Junius S. Washington v. United States

401 F.2d 915
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 26, 1968
Docket20267
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 401 F.2d 915 (Junius S. Washington v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Junius S. Washington v. United States, 401 F.2d 915 (D.C. Cir. 1968).

Opinion

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge.

From a parked position at the curb of a public street, appellant drove his automobile in a U-turn directly in front of another car, forcing the driver of the latter to apply his brakes abruptly to avoid a collision. A police officer, who had observed the maneuver, signaled appellant to a stop and asked for his operator’s license. Appellant produced the license and the officer, after examining it, requested the registration card for the vehicle. Appellant, ostensibly in response, opened the glove compartment, and from it fell three envelopes. The officer recognized the envelopes as of a type used in numbers operations, and saw figures written on the outside of them. On inquiry as to what they were, appellant admitted that they contained numbers matter and money. Thereupon, the officer told appellant that he was under *917 arrest and ordered him to get out of the car. He was searched immediately, and numbers slips and money were found in a pocket of his trousers. A bag containing still more slips and money was then found under the front seat of the car. 1

Now convicted by a jury of two violations of the lottery laws, 2 appellant presses three points on this appeal. One 3 pertains to the denial, by District Judge Walsh, of his pre trial motion to suppress the numbers items and money, 4 some of which were introduced into evidence at the trial. 5 The other two 6 emanate from events at the trial, before District Judge Corcoran, now to be related.

On cross-examination of a Government witness, appellant’s counsel had an exhibit marked for identification, whereupon the following occurred:

“Q. Now, sir, that document you have in front of you, that newspaper advertisement, that has on it a list of automobile tag numbers, does it not?
“A. That is correct.
“Q. And it has the statement that if you come to the Buick automobile company and your car has the tag matching one of the numbers on that list, that you will win a prize; is that true? •
“A. That is correct.
“Q. Now, that piece of paper, sir, that identifies the person who is going to be a winner, does it not? There can be no speculation or doubt about it, can there?
“A. It identifies them by tag number.
“Q. That is right. Everybody knows that whoever has one of those tag numbers is going to win something, is that correct?
“A. That is correct.
“Q. * * * Have you had any occasion to investigate that proposition ?
“A. This particular one?
“Q. Yes.
“A. No.”

*918 Defense counsel then proceeded to have another exhibit marked and, as he was apparently about to resume cross-examination, Judge Corcoran, at a bench conference, inquired as to his purpose. Counsel responded:

“ * * * I want to introduce this in evidence. These represent chances on a lottery. On the basis of that, I am going to ask that this statute be declared unconstitutional. It doesn’t afford equal protection of the law to my client. I am going to interpose that as a defense under the rules of procedure. * * * ”

Then asked by the judge as to the materiality of the first exhibit, counsel explained that “[i]t is a lottery and it exists. The law doesn’t apply to those people the same way as it does to my client.” Counsel then stated that he had

“ * * * 40 or 50 similar exhibits which I contend will prove the existence of other lotteries in this town which are not made subject to the provisions of the statute; therefore, we should have equal protection of the law.”

The judge refused, on the ground of irrelevance, to admit any of the exhibits into evidence.

Our review of appellant’s contentions leads to the conclusion that neither affords an acceptable basis for reversal. We therefore affirm, but respond to a need for explication of our reasons for doing so.

I

At the trial, appellant did not renew his motion to suppress, 7 and the Government was permitted to introduce into evidence the numbers items and money which appellant had secreted in his glove compartment and his pocket. 8 The motion, however, preserved for appellate review the objection to prosecutorial use of these materials, 9 so we are brought to a consideration of a single aspect of Judge Walsh’s pretrial determination which appellant focuses on here.

At the core of Judge Walsh’s ruling was his initial holding that appellant came under arrest for the traffic violation when his ear was stopped, although the officer did not proclaim an arrest until after he had seen the telltale envelopes. 10 The officer’s “inspection” of the glove compartment as it was opened 11 *919 was treated as a search incidental to that arrest, 12 and the subsequent searches of appellant’s person and his automobile as reasonable concomitants of an arrest for the lottery offenses 13

Appellant attacks the judge’s legal conclusion that the halting of his automobile constituted the act of arrest, pointing to the officer’s testimony, and the concordant finding, that no arrest was announced until after the envelopes appellant spilled from the glove compartment were recognized as numbers paraphernalia. He urges us to hold that as a matter of law an unlawful search of the compartment preceded the arrest which the officer effected.

Our appraisal of appellant’s thesis begins with close scrutiny of the salient factual findings which Judge Walsh’s opinion incorporates. After witnessing appellant’s U-turn and his near-collision with the oncoming automobile, the officer “flagged him to a stop, * * * stepped up to the defendant’s car, identified himself as a police officer, advised defendant of the traffic violation, and asked for his driver’s license.” 14 After checking the license, the officer twice requested the registration card, and in response appellant entered the glove compartment from which the envelopes fell, exposed plainly to the officer’s gaze. 15

Save in one ill-founded respect, 16

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