THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, Respondent, v. ALLEN CALVIN SMITH, Appellant.
No. 35077
Department Two. June 23, 1960.
June 23, 1960
368 Wash. 2d | 353 P. (2d) 155
Charles O. Carroll and James Alva Noe, Jr., for respondent.
FINLEY, J.—Sometime during the predawn hours of June 5, 1958, the premises of the Gourlay Lumber Company, a Seattle lumber and hardware establishment, were burglarized. Among the items stolen were a large safe, a new orange-colored, “Honko” power lawn mower, and certain power tools. At about 4:15 a. m., on the same morning, Officers Reed and Litzenberger, of the Seattle police department, while on a routine patrol, discovered signs of the burglary. They notified the owner, S. H. Gourlay. He came immediately to the scene and, after an examination of the premises, informed the officers as to what had been taken. At 6:30 a. m., Reed and Litzenberger were directed by police radio to proceed to a certain location a few blocks from the Gourlay premises. They were to investigate a report that a safe had been dumped along the roadway. They found a safe, discovered that it had been broken into, and learned from certain papers strewn about the area that it was the safe which had been stolen from Gourlay. Because of the size of the safe, the officers concluded that more than one person must have been involved in the burglary. Reed and Litzenberger returned to the precinct station at about 8:30 a. m. They were informed that a Mr. Fruetal had called in with a report that he had been awakened by loud noises coming from the premises next door to his home. He described the noises as sounding like “some one hammering on a safe.” The officers were further told that Fruetal had also reported that Millard Tomlin (son of Fruetal‘s next-door neighbor) had been mowing the lawn with a new, reddish-colored power mower.
Reed and Litzenberger, accompanied by two detectives, thereupon proceeded to the Tomlin premises. Through an
Smith claimed at the trial that he was the subject of an unlawful arrest, and he moved that the physical evidence seized at the time of the arrest be suppressed. The motion was denied. Thereafter, Smith was convicted and sentenced. From this conviction the present appeal is taken.
Appellant has assigned as error: (1) the denial of his motion to suppress the evidence seized at the time of his arrest; and (2) the denial of a motion for a continuance, made in order to allow him to call Fruetal as a witness in his behalf.
Respecting the latter of these two assignments, it does not appear from the record that appellant ever subpoenaed Fruetal. We have held that it is not error for a trial court to deny a continuance to procure an absent witness where no showing is made by the moving party that a diligent attempt has been made to procure the presence of the witness. State v. Schmidt (1927), 141 Wash. 660, 252 Pac. 118. The failure to cause a subpoena to issue clearly constitutes such a lack of diligence as to justify the denial of a motion for a continuance.
Appellant‘s first assignment of error, relating to the denial of his motion to suppress, raises the significant
In State v. Miles, supra, the test to be applied in resolving the question as to probable cause was outlined as follows:
“. . . An officer making an arrest without a warrant, on the theory that a crime has been committed, must not only have a real belief of the guilt of the party about to be arrested, but such belief must be based upon probable cause and reasonable grounds. An officer may not arrest simply because he has some fleeting idea or suspicion that the individual has committed a felony.”
“Reasonable grounds” exist or may be said to be established if supported by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves to warrant a cautious man in believing the arrested person to be guilty of a felony. State v. Young (1952), 39 Wn. (2d) 910, 239 P. (2d) 858. The question then is whether Officer Reed, at the time he placed the appellant under arrest, may be said to have had reasonable grounds to believe that appellant had participated in the Gourlay burglary.
On the basis of the facts above summarized, we are of
The judgment of the trial court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
ROSELLINI and HILL, JJ., concur.
FOSTER, J. (concurring in the result)—While I agree that the judgment should be affirmed, I do so for another reason.
Appellant had no standing to complain of the allegedly illegal search and seizure because he had no interest in either the premises searched or the property seized.
The search occurred in a garage located on premises owned by a Mr. Tomlin. Appellant was discovered and arrested in a nearby house trailer, but he did not claim ownership of, or any proprietary interest in, the garage. Since he claimed no interest in the premises, he had no standing to
But although one claims no interest in the premises searched, one is, nevertheless, entitled to the suppression of illegally seized property if he has a proprietary interest in the objects seized. Many cases are reviewed and the law summarized in Jeffers v. United States, 187 F. (2d) 498, affirmed 342 U.S. 48, 96 L. Ed. 59, 72 S. Ct. 93, as follows:
“. . . one who seasonably objects to the use in evidence against him of property he owns which has been seized as the fruit of an unlawful search . . . is entitled to its exclusion though the premises searched were not his.
. . . To deny him standing to object would be inconsistent with the purpose of the exclusionary rule to make the Amendment effective; for it condemns unreasonable seizures as well as unreasonable searches and applies to ‘effects’ as well as to ‘houses‘.”
In the affidavit in support of his motion to suppress, appellant did claim ownership in the objects seized. Under such circumstances, the proper procedure is for the court to take evidence and decide the existence or absence of such interest. If interest is found, the motion should then be decided on its merits.
Here the trial court made no determination respecting appellant‘s alleged interest in the seized property prior to ruling on the motion to suppress. The ground upon which the trial court denied the motion is not disclosed, but, whether it was upon the merits or upon lack of standing, the failure to determine the preliminary question was without prejudice because there is independent uncontradicted evidence and appellant‘s own confession that he neither owned nor had any proprietary interest in the objects seized.
WEAVER, C. J., concurs with FOSTER, J.
