This appeal involves the proper scope of the order of the District Court to be entered ■on a motion for the return of articles seized by prohibition agents at the premises of J. M. Dooley Fireproof Warehouse Corporation in the course of an illegal seareh. The illegality of the seareh and seizure is not questioned. The order directed the return of the articles seized and enjoined their use in any prosecution of J. M. Dooley Fireproof Warehouse Corporation, Joseph M. Dooley, its president, and Joseph M. Dooley, Jr., Frederick Dooley, and William M. Dooley, the three sons of the president of the corporation, who, with him, were at the premises at the time of the unlawful raid.
The petitioners by this appeal seek to have the order of the District Court so modified as to provide that the property seized be suppressed as evidence not merely as against themselves but as against all persons. ^ Their contention is that the policy of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution precludes the use of illegally seized property as evidence against anyone whatever. But
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has been held by an impressive weight of authority that the objection to an unlawful search and seizure is personal and cannot be successfully raised bv third parties. Rouda v. United States (C.C. A.)
It is argued that the reasoning of the Supreme Court in Silverthorne Lumber Company v. United States,
Here the District Court has granted the identical relief which the Supreme Court granted in the Silverthome Case and has refused relief only in respect to persons who were hot before the court and whose rights, so far as the record shows, were not invaded at all.
In Remus v. United States,
The rule of the common law that an illegal search does not affect the rules of evidence ivas modified for the courts of the United States by the decision of the Supreme Court in Weeks v. United States,
Order affirmed.
