Community Caretaking stop sometimes-permitted
Cady v. Dombrowski
413 U.S. 433 (1973)
Respondent
had a one-car accident near a small Wisconsin town, while driving a rented
Ford. The police had the car towed to a garage seven miles from the police
station, where it was left unguarded outside. Respondent was arrested for
drunken driving. Early the next day, an officer, looking for a service revolver
which respondent (who had identified himself as a Chicago policeman) was
thought to possess, made a warrantless search of the car and found in the trunk
several items, some bloodied, which he removed. Later, on receipt of additional
information emanating from respondent, a bloodstained body was located on
respondent's brother's farm in a nearby county. Thereafter, through the windows
of a disabled Dodge which respondent had left on the farm before renting the
Ford, an officer observed other bloodied items. Following issuance of a search
warrant, materials were taken from the Dodge, two of which (a sock and floor
mat) were not listed in the return on the warrant among the items seized.
Respondent's trial for murder, at which items seized from the cars were
introduced in evidence, resulted in conviction which was upheld on appeal. In
this habeas corpus action, the Court of Appeals reversed the District Court and
held that certain evidence at the trial had been unconstitutionally seized.
Held:
1. The warrantless search of the Ford did not violate the Fourth
Amendment as made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth. The search was
not unreasonable since the police had exercised a form of custody of the car,
which constituted a hazard on the highway, and the disposition of which by
respondent was precluded by his intoxicated and later comatose condition; and
the revolver search was standard police procedure to protect the public from a
weapon's possibly falling into improper hands. Preston v. United States, 376 U.S. 364 , distinguished; Harris v. United States, 390 U.S. 234 , followed.
2. The seizure of the
sock and floor mat from the Dodge was not invalid, since the Dodge, the item
"particularly described," was the subject of a proper search warrant.
It is not constitutionally significant that the sock and mat were not listed in
the [413 U.S. 433, 434] warrant's return, which (contrary to the
assumption of the Court of Appeals) was not filed prior to the search, and the
warrant was thus validly outstanding at the time the articles were discovered.
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