OPINION
Appeal is taken from a conviction for unlawfully carrying a handgun. V.T.C.A. Penal Code, Sec. 46.02. Trial was before the court upon a plea of not guilty and punishment was assessed at a fine of $105.00.
At the outset appellant contends that the court erred in overruling his objection to the admission of the gun in evidence.
Officer Jones of the Austin Police Department testified that while he was on patrol in the early morning hours of July 18, 1975, he observed a vehicle in the parking lot between a bar and a shoe store on East 7th Street in Austin. The door of the vehicle was open and Jones noted “a pair of legs hanging out of the driver’s door.” Upon investigation it was determined that a person later identified as appellant “was sprawled on the front seat, his billfold was laying, I believe beside him, it was either beside him or on the floor and it was opened.” Jones further testified “first of all what went through my mind was that he had been robbed or possibly stabbed or something like that.” Jones tried to arouse the man to no avail and in the course of making such an attempt detected an odor of alcohol. After Jones finally was able to get appellant “to come around a little bit” he got him out of the car. The officer found no evidence of “injury or anything like that.” Jones determined that appellant was in a state of intoxication and felt “that he might be possibly in some sort of danger or need some protection.” Jones arrested appellant. and in frisking him found what “felt like a gun in his right front pocket.” Upon further search of appellant a handgun was removed from his pocket.
Appellant urges that he was under arrest when the officer seized his body and removed it from the car. Since the officer did not determine until after he had removed appellant from the car that he was intoxicated and a danger to himself, appellant argues that the arrest was without probable cause and that the gun seized in a search incident thereto was the result of an unlawful search.
We find that Officer Jones’ action was proper in removing appellant from the vehicle under the “emergency” or “exigent circumstances” doctrine. See
Perez v. State,
Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the conviction.
Appellant argues that the officer’s testimony that appellant was so drunk that he was “unconscious” negates the necessary *417 elements of the offense that appellant “knowingly and intentionally” carried the handgun.
In
Ramos v. State,
The judgment is affirmed.
