This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction and sentence for the unlawful possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The sole question is the validity of a warrantless search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment which protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures . . . and [declares that] no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.” The facts are not materially in dispute.
On the morning of February 5, 1974, in San Francisco, California an unnamed woman delivered a shoebox size package wrapped in brown paper to the air freight agent for American Airlines. The package was addressed to Miss Linda Ford, 5208 Michigan Street, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. When the air freight agent routinely asked about the contents of the package to be typed on the air bill, the woman appeared noticeably nervous to the agent and said she didn’t know “what the contents are.” When told that the agent would have to know so that it could be typed on the weigh bill she finally said, “Well, it is a present.” The word “present” was typed on the weigh bill. When a small boy accompanying the woman gave his name, she appeared increasingly nervous and said that he was not her son. The woman’s demeanor prompted the agent to seek the advice of his supervisor. Apprehensive that the package might contain matter not eligible for shipment, airline officials unwrapped and opened it. See ATP Tariff CAP No. 96, Rule 24. 1 It was found to contain about eight prophylactics, six or seven inches long, containing a powdered substance. The airline officials did not know the nature of the substance, but because of the sender’s apparent nervousness they suspected it was contraband or a substance ineligible for air freight. Local police officers were called and upon their arriv *1310 al were shown the contents of the open package. The officer in charge, who had four years experience in narcotics investigation, testified that prophylactics are commonly used for shipping narcotics. An on-the-spot field test showed that the substance was heroin. The police officers marked the package, placed a business card inside it, and resealed it. It was then placed on board the plane for Oklahoma City where enforcement officers were alerted and fully informed of the situation.
When the package arrived at the Oklahoma City airport, appellant Kathryn Ford, the mother of the addressee, claimed it and proceeded to a waiting car driven by another party. She placed the package in the car, and as she and the driver were leaving, officers converged on the car. As the officers approached the car appellant was seen to throw the package out; it and the air weigh bill were retrieved; the appellant was arrested and charged; the court overruled a motion to suppress the evidence; the contents were admitted into evidence; appellant was convicted and brings this appeal.
The government, for the first time on appeal, challenges Mrs. Ford’s standing to invoke Fourth Amendment protection. Ordinarily, an appellate court will not take note of contentions not raised in the trial court. See
Hormel v. Helvering,
Next we consider the validity of the search, arrest, and seizure process in San Francisco and Oklahoma City. It seems to us that the events which occurred in California and Oklahoma were one episode and must be considered together for Fourth Amendment purposes. Illegality in either place would be fatal to the government’s case.
Ninety years ago the Supreme Court in
Boyd v. United States
Twelve years later, the Court in
Bram v. United States,
Weeks v. United States,
THE SEARCH
Mrs. Ford does not question the right and duty of an air carrier to inspect any package or article submitted for shipment if it has reason to believe the package does not conform to tariff regulations. But, if government officers participated in this inspection, it became a warrantless government search, per se unreasonable unless falling within one of the carefully defined exceptions. See cases cited in
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
supra,
There is an abundance of recent cases arising out of airline freight inspections of which
United States v. Harding,
In
United States v. Pryba,
Two cases from the Seventh Circuit drew a thin line between private inspection and governmental participation. In
United States v. Issod,
In
Newton,
a government agent was present from the beginning of a search by private airline agents which was not directly related to airline purposes. In our case, as in
Pryba
and apparently in
Issod,
the government agents were called in after completion of a privately motivated and authorized inspection by airline officials which exposed contraband to plain view. Compare
Corngold v. United States,
We, thus, have an inspection which was private in both motivation and manner. The government agents appeared only after the suspicion of the possible presence of contraband was confirmed by discovery of the prophylactics. At this point, it was the province and indeed the duty of the officers to further investigate the open box, which they did without any invasion of protected rights of privacy, to determine whether the suspicious substance in plain view was in fact contraband and, if so, to commence an arrest process. Indeed, they could not turn their backs or walk away from what appeared to their trained eyes to be, and which was, a violation of the law. In these circumstances, we are unable to perceive any new or different search after the government agents arrived. We conclude that the events which occurred in San Francisco did not amount to a government search; rather, it was a private inspection, authorized by tariff regulations and not violative of the Fourth Amendment.
THE SEIZURE
Having determined that no constitutional rights of Mrs. Ford were violated in the search, we proceed with an analysis of the seizure. Appellant Ford apparently contends that the seizure occurred in Oklahoma City, separate and distinct from the search in California, and that since there was time to obtain a warrant before the Oklahoma City seizure, the warrantless seizure violated the Fourth Amendment. See
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
supra,
Realistically, the contraband was seized by the officers in California before it was ever shipped to Oklahoma. See
United States
v.
DeBerry,
Certainly, the seizure meets the Fourth Amendment requirement of probable cause, because the government agents involved knew that the substance was contraband before seizing it. But, the officers’ failure to obtain a warrant to seize can be excused only if the circumstances at the time of the seizure were sufficiently exigent to make their course of action imperative. See Coolidge, supra. We believe that such circumstances existed here. The California officers had determined with certainty— and without violation of privacy — that the substance submitted for shipment was contraband. At that time, they could have ordered that the substance be detained until a magistrate could issue a warrant to seize it. The time delay required to obtain a warrant, however, might very well have warned the parties to the crime of the government’s presence and prevented their apprehension. If the contraband had not been shipped immediately, the Oklahoma City addressee probably would have become suspicious and remained aloof, and the officers’ investigation and arrest process would have proven unproductive. See also cases cited in Issod, supra, at 993. In these circumstances we think the California officers’ actions in seizing the package were reasonable and necessary. No warrant to seize was required here.
The search was private, and the ensuing warrantless seizure was made upon probable cause under exigent circumstances. Neither the search nor the seizure violated appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights.
Affirmed.
