289 S.W. 212 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1926
Reversing.
Appellant has been convicted of unlawfully manufacturing whiskey, and appeals.
He insists that the evidence under which he was convicted was incompetent because procured by an invalid search made without a search warrant. The evidence is in considerable confusion, but its careful consideration establishes that a distilling outfit in operation was discovered by the witnesses for the Commonwealth in a house located on land either owned or leased by appellant. The distance which the house was situated from his dwelling house varies according to the testimony of the witnesses from 100 to 300 yards. It was night and the search that resulted in the discovery of all of the evidence used against appellant was made by peace officers who had no search warrant. The record contains a very *170 meager description of the "house" in which the officers discovered the distilling outfit concerning which they testified in detail over the objection of appellant. The witnesses in testifying frequently referred to it as "the still house," which is perhaps the most comprehensive description of it the evidence herein affords. They seem to have so referred to it, however, merely because it was the house in which the distilling outfit was discovered. It is in evidence that the house had a means of entrance and exit, referred to in the testimony as a "door," but that it was not equipped with the swinging covering for the opening which we commonly call a door. The fact that there was a distilling outfit set up for operation within the house appears to have been discovered when the officers walked up to and looked in through the door of the house.
Section 10 of our Constitution provides: "The people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and possession from unreasonable search and seizure." The word "houses" there used has been construed by this court in Morse v. Commonwealth,
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed for other proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The whole court sitting. Judge McCandless and Judge Sampson dissenting. *171