayne.
*414 The officer then asked about a footlocker lying next to the car. The suspects stated thаt it was a toolbox which belonged to their brother which they had removed from the trunk in order to work on the car. The officer saw that the footlocker was locked with a padlock, and the suspects said they did not have a kеy. It also did not appear to fit in the trunk, but the suspects said they intended to put it in the back seat. The officer thought the footlocker was too large and too clean to be a toolbox.
The suspects invited the officеr to search the car. Inside the trunk, he found an amplifier and two unlocked toolboxes. The amplifier had a dry top and wet bottom, which the officer believed was unusual because it was raining and the trunk had previously been open. The officer was given permission to determine via a radio check whether the amplifier was stolen. He checked and it was not reported stolen, but he felt it would not have been reported if it had just been stolen.
The officer decided to open the footlocker to determine its true ownership. He did not ask the suspects' consent before opening it. The contents of the footlocker led to the discovery that it was stolen frоm a nearby house. The victim identified the footlocker, the amplifier and a puppy that was with the suspects as belonging to his son. The defendants claimed they had purchased these items from his son.
The trial court's findings are unchallеnged on appeal, and the State concedes there was no probable cause to arrest the defendants prior to opening the footlocker. The trial court suppressed the footlocker, its cоntents, the amplifier, all evidence obtained from the victim and the defendants' statement to the victim. The trial court ruled that all statements made by the defendants to the police during their lawful detention were voluntary and admissible.
Thе first issue raised is whether the State can raise the issue of standing for the first time on appeal, and if so, do the defendants have standing to challenge the search? The
*415
State contends that the defendants did not show any personal Fourth Amendment rights in the property seized because they consented to the car search, they admitted they had no possessory interest in the footlocker, and their false assertion that it belonged to a brother cannot establish standing.
Rakas v. Illinois,
There is nothing quasi-jurisdictional about "standing" to justify аn exception to the general rule that issues cannot be raised for the first time on appeal. Rakas v. Illinois, supra, held that "standing" is part of substantive Fourth Amendment law. As such, it is like any other search and seizure question which the State must raise at trial before we will consider it on appeal. State v. Wicke, supra.
Combs v. United States, supra,
is distinguishable. The government in that case raised standing for the first time on appeal
as a respondent.
Further, the case involved the intrusion into a home, not personal property on a public streеt. The court remanded the case for a hearing because the record contained no facts relevant to standing. This willingness to give the government a hearing on a new issue is explained by the duty of an appellate court to affirm
*416
upon any ground supported by the record, even if not the ground utilized by the trial court.
State v. Carroll,
Nonetheless, on the record before us, the Grundys had standing. While they denied ownership of the footlocker, they asserted a possessory interest as their brother's bailee.
2
It is the assertion of a possessory interest in the property searched which gives them the right to challenge the legаlity of the search.
Rakas v. Illinois, supra.
The falsity of that assertion was determined only by opening the footlocker, and if that search were illegal, it could not be justified by what it revealed.
State v. Lesnick,
The second issue raised is whether, when police officers detain persons under suspicious circumstances but lack probable cause to arrest such persons, they may make a warrantless search of a nearby locked footlocker for the purpose of detеrmining its ownership. The State contends
*417
that where police officers had no prior notice that a crime was going to occur and detained suspects gave evasive and incorrect statements, under such circumstances it was reasonable as part of their community caretaking function to open the footlocker to determine its rightful owner.
State v. Webster,
In
Arkansas v. Sanders,
Where — as in the present case — the police, without endangering themselves or risking loss of the evidence, lawfully have detained one suspected of criminal activity and secured his suitcase, they should delay the search thereof until after judicial approval has been obtained.
The State, however, contends that the lack of probable cause somehow allows a warrantless search where none would be allowed with probable cause. It is argued that the community caretaking function of the police allows a war-rantless search under these circumstances, citing
State v. Houser, supra.
This exception, however, applies only to prеimpoundment inventory searches of automobiles, police response to reported theft or vandalism, or where it is necessary to determine whether an automobile is stolen and abandoned.
State v. Orcutt,
*418
The State contends further that the search was reasonably related in scope to the officer's lawful investigation of suspicious circumstances. Relying on
State v. Webster, supra,
it is argued that the intrusion was justified to determine ownership of the footlocker because of evasive and incorrect statements made by the suspects. The
Webster
opinion allowed a limited intrusion into a purse to obtain the
identity
of an evasive suspect. As part of a lawful detention, officers may require a suspect to identify himself.
State v. Gluck,
The last issue presented asks, if the search of the footlocker was unlawful, was the seizure of a previously observed amplifier a lawful plain view seizure or a fruit of the illegal search? The State argues that the amplifier was lawfully observed in plain view in the trunk so its seizure was independent of the footlocker search.
State v. Glasper,
In
State v. Glasper, supra,
the police had reasonable cause to believe that the property which came into their plain view was stolen.
State v. Glasper, supra
at 21. Here, there was no such probable cause until after the unlawful search of the footlocker. The seizure of the amplifier was the fruit of that unlawful search, and it cannot be used as
*419
evidence.
State v. York,
11 Wn. app. 137,
The judgment is affirmed.
Swanson and Ringold, JJ., concur.
Reconsideration denied April 17, 1980.
Review denied by Supreme Court February 13,1981.
Notes
This doctrine will not be invoked to allow the State, as an appellant, to challenge for the first time an allegedly unwarranted protection of the accused's constitutional rights. See
State v. Byers,
The State contends this evidence was hearsay and not admissible to prove standing. The State elicited this evidence from its own witness and cannot now complain it was erroneously admitted.
State v. Atkinson,
