delivered the opinion of the court:
Jаmes Tate was convicted of gambling and placed on three years probation following a bench trial in the circuit cоurt of Cook County. In this direct appeal he urges that he was subjected to an unreasonable search and seizure violating bоth State and Federal constitutional requirements.
About 8:30 P.M. on September 20, 1965, defendant was stopped in Chicago by police officers Bernard Stahl and Norbert Listowski for making an improper right turn. Officer Stahl asked defendant for his driver’s license, which he produced. While this was occurring the officer noticed a paper envelope with a glassine window sticking out of defendant’s shirt pocket. The officer testified that through the window he observed “what appeared to me to be a piece of tissue-weight рaper with blue or carbon lettering on it.” He stated that after he saw the envelope he asked the defendant for whom .he worked and was told “Windy City”, which was a well-known policy wheel, and that he then placed defendant under arrest, took the envelope from his pocket, opened it and found policy slips inside. Officer Listowski’s testimony was consistent with officer Stahl’s, except that he was unsure whether officer Stahl took the envelope or was handed it by defendant, and he became uncertain in his testimony as to the sequence of events. On direct examination he testified that “Officer Stahl * * * asked the * * * [defendant] for his driver’s license and then he saw an envelope in the breast pocket which we believed was policy writings and * * * I don’t recall if * * * [defendant] handed it to him or if officer Stahl took it from his shirt pocket, but we then placed the gentleman under arrest.” In response to a questiоn concerning whether he heard any further conversation between the defendant and officer Stahl prior to the arrest, оfficer Listowski said that the question concerning defendant’s employment was asked at that time. However, on cross-examinatiоn he testified that this occurred after the envelope was secured by officer Stahl, and on re-direct he said that he was not quite certain whether the "admission occurred before the envelope was obtained or afterwards. Defendant testified his admission occurred subsequent to his arrest and the seizure of the envelope.
Defendant moved to suppress all of the evidence seized from him. The court sustained the motion as to the evidence taken from the car but denied it as to the envelоpe and its contents because the envelope was open to view and thus no search was involved. It is the portion оf this ruling relating to the contents of the envelope which is now being attacked.
It is well-settled law that observation of that which is oрen to view does not constitute a search, so that seizure of articles in plain view cannot be considered unreasоnable (People v. Davis,
While no case has been found in which the precise issue herein raised has been considered, our decision that the seizure and opening of the envelope constituted a search is reinforced by the сases which uphold the admission into evidence of letters obtained in the exercise of a prison practice of reading incoming or outgoing mail of prisoners, not because the opening of letters which were properly being handled by prisоn officials did not constitute a search, but because the practice was found to be justified for purposes of prison sеcurity or for the discipline of inmates. Stroud v. United States,
Since the seizure and opening of the envelope constituted a sеarch, the policy slips found therein should not have been admitted into evidence unless the search was lawful. It is clear that this aspect of the search was not justified merely because the defendant was stopped for a traffic offense (People v. Lewis,
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
Mr. Justice Ward took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
