COMMONWEALTH of Pennsylvania, Appellee, v. Jack D. GROSSMAN, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
Argued Sept. 29, 1988. Decided March 13, 1989.
555 A.2d 896 | 521 Pa. 290
* This decision was considered and rendered prior to March 7, 1989.
Thomas A. Crawford, Jr., Patricia Liptak-McGrail, Pittsburgh, for appellant.
John M. Dawson, Dist. Atty., John F. Spataro, Asst. Dist. Atty., Meadville, for appellee.
Before NIX, C.J., and LARSEN, FLAHERTY, McDERMOTT, ZAPPALA, PAPADAKOS and STOUT, JJ.
OPINION OF THE COURT
STOUT, Justice.
Jack D. Grossman appeals from thе Superior Court‘s order affirming his conviction for thirteen counts of theft by failure to make required disposition of funds received. 358 Pa. Super. 625, 514 A.2d 198.
I. Facts
Having heard the evidence, the Court of Common Pleas, aptly summarized the facts underlying the conviction:
The defendant was the owner of a local insurance agency and had an extensive clientele of over 2,000 active cases. For a variety of reasons the defendant fоund himself in [a] precarious financial condition and one or more of his insurance companies had withdrawn his right to act as a binding agent to bind the company as their representative. . . . [T]he defendant fell into the habit of taking partial or full premiums for new or renewal insurance policies and then improperly using these funds to meet third party premium obligations to the company or to underwrite the expenses of his insurance business. Apparently, the defendant‘s operations drew sufficient complaints to alert the state insurance department, the police and the district attorney‘s office.
Trial Court slip op. at 2-3.
On Mаrch 4, 1983, the district attorney and police decided that the investigation had proceeded far enough. At 4:30 p.m., the district attorney, Mr. Dawson, and two police officers, Officer Young and Officer Loutzenhiser, arrived at the Jack D. Grossman Agency. Apparently out of fear that Appellant had both “got wind” of thе investigation and of the imminent search and would therefore destroy evidence, N.T. Suppression Hrg. of 9-6-83 at 168, the police first “secured” the premises. The police made clear to those present in the agency that Young was to stay and “not [to] let anybody take anything out or bring anything in.” N.T. Suppression Hrg. of 7-13-83 at 32. Young “remained in the office and sat on a chair by the door” while Dawson and Loutzenhiser went to obtain the search warrant. Id. at
Dawson and Loutzenhiser then obtained a search warrant on the basis of an affidavit detailing complaints filed with the Pennsylvania Insurance Commission by three of Appellant‘s clients. In that section of the warrant titled “Identify Items To Be Searched For And Seized (be as specific as possible)” was written: “All insurance files, payment records, receipt records, copies of insurance applications and poliсies, [and] cancelled checks.”
After Dawson and Loutzenhiser returned with the search warrant, the police seized virtually every file and business record in the office. Officer Rossi, who aided in the search, testified that the police seized eight file drawers. Id. at 63. When asked, “Do you know if files other than those filеs concerning those three individuals [described in the affidavit] were taken?” Officer Rossi responded, “We took every file that was in the building that we could find.” Id. at 64.1
II. Procedural History
Appellant moved to suppress, arguing that the evidence seized from his office had been discovered as a result of a warrant that lacked the requirеd specificity,2 hence the
The Superior Court affirmed the denial of the motion to suppress. Adopting the reasoning of a Superior Court opinion in a related case arising from the same search, the Superior Court held:
The affidavit did not limit the warrant to the three specified files. Those three files contained irregularities known to officials. They also provided probable cause that other files were irregular since appellant was known to have many clients. Other files were suspected because of the numerous complaints to the insurance commissioner concerning appellant‘s businеss tactics.
Super.Ct. slip op. at 9 (citing Commonwealth v. Grossman, 351 Pa.Super. 298, 305, 505 A.2d 991, 994-95 (1986)).4
Appellant petitioned this Court to review his conviction. We granted an appeal “limited to the question whether the breadth of the search warrant in this case requires the
III. The Constitutional Requirement of Specificity For Warrants
The people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and possessions from unreasonable searches and seizures, and nо warrant to search any place or to seize any person or thing shall issue without describing them as nearly as may be, nor without probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation subscribed to by the affiant.
The framers of the Pennsylvania Constitution thought the right to be free from unrestricted police intrusions so critical that they secured the right for future generations by including it in the original Constitution of 1776. The language of the Pennsylvania Constitution requires that a warrant describe the items to be seized “as nearly as may be....” The clear meaning of the language is that a warrant must describe the items as specifically as is reasonably possible. This requirement is more stringent than that of thе
It is settled
IV. The Warrant Here At Issue
It is clear that the warrant here at issue cannot survive constitutional scrutiny. Notwithstanding the contrary conclusion reached by the Superior Court, the affidavit was limited to the files of only three of Appellant‘s clients: Mr. Paul Dorman, Dr. Thomаs Watson, and Mr. Gary Jones. After detailing the irregularities in these files, the affidavit concludes: “[w]herefore, affiant believes there is sufficient probable cause to believe [Appellant] . . . fraudulently executed various documents in connection with an ongoing scheme to defraud insurance applicants.” This language must be read in the context of the entire affidavit. The “wherefore” clause refers back to the three client files discussed in the body of the affidavit. Although the Superior Court may have been correct to observe that the police may have suspected that other clients were being defrauded, the affidavit that was placed before the issuing judge did not include any such additional information, and “[t]he issuing authority, in determining whether probable cause
We conclude that while probable cause existed for the three named files7 there was not probable cause as to the other files in Appellant‘s offices. Appellant had over 2,000 clients. That three clients, 0.15% of Appellant‘s clients, had filed complaints with the Pennsylvania Insurance Commission cannot be said to lead a reasonable person tо conclude that probable cause existed to seize, and subsequently to search, the files of all 2,000 of Appellant‘s clients. See Santner, supra, 308 Pa.Superior Ct. at 75, 454 A.2d at 28 (relying on federal cases). See also Commonwealth v. Jones, 506 Pa. 262, 269, 484 A.2d 1383, 1387 (1984); Commonwealth v. Davis, 466 Pa. 102, 109, 351 A.2d 642, 645 (1976). In short, there was probable cause to search only for those three files described in the affidavit.
Therefore, we hold that the warrant authorizing the seizure of “all files” was unconstitutionally overbroad in its failure to describe as specifically as was reasonably possible the three files described in the affidavit for which there was probable cause. All evidence seized as a result of the deficient warrant should have been suppressed.
Accordingly, the decisions of the courts below are reversed and a new trial is granted.8
ZAPPALA, J., did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.
McDERMOTT, J., files a dissenting opinion in which PAPADAKOS, J., joins.
McDERMOTT, Justice, dissenting.
I dissent and would join the analysis of the Superior Court. See Commonwealth v. Grossman, 351 Pa.Super. 298, 505 A.2d 991 (1986).
PAPADAKOS, J., joins this dissenting opinion.
Notes
Id. at 1065.Nor is there any pretence to say, that the word ‘papers’ here mentioned ought in point of law to be restrained to the libellous papers only. The word is general, and there is nothing in the warrant to confine it; nay, I am able to аffirm, that it has been upon a late occasion executed in its utmost latitude: for in the recent case of Wilkes against Wood, when the messengers hesitated about taking all the manuscripts, and sent to the secretary of state for more express orders for that purpose, the answer was, ‘that all must be taken, manuscripts and all.’ Accordingly, all was taken, and Mr. Wilkes‘s private pocket-book filled up the mouth of the sack.
