Petition is made for the return of certain intoxicating liquors taken from the possession of the petitioner, Sarah Connelly, at Syracuse, N. Y., by two prohibition enforcement agents.
The premises from which the liquors were taken was a private dwelling house occupied by the petitioner. The agents went into this house of the petitioner without a search' warrant and seized these liquors, of which there was a large quantity. The contention of the agents is that they observed one Cameron coming out of the petitioner’s house, and upon questioning and searching him they were informed that the petitioner had sold him some liquor. The agents had been secreted across the street from the petitioner’s house and had seen Cameron enter and shortly thereafter leave the petitioner’s house.
Manifestly it was in utter disregard of the constitutional rights of the petitioner to enter her private dwelling house without a search warrant and seize these liquors.
The Fourth Amendment reads:
“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrant shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”
That part of the Fifth Amendment essential to this controversy is as follows:
“No person :I * * shall be compelled in any criminal ease to be a witness against himself.”
Under section 25 of the National Prohibition Enforcement Act, it is provided that no search warrant shall issue to search any private dwelling occupied exclusively as such unless an unlawful sale has been máde therein, in which case there would be the probable cause required by the Constitution for the issuance of a search warrant by a duly authorized officer empowered to issue the same. Had the agents in this case laid whatever information they were able to secure from Cameron hefore such officer, and secured the warrant, they would have performed their work as it should have been performed. Violations, if any, could then properly be checked. Under the circumstances as they now exist, it is unfortunate that evidence illegally seized cannot be used to secure the conviction for wrongdoing, if wrongdoing there was.
The provisions of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments were adopted with the thought uppermost that they would safeguard the rights and liberties of the people against the encroachment of unlawful or arbitrary power. They are now too firmly entrenched in our system of jurisprudence to require any justification for their existence.
In Boyd v. United States,
In Weeks v. United States,
More recent cases upon this subject are: Silverthorne Lumber Co.
The contention of the government is that, although the seizure may be unlawful, yet intoxicating liquors are contraband, and under no circumstances should they be returned, even though it is impossible to use them as evidence against the accused. The mere possession of intoxicating liquors in a private dwelling house, if acquired before the date when the Volstead Act took effect, is not unlawful. National Prohibition Enforcement Act, § 33; Street v. Lincoln Safe Deposit Co.,
“An intention to confiscate private property, even in intoxicating liquors, will not be raised by inference and construction from provisions of law which have ample field for their operation in effecting a purpose clearly indicated and declared.”
If the seized property could not possibly be lawfully in the possession of the accused, such as an illicit still (United States v. Rykowski [D. C.]
The motion for restoration is granted, and the counter motion to impound is denied. An order may be entered accordingly.
