People v. Robinson
Decision Date | 19 March 1957 |
Docket Number | Cr. 5789 |
Citation | 149 Cal.App.2d 282,308 P.2d 461 |
Court | California Court of Appeals Court of Appeals |
Parties | The PEOPLE of the State of California, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. Virgil De Wit ROBINSON, Defendant and Appellant. |
Gladys Towles Root, Eugene V. McPherson and Joseph A. Armstrong, Los Angeles, for appellant.
Edmund G. Brown, Atty. Gen., Joan D. Gross, Deputy Atty. Gen., for respondent.
Convicted, after a nonjury trial, of possession of heroin, § 11500, Health & Safety Code, appellant urges on appeal that there was an unlawful search of his apartment and seizure of the subject matter of the crime, a bindle of heroin which was hidden in the lower part of the back of his television set. No claim of unlawful arrest is made, only that of unlawful search and seizure. Both sides agree that the case turns upon the question of whether defendant freely consented to the search. The evidence was conflicting and the court believed that of the police officers, thereby rejecting defendant's version of the facts.
Accepting as we must on appeal the evidence and inferences favorable to the respondent, People v. Newland, 15 Cal.2d 678, 681, 104 P.2d 778, the factual situation is as follows. The search was made without a warrant. Police officer Fitzgerald, on the morning of April 2, 1956, saw two men on the northwest corner of 41st Street and Broadway in Los Angeles; he drove past them, looked back and saw one of them reach underneath some bush or shrubbery; he turned around to investigate; one of the men disappeared and the other hurriedly walked west on 41st Street. The latter was a colored man wearing a gray hat and gray coat. The officer searched the shrubbery and found nothing. He gave this description of the one suspect to officer Waggoner, told what he had seen and said he thought it a narcotic transaction. As they were talking together on 41st Street defendant, who answered the description given by Fitzgerald, arrived in an automobile which he parked on 41st Street near an apartment building which later proved to be his place of residence. Fitzgerald, on his three-wheel motorcycle, drove past defendant's car on his way to show Waggoner and two other officers the place where the shrubbery was. As Fitzgerald passed defendant Waggoner saw him watching Fitzgerald and starting his car. Waggoner and officer Phillips then crowded defendant to the curb before he had gone more than 100 feet or so and immediately arrested him 'for narcotics.' By radio communication with headquarters they learned that defendant had a narcotic record plus eight traffic warrants standing against him. He denied both aspects of that information. Asked where he lived he told the officers and Waggoner said he thought defendant had narcotics in his room and requested leave to search the apartment. Defendant made no reply. On inquiry he said he had a telephone and the officers said they could check the traffic warrants while there. Again defendant remained silent. Then Waggoner said that if defendant so wished they could go downtown and obtain a search warrant. He replied that that was not necessary. 'Well, let's forget about it; let's go up there.' He produced the door key from his pocket, led the officers to the door, unlocked it and ushered them in. He was not handcuffed and sat near the wall before and during the search. Officer Phillips said: 'Now the search begins,' and defendant replied, 'Go right ahead.' The bindle of heroin was found inside the television set. Defendant first denied that he knew what it was. Finally he said he saw three Mexicans throw this package out of the window of a car, that he had picked it up and placed it in the television and that he thought it was heroin. Defendant's version of these events was contrary in most respects to the testimony of the police officers, but the trial judge rejected defendant's testimony as above indicated.
Counsel for appellant argue that the fact of consent given while under arrest per se spells submission to authority rather than voluntary waiver of the right to decline to submit to the search. In People v. Lujan, 141 Cal.App.2d 143, 147, 296 P.2d 93, 96, this court said: While the reasons for a voluntary consent which suggest themselves at bar are different from those just quoted, it does seem logical to infer that a culprit who has no narcotic on his person would readily agree to a search of his home if he believed that the drug was cleverly enough concealed to escape detection, thus convincing the officers of his innocence of the impending charge, or at the minimum incurring their goodwill through a show of cooperation. These considerations well may enter into a solution of the question of voluntary consent which essentially is one of fact (People v. Gorg, 45 Cal.2d 776, 782, 291 P.2d 469), ordinarily not one of law. People v. Michael, 45 Cal.2d 751, 753, 290 P.2d 852, 854, says: ...
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...in consensual searches are that (1) the fact that a suspect is in custody does not render a consent involuntary (People v. Robinson, 149 Cal.App.2d 282, 308 P.2d 461), (2) an illegal arrest or detention will render invalid a consent given during the course of such detention (People v. Moore......
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