Burnside v. State

110 So. 121 | Miss. | 1926

* Corpus Juris-Cyc References: Criminal Law, 16CJ, p. 567, n. 4, 5; p. 571, n. 93. Searches and Seizures, 35Cyc, p. 1271, n. 61 New. Mary Burnside appeals to this court from a conviction upon the charge of unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor. The appellant urges reversal on the ground that the intoxicating liquor offered in evidence in the case was secured by an unlawful search of her person, and that, therefore, the testimony of the officers was inadmissible at the trial, and that without it no conviction could be had.

Briefly stated, the circumstances of the case are as follows: *408

Certain officers of Attala county procured a search warrant, and were searching the premises of Marshall Burnside, who was the husband of the appellant, Mary Burnside. While searching the premises, one of the officers saw the appellant, who had gone into the back yard, pick up a small flat bottle, and place it under her dress. He could not tell what, if anything, the bottle contained at that time. This officer followed appellant around over the premises, and demanded of her that she give him the whiskey she had under her dress; and finally appellant, after having been followed through the fence and watermelon patch, disclosed the liquor which was demanded of her, and, after a scuffle between her husband, the officers, and herself, the officers took the liquor from her.

We shall here set out the testimony of the officer, which is to be taken as true, for the purpose of passing on the legal question involved. The officer testified as follows:

"A. She picked the bottle up and run it under her dress, and started walking off, and climbed through a fence in the hog lot, and went out on the back side, and I followed her, and she turned off down at the well, and went through a watermelon patch, and by the time she got to the watermelon patch I was close to her, and walked right on in behind her, and we talked about the watermelons, and by that time she had got to the other end of the watermelon patch, and I walked in ahead of her, and asked her where she was going. She said she was going to another watermelon patch, and I told her, I says, `No, you give me that whiskey you got there.' And she began to holler and squall, and wheeled back and started back towards the house, and I followed along by her — I never put my hands on her — and we got back nearly to the house and met Marshall Burnside, and Mr. Lee Breazeale and Mr. Tom Breazeale was with me down there, and I told Marshall that his wife had some *409 whisky, and he said he did not know she had any, and I says, `I know it, I saw her pick it up. I told him I hadn't searched her, but that she had it, and Marshall went back and asked her about the whisky. . . . And she said, `Yes, I have got that what you had this morning,' and she started to pull it out, and about that time Marshall grabbed the whisky and Tom Breazeale grabbed for it, and they spilled some of it in the scuffle, but we got about a fourth of a pint, I suppose."

Counsel for the appellant urges that the liquor was unlawfully secured, in that the appellant was commanded by the officer to take the liquor from under her dress and deliver it to him at a time when she was not under arrest, nor had the officer seen any offense committed by her in his presence; that the method of obtaining the liquor from the person of the appellant amounted to an unlawful search of the person; that, therefore, the testimony of the officers was inadmissible, and ought to have been excluded by the court.

We think the contention is well grounded. Under the circumstances, the officer had no right to search the person of the appellant, nor should he have commanded her to deliver to him the article concealed under her clothes. The officer, in what appears to have been a threatening manner, followed the appellant around over her premises, commanding her to deliver to him the article concealed on her person, and finally took it in this intimidating manner.

We think the method pursued by the officer in obtaining this liquor was an undignified species of coercion, which was equivalent to a forcible search of the appellant's person without authority of law so to do; and, for that reason, the testimony of the officer was inadmissible, and the conviction must be reversed and the appellant discharged.

Law officers are to be commended in their laudable efforts to secure testimony against violators of the law; but there is a regular and orderly way of doing this, *410 which the officer should bear in mind. The ordinary person who is approached by an officer has respect for the authority of the officer, and will, generally, through respect or fear, do whatever the officer commands to be done; and when the officer, without authority of laws, violates the security of the person of the citizen by demanding and coercing him into doing something not required by law to do, then such an act of the person is not a free and voluntary act, but is the result of force by reason of the threatening and coercive attitude of the officer. Butler v.State, 135 Miss. 885, 101 So. 193.

The search of a person may be made in a lawful way, but it was unlawful in this case to compel this woman, in the manner pursued by the officer, to disclose and deliver to him an article concealed on her person under her dress. He did not even know what the bottle contained. The zeal of the officer blinded him to the rights of personal privacy of the citizen.

For the reason given, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and appellant discharged.

Reversed, and appellant discharged.

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