Application has been made for an order pursuant to section 813-a of the Code of Criminal Procedure to authorize the tap of a telephone wire. In the light of the decision of the United States Court of Appeals in the case of Pugach v. Dollinger, decided February 11, 1960, this court has re-examined the propriety of signing ex parte wiretap orders. It deems itself constrained to deny the application.
The United States Supreme Court in United States v. Benanti (
Immediately following that decision, Justice Hofstadter, of our State Supreme Court, in Matter of Interception of Tel. Communications (
Notwithstanding the Benanti case (supra), however, the practice generally of authorizing wiretaps continued in New York in reliance on the earlier case of Schwartz v. Texas (344 17. 8. 199). Indictments based on such evidence were not dismissed and convictions so secured were upheld on appeal. But the Schwarts case had merely held that once there was a conviction in a State court — even though it had been based on evidence secured in violation of section 605 — the Federal court would not overturn it.
Now, however, the United States Court of Appeals in this circuit in Pugach v. Dollinger (
Not only is the illegality of wiretaps manifest under the Benanti decision, but their futility has been determined by the United States Court of Appeals.
The petitioner in the Pugach case urged (
While that ruling was made on a preliminary application for an injunction, the logic behind the decision is irresistible. The effect of that holding is that evidence obtained by means of an ex parte State court wiretap order, which is an illegal act under the Benanti case, will prompt the Federal court, on application, to enjoin the proposed divulgence of such evidence in a State court trial.
The rationale of the Pugach case was made clear by the court. After information obtained by means of an illegal State court wiretap order has been introduced in evidence in a State court, a defendant may obtain no redress in the State court on the ground that his constitutional rights were violated. (United States ex rel. Grazino v. McMann,
Should the Judges of our State courts continue to sign ex parte wiretap orders knowing that they are illegal under the Benanti and Pugach cases, and place the burden on a defendant of seeking a Federal court injunction against the threatened disclosure in the State courts of the evidence thus illegally obtained f — I think not. Our courts are courts of justice and Judges should not be parties to authorizing an ostensibly futile as well as illegal act.
The Appellate Division in People v. Dinan (7 A D 2d 119, 121-122) stated: “However, it must not be forgotten that the Court of Appeals, in formulating and adhering to the New York rule, did so, as we have seen, with realization that the very introduction of evidence of this nature would itself constitute the commission of a crime, one with the ostensible sanction of the trial court.” (Italics supplied.)
In view of the illegal character of an ex parte wiretap order (United States v. Benanti, supra) and in the light of the Pugach decision (supra) the obligation of restraining the threatened divulgence of the contents of such illegal wiretap should not be shifted to a defendant. If lawlessness there be, the court should refrain from initiating it, rather than require a defendant to seek affirmatively an order restraining the use of the fruits
Should ex parte wiretap orders be signed in aid of purely investigative purposes where the District Attorney assures the court that any information so obtained will not be presented in court? The answer must be in the negative. The pertinent part of section 605 of the Federal Communications Act provides : “no person not being authorized by the sender shall intercept any communication and divulge or publish the existence, contents, substance, purport, effect, or meaning of such intercepted communication to any person ”. (Italics supplied.)
This section is all embracive in its prohibition. The interception of a telephone communication and its divulgence to any person are banned. A tap without divulgence is meaningless and would lack efficacy. To attempt to make a distinction between the interception and the divulgence would be, to quote Justice Frankfurter in another context, to indulge in “ a sterile juristic dialectic.”
The section does not limit the divulgence of the contents of an illegal wiretap solely to court proceedings. The police officer who listens to the illegal tap and divulges its contents to his superior officer or to the Assistant District Attorney violates section 605 in the same manner as though he testifies to it in court. It was the realization of this inevitable result that doubtless prompted our Police Commissioner recently to declare publicly in no uncertain terms that unless and until section 605 of the Federal Communications Act is amended to give explicit authorization to wiretaps by State officials, he would issue a directive that no police officer under his jurisdiction would apply for authorization to intercept a telephone communication.
In the light of the foregoing my present ruling conforms to the decisions which are to the effect that the New York courts may not authorize what is an illegal act. Above and beyond procedural questions as to the issuance of an injunction, preliminary or permanent, in these situations, the stark fact emerges that tapping wires to be followed by divulgence on a trial or otherwise is an illegal procedure. There can be no legal as there is no moral justification for authorizing it.
In his concurring opinion in the Pugach case (supra) Judge Waterman manifested grave reluctance to interfere with the processes of State courts, saying (p. 508): “Although it is intolerable that the federal courts should so presume to interfere with the orderly progress of the administration of justice in
The State’s judiciary should find it yet more intolerable for its officers to flout the law of the land. They should not countenance the practice. Certainly, they may not lend active encouragement by issuing invalid orders which suggest a color of right in a manifest violation of such law. In the language of Judge Hofstadter : “ These decisions require that we now cease and desist, for it cannot be lawful to authorize what is an illegal act. It is more and worse than a mere futility — for if the police officer violates the Federal statute by tapping wires notwithstanding a warrant issued out of this court pursuant to New York law — if that act be illegal — those who set the act in motion have condoned if not instigated illegality. Clearly, a judge may not lawfully set the wheels in motion toward the illegality by signing an order — the warrant itself partakes of the breach, willful or inadvertent, of the Federal law. Such breach may not find sanction in the orders of courts charged with the support of the law of the land and with enforcing that law! ” (Matter of Interception of Tel. Communications, supra, p. 126.)
The application of the District Attorney for the foregoing wiretap order is in all respects denied.
