State v. Brown

476 S.W.2d 519, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 1092
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 22, 1972
Docket55923
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 476 S.W.2d 519 (State v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brown, 476 S.W.2d 519, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 1092 (Mo. 1972).

Opinion

JACK P. PRITCHARD, Special Judge.

Appellant was convicted by the verdict of a jury for the commission of the crime of robbery in the first degree. Upon a finding that appellant was a second offender, the court sentenced him to twenty years imprisonment in the Department of Corrections.

The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction is not questioned. Appellant’s points relate (1) to the court’s refusal to suppress evidence taken from an automobile without a search warrant; (2) the admission of documentary proof of a prior Indiana felony conviction (it being said also that the Indiana conviction of “entering” a dwelling house with intent to commit a felony is not a felony in Missouri as required by § 556.290, RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S.); and (3) that the court erred “in allowing extensive evidence tending to prove defendant ‘guilty by association’ with codefendant Larry Lynn Asbury.”

On the hearing on the motion to suppress evidence these facts were brought out: On March 21, 1968, Gilbert E. Rains, a patrolman of the City of Creve Coeur, Missouri, was working the “Three thirty to eleven” shift in a marked police vehicle. About 8:32 p. m. he received a radio call of a burglary at No. 52 Country Fair. While en route to the scene he observed an automobile on Ladue Road about 300 feet west of Country Fair. He stopped and looked into the car. At that time Rains did not know what items were taken in the burglary, but he did know that Sgt. Cooper had been dispatched to the scene. Rains radioed his position on Ladue Road, and when he went to the vehicle and shined the flashlight in its window he saw two coin collection books and a pair of nylons in the front seat. In the rear seat were two coats hanging from a coat hanger and a bottle of whiskey. Rains radioed the dispatcher and told him what items were in the car. He backed five to six hundred feet east, keeping the car in view, and concealed the police vehicle as best he could in some shrubbery. About 8:45 p. m. Cooper, who had gone to the scene of the burglary, radioed the information that two coats, one brown and one gray, and coin collection books were missing from 52 Country Fair Acres. Rains heard that report and acknowledged that he was at the car and had it under surveillance. He sat there about an hour, then drove back to the car, opened the right-hand door, and looked in the glove compartment and searched it. At this time Rains was looking to find who owned the automobile. He found two wallets, a first-aid box, a box of .38 and a box of .32 ammunition, a prescription medicine bottle with the name Cy Brown on its label. There was no one around the vehicle at the time, nor had Rains seen anyone as he watched the vehicle for an hour. After he searched the glove compartment Rains called for a tow truck and the car was taken to his police station where he removed the items from the glove compartment and those on the rear seat. The people who lived at 52 Country Fair Acres, whose name was Levin, viewed the two coats at the police station and identified the coin *522 collection, the two books, a first-aid box, and Lincoln head pennies (taken from the car) as their property which was taken from their home. The wallet taken from the glove compartment contained $170.00, a social security card and a driver’s license which had the name Cyril Lew Brown on them.

Appellant testified on the motion to suppress that on March 21, 1968, at noon, he was in Champaign, Illinois, with Asbury. A vehicle was then rented by Asbury’s wife, Donna, for appellant who gave her the money for the rental. Appellant drove the vehicle to St. Louis where it was under his care, custody and control, and parked it on Ladue Road about 300 feet west of Country Fair street and left it there. Appellant placed the wallet and the prescription bottle (pills) in the glove compartment.

Sgt. Howard Cooper was dispatched to the Levin home at 52 Country Fair Acres on March 21, 1968, and arrived there about 8:40 p. m. He determined from Mr. Levin that two coats and some coin collection books were missing from the home and Cooper dispatched that information to Officer Rains.

The robbery for which appellant was convicted was committed upon Sally Jean Altman who lived at No. 3 Country Fair Lane in Creve Coeur. No claim of error is made as to the evidence of the robbery. Appellant and Larry L. Asbury were taken into custody by Officer Rains in Denver, Colorado, on April 6, 1968, and he and Officer Cooper returned them to Creve Coeur.

Appellant’s only thrust at the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress is that error was made by the court in ruling (in part) that appellant had no standing to object to the search of the rented car. The argument is irrelevant under the facts of this case which show that Officer Rains had reasonable grounds and thus probable cause to search the car without a search warrant. Rains knew that a burglary, a felony, had been committed in the vicinity of where he found the parked car on La-due Road, and at a time when he was en route to the burglary scene. His first act was merely to look into the car and by shining his flashlight into it to observe coin books, two coats and a bottle of whiskey in plain view. State v. Watson, Mo., 386 S.W.2d 24, 28 [1] ; State v. Cage, Mo., 452 S.W.2d 125, 128 [1-3]; Williams v. United States (C.A.5th), 404 F.2d 493, 494 [4]; and State v. Hohensee, Mo., 473 S. W.2d 379, 381. He did not then open the car door and seize these items, but radioed to the dispatcher the information as to the items he saw in the car. Sgt. Cooper then informed Rains by radio as to items missing from the burglarized Levin home, which items fit the general description of those Rains saw in the car. Thus, Rains had reasonable cause for a belief that the contents of the car offended against the law. Carroll v. United States, 267 U.S. 132, 45 S.Ct. 280, 69 L.Ed. 543, 554. Important here also is the obvious fact that the burglars of the Levin home had not been apprehended. If Rains had not acted as he did in keeping the car under surveillance, then looking into its glove compartment to ascertain ownership, then having it towed to the police station, retaining its custody, for further search, it was possible that the burglars would have returned to it and driven it away with the loot. See Chambers v. Maroney, 399 U.S. 42, 90 S. Ct. 1975, 26 L.Ed.2d 419, and State v. Ed-monds, Mo., 462 S.W.2d 782, 784 [2, 3], setting forth the rule that because of their mobility automobiles may be searched without a warrant upon facts not justifying a warrantless search of a residence or office. The ruling of the trial court did not rest alone upon its finding that appellant had no standing to object to the search and seizure, and consequently appellant’s contention is overruled.

Appellant first attacks the proof of prior conviction upon the ground that the certificates of the purported clerk were not “regular on their face.” He says that *523 che signatures of “Alpha E.

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Bluebook (online)
476 S.W.2d 519, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 1092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brown-mo-1972.