Defendant was found guilty by a jury of illegal possession of more than thirty-five grams of marijuana (Sections 195.020 and 195.200, RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S., as amended, Laws of 1971) and his punishment was fixed at two years imprisonment in the Department of Corrections. The marijuana which defendant was charged and found guilty of illegally possessing was obtained by a warrantless search.
Defendant duly appealed, and in pressing this court for relief charges five instances *601 of alleged error. His first charge, that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to suppress the marijuana, and in admitting it into evidence over his objection, because the warrantless search by which it was obtained was proscribed by the Fourth Amendmеnt to the Constitution of the United States, becomes the critical focal point of review since it is decisive of the appeal.
Evidence adduced at the hearing held on defendant’s pre-trial motion to suppress showed that at about 1:25 a. m. on July 18, 1973, as part of “a raid” called by “a Clay County Investigative Squad” to "serve numerous warrants”, Detective Captain Ar- • thur L. Piburn of the Gladstone, Missouri, Police Department, proceeded to 8 North East 70th Place in Gladstone, Missouri. The address was the home of defendant’s parents. The home faced the south. Pi-burn had with him a “Clay County warrant” for defendant’s arrest “for dispensing marijuana”. Piburn was accompanied by two other Gladstone police officers and a Missouri Highway Patrol trooper. Piburn and one of the police officers approached the home from the front and the other police officer and the trooper approached the home from the rear. Defendant and both of his parents were in the home asleep at the time. Piburn knocked at the front door of the home and defendant’s father responded and opened the front door. Pi-burn asked if defendant was there and his father replied that he was. Piburn then advised defendant’s father that they had a warrant for defendant’s arrest “for dispensing marijuana”, and thе arrest warrant was displayed. Defendant’s father advised that defendant was asleep in the basement at the time and he would go and get him. Piburn declined the offer and said he and the officer would go and get defendant. Piburn and the police officer with him were then admitted into the home and they proceeded to the basement. During the “commotion” defendant’s mother awakened, and she and defendant’s father followed the officers down into the basement. The basement was divided into two sections “down the middle” running east and west. The west end of the north section was further “sectioned off” into a “room” by means of a “bamboo curtain’.’ and a “British flag”. The flаg was. hung so that it could be pushed aside to go “in and out” of the “room” formed by the “sectioned off” area. The “room”, as described, was rented by defendant from his parents for $60.00 a month and was furnished with bedroom furniture belonging to defendant. Defendant’s father testified that the “room” was “exclusively” the defendant’s “area” and no one else “had a right to be there”. This testimony by defendant’s father is the sum and substance of all the evidence presented concerning right of access to and control of the basement “room” rented by defendant from his parents.
Piburn and the other officer with him entered the “room” where they observed defendant asleep in bed without any clothes on. Piburn awakened defendant and read the arrest warrant to him. While doing so, Piburn noticed “a- brown leaf with a stem on it-that appeared to be marijuana” tacked to the wall just above the bed which defendant had been asleep on.
There was a basement door near .the “room” occupied by defendant which provided access to and from the rear yard of the home. The other police officer and the trooper who had gone to the rear of the house were subsequently admitted through the basement door. They entered the basement “room” occupied by defendant while he was in the prоcess of getting dressed.
Either Piburn or one of the other officers searched each item of defendant’s clothing before permitting him to dress. After defendant was dressed, he was handcuffed and the other two Gladstone police officers led him out of the house and placed him in a patrol car that was parked outside, leaving Piburn and the trooper in the “room” with defendant’s father and mother. Defendant’s mother and father were in the *602 “room” when defendant was arrested, while he dressed, and when he was handcuffed and taken from the house. Defendant’s mother, according to Piburn, “was quite upset” at the time and “she was wanting to know what was going on, why we wеre there, what had he done and mostly crying, very upset”, and defendant’s father, who was also quite upset at the time, was “attempting to calm” her down.
After defendant was taken outside and placed in the patrol car, Piburn asked defendant’s father, who at the time was “upset and confused”, if it would be alright if they searched the “room” for “marijuana” and, according to Piburn, “he said ‘Go ahead’, something to that effect.” Piburn and the trooper then proceeded to search the basement “room” from which defendant had been removed. During the course of the search the trooper found a “large brown sack” near the foot of the bed on a pile of “bed clothes” or “discarded clothing”. A purse was also discovered in another part of the room, and it contained a substance which was later identified as marijuana. The brown paper sack was either folded or twisted, when found by the trooper, so that its contents were not visible or in plain view. Piburn opened the brown paper sack and, according to his testimony, “it contained I believe seven smaller sacks, some paper, some plastic, containing various amounts of brown ground up plant material.” Piburn also testified that the contents of the brown paper sack were subsequently analyzed as marijuana. Two cigarette butts found during the search were also subsequently analyzed as marijuana, as was the brown leaf with the stem on it tacked above defendant’s bed. The contents of the brown paper sack, the purse, and two cigarette butts and the brown leaf with the stem on it tacked above defendant’s bed were seized by Piburn and removed from the home. However, defendant was charged and tried solely for possession of the contents of the brown paper sack.
During cross-examination of Piburn by defendant’s counsel at the pre-trial hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress, the following occurred:
“Q Was there any remonstrance by Mr. Peterson when his son was handcuffed?
MR. ALLEN [attorney for the state]: Your Honor, I object to that as irrelevant.
MR. HALL [attorney for defendant]: Your Honor, we're trying to show here the character of this whole thing in terms of illegal search and seizure and as to whether or not the defendant or his parents were making decisions freely of their own choice, and I think it’s necessary to show the nature of it, to show whether or not there might be any duress involved. This is a part of the motion to suppress.
MR. ALLEN: May it please the Court, I’m submitting this not as a consent ual search at any rate, but a search incidental to a lawful arrest where they, had a warrant, and the marijuana was in a paper bag оut in plain view at this point. I think this is all irrelevant.
THE COURT: I’m going to overrule the objection at this point, but if you would hurry through it because I tend to agree with Mr. Allen.
MR. HALL: All right.”
Defendant’s counsel did not press Piburn for an answer to the above question, and it went unanswered.
During direct examination of defendant’s father, called as a witness by defendant at the pre-trial hearing, the following occurred:
“Q All right. After you were advised to ■ stand back by whatever officer it was, what happened after that?
A Well, Marie, she was crying and I went over there trying to get her *603 settled down. I was pretty settled up myself.
MR. ALLEN: May it please the Court, I must interpose an objection here for the reason this is all irrelevant really.
MR. HALL: Your . Honor,—
THE COURT: It’s sustained, as to the last answer and question.
MR. HALL: Pardon me.
THE COURT: It’s sustained as to the last question and answer.”
During direct examination of defendant’s mother, called as a witness by defendant at the pre-trial hearing, the following occurred:
“Q And what did you see when you arrived in the basement?
A They were awakening David.
Q All right. What was your condition at this time?
MR. ALLEN: Your Honor, her condition is irrelevant I believe, unless it goes to her ability to recall events.
MR. HALL: Your Honor, it’s relevant in terms of whether or not there is any duress of the gentleman who allegedly gave consent.
MR. ALLEN: May it please the Court, I’ve already pointed out this is not a consent ual search. This is a search incidental to a lawful arrest based upon a warrant, and his own evidence showed this was in the defendant’s exclusive area, an area where they had a complete right to search and his own evidence has proved this because it was the defendant’s area.
THE COURT: As I understand it then, the state is asking me to decide the issue here today not on the basis of conseniual consent but on the basis that the search is to be incident to a lawful arrest?
MR. ALLEN: Yes, sir, based upon their evidence. The officers didn’t know who had—
THE COURT: Very well.
MR. ALLEN: —authority to make consent at the time but his evidence has now established that this was the defendant’s area.
THE COURT: Very well, then the objection is sustained.
MR. HALL: Under those circumstances, I have no further questions.”
Evidence adduced at the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress has not been sparingly referred to because judicial determination оf the constitutionality of war-rantless searches necessarily turns on the “concrete factual context of the individual case.”
Sibron v. State of New York,
Every judicial review of a warrant-less search is permeated with the cardinal principle that all warrantless searches, subject only to a few well delineated exceptions, are per se constitutionally offensive.
Katz v. United States,
In deciding the principal question posed by this appeal this court, regardless of a perfectly human and natural inclination otherwise, must obliterate from considera *604 tion the question of defendant’s guilt or innocence of the charged offense, and restrict its review to the sole questiоn of whether the marijuana was obtained by an “unreasonable” warrantless search, or, on the other hand, whether the warrantless search, when viewed in its “concrete factual context”, falls within one of the recognized exceptions advanced by the state.
Numerous decisions handed down by the Supreme Court of the United States have articulated the often stated and broadly asserted proposition that a warrantless search incident to a lawful arrest, even in a person’s place of abode, is a recognized exception to the Fourth Amendment’s admonition against unreasonable searches. For instance sеe
Jones v. United States,
Can the warrantless search pass constitutional muster as being reasonable because of the existence of “exigent” circumstances? Constitutional validation of war-rantless searches (of places of abode as opposed to automobiles) due to the presence of “exigent” circumstances, perhaps more so than all other warrant requirement exceptions, is virtually incapable of being pragmatically expressed. Basically, as in all warrantless searches, it involves a delicate balancing of an individual’s right to have his place of abode secure from intrusion against the interest of society at large in obtaining incriminating evidence with which to prosecute violators of the law. Although both are salutary goals and each serves a societal interest, the scales must inevitably tip one way or the other. The Supreme Court of the United States in at least three cases,
Johnson v. United States,
One notable exception in the body of federal case law is
United States v. Rubin et al.,
A notable exception in the body of case law in this state is
State v. Wiley,
The facts and girding rationale of United States v. Rubin, supra, and State v. Wiley, supra, have been set forth at considerable length in order to determine whether there are any factual parallels between them and the instant case, as measured by the principles of law enunciated therein, to support the state’s argument that Piburn and the trooper were confronted with “exigent” circumstances which relieved them from obtaining a search warrant.
That portion of the opinion in Wiley holding that the limited search could be justified as reasonable because it enabled the officers to determine whether the occupants *607 of the apartment should be released or retained in custody, immediately fades from serious consideration. Here the defendant was arrested and taken into custody by virtue of an arrest warrant for an alleged offense totally unconnected with the contraband that was seized during the war-rantless search.
Based on the facts presented by this appeal as measured by the facts and legal principles of United States v. Rubin, supra, and State v. Wiley, supra, can it be said that the circumstances facing Piburn and the trooper had reached a state of constitutional exigency, thereby precluding the necessity of a search warrant? Assuming, arguendo, that probablе cause existed for the officers to believe that additional contraband might be cached in defendant’s “room” — presence of what appeared to be marijuana tacked to the wall above defendant’s bed coupled with knowledge that the warrant which they carried for defendant’s arrest was for “dispensing marijuana”— that alone did not constitute an “exigent” circumstance justifying the warrantless search conducted of defendant’s “room”. United States v. Rubin, supra. In the instant case the search was not limited to a particular place as in Wiley. Unlike both Wiley and Rubin, no facts were present in the instant case from which the officers could reasonably conсlude that defendant had compatriots at or in the immediate vicinity of the situs of the search who were threatening to destroy, conceal or remove the marijuana. There was nothing by way of evidence presented at the pre-trial hearing that even intimated that the officers reasonably believed that destruction, removal .or concealment of contraband material was imminent or threatened. The very most that can be said is that defendant’s parents were upset and distraught. As might be expected when their son was awakened from his sleep and arrested at 1:30 in the morning, the atmosphere in the basement “room” was chargеd with emotional tension. But there is not one scintilla of evidence that defendant’s parents were other than law abiding citizens, and the record is devoid of any evidence linking them to the marijuana. The facts disclosed that defendant’s parents were cooperative in every respect and made no effort to in anyway thwart the officers. In the absence of any evidence that one or both of defendant’s parents were known by the officers to be persons of disreputable character, or compatriots of their son regarding possession of the marijuana, this court is unwilling to say that the mother’s weeping and the father’s upset condition, alone, was sufficient to cause the officers to conclude or infer that the parents posed a threat with reference to concealment, removal or destruction of the marijuana. The state made no effort to show that undue delay would be encountered in obtaining a search warrant, or that one or several of the officers would be subjected to possible danger if they remained in defendant’s “room” while one of the other officers sought to procure a search warrant. Since the record discloses that the officers appearance at the residence in question during the wee hours of the morning was part of a general drug raid conducted in Clay County, this court, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, is not willing to infer that a search warrant could not have been timely obtained. In view of the particular circumstances of this case, if difficulty in obtaining a search warrant, because of possible inconvenience to an issuing magistrate, standing alone, is held to rise to the dignity of a constitutional exigency, then law enforcement officers, by the simple expedient of launching widespread raids and searches at nighttime, could circumvent the Fourth Amendment in a manner never envisioned by its drafters.
This court holds that the state did not' carry the burden [
Vale v. Louisiana, supra,
Attention is now directed to the state’s final argument that the warrantless search should be upheld as a consensual search. As previously noted, the state at the pre-trial hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress advised the court that it was not contending that the search could be justified as a consensual search, conceded that the defendant’s evidence showed that he had exclusive possession of the basement “room”, made no attempt on direct or cross-examination to show otherwise, and by various objections effectively precludеd defendant from introducing evidence that the ostensible consent given by his father was involuntary. Can the state now belatedly contend that the search was consensual? Fundamental concepts of fairness and technical procedural rules imbuing our system of criminal justice would seem to say no. See
Giordenello
v.
United States,
The fact that defendant was in lawful custody by virtue of a validly issued arrest warrant at the time the unreasonable search took place did not ostracize him from the protective umbrella of the Fourth Amendment. The suppression of evidence resulting from unlawful searches is not a judicial exercise designed to frustrate those charged with enforcement of our laws; it is nothing more and nothing less than judicial compliance with the positive mandate of the Fourth Amendment that all citizens, the guilty and innocent alike, shall not be subjected to unreasonable searches and seizures. In spite of a popular notion in some quarters that the avowed purpose of the Fourth Amendment can no longer be reconciled with the course of modern day society, thе people have not seen fit to eliminate or rewrite it. Its wording today is the same as when it was originally written and adopted. The people wrote and adopted the Fourth Amendment, and they alone possess the power to eliminate or rewrite it. To date, in their innate wisdom, they have not seen fit to do either. Courts are charged with the solemn obligation of upholding the Fourth Amendment. They are powerless to eliminate or rewrite it. Although a multitude of cases construing and applying the Fourth Amendment may at first blush appear to some to be a verbal symphony of confusion and contradiction, a careful scrutiny of the facts of each discloses a dedicated and conscientious effort to carry out its mandate — “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,- against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, . . . .” In an effort to do no less, this court finds and holds that the search, complained of was constitutionally offensive and the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to suppress and in admitting the controversial marijuana into evidence.
Since it is patently obvious that the state can not make a case against defendant as charged in the information absent use of the marijuana that was seized during the warrantless search, the judgment is reversed and the defendant is ordered discharged.
All concur.
