ON REHEARING
Uрon consideration of the Motion for Rehearing, the opinion formerly filed -is withdrawn and the following substituted in lieu thereof:
OPINION
In the early morning hours of March 28, 1965, the owner of a drive-in theater in Clovis, New Mexico, wаs robbed at gun point of his cash receipts by two men with stockings over their faces. The victim was bound by a rope and placed in the rear seat of his automobile. Pie could not recognize the two men. Shortly thereafter the robbery was reported, and the police stopped a white Cadillac automobile which was being driven by the defendant in a suspicious manner in the vicinity of the robbеry. The defendant and the other occupant were arrested for armed robbery and searched. While one officer remained near the Cadillac automobile the other officers took the prisoners to the drive-in theater and later to the city hall. At the city hall the police captain was given the rope used to tie up the victim, and he went to the Cadillac automobile, which was then being searched by the other police officers. He arrived there 20 to 25 minutes after the prisoners were arrested.
Two pieces of rope were found — one in the unlockеd trunk of the automobile and one in the righthand pocket of a fatigue jacket which was also in the trunk of the automobile. The two pieces of rope were identified as being identical with the rope which bound the victim. No search warrant was sought or obtained.
Appellant was convicted for armed robbery, and on his appeal claims error in the admission into evidence of the rоpe found in the car. Appellant relies on Preston v. United States,
On June 23, 1969, the Supreme Court of the United States in Chimеl v. California,
Prior to the Supreme Court’s advice in Chimel, supra, as to what Preston, supra, actually held, Preston had not been interpreted as so limited, but had been construed as permitting other tests for justifying warrantless searches. In Stoner v. California,
“But a search can be incident to an arrest only if it is substantially contemporaneous with the arrest and is confined to the immediate vicinity of the arrest. Agnello v. Unitеd States,269 U.S. 20 ,46 S.Ct. 4 ,70 L.Ed. 145 , [51 A.L.R. 409 ]. Whatever room for leeway there may be in these concepts, it is clear that the search of the petitioner’s hotel room in Pomona, California, on October 27 was not incidеnt to his arrest in Las Vegas, Nevada, on October 29. The search was completely unrelated to the arrest, both as to time and as to place. See Preston v. United States, decided this day,376 U.S. 364 ,84 S.Ct. 881 [11 L.Ed.2d 777 ].” (Emphasis added.)
A reviеw of the post-Preston federal and state decisions on the 'subject set out in People v. Webb,
Here the crime was committed over four years prior to the decision in Chimel, supra. If the Chimel interpretation of the holding in Preston, supra, is applicable here, then it would seem that there could be little question but that the warrantless search was not proper. (We note from State v. Moore,
In Colosimo v. Perini,
“We believe that Chimel instructs us that the rule of Preston, decided prior to the trial here involved, is the law that controls this case. Therefore, we need not consider whether Chimel is to be given retrospective effect. The evidence seized should have been suppressed.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals, however, felt otherwise. There in United States v. Bennett,
In Scott, supra, the Maryland court held that the Chimel rule is applicable “only to-cases in which the prosecution seeks to introduce the fruits of a search conducted after 23 June 1969” (the date of the Chimel decision), and that the search in the case before it “was reasonable rtnder the pre-Chimel rules” and thе evidence admissible.
We are convinced, as was the Maryland court and the Federal court in Bennett, supra, that the Supreme Court in Chimel recognized it was announcing a constitutional rule which was a complete break from -the past. See Shipley v. California, supra. We conclude it has prospective application only. (Compare State v. Miller,
We must now decide whether the trial court here erred in reсeiving the evidence under the law as announced by Preston, supra, as it was interpreted prior to Chimel, supra.
In Preston, supra, two men were arrested for vagrancy, and after they were booked on this charge and their car was driven to the police station and then towed to a garage, it was searched by entering the trunk through the back seat. There sufficient evidence was found to identify thе men with a bank robbery. It is evident that the search was remote in -time and place. Furthermore, such search was not connected in any way with the crime for which they were arrested, since there аre no “fruits or implements” of the crime of vagrancy.
A review of the post-Preston decisionsi cited and referred to above indicates that in only one respect could there be any doubt аs to whether the search here involved was so incidental to the arrest as to be reasonable rtnder the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. It was certainly made in the vicinity of the arrest, but was it substantially contemporaneous with the arrest? In People v. Williams, supra, the arrested men had been taken to the police station, and the officers returned and searched the car. The Michigan court held this reasonable. In People v. Webb, supra, and in State v. Carter, supra, there was evidence of crowds gathering which required a quick search or removal of the automobile bеfore search. In those cases the searches were held reasonable although made some 15 or 20 minutes after the arrest and out of the presence of the accused. In Crawford v. Bannan, supra, the accused was arrested first and taken to the police station before his car was searched. In none of these cases was the search held so remote in time to thе arrest as to be unreasonable.
In State v. Perez, supra, where the weapon and the stolen property were seen in the car before it was towed to the police station and sеarched, Judge Wood, in distinguishing Preston, supra, points to the review of cases in People v. Webb, supra, and particularly Price v. United States,
“The post-Preston decisions have emphasized the question of the reasonableness of the search. With the .emphasis on 'reasonableness’, Preston has frequently been held inapplicable because of the circumstances involved in the particular case.”
In State v. Everitt, supra, the arresting officers, as here, were faced with the problem of keeping the arrested men in custody and continuing their investigation. There, the vehicle, later searched, was out of police surveillance for about ten minutes. Here, it was under police surveillance at all times after the arrest. In Everitt, supra, our Court of Appeals again citеd Preston, supra, and our own case of State v. Aull,
Since the fact situation ■in..Preston was far different from the facts here, and since we believe that under the pre-Chimel law the search here was substantially contemporaneous with the arrest so as to be reasonable under the facts here, we hold that there was no violation of the accused’s constitutional rights in the admission of the pieces of rope that tied his victim.
The judgment is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
