OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal by the government from a district court order,
The circumstances which gave rise to this ease reveal a marihuana shipper from Korea who, depending upon one’s point of view, must be regarded as either unusually sophisticated or extremely naive, for he shipped a parcel containing ten pounds of marihuana through the Korean and U.S. postal services. The parcel bore Korean Postal Registry No. 62, the return name and address of one Kim Yijum, and was addressed to the appellee at a rural New Castle, Pennsylvania, address. The package was initially intercepted in Seattle, Washington, by U.S. Customs officials who, after consulting other customs and postal authorities, made arrangements for a “controlled delivery” at appellee’s premises. Such a plan called for a delivery of the contraband at a specific time, with appropriate law enforcement officers in attendance. Delivery at the addressee’s mailbox was set for 11 a. m., February 12, 1970. On that date, agents arrived at appellee’s premises, and witnessed the following events: (1) at 4:12 p. m., Menke drove his vehicle to a mailbox situated approximatеly 200 yards from the house in which he resided with his parents and a sister; (2) he removed the parcel from the mailbox; (3) he placed it in the trunk of his car; (4) he drove the ear into the driveway; (5) he removed “a like appearing” package from the trunk, and (6) he entered the house with the package.
After this sequence of events, a warrant to search the premises was duly ex *22 ecuted. Unquestionably, there was probable cause to issue the warrant. Thereafter, as related by the district court in its memorandum opinion, the following took place:
At approximately 5:00 p. m., the two reunited agents and the postal inspector, together with four state law enforcement officers, approached the house and identified themselves. Presently, the warrant was read to the occupants — the defendant, his father, mother, and sister — the agents, inspector and officers were admitted to the house, and the defendant was given his Miranda warnings. [384 U.S. 436 [86 S.Ct. 1602 ,16 L.Ed.2d 694 ] (1966)] The agents and the postal inspector then searched the defendant’s bedroom for the parcel. In the course of the search of the bedroom, the searchers found a Korean mailing registry slip which bore the number 62, a personal telеphone book which contained the name and address of Kim Yijum and a list of prices of opium, hashish, marihuana and other narcotics. The search, which lasted approximately 15 minutes, failed however to uncover the parcel.
At this point, there is a substantial dispute as to what happened. The defendant testified that after the agents completed the unfruitful search of his bedroom, they took him outside and made him open the trunk of his automobile. He testified that he was not advised that he didn’t have to open the trunk and that he opened it not knowing at the time whether or not he had a right tо refuse to open it. On the other hand, one of the customs agents testified that during the course of the search of the defendant’s bedroom, the defendant was invited by the other agent to disclose the whereabouts of the parcel which the defendant had been seen removing from the mailbox and that in response to that invitation, the defendant volunteered that the parcel was in the trunk of his automobile and that he was willing to get it if the agents wanted it. Further, the agent testified that the defendant advised the agents that it would be easier for him to open his trunk because it had a tricky lock. The parcel containing the marihuana was, by either account, found in the trunk.
The agents and the defendant are also in agreement on two other matters: (1) that the defendant was under arrest from the time the agents entered the farmhouse, and (2) that the defendant was not advised by the agents that he was not legally obligated to open the trunk of his automobile in the absence of a search warrant covering the automobile.
I.
Granted the existence of probable cause for the issuance of a warrant to search the real estate and the automobile, the problem arises becаuse the area for search set forth in the warrant was limited to the house and did not include the automobile. It thus became essential for the government to establish either a consensual search or to demonstrate probable cause to make a warrantless search of the autоmobile. Chambers v. Maroney,
*23
The fallacy of this аpproach lay in the assumption that after 5:00 p. m., a United States magistrate or district judge or other warrant-issuing authority was immediately available in this rural area of Western Pennsylvania to issue the warrant. The approach also minimizes the reality of the circumstances. The agents knew, from their Seattle experience, that the package did contain marihuana. The agents were eye witnesses to the defendant’s acts of removing the package from the mailbox and placing it in his car. The combination of these two factors makes especially appropriate the pronouncement of the Supreme Court in
Carroll, supra,
reiterated in
Chambers,
Where an automobile is the subject of the search, the possibility of its movement and the concomitant disappearance of the contraband is a more critical factor than a count of the number of agents present who could be dispatched to a warrant-issuing authority. Even the plurality opinion in
Coolidge,
heavily relied upon by the district court, disclosed: “There was no way in which he could conceivably have gained access to the automobile after the police arrived on his property.”
The district court overlooked thе unassailable logic espoused in Chambers, a case also arising out of the Western District of Pennsylvania:
For constitutional purposes, we see no difference between on the one hand seizing and holding a ear before presenting the probable cause issue to a magistrate and on thе other hand carrying out an immediate search without a warrant. Given probable cause to search, either course is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
On the facts before us, the blue station wagon could have been searched on the spot when it was stopped since there was probable cause to search and it was a fleeting target for a search. The probable-cause factor still obtained at the station house and so did the mobility of the car unless the Fourth Amendment permits a warrantless seizure of the car and the denial of its use to anyone until a warrаnt is secured. In that event there is little to choose in terms of practical consequences between an immediate search without a warrant and the car’s immobilization until a warrant is obtained.
Moreover, the district court failed to respect the distinction between the holding in
Coolidge
with respect to non-contraband goods, and the holding in
Carroll
that “contrаband goods concealed and transported in an automobile or other vehicle may be searched for without a warrant.”
Accordingly, we hold that under the circumstances of this case, there was probable cause to conduct a warrantless search of appellee’s automobile, and that the district court erred in finding to the contrary.
II.
Although our disposition of the рrobable cause issue is sufficient to return these proceedings to the trial court, we nevertheless consider the consent issue as a separate basis for reversal, standing alone and independently of the other ground. We do this out of caution that any failure by us to comment on the district сourt’s treatment of the consent issue would signify a
sub süentio
éndorsement of it. Because we disagree with the court’s analysis and its statement of applicable law, it becomes necessary for us to reaffirm explicitly our holding in Government of Virgin Islands v. Berne,
In
Berne,
we held that where a defendant is given the detailed warnings mandated by Miranda v. Arizona,
*25 A fair reading of the district court’s opinion compels the conclusion that it found an articulation or a verbalization of an acquiescence or assent to search the automobile, but that this did not amount to a “legal consent.” The court found: “In the instant case, the policе were . . . confronted . with an accused who . indeed resorted to ‘consent’ to search the automobile. . . . We think the defendant most probably merely acquiesced, ... to the agents’ suggestion as to the location of the marihuana.” Nevertheless, the court refused to elevate the aсquiescence to legal consent. It distinguished the case at bar from Berne: “In both Berne and Harris consent was found, but in neither was the accused under arrest.” From this major premise, the court proceeded to characterize the agents’ questioning about the location of the marihauna as having “the same effect as a demand or order. The defendant’s conduct, then, particularly absent knowledge of his right to refuse the search, cannot be construed to constitute consent.”
Regrettably, the district court erred in its major premise; it misread the facts in
Berne.
In the second Fourth Amendment issue in that case, when the defendant informed the police there was a hunting knife in the car, the accused had already been “arrested and taken to police headquarters.”
Our independent review of the evidence convinces us that a finding of actual assent to the search was proper, and, the district court having imposed an improper impediment to translating this actual assent into legal consent, we hold that the search was consensual and not repugnant to the strictures of the Fourth Amendment.
The judgment of the district court ordering the suppression of the evidence will, bе reversed.
Notes
. Although neither
Berne
nor
Harris
were mentioned by name in United States v. De Larosa,
. Because we have found probable cause to search Menke’s automobile, it was not in fact a constitutionally protected area.
. In general accord with our view are Gorman v. United States,
In Modern Criminal Procedure, pp. 293-294, Hall, Kamisar, LaFave, and Israel present the following analysis of the problem:
Does Miranda . . . necessitate a reexamination of the law of consent search? May consent to a search be viewed as a self-incriminating “communication” ? In any event, should the protection against unreasonable search and seizure be waived only with the same knowledge and intelligence now required for a valid waiver of the right to remain silent?
The authors query whether police, lacking both a search warrant and probable cause for obtaining one, and in the absence of
Miranda-tyx>e
warnings, may “invite” an individual, already in custody, to give them permission to search a designated area. “At least when placed in such a ‘custodial’ situation, should a suspect be advised that if he refuses permission the police will respect his decision and that he has a right to the assistance of counsel — and ‘free’ counsel if he cannot afford a lawyer — before he makes up his mind?” No, answer Rosenthall v. Henderson,
To the extent that Blaloelo and Moderaclci conflict with our decisions in Berne and Harris, they lack persuasive precedential value.
