[461]*461OPINION
By the Court, Gunderson, J.:
Convicted of committing burglary by entering the Henderson Bowling Alley with intent to commit larceny, appellant contends officers who originally arrested him for displaying stolen license plates on his car, in violation of NRS 482.545, infringed his Fourth Amendment rights by warrantless “searches” of [462]*462his person and vehicle that produced evidence linking appellant to the burglary. This contention has no merit, in the factual context of this case.
About 2:00 a.m. on April 17, 1970, two Las Vegas patrol car officers, through a routine check with central control, learned the 1964 Oldsmobile ahead of them bore stolen Texas license plates. As the Oldsmobile turned into a motel parking lot, the officers pulled in “[approximately ten to fifteen feet behind it.” The Oldsmobile’s driver, George Watts, got out and walked toward the motel office. Officer Jones approached him, said he wanted to talk to Watts, and asked him to “step back to the police vehicle.” When appellant Wright ignored repeated requests to get out of the car, Officer Gates ordered him out at gunpoint, and took him to the police vehicle also.
Returning to make sure the Oldsmobile was now unoccupied, Officer Gates saw a gun protruding from under the front seat, visible because appellant had not closed the door as he debarked. The officers then “frisked” appellant and Watts by patting down the exterior of their clothing, found no more weapons, but discerned a large bulge inside appellant’s shirt. Officer Jones asked what the bulge was; appellant said it was money he had taken by force from a man in California to satisfy a debt; and, since it seemed soft, the officers did not remove it from his person.
When appellant and Watts asked why they were being detained, the officers explained plates on the Oldsmobile were reported stolen. Appellant claimed ownership of the car, saying he had borrowed the plates from a friend he would not name, for a purpose he would not disclose. The officers then arrested appellant and Watts for “fictitious license plates”; they gave the “Miranda warning,” and radioed for a tow truck to impound appellant’s car.1 Appellant and Watts continued to talk, each saying Watts was “hitch-hiker” appellant had picked up on the way from California, but stating their meeting place differently. While awaiting the tow truck’s arrival, the officers “inventoried” the Oldsmobile’s contents; on the back seat, they found a case of assorted whiskey “with a crowbar sitting on top of it”; on the floor behind the driver’s seat, they found a bowling bag that bore the name of Elvis Russell, 346 Tungston, Henderson, Nevada. Inside the bowling bag, which was closed but not zipped, Officer Gates discovered a [463]*463large quantity of rolled coins. Gates testified: “When I pushed the front seat forward, I could spread the top apart and look inside the bowling bag.” On their inventory sheet, the officers also listed suitcases found in the trunk, but apparently did not look inside. The tow truck came; appellant’s car was impounded at a private storage yard with all property, except the gun and the bowling bag containing rolled coins. Those valuables were taken to police headquarters. When appellant was “booked” into the jail, the bulge in his clothes proved to be currency, as he had said.
The officers notified police agencies in Clark County to check bars and bowling alleys for signs of forced entry. Henderson police discovered a burglary at the Henderson Bowling Alley. Appellant was charged with the crime; and evidence at his trial showed the currency on his person, the whiskey, the bowling bag, and the coins it contained, were proceeds of that crime, committed within two hours of appellant’s apprehension. The gun had been fired to break the locking mechanism of the bowling alley’s safe.
During trial, appellant acknowledged he, his wife, Watts and Watts’ girlfriend had been in the Henderson Bowling Alley the day before the crime. However, he said they had “found” the property that linked him to the burglary there. He denied making incriminating oral admissions while in jail, as two Henderson policemen testified he did, after again being advised of his rights. Not surprisingly, the jury found him guilty; the court sentenced him to 10 years in prison; this appeal follows.
1. Appellant contends only the Nevada Highway Patrol has a duty to enforce NRS 482.545, and concludes Las Vegas police may not investigate when an evident misdemeanor involving possession and use of stolen license plates is committed in their presence. Assuming his premise, his conclusion is a non sequitur; for any peace officer may act when a public offense is committed or attempted in his presence. NRS 171.124(1)(a). Indeed, even a private person may arrest in such circumstances. NRS 171.104; NRS 171.126(1).2
We might agree the officers could not properly have arrested [464]*464appellant under NRS 482.545, if he or his companion had shown the information from central control was incorrect. However, in Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968), the United States Supreme Court recognized “a police officer may in appropriate circumstances and in an appropriate manner approach a person for the purpose of investigating possible criminal behavior even though there is no probable cause to make an arrest.” Id., at 22; in accord, Robertson v. State, 84 Nev. 559, 445 P.2d 352 (1968). Indeed, before Terry, this court upheld the right of a Las Vegas police officer to stop a vehicle that was without a regular plate, saying: “It is recognized that an officer need not and, in fact, should not ignore evidence of a crime which comes to his attention.” Harper v. [465]*465State, 84 Nev. 233, 239, 440 P.2d 893, 897-898 (1968). After Terry, our legislature declared: “Any peace officer may detain any person whom such officer encounters under circumstances which reasonably indicate that such person has committed, is committing or is about to commit a crime.” NRS 171.123(1). Thus, we think the officers acted properly when they stopped, and approached appellant and Watts.
2. While automobiles are subject to search under certain other rules discussed later, a police officer may summarily seize personal property in the possession of another, wherever it may be, if probable cause exists to believe it is the instrumentality or evidence of a crime, if it has come inadvertently into the officer’s lawful “plain view,” and if inadequate opportunity to obtain a warrant gives rise to genuinely “exigent circumstances.” See: Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
[461]*461OPINION
By the Court, Gunderson, J.:
Convicted of committing burglary by entering the Henderson Bowling Alley with intent to commit larceny, appellant contends officers who originally arrested him for displaying stolen license plates on his car, in violation of NRS 482.545, infringed his Fourth Amendment rights by warrantless “searches” of [462]*462his person and vehicle that produced evidence linking appellant to the burglary. This contention has no merit, in the factual context of this case.
About 2:00 a.m. on April 17, 1970, two Las Vegas patrol car officers, through a routine check with central control, learned the 1964 Oldsmobile ahead of them bore stolen Texas license plates. As the Oldsmobile turned into a motel parking lot, the officers pulled in “[approximately ten to fifteen feet behind it.” The Oldsmobile’s driver, George Watts, got out and walked toward the motel office. Officer Jones approached him, said he wanted to talk to Watts, and asked him to “step back to the police vehicle.” When appellant Wright ignored repeated requests to get out of the car, Officer Gates ordered him out at gunpoint, and took him to the police vehicle also.
Returning to make sure the Oldsmobile was now unoccupied, Officer Gates saw a gun protruding from under the front seat, visible because appellant had not closed the door as he debarked. The officers then “frisked” appellant and Watts by patting down the exterior of their clothing, found no more weapons, but discerned a large bulge inside appellant’s shirt. Officer Jones asked what the bulge was; appellant said it was money he had taken by force from a man in California to satisfy a debt; and, since it seemed soft, the officers did not remove it from his person.
When appellant and Watts asked why they were being detained, the officers explained plates on the Oldsmobile were reported stolen. Appellant claimed ownership of the car, saying he had borrowed the plates from a friend he would not name, for a purpose he would not disclose. The officers then arrested appellant and Watts for “fictitious license plates”; they gave the “Miranda warning,” and radioed for a tow truck to impound appellant’s car.1 Appellant and Watts continued to talk, each saying Watts was “hitch-hiker” appellant had picked up on the way from California, but stating their meeting place differently. While awaiting the tow truck’s arrival, the officers “inventoried” the Oldsmobile’s contents; on the back seat, they found a case of assorted whiskey “with a crowbar sitting on top of it”; on the floor behind the driver’s seat, they found a bowling bag that bore the name of Elvis Russell, 346 Tungston, Henderson, Nevada. Inside the bowling bag, which was closed but not zipped, Officer Gates discovered a [463]*463large quantity of rolled coins. Gates testified: “When I pushed the front seat forward, I could spread the top apart and look inside the bowling bag.” On their inventory sheet, the officers also listed suitcases found in the trunk, but apparently did not look inside. The tow truck came; appellant’s car was impounded at a private storage yard with all property, except the gun and the bowling bag containing rolled coins. Those valuables were taken to police headquarters. When appellant was “booked” into the jail, the bulge in his clothes proved to be currency, as he had said.
The officers notified police agencies in Clark County to check bars and bowling alleys for signs of forced entry. Henderson police discovered a burglary at the Henderson Bowling Alley. Appellant was charged with the crime; and evidence at his trial showed the currency on his person, the whiskey, the bowling bag, and the coins it contained, were proceeds of that crime, committed within two hours of appellant’s apprehension. The gun had been fired to break the locking mechanism of the bowling alley’s safe.
During trial, appellant acknowledged he, his wife, Watts and Watts’ girlfriend had been in the Henderson Bowling Alley the day before the crime. However, he said they had “found” the property that linked him to the burglary there. He denied making incriminating oral admissions while in jail, as two Henderson policemen testified he did, after again being advised of his rights. Not surprisingly, the jury found him guilty; the court sentenced him to 10 years in prison; this appeal follows.
1. Appellant contends only the Nevada Highway Patrol has a duty to enforce NRS 482.545, and concludes Las Vegas police may not investigate when an evident misdemeanor involving possession and use of stolen license plates is committed in their presence. Assuming his premise, his conclusion is a non sequitur; for any peace officer may act when a public offense is committed or attempted in his presence. NRS 171.124(1)(a). Indeed, even a private person may arrest in such circumstances. NRS 171.104; NRS 171.126(1).2
We might agree the officers could not properly have arrested [464]*464appellant under NRS 482.545, if he or his companion had shown the information from central control was incorrect. However, in Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968), the United States Supreme Court recognized “a police officer may in appropriate circumstances and in an appropriate manner approach a person for the purpose of investigating possible criminal behavior even though there is no probable cause to make an arrest.” Id., at 22; in accord, Robertson v. State, 84 Nev. 559, 445 P.2d 352 (1968). Indeed, before Terry, this court upheld the right of a Las Vegas police officer to stop a vehicle that was without a regular plate, saying: “It is recognized that an officer need not and, in fact, should not ignore evidence of a crime which comes to his attention.” Harper v. [465]*465State, 84 Nev. 233, 239, 440 P.2d 893, 897-898 (1968). After Terry, our legislature declared: “Any peace officer may detain any person whom such officer encounters under circumstances which reasonably indicate that such person has committed, is committing or is about to commit a crime.” NRS 171.123(1). Thus, we think the officers acted properly when they stopped, and approached appellant and Watts.
2. While automobiles are subject to search under certain other rules discussed later, a police officer may summarily seize personal property in the possession of another, wherever it may be, if probable cause exists to believe it is the instrumentality or evidence of a crime, if it has come inadvertently into the officer’s lawful “plain view,” and if inadequate opportunity to obtain a warrant gives rise to genuinely “exigent circumstances.” See: Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 464-469 (1971).3 In accord: Chapman v. United States, 365 [466]*466U.S. 610 (1961); Jones v. United States, 357 U.S. 493 (1958); McDonald v. United States, 335 U.S. 451 (1948); Trupiano v. United States, 334 U.S. 699 (1948) ;4 Johnson v. United States, 333 U.S. 10 (1948); Taylor v. United States, 286 U.S. 1 (1932). Here, appellant apparently contests application of the “plain view” doctrine to seizure of his gun, only on the theory that Officer Gates’ view was unlawfully obtained by ordering appellant from his car when, appellant says, “no independent ground existed for the officer to question or detain Appellant.”
As indicated, Gates’ actions were not dependent on cause to arrest. Terry v. Ohio, cited above, recognized that a policeman making a reasonable investigatory stop has the right to protect himself when he “is justified in believing that the individual whose suspicious behavior he is investigating at close range is armed and presently dangerous.” 392 U.S., at 24. See also: NRS 171.1232(1). In our view, when police see two adult males in a car bearing stolen out-of-state license plates, they may reasonably fear either passenger or driver is armed [467]*467and dangerous.5 Hence, we think Gates properly ordered appellant from the car; and, particularly after Gates discovered a gun where appellant had been sitting, the officers had a clear right to conduct a limited protective search for weapons on appellant’s person. Terry v. Ohio, cited above; Adams v. Williams, 407 U.S. 143, 92 S.Ct. 1921 (1972).
Therefore, Gates’ discovery of appellant’s weapon, and initial discovery of currency on appellant’s person, need not be justified on the basis of probable cause to arrest.6
3. However, on at least two grounds, appellant contends Gates’ subsequent discovery of the whiskey and bowling bag cannot be sustained as an “inventory,” related to and occasioned by a proper impound of the vehicle. First, relying particularly on Mozzetti v. Superior Court of Sacramento County, 484 P.2d 84 (Cal. 1971), appellant contends the “inventory” was exploratory in nature, and thus an unjustified [468]*468and unconstitutional search.7 Second, appellant contends that since his vehicle was lawfully parked on private property, there was no justification for an impound, hence no justification for an “inventory” to protect its contents during impound.8
On at least two grounds, appellant further contends that this “search,” as he styles it, may not be justified as incidental [469]*469to an arrest under NRS 482.545. First, relying on Chimel v. California, 395 U.S. 752 (1969), appellant contends the “search” took place so far distant from where he was arrested, at the police car, that it was impermissible in scope.9 Second, relying on People v. Superior Court of Yolo County, cited above, 478 P.2d 449 (Cal. 1970), he contends that where an arrest is for a “routine traffic violation,” a search of the vehicle cannot be justified by reference to the arrest [470]*470because there exists no reason to believe the arrestee’s vehicle contains either weapons or evidence.10
We need not resolve these contentions; for we believe examination of the vehicle’s interior was proper in this case because the police by that time had reasonable cause to believe it contained contraband or evidence in addition to the currency already discovered on appellant’s person and the gun found in plain view.11
4. In Carroll v. United States, 267 U.S. 132 (1925), the United States Supreme Court long ago rejected the contention that a warrantless search of an automobile can be justified only if incidental to a lawful arrest, and announced a new exception to the general rule that a search is unreasonable unless made pursuant to a search warrant.12 That exception, prior to the [471]*471Court’s decision in Chambers v. Maroney, 399 U.S. 42 (1970), could be stated generally as follows:
“The two essential conditions to the validity of the reasonable cause auto search under the Carroll exception are: 1) The officer must have reasonable cause to believe the auto contains items subject to seizure, and 2) the auto must be ‘movable’ in the sense that the officer reasonably believes that it may be moved by someone who is free to do so and that it is therefore not ‘reasonably practicable’ to secure a search warrant.” A. Murray and R. Aitken, Constitutional Limitations of Automobile Searches, 3 Loyola U.L.Rev. (L.A.) 95, 102 (1970).
Then came Chambers v. Maroney, cited above, in which occupants of a station wagon were arrested on the basis of information provided by witnesses to a robbery; the vehicle was driven to the police station, where a search revealed evidence used at petitioner’s trial. As a reigning expert on search and seizure has said:
“Keeping in mind the fact that Carroll was based upon the impracticability of obtaining a search warrant in advance of the search, and also the Court’s more recent pronouncements in Chimel and Vale that warrantless searches must be closely tied to necessity, one might well have thought that the Supreme Court would find the search in Chambers unlawful. Once the occupants of the automobile had been lawfully arrested, the car was no longer movable, so that even a warrantless search at the time of the arrest was not necessary. As one court put it, ‘Exigencies do not exist when the vehicle and the suspect are both in police custody.’ . . .” W. LaFave, Warrantless Searches and the Supreme Court: Further Ventures Into the “Quagmire.” 8 Crim.L.Bull. 9, 18 (1972).
However, in Chambers the Court ruled otherwise. On reasoning questioned by Professor LaFave, id. at 18-19, the Court not only concluded that the station wagon could have been searched at the time and place of arrest under the principles of Carroll, but found the search at the station lawful. The Court found exigency that would have justified the vehicle’s “search on the spot when it was stopped”; it upheld the delayed search at the stationhouse, saying “there is little to choose in terms of practical consequences between an immediate search without a warrant and the car’s immobilization until a warrant is obtained.” 399 U.S., at 52. Given this standard of continuing “exigency,” arresting officers in the instant case could properly search appellant’s car, although appellant’s arrest rendered it nonmobile, if they had reasonable cause to believe it contained items subject to seizure. [472]*472(Compare: Coolidge, cited above, in which there was no “exigency” when the initial seizure occurred.)
In the instant case, we think the probable cause element of the Carroll-Chambers doctrine was satisfied. When the officers examined the contents of appellant’s car, they lawfully knew he had placed stolen license plates on it for some criminal purpose, quite likely connected with robbery or burglary; they knew he had a large wad of money stuffed under his shirt, concerning which he gave a most questionable explanation; they knew he was traveling with a gun at his feet; and they knew he and his companion had given conflicting stories concerning their relationship. Under such circumstances, if the officers indeed “searched” appellant’s car, we think they acted on probable cause.13
5. Appellant also contends the court should have granted a mistrial when a State witness mentioned appellant had been on probation for another crime. While the witness’s statement was improper, as the trial court recognized, the court denied appellant’s motion for a mistrial because the evidence against him was overwhelming, and the comment therefore harmless. NRS 178.598; Fairman v. State, 83 Nev. 287, 429 P.2d 63 (1967). After careful review of the record, we agree.
Affirmed.
Zenoff, C. J., and Batjer and Thompson, JJ., concur.