STATEMENT
Appellant, a prisoner in the Washington State Penitentiary, commenced this proceeding by filing an application for a Writ of Habeas Corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Washington, under which application he claims that his constitutional rights, both State and Federal, have been denied.
On June 30, 1959, the appellant was convicted in the State Court of Washington of the crime of burglary in the second degree and, having been found guilty of being an habitual criminal under the Washington State Law, was sentenced to life imprisonment in the Washington State Penitentiary. From this conviction the appellant appealed to the Supreme Court of Washington, which affirmed the decision of the lower Court
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on September 1, 1960. State v. Reed,
Subsequently, appellant filed certain applications in the District Court for Writs of Habeas Corpus, which applications were denied on the ground that appellant had failed to exhaust state remedies.
The appellant on January 12, 1962, filed an application for Writ of Habeas Corpus in the Washington Supreme Court, which application presented for decision the same issues which are here presented. This application was denied by an order of that Court sustaining the demurrer to the application. Thereafter, appellant’s application for a Writ of Cer-tiorari to the United States Supreme Court was denied.
Appellant filed the application for a Writ in the District Court in July, 1962. In October the proceedings had reached the Pre-Trial stage. A Pre-Trial Order reciting certain agreed facts and outlining the issues both of law and of fact was then entered. Certain of those issues are not here presented.
Presented for our decision are two principal issues:
(1) The validity of the decision of the lower Court that the information, on which appellant was convicted, charged a crime.
(2) The validity of the decision of the lower Court that the search and seizure, in issue, did not violate the United States Constitution.
I.
Appellant was charged with a violation of R.C.W. 9.19.020. 1
He was accused, under said statute, of the crime of burglary in the second degree, in an information, in part, reading as follows:
“He, the said William Archie Reed, in the County of King, State of Washington, on or about the 16th day of April, 1958, with intent to commit a crime therein, wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously did enter the dwelling of one Eugene F. Griffin, * * * in the City of Seattle, of said County and State.”
Appellant’s counsel, after an exceptionally thorough and time consuming analysis of numerous Washington and other cases, makes an exceptionally resourceful, if not convincing, argument that a proper construction of this statute requires us to hold that the information,, on its face, does not charge a crime, in that it does not charge a “breaking”..
Putting aside the niceties and persuasiveness of counsel’s analysis and casually reading the languáge in question, we find a statute in common language, providing that a person may be guilty of the crime of burglary in the second degree by simply
entering a dwelling house of another
with intent to commit a crime therein, and further -providing that there must be a “breaking” and entry in any other type of building or a part thereof. Here, the appellant was. charged with the unlawful entry of a dwelling house. We are not concerned with the language of the statute touching upon other buildings. Manifestly, the information charged the appellant with the crime in the exact language of the statute. This being so, the information clearly states a crime. State v. Forler,
Aside from our conclusions, it appears that the Washington Supreme Court has decided adversely to appellant’s contentions on the exact issues here before us. Such being the case, we will not quarrel with the state Court’s construction of its own statutes and Con
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stitution. Hebert v. Louisiana,
II.
On this contention, the appellant charges that he was deprived of due process under the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution and Article I, Sections 3 and 7 of the Washington State Constitution, by the denial of his motion to suppress certain evidence gained by an alleged illegal search and seizure.
The trial Court very wisely framed the issues under a Pre-Trial Order and thereafter held a hearing, at which the appellant was present and testified. The trial Judge’s findings, as shown in the margin 2 demonstrated beyond question that he did not believe the appellant’s story.
These findings, of course, are binding on appellant and he does not argue that point. He would, however, avoid the effect of the findings by urging the invalidity of the search, even conceding the truth of the facts to which the officers testified.
Appellant argues that the facts in this case are on all fours with the facts in Johnson v. United States,
For that matter, there is a vast distinction between the recognition of the •odor of opium in the Johnson case and the entry for the specific purpose of ■questioning defendant, and the subsequent recognition of stolen property, in .plain view, after the entry. If a search •cannot be made under these circumstances, it is difficult to envision a factual background which would permit an arrest and search without a warrant.
Recognized by both parties is the fact that the search and seizure provisions -of the 4th Amendment to the Federal Constitution applies to unlawful searches .and seizures by state officers. Mapp v. Ohio,
Closely in point and somewhat supporting appellant’s view, is the opinion of Judge Youngdahl in United States v. Evans,
We agree with the conclusion of the lower Court and that of the Supreme Court of Washington. The search and seizure here presented does not offend the provisions of our Constitution.
Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the lower Court.
Notes
. R.C.W. 9.19.020.
“Every person who, with intent to commit some crime therein shall, under circumstances not amounting to burglary in the first degree, enter the dwelling house of another or break and enter, or, having committed a crime therein, shall break out of, any building or part thereof, or a ■room or other structure wherein any property is kept for use, sale or deposit, shall be guilty of burglary in the second degree * *
. “Two police officers testified that they had the description and license number of a •car that had prowled the neighborhood of the alleged burglary. They found it licensed to petitioner and called at his home. He stated that he and no one else had used the car at the time of the burglary. They then asked if they could go into his house and talk to him and he invited them in. They had no warrant of arrest or search wammt. While talking they saw a heater, one of the stolen items. They then put the petitioner under arrest and searched and found additional articles that had been taken.
“The petitioner denies the testimony of the police officers and states they forced their way into his home after he demanded they not search without a search warrant. This testimony is not accepted and I must find the officers were in fact invited into petitioner’s residence.
“This case is not to determine the guilt or innocence of petitioner. It is to find whether petitioner in his trial was denied due process of law. I have concluded he was granted due process.
“Counsel for petitioner relies on United States v. Evans, D.C.,
.
“ * * * the Court should not be understood as holding that the poliee may never go to a home and ask to speak with a suspect about rumors of his involvement in a crime; the holding here condemns only their going with the intention of making a search. * * * ” (Emphasis supplied)
