Defendant appeals from conviction of burglary in the second degree. ORS 164.215. His sole assignment of error is that his motion to suppress, evidence should have been sustained.
Defendant, one of three occupants in a bluish-colored 1965 Ford, was arrested by a police officer about two miles south of Cloverdale in Tillamook County in the before-dawn hours of November 10,1972. Shortly before that, a householder near a drugstore in Cloverdale had heard a burglar alarm sound in the store. He .observed ^ a car which he later said “looked *261 like” the Ford leave on the highway south after two persons had come out of the store. He saw one of them get in the Ford. He reported his observations by telephone to police, resulting in a deputy sheriff’s being alerted in Woods, four miles south. This deputy started toward Cloverdale, saw no other vehicles except a Volkswagen and the Ford together, pursued the Ford and stopped it. These are small, unincorporated towns and the area is rural. The result was that all three occupants of the Ford were arrested and taken to jail at Tillamook about 22 miles away. The Ford was locked and left along the roadway.
The deputy and other officers investigated the burglary of the store, which had been entered by boring holes in the wood wall and then cutting out a larger hole. Later in the day the deputy and another officer returned to the Ford, and, preparatory to storing it, they inventoried its contents.
As testimony was taken on the motion, to suppress, the attorneys did not ask questions to show whether items taken as evidence during this inventory were in plain view. A copy of a “vehicle tow request” signed by the officers is in the record. It lists 40 items with the following “taken as evidence”: ■
“(Glove Box area)
{(* * * * #
“8. 1 solid state cAFCO’ brand 100 MW CB Badio
u (Front seat area (under))
# # # *
“10. 1 solid state * * * Badio
/«# * * * *
*262 “11;: 1 large ‘Great Neck’ brand screwdriver
* # #
“12; 2 small wood chips * * *
‘«88»#*
“(On-Floor between Front and Back seat)
“18. 1 Laundry bag * * *
“19. 1 .solid state. * * * Radio
tik * *
“20. 1 pair Dk. Brown cotton gloyes- — wet 8* # # #
'“21. 1 small wood chip * * *
««8 ''*####:’*•
“ (Rear Seat Area) under
'.“22. 17*. *'.* wood drill ' *.
£ { íí*
“23. 1 * * * wood bit * * *
.'££$(( 8* , 8» 8«8 ‘ 8» »
In
State v. Keller,
The search at bar may be justified, however, on the basis of
State v. Keith, 2
Or App 133,
“Cooper [Cooper v. California,386 US 58 ,87 S Ct 788 ,17 L Ed 2d 730 (1967)] has been construed by the Oregon Supreme Court in McCoy [State v. McCoy,249 Or 160 ,437 P2d 734 (1968)] as holding that when a vehicle has been seized as the instrumentality of a crime it may thereafter be lawfully examined (searched) for further evidence of that crime without the necessity of obtaining a search warrant * *
Accordingly, in
Keith
we approved a warrantless search of a vehicle, which was an instrumentality of a crime, for evidence of the crime where there was an arrest of the occupants. The vehicle had been taken to the police station before the search occurred.
Keith
was decided in March 1970;
Chambers v. Maroney,
In the case at bar, the vehicle was locked and left at the place of defendant’s arrest while all of its occupants were returned to the scene of the crime and *264 then on to jail. A warrant for its search .was:not obtained, but it was searched when the arresting officer got back to it. It had been identified by the witness who saw it leave the scene of the crime. It-was an instrumentality thereof. On the basis of McCoy, Keith, and Chambers■ we hold that the search was not unreasonable, and the ruling on the motion to suppress was correct.
. Affirmed.
