DISTRICT ATTORNEY FOR THE PLYMOUTH DISTRICT vs. ROBERT A. COFFEY
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
May 12, 1982
386 Mass. 218
Plymouth. February 1, 1982. — May 12, 1982. Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., LIACOS, ABRAMS, NOLAN, & O‘CONNOR, JJ.
Installation of a device to determine the source of incoming calls on a customer‘s telephone line by a telephone company at the customer‘s request did not constitute a search within the scope of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution or art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. [220-222] LIACOS, J., concurring.
Installation by a telephone company of a device to determine the source of incoming calls on a telephone line and the company‘s disclosure of the results to a district attorney were authorized by
The requirement of
The Federal Communications Act of 1934,
COMPLAINTS received and sworn to in the Second Plymouth Division of the District Court Department on May 13, 1980.
A pretrial motion to suppress was heard by Tamkin, J.
After review was sought in the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial Court ordered direct appellate review on its own initiative.
Samuel Lazarus, Assistant District Attorney, for the plaintiff.
NOLAN, J. The defendant was charged with three violations of
The parties have submitted a statement of agreed facts. On or about February 1, 1980, Mrs. Elaine Coffey called the Annoyance Call Bureau of New England Telephone Company (company), to report annoying telephone calls. At her request the company installed an XFVT on-line trapping system, commonly called a cross frame unit trap, on Mrs. Coffey‘s telephone line. This system allowed the company to determine the source of incoming calls to Mrs. Coffey‘s line. The trapping system did not, and was not designed to, record any conversation.1 The company, on three successive dates, traced the reported annoyance calls to the defendant‘s unlistеd residential telephone number. The defendant was unaware of the existence or operation of the unit. Mrs. Coffey signed complaints against the defendant, alleging violations of
