In the Matter of L. J. W., Appellant.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
*1334 Surell Brady, Public Defender Service, Washington, D. C., for appellant. Robert A. W. Boraks, Public Defender Service, Washington, D. C., was on the brief, for appellant.
E. Calvin Golumbic, Asst. Corp. Counsel, Washington, D. C., with whom John R. Risher, Jr., Corp. Counsel, Louis P. Robbins, Principal Asst. Corp. Counsel, and Richard W. Barton, Asst. Corp. Counsel, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for appellee.
Before NEBEKER, YEAGLEY and HARRIS, Associate Judges.
YEAGLEY, Associate Judge:
Appellant appeals from juvenile court convictions of burglary in the first degree (D.C.Code 1973, § 22-1801), two counts of assault with a dangerous weapon (D.C.Code 1973, § 22-501), and two counts of robbery (D.C.Code 1973, § 22-2901). On appeal he argues that (1) the nighttime search of his home was pursuant to a defective search warrant and the evidence uncovered should have been suppressed; (2) his severance motion should have been granted when the judge heard a witness testify that appellant's corespondent confessed to the crime and implicated appellant; and (3) the same judge was barred from presiding over the detention, suppression, and factfinding hearings at different stages of appellant's case. For the reasons set forth, we affirm.
On April 3, 1975, at approximately 1:45 a. m., three persons wearing ski masks and sunglasses entered the bedroom of the victims, assaulted the husband and wife with guns, and robbed them of various items of personal property. A fourth burglar remained downstairs. None of the assailants were ever identified by the victims.
At approximately 4 p. m. that same day, a young man, who later testified at trial, told Detective Thiebeau, a Metropolitan Police Department detective, that D.G. (appellant's co-respondent at trial) had informed him that appellant, two others, and D.G. "did a hustle at [the victims'] house." The young man had been inside appellant's home and had seen what subsequently was identified as the victims' personal property.
Detective Thiebeau worked on the case from 4 p. m. on, and, after discussing the search warrant affidavit with an Assistant United States Attorney, drove to the issuing judge's home to obtain the search warrant. The warrant was signed by the judge between 10:30 and 11 p. m., after the judge questioned the detective under oath about the prospective search. The warrant, which on its face authorized a nighttime search, was executed that night. Appellant's home was searched from about 11:30 p. m. to 2 a. m. and much of the victims' stolen personal property was recovered.
Appellant's first contention is that the search warrant authorizing the nighttime search of his home was invalid because the application for the warrant did not contain, in writing, any of the three D.C.Code *1335 grounds authorizing a nighttime search.[1] The government argues that although the specific nighttime authorization grounds were not included in the written application,[2] the detective requesting the warrant told the issuing judge, under oath, why this nighttime warrant was needed. No record was made at that time, but at the suppression hearing the detective testified:
I told him that in that vicinity down there, property does move quickly and that that's why we need this warrant, and that's why we were bothering him in his home because of the fact that we were afraid of losing the property if we didn't act quickly.
The issue is whether that explanation was required by statute to be in the written application for the search warrant. While it is much preferable to have a contemporaneous written record of the facts presented to the issuing judge or magistrate in order to avoid subsequent memory problems,[3] in the instant case we find no reversible error based upon the oral recitation under oath of the facts necessitating this nighttime search.
We turn first to the actual statutory language involved. D.C.Code 1975 Supp., § 23-522. Subsection (a) states that "[e]ach application for a search warrant shall be made in writing . . .," and subsection (b) mandates what "[e]ach application shall include." Subsection (c) permissibly ("may") allows an applicant to include in the application a request, with stated reasons, "that the search warrant be made executable at any hour of the day or night. . .." But in any event, the minimum required to obtain a nighttime warrant is that "[a]ny request made pursuant to this subsection [nighttime authorization] must be accompanied and supported by allegations of fact supporting such request." It is those supporting allegations of fact which we hold may be relayed orally and under oath to the issuing judge or magistrate.[4]
There are no D.C. cases exactly on point,[5] but many analogous federal cases support our holding.[6]See, e. g., United States v. *1336 Marihart,
In United States v. Ravich,
In the instant case, as in Ravich, the issuing judge "must have known that the warrants [were to] be executed at night; that was the very reason why the officers had come to his home." United States v. Ravich, supra at 1201. In addition, the requesting detective under oath informed the issuing judge, in substance, of one of the D.C.Code's reasons for authorizing a nighttime search: "(2) the property sought is likely to be removed or destroyed if not seized forthwith." D.C.Code 1975 Supp., § 23-522(c)(2). Furthermore, this warrant, on its face, authorized the nighttime search. We therefore conclude that the warrant was both properly issued and properly executed.
Appellant's second issue is that the trial court committed reversible error when it refused to grant appellant a separate trial after hearing a witness testify that appellant's co-respondent had implicated appellant in corespondent's statements about the burglary. Citing Bruton v. United States,
This court has recognized the "presumption that a trial court will disregard all irrelevant matters in making its adjudications." In re W.N.W., D.C.App.,
The core of Bruton v. United States, supra, was that a jury would not be able to do what we presume the judge is able to do, namely, accept evidence for one purpose and disregard it for another. Id.,
*1337 The trial court recognized the crucial jury/judge trial distinction when it denied appellant's severance motion: "Well, you may have a really valid point if this were a jury trial, but this is not a jury trial. The Court considers this." The trial judge knew of the limited purpose for which the witness' testimony was admissible and "[n]othing in Bruton suggests that a judge is incapable of applying the law of limited admissibility which he has himself announced." Cockrell v. Oberhauser, supra at 258. Appellant cannot point to any references showing the judge improperly considered the witness' statement against appellant, and thus the presumption that the irrelevant evidence was not considered has not been overcome. In re M.D.J., D.C.App.,
Appellant's final contention is that the same trial judge should not have presided at his (1) detention/probable cause hearing as well as at his (2) suppression hearing and at his (3) factfinding hearing. The first two hearings provided the judge with "adverse social information" and appellant's confession (later suppressed) that had to be ignored at the factfinding hearing; appellant contends this put an unwarranted strain on the purity of the factfinding function and ultimately denied him a fair trial.
The same judge may conduct both the detention and factfinding hearings unless objected to by "the child or his parent, guardian or custodian." D.C.Code 1973, § 16-2312(j). This court in In re M.D.J., supra at 736, and In re W.N.W., supra at 58, held that disqualification under § 16-2312(j) is mandated only upon objection, and we held:
The fact that the trial judge successively presided over two proceedings involving appellant provides an insufficient basis for finding of reversible error. [In re W.N.W., supra at 58.]
Appellant did not object[7] and is thus precluded now from asserting this issue as error on appeal. See also Super.Ct.Juv.R. 51.
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] D.C.Code 1975 Supp., § 23-522(c) provides:
The application may also contain a request that the search warrant be made executable at any hour of the day or night upon the ground that there is probable cause to believe that (1) it cannot be executed during the hours of daylight, (2) the property sought is likely to be removed or destroyed if not seized forthwith, or (3) the property sought is not likely to be found except at certain times or in certain circumstances. Any request made pursuant to this subsection must be accompanied and supported by allegations of fact supporting such request.
[2] The written warrant application asserted only that the detective was "positive" that the goods were at appellant's house. This was the standard for authorizing nighttime searches under the pre-1972 Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure (Rule 41(c)).
[3] See Campbell v. State of Minnesota,
[4] The search warrant itself need not include these supporting allegations of fact. The warrant, however, must, on its face, authorize "execution at any time of day or night" where the issuing officer has found cause for such execution under § 23-522(c). D.C.Code 1975 Supp., § 23-521(f)(5).
[5] See generally United States v. Thomas, D.C. App.,
[6] The federal cases primarily deal with whether the oral supplementation can be used to bolster the probable cause showing, not the degree of "positiveness" needed for a nighttime warrant. The possibility of an inadequate probable cause showing because of a hastily drawn affidavit or the possibility of "manufactured" probable cause when the affiant later "remembers" what he orally testified to before the issuing judge strikes directly at the constitutionality of the warrant in Fourth Amendment terms. There is no challenge in the instant case that the requisite probable cause was not shown.
But see the dissenting opinion of Justices Brennan and Marshall to the denial of certiorari in Christofferson v. Washington,
[7] Appellant argues that his motion for severance on Bruton grounds was the equivalent of a § 16-2312(j) objection. Even if this were the equivalent, which we find it is not, there remains an issue of whether the objection was timely under Super.Ct.Juv.R. 12(b)(1) and (2).
