287 S.W. 726 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1926
Reversing.
The appellant, Frank Elliott, was arrested under a warrant issued by the county judge of McCracken county, charging him with the offense of unlawfully possessing spirituous and intoxicating liquors. Upon his trial before the officer who issued the warrant he was convicted and appealed to the McCracken circuit court with a like result, and from the judgment therein he prosecutes this appeal. The sole question presented to this court and argued in brief is the sufficiency of the affidavit upon which the search warrant was issued and, in the execution of which the incriminating evidence against defendant was discovered.
The affidavit to procure the search warrant was made by a federal prohibition officer. The affiant in giving the reasons for his information and belief that the contraband article was harbored in the premises sought to be searched, stated as grounds for his information and belief: "That on this date, October 13th, 1925, affiant passed said place and saw a package put in a delivery automobile, which from its appearance and said Elliott's reputation as a purveyor of intoxicating liquor, he had reason to believe and he does so believe that the same was intoxicating liquor and that he had personal knowledge *272 of the fact that on Saturday night, October 10th, 1925, automobiles were operating from said paint shop all night." The question to be determined is: Whether that language contains a sufficient statement of facts to create in the mind of the officer who issued the warrant legal "probable cause" for the issuing of the search warrant?
A part of section 10 of our Constitution says: "And no warrant shall issue to search any place . . . without probable cause supported by oath or affirmation." Section 2554a-14 of the 1926 supplement to Carroll's Kentucky Statutes, and which is section 14 of chapter 33, page 109, Acts of 1922, commonly known as the Rash-Gullion Act, authorizes the issuing of a search warrant only "when affidavit of any state or federal officer, or of any reputable citizen is filed with him (the judicial officer), describing the house, building or premises, as nearly as may be, where intoxicating liquors are sold or manufactured, or disposed of, or illegally possessed in violation of this act." That language would seem to imply that the affidavit must not only give a reasonable description of the premises or thing to be searched, but should also be sufficiently positive in its terms as to charge that the forbidden articles sought to be discovered are therein contained. But we have uniformly held that it would be sufficient if the affidavit stated the facts sufficient to create "probable cause" in the mind of the officer acting as a reasonably prudent and cautious man to believe that such articles were so harbored. Some of the numerous cases so holding are Taylor v. Commonwealth,
We have also held that, in view of our holding in those opinions, the judicial officer can not issue a search warrant upon his own personal knowledge. Osborne v. Commonwealth,
It will be noted that the affiant states as a fact that on the same day the affidavit was made he "passed said place (defendant's paint shop) and saw a package put in a delivery automobile." From that fact, and the further one of defendant's reputation as a purveyor of intoxicating liquor, he concluded that the package contained intoxicating liquor, which, to our minds, is nothing more than what might be termed a far-fetched conclusion. He does not state that the putting of the package into the delivery automobile was near to or about defendant's premises, nor how near it was to the time when affiant passed defendant's shop. No description is given of the character of package, nor is it stated that defendant owned, controlled or had anything to do with either the package or the delivery automobile, and the most that can be gleaned from the language is that affiant was passing up the street and in doing so he passed defendant's paint shop and that somewhere on his trip he saw someone put a package with no description into someone's delivery automobile, and because of that fact affiant concluded that the package contained liquor and that it came from defendant's shop. His belief is sought to be strengthened by what affiant terms the defendant's "reputation as a purveyor of intoxicating liquor," but that *274
language neither states what that reputation was nor that affiant knew it. Evidently the statement as to defendant's reputation contained in the affidavit is not sufficient to support a prosecution of the affiant for false swearing if it was false, since it does not state a fact; and which we held in the case of Goode v. Commonwealth,
But it is insisted that the remaining portion of the affidavit was sufficient for that purpose, or if not that the two portions together, and as a whole, were sufficient and that the county judge properly issued the warrant. Such remaining portion of the affidavit is: "And that he (affiant) had (presumptively at the time he passed defendant's shop) personal knowledge of the fact that on Saturday night, October 10, 1925, automobiles were operating from the paint shop all night." That statement is so vague and indefinite as to be difficult of analysis In the first place, it nowhere appears as to how or from what source the affiant obtained his knowledge of that fact. It does appear that it was Saturday night when it is so universally known that we take judicial knowledge of the fact that places of business are kept open until a late hour. It does appear that defendant operated a paint shop from which, in the absence of something appearing to the contrary, it might be reasonably presumed that he painted any and all articles requiring such repairs. At any rate, it does not appear from the affidavit that the automobiles so charged to be operated did not carry any such articles to or from defendant's shop, nor is it made to appear that they carried any other articles, or even persons, except, perhaps, the drivers of them; and as to them it does not even appear whether they were intoxicated.
In the case of Hyde v. Commonwealth,
We are aware that the presentation of the facts in the affidavit is not measured by the same technical rules as are required for the introduction of testimony at a trial, but, notwithstanding that qualification, it has never been held by us or any other court to which our attention has been called or which we have been able to find, that the facts, howsoever stated in the affidavit, would be sufficient to create probable cause when all of them taken together only raise a suspicion or surmise. Surely, "probable cause" for the issuing of a search warrant should be supported by as much evidence as is necessary to create a scintilla of proof under what is generally known as the "scintilla rule," and we held in the cases of Poll v. Patterson,
The demonstrated guilt of the defendant, after the execution of the warrant that issued upon the affidavit, can not be taken into consideration in determining the sufficiency of the latter, although it may, as we can truthfully say it does, cause us to reluctantly reach the conclusion we have done. The whole court considered this case and concluded that in the light of the foregoing principles the affidavit for the search warrant was insufficient, and that defendant's objection to the testimony should have been sustained.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to grant the new trial and for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Whole court sitting.