People v. Foster

102 Cal. App. 3d 882, 162 Cal. Rptr. 623, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1538
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1980
DocketCrim. 33467
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 102 Cal. App. 3d 882 (People v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Foster, 102 Cal. App. 3d 882, 162 Cal. Rptr. 623, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1538 (Cal. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Opinion

COLE, J. *

In a court trial appellant Shelley Ann Foster was convicted of the murder of her husband. The court fixed the offense as being in the second degree, and sentenced appellant to the state prison. She appeals. We affirm.

Facts Relating to Motion to Suppress

At about 11:45 p.m. on July 25, 1977, Long Beach Police Officer Milovich, assigned to the narcotics section received a telephone call from an unidentified informant. The caller said there was a dead body in the area of 23d and Lime in the first white garage south of 23d Street on the west side of the alley. The caller also said that “The broad in the front house did the dude in.” Within a half hour of the call, or sooner than that, Officer Milovich, together with Sergeant Sutton and Officer Scholtz, went to the alley. All three noted a very strong odor of decaying flesh, and as they walked down the alley and approached the white garage, the odor become stronger. The garage was locked. There was an opening of about eight inches in the garage where a wooden slat had been broken. Shining a flashlight through the opening the officer saw something wrapped in a green blanket but could not tell what it was, although he did note that there were flies around the blanket and trails of ants leading to and from the inside. Thus the officer, not illogically, suspected that there was decaying flesh or possibly a dead body in the blanket. Sergeant Sutton called for a homicide crew and the officers went back to the garage and broke in by prying a lock.

Officer Martinson and four other officers arrived at the location at about 2 a.m., July 26, 1977. Officer Scholtz pried open the lock and Officers Martinson and Bertrand entered the garage and determined that the smell was coming from the wrapped up object. Opening up the wrapping, the witness and Officer Bertrand found that it contained a *886 human body. A witness who lived in a rear house on the premises looked at the body from a distance and gave information which led the officers to believe the victim was a person who lived in the front residence and who rented or owned the garage. The witness stated that the victim lived there with his wife. Another witness gave the officer the name of appellant and her husband Frank (the victim) and also gave a description of Frank that matched that of the deceased. She also gave a description of appellant that was used later for a broadcast description of a possible suspect. A third witness stated that he had not seen Frank for several days but had seen the defendant and another person removing furniture and household items from the residence. One of the witnesses also stated that appellant and Frank were constantly fighting, to a degree audible to the neighbors. The victim’s automobile was also described by one of the neighbors as was a van which had been seen at the location. A warrant was issued to search appellant’s house, and the house was searched between 7:30 and 9 a.m. that morning. A radio broadcast was sent out indicating that officers wanted to question appellant.

At approximately 8 a.m., appellant was apprehended driving the van, and taken to the homicide division. After being advised of her constitutional rights, appellant was interrogated and made incriminating statements, including the location of the murder weapon, which was recovered from that location.

We pause in our recitation of the facts to discuss the contention that a motion to suppress evidence should have been granted.

The Motion to Suppress Was Properly Denied

Appellant’s motion to suppress evidence of decedent’s body, the items recovered during a search of appellant’s house (washcloth, shells, a knife, and a padlock), appellant’s statement, and the gun was denied. The thrust of appellant’s argument to the trial court was that if the body had not been discovered in the garage, there would have been no basis to arrest appellant. Since no search warrant was secured to enter the garage, the argument goes, the motion should have been granted.

Were we writing on a clean slate, it could be argued on the basis of authority and some logic that since the officers had every reason to believe that a homicide had been committed, it was reasonable for them

*887 to enter the garage to commence their investigation and try to locate the killer. (People v. Amaya (1979) 93 Cal.App.3d 424, 430 [155 Cal.Rptr. 783]; People v. Wallace (1973) 31 Cal.App.3d 865, 868 [107 Cal.Rptr. 659].) It was on this theory that the trial court denied the motion to suppress. But we do not write on a clean slate. In Mincey v. Arizona (1978) 437 U.S. 385 [57 L.Ed.2d 290, 98 S.Ct. 2408], a case decided after the trial court ruled in the instant matter, the United States Supreme Court held, in an opinion joined in on this issue by all of the justices, that there is no “murder scene exception” to the requirement of the Fourth Amendment that a search warrant be procured before premises are entered. In the Mincey case, a narcotics officer was shot in Mincey’s apartment when he and other officers entered during a narcotics investigation. After the shooting, the narcotics officers looked about the apartment for other victims. They found a woman, wounded, lying in a closet, Mincey, wounded, on the floor, and three other persons, one of them also wounded. Pursuant to a Tucson police procedure that officers should not investigate incidents in which they are involved, the narcotics officers merely guarded the suspects and the premises until homicide officers arrived a few minutes later. The latter proceeded to search the apartment over a period of four days, opening drawers, closets and cupboards, and seizing over 200 objects. The Arizona Supreme Court upheld the search as being a reasonable search of the scene of a homicide where the officers were legally on the premises in the first place. It stated that for such a search to be reasonable, it must begin within a reasonable time after officers learn of the homicide and must be limited to determining the circumstances of the death.

Rejecting this argument, the high court pointed out that such a search does not fall within any exceptions to the warrant requirement previously recognized. (437 U.S. at p. 390 [57 L.Ed.2d at pp. 298-299].) It held that the search could not be justified on the ground that no constitutionally protected right of privacy was invaded (id. at p. 392 [57 L.Ed.2d at p. 299]), nor on the ground of exigent circumstances (id. at pp. 392-393 [57 L.Ed.2d at p. 300]), nor on the ground that the state had a “vital public interest in the prompt investigation of the extremely serious crime of murder....” (Id. at p. 393 [57 L.Ed.2d at p. 300].) It concluded “In sum, we hold that the ‘murder scene exception’ created by the Arizona Supreme Court is inconsistent with the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments—that the warrantless search of Mincey’s apartment was not constitutionally permissible simply because a homicide had recently occurred there.” (Fn. omitted.) (Id. at p. 395 [57 L.Ed.2d at p. 302].)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 Cal. App. 3d 882, 162 Cal. Rptr. 623, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-foster-calctapp-1980.