Opinion
March 1, 1976
Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County, rendered May 2, 1975, convicting defendant upon his guilty plea to attempted possession of a weapon as a felony, following the denial of his motion to suppress, is unanimously reversed, on the law, and the indictment is dismissed. Whether or not People v Ingle ( 36 N.Y.2d 413), applies retroactively so as to invalidate the "routine traffic check," the subsequent acts of the officer in forcing and breaking the lock of the console of the car, thus discovering the loaded pistol (all in the course of an "inventory search" of the car), constituted an unreasonable search and seizure. Upon the information then available, the police would not have been entitled to a search warrant authorizing the breaking of the lock of the console. The police cannot make a search without a warrant, in a situation in which a Judge clearly would not have granted a warrant if one had been requested.
Concur — Lupiano, Silverman and Lane, JJ.; Murphy, J.P., and Birns, J., concur in the following memorandum by Murphy, J.P.: While I fully concur in the result, I find no justification for still questioning Ingle's retroactivity in light of People v Martinez ( 37 N.Y.2d 662; see, particularly, concurring opinion of Wachtler, J., p 672.)