This is an appeal by the Commonwealth from the order of the court below suppressing evidence which was seized pursuant to two warrants executed at appellee’s residence and at appellee’s bank. 1 We reverse the lower court’s suppression order.
Mrs. Tonden also told police that when she confronted her granddaughter concerning the bank accounts Mrs. Gannon returned $22,000. Mrs. Tonden did not confront her concerning the redeemed stock.
The affidavit also provides details concerning the police investigations following Mrs. Tonden’s report. In August, 1979, Elizabeth Larken told the investigating detective that she had handled a transaction in which Patricia Gannon had sold 300 shares of the Sun Oil stock. Furthermore, Mrs. Tonden’s attorney was questioned and reported that he had received confirmation from the bank of the depleted sum in Mrs. Tonden’s savings account. Thereafter, under Mrs. Tonden’s instruction, he placed a freeze on the accounts.
Based on this information the first warrant in question was issued for the home of Mrs. Gannon at 314 W. 21st Street, Chester, Pennsylvania authorizing the search for and seizure of “[c]opies of all bank records, statements,
The second warrant was issued pursuant to the identical probable cause affidavit four days later for the premises of Southeast National Bank, Operation Center, Concordville, Pennsylvania, authorizing the seizure of “Checks, Deposit Slips and any other bank documents regarding the account in the name of Matthew M. Gannon, Jr. and Patricia Ann Gannon, 314 W. 21st Street, Chester, Pennsylvania^] Master # 0508306-8-00.”
On January 2, 1980 appellee Matthew M. Gannon, Jr. was arrested and charged with 121 counts of theft and conspiracy in connection with the depletion of his wife’s grandmother’s assets. Gannon filed an omnibus pre-trial motion on which a hearing was held. On April 17, 1980, the Honorable Robert A. Wright of the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County entered an order suppressing all evidence seized in the execution of both warrants.
The Commonwealth argues that the issuing authority properly determined probable cause to support the search for banking records in defendant’s residence. We agree.
The lower court found the affidavit insufficient in several respects. Specifically, Judge Meade objected to the affidavit because it failed to set forth any facts to prove 314 W. 21st Street was the residence of Patricia Gannon, because it failed to mention Matthew Gannon’s name, and because it failed to offer any proof that the bank receipts would indeed be found at the residence. We do not agree with the court below that these factors caused the magistrate’s finding of probable cause to be unreasonable and, therefore, violative of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
The general definition of probable cause sufficient to satisfy the Fourth Amendment was stated by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in
Commonwealth v. Thomas,
448
The requirements of a probable cause finding are tempered by the courts so as not to impede the goals and obligations of law enforcement. Accordingly, “affidavits of probable cause are tested by much less rigorous standards than those governing the admissibility of evidence at trial.”
Commonwealth v. Frye,
242 Pa.Superior Ct. 144, 148,
In
Commonwealth v. Frye, supra,
marijuana seized during the execution of a search warrant for a residence was suppressed by the lower court judge. On appeal by the Commonwealth the appellees emphasized the fact that the affidavit was devoid of any statement that the informant observed marijuana at the Frye residence or that the informant had drawn any such inferences. “Rather it was the police and the issuing authority who concluded that [the defendant] was storing marijuana in his residence.”
Id.
242 Pa.Superior Ct. at 148-149,
Likewise, in the present case, it is only a matter of common sense to assume that the most likely place to find the bank records would be in Mrs. Gannon’s residence. “[T]he law does not require that the information in a warrant affidavit establish with absolute certainty that the object of the search will be found at the stated location, nor does it demand that the affidavit information preclude all possibility that the sought after article is not secreted in another location.”
Commonwealth v. Forster,
253 Pa.Superior Ct. 433, 437-438,
As regards the ownership of the residence to be searched, the fact that the affidavit offered no proof that Patricia Gannon owned or resided at 314 W. 21st Street does not render the affidavit, when taken as a whole, insufficient to establish probable cause. Again, a common sense reading compels the assumption that under these circumstances Mrs. Gannon’s grandmother was aware of her residence. Granting the issuing magistrate the deference to be accorded in marginal cases, we cannot accept the finding of probable cause violative of the Fourth Amendment for this reason.
The critical element in a reasonable search is not that the owner of the property is suspected of crime but that the specific 'things’ to be searched for and seized are located on the property to which entry is sought.
Id.
Therefore, we find no basis for suppressing the bank receipts from the joint bank account of Matthew and Patricia Gannon on the grounds that appellee was not named in the probable cause affidavit. We find there was sufficient probable cause to believe that banking records evidencing the theft of Mrs. Tonden’s missing funds would be found at 314 W. 21st Street. This is enough to sustain the issuance of the warrant.
The lower court also found that any documents concerning the Gannons’ auto purchases which were seized should be suppressed because they were not particularly described in the warrant. Slip op. at 3, 7.
In
Commonwealth v. Matthews,
We are convinced that the detectives investigating Mrs. Tonden’s report were not conducting a random, exploratory search but were conducting a search in good faith for records relating to the missing assets. “It is permissible to seize things other than those described in the search warrant if they have a reasonable relation to the purpose of the search.”
Commonwealth ex rel. Stoner v. Myers,
199 Pa.Superior Ct. 341, 345,
We also reject appellee’s assertion that the affidavit failed to mention any dates or set any time frame in which to place the alleged criminal activity, causing the search warrant to be invalid due to staleness. In
Commonwealth v. Shaw,
In order for the issuance of a search warrant to be constitutionally valid, the issuing officer must reach the conclusion that probable cause exists at the time he issues the warrant. Such a decision may not be made arbitrarily and must be based on facts which are closely related in time to the date the warrant is issued.
Id.,
We disagree that this rule commands suppression of the evidence seized during the execution of the warrant for the Gannon residence. Specifically, the warrant was not, in
We hold that the warrant for the Gannon dwelling was issued upon probable cause and that the evidence seized therein in execution of the warrant is admissible.
The second issue involved in this appeal is whether the seizure of bank records from the joint account of Matthew M. Gannon and Patricia Ann Gannon at the Southeast National Bank, Concordville, Pennsylvania was constitutionally reasonable.
The lower court held that the warrant to search the bank was invalid because the affidavit did not establish probable cause and because evidence seized pursuant to the warrant amounted to fruit of the poisonous tree under the rule of
Wong Sun v. United States,
Our finding that the warrant for the Gannon residence was valid disposes of the issue of whether the evidence gathered at the bank was fruit of the poisonous tree.
However, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in
Commonwealth v. DeJohn,
In the case presently before us the same affidavit presented for the warrant for the Gannon residence was presented for the warrant for the Southeast National Bank. Appellees argued and the lower court stated that this affidavit was insufficient to support a finding of probable cause because it never mentioned Matthew M. Gannon, Jr., the Southeast National Bank or how the police officers obtained information leading them to the Southeast National Bank. We do not find these arguments compelling and we, therefore, reverse the lower court’s order to suppress the bank records.
We are convinced that an overtechnical reading of this particular warrant would not serve the interests of justice or the purpose and policy of the exclusionary rule. As always in these types of cases this court is presented with the problem of balancing competing social values: “deterrence of police misconduct, on one hand, and conviction of guilty persons, on the other.”
Commonwealth v. Bradshaw,
290 Pa.Superior Ct. 162, 167,
The argument asserted by appellee is in substance the rule provided in Pa.R.Crim.P. 2003(a).
3
The rule mandates that the issuing magistrate look only to the four corners of
However, it is also clear that search warrant affidavits are to be read in a sympathetic, common sense manner, with due regard for the hectic conditions under which they are often prepared. United States v. Ventresca,380 U.S. 102 ,85 S.Ct. 741 ,13 L.Ed.2d 684 (1965); Commonwealth v. Billock,221 Pa.Super. 441 ,289 A.2d 749 (1972). Furthermore, an affidavit is to be considered as a whole____
Id.
281 Pa.Superior Ct. at 554,
As in
Luddy,
the affidavit as written did clearly imply that the police were investigating the disappearance of a considerable amount of assets and were specifically investigating the financial records of Patricia Gannon. Common sense would tell us that such an investigation would also lead into financial records Mrs. Gannon held jointly with her husband, the appellee. Inclusion of greater detail in the second affidavit (e.g., the name of the Southeast National Bank, an up-to-date explanation of the investigation) would obviously have strengthened the entire statement. We cannot emphasize too strongly the advisability of detailed affidavits. In the present case, however, “it does not appear that [the police officer’s] failure to do so was with any intent to mislead ... ”,
Commonwealth v. Luddy, supra,
281 Pa.Superior Ct. at 556,
The order of the trial court suppressing the evidence seized in execution of the two search warrants as well as
Notes
. The Commonwealth may appeal from a pre-trial ruling where the practical effect is to terminate the prosecution and where it appears that the order suppressing evidence will substantially impair the prosecution of the case because the Commonwealth may not present all of its available evidence.
Commonwealth v. Stokes,
.
See also, Commonwealth v. Rambo,
250 Pa.Superior Ct. 314, 323,
The lower court cited
Commonwealth v. Morris,
265 Pa.Superior Ct. 589,
. Rule 2003(a) provides:
(a) No search warrant shall issue but upon probable cause supported by one or more affidavits sworn to before the issuing authority. The issuing authority, in determining whether probable cause has been established, may not consider any evidence outside the affidavits.
