delivered the opinion of the Court.
Here are appeals from judgments and sentences imposed on verdicts of guilty on charges of sale of lottery tickets; having in possession lottery tickets, slips and records; gambling on horse races; and making books on horse races. The cases were tried before the trial judge without a jury.
On March 16, 1951, about 1 P. M., Sergeant Joseph J. Byrne went to the premises at 236 S. Eaton Street, Baltimore, a private dwelling, having with him a search warrant signed by Chief Judge W. Conwell Smith, allowing him to enter those premises. That search warrant also authorized him to diligently search for lottery tickets and other paraphernalia used in the unlawful operation of lottery, and to bring said lottery tickets and lottery paraphernalia, so found, also the body of a person known to the officer “as Chickie and all other persons who may be found participating in said lottery before me, the subscriber, or some Police Justice of the said State, in and for the City aforesaid, to be disposed and dealt with according to law.”
Sergeant Byrne knocked on the door of the dwelling, which, according to the testimony belonged to a Mr.
Code, Article 35, Section 5, commonly known as the “Bouse Act”, provides that no evidence shall be admissible in a trial of a misdemeanor which has been procured by an illegal search and seizure. Of course, if a misdemeanor be committed in the presence of an officer •who is charged with the enforcement of the law, he is authorized, without a warrant to arrest the offender. As an incident of the arrest he is authorized to search the prisoner, and the tangible evidence or instrument of the crime, whether upon his person or within his use and immediate possession, can be seized, taken into possession and examined. If the- arrest was lawful, the search was lawful and the articles found on him were admissible in evidence. If the arrest was unlawful, the incidental search in connection therewith was likewise in violation of the constitutional rights of the defendant.
Callahan v. State,
The State, however, relies on the words in the search warrant, which commands the officer to bring in “all other persons who may be found participating in said lottery”.
Smith v. State,
The State relies on the case of
Smith v. State,
The undisputed facts in the case at bar are very differ-tent. We are of opinion that there were no reasonable grounds to believe, assuming that that would have been sufficient, that the appellant was participating in a lottery, merely by entering a private dwelling where the only suspicious circumstance at that time was the presence of the lottery tickets in the house. Not having been asked why he came in the house, he gave no explanation of his presence there. There are many reasons why he might have lawfully entered this private dwelling. Therefore, the arrest and search of the appellant were unlawful and the admission in evidence of the articles found as a result of that search and the testimony thereto was erroneous. The judgments will therefore be reversed and new trials awarded.
Judgments reversed, with new trials.
