The only evidence adduced on the trial of the case connecting the defendant with the offense of lottery was evidence obtained from her home at the time she was arrested.
The evidence did not disclose a search made in connection with a legal arrest. There was no evidence of a crime having been committed in the presence of the officers before the search was instituted. There was no evidence of flight, and there was no evidence of an arrest under an arrest warrant. Therefore, the question is presented, all of such evidence having been properly objected to as having been obtained in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, as to whether the search warrant was proper, and if not the evidence was inadmissible. In
Smoot v. State,
Judgment reversed.
