People v. Wickliff

300 P.2d 749, 144 Cal. App. 2d 207, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1703
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 1956
DocketCrim. 5556
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 300 P.2d 749 (People v. Wickliff) 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. Wickliff, 300 P.2d 749, 144 Cal. App. 2d 207, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1703 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

In an information filed by the district attorney of Los Angeles County, defendant was charged with a violation of section 11500 of the Health and Safety Code of California, a felony, in that she had in her possession a preparation of heroin. It was further alleged that defendant had previously been convicted of the crime of violation of section 11721, Health and Safety Code of this state, a misdemeanor.

At the time of her arraignment defendant made a motion under section 995 of the Penal Code to set aside the information. The motion was granted and defendant discharged. *209 From the order setting aside the information the People prosecute this appeal.

The factual background surrounding this prosecution maybe thus epitomized. On the night of August 4, 1955, Alfred W. Trembly, a police officer of the city of Los Angeles, assigned to the Narcotic Division, and one of the arresting officers, followed defendant and “her common-law husband” from Fifth and Stanford Streets. He observed them get into an automobile and followed them. The officer noticed a second automobile following the one in which he was riding “down the side street.” The officers “tailed” defendant's vehicle to 928 West 28th Street, where they observed the aforesaid two autos stop, one behind the other. Defendant and one Dudley Osby (defendant’s common-law husband), who was also arrested, alighted from one of the vehicles and entered the house. The officers observed one of the occupants get out of the other vehicle and go into the house. After approximately 20 minutes “they” returned and as “they” attempted to enter the automobile, the officers placed “them” under arrest.

Testifying as to his reasons for trailing the vehicle in which defendant was riding, Officer Trembly stated that she had been known to him for over a period of a year; he had arrested her twice previously for narcotics; he had known her common-law husband by the name of Dudley Osby for a year and “at that time” the officer had received information from 50 or 60 sources that “he was selling narcotics.” The officer had had a conversation with defendant’s common-law husband the night before the arrest and he had told him (the officer) that he was “beating up a half ounce of heroin to one Eddie Turner”; the officer had been “working on the defendant,” watching her for a period of at least six or eight months.

The officers took defendant to a police station where they “had her” searched by Policewoman McGregor who took defendant to the women’s room and returned three or four minutes later and handed the witness “the evidence,” which consisted of a latex bag, which had another latex bag inside of it containing a brownish powder. Policewoman McGregor also handed the officer a cellophane package containing eight bindles, each containing a brown powder.

A “bicadol” box was found in the street on the ground at the time of the arrest; the spoon was found in defendant’s common-law husband’s (Dudley Osby) pocket.

Defendant, “her husband,” Dudley Osby, and “the other *210 person by the name of Doss” all passed over the area where the “bicadol” package was found.

The officer had a conversation with the defendant which was free and voluntary on her part, in which she said that she had gone to 928 West 41st Street for the purpose of buying five spoons of heroin from Doss, “from San Diego,” having made the arrangements on Bast Fifth Street where Doss had stated that he had five spoons of heroin; they went to “the room” where he had four spoons in “the cumdon” and another “already papered up in the ‘bicadol’ can”; they examined the can and found the heroin inside the paper which apparently had been wet and of a very poor grade so “they” did not buy it. “They only bought the four spoons which was loose in the cumdon.” The “cumdon” is the latex bag.

She stated that while Doss was putting the “bicadol” package in his pocket, defendant stole “the eight papers” from him and put them in her brassiere.

She stated that the money was given to her by “Dudley, her husband,” who did not know anything about the heroin which was defendant’s; that she “knew she was guilty and knew she had to take the rap for it.”

She further stated that she had “the latex bags” in her brassiere at the time of her arrest.

The defendant stated that she paid $70 “for the four spoons.”

Asked what he did with “the latex bags, the spoon and the ‘bicadol’ box,” the witness stated that after Policewoman McGregor gave “them” to him, he put her initials on them and took “them” to Central Station and booked them as evidence.

On cross-examination the witness testified that:

He searched the man, Dudley; he had no “warrant to search him”; that he made a cursory search (“just of her (defendant’s) pocketbook”) and had no “warrant to search her.”

During the searches he observed no narcotics on the person of either of them.

The witness did not ask defendant for her consent to be searched but, ‘ ‘ did it against her consent. ’ ’

They took her to the police station, where she neither objected nor consented to being searched.

The defendant did not at any time object to having a search made of her person.

Gerda McGregor, the policewoman, testified that she searched *211 defendant but that nothing was said by her to defendant prior to the search. That she asked defendant to come with her to the ladies’ restroom; asked her if she had “any stuff on her”; defendant said “Yes” and “mentioned” that it was in her brassiere. The officer then “reached in her brassiere and pulled out these items.”

The defendant at no time gave her consent “in words” to the witness searching her.

The officer did not have a warrant or “a warrant from any judicial law enforcing authority to make that search.”

Jay A. Allen, a police officer of the city of Los Angeles assigned to the Scientific Investigation Division and who was stipulated to be a qualified forensic chemist, testified that in his opinion the powder contained in the latex bag and the 34 paper bindles consisted of a narcotic known as heroin.

The sole question tendered on this appeal is whether there was reasonable and probable cause for the arrest of defendant and was the resultant search reasonable under the facts and circumstances narrated in the foregoing factual statement.

No brief has been filed by respondent and it is the contention of appellant (People) that the principal evidence against defendant at the preliminary examination was not obtained in violation of her constitutional guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures; was admissible in evidence; and based thereon, that respondent was legally and with reasonable and probable cause committed for trial in the superior court and therefore that the trial court erroneously granted respondent’s motion to dismiss the information made under section 995 of the Penal Code.

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Bluebook (online)
300 P.2d 749, 144 Cal. App. 2d 207, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wickliff-calctapp-1956.