
17 F.2d 373 (1927)
HERNANDEZ
v.
UNITED STATES.
No. 4907.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
January 31, 1927.
Kenneth C. Gillis, of Oakland, Cal., for plaintiff in error.
Geo. J. Hatfield, U. S. Atty., and T. J. Sheridan, Asst. U. S. Atty., both of San Francisco, Cal.
Before GILBERT and RUDKIN, Circuit Judges, and JAMES, District Judge.
GILBERT, Circuit Judge.
The plaintiff in error was sentenced to imprisonment for a term of ten years upon his conviction had under two counts of an indictment, charging him, respectively, with violation of the Harrison Narcotic Act and the Jones-Miller Narcotic Act. Upon the writ of error the single question is presented whether the evidence obtained upon the search of the person of the defendant should have been excluded, timely application having been made for its return. The defendant was arrested without a warrant. Federal narcotic agents were watching a house at which it was believed narcotics had been sold. They saw the defendant coming from the rear of the house, accompanied by a woman, who was a narcotic peddler, and saw them proceeding down the street, looking around in different directions "in a rather suspicious way." They arrested both the defendant and the woman. They found no narcotic on the woman, but, on searching the defendant, they found morphine in his overcoat pocket. The admissibility of evidence so obtained depends upon the question whether there was probable cause for the arrest. The generally accepted rule is thus expressed in 2 R. C. L. 451: "Probable cause for an arrest has been defined to be a reasonable ground of suspicion, supported by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves to warrant a cautious man in believing the accused to be guilty." The officers who made the arrest knew nothing whatever of the defendant or his prior conduct. The fact that he was seen coming from a suspected house in company with a suspected woman, and that he and the woman were walking down the street looking around in what the officers thought was a suspicious manner, whatever that may have meant, constituted all of the evidence of probable cause. It falls far short, we think, of presenting reasonable grounds of suspicion, supported by facts which would warrant a cautious man in believing that the defendant had committed a felony. At most, the circumstances were sufficient to create only a suspicion, and suspicious circumstances, it has been repeatedly held, do not constitute probable cause. It is true that the defendant was arrested in the commission of a felony, as was subsequently developed, but the officers were not apprised of that fact, by their senses or otherwise, and they had no reasonable ground to believe it. Brown v. United States (C. C. A.) 4 F.(2d) 246.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
