182 N.E. 26 | Ohio | 1932
On April 1, 1929, the Legislature of Ohio adopted a Code, codifying the state's laws of criminal procedure. This Code repealed, in toto, the then existing chapter of the General Code relating to search warrants. In the newly enacted Code (113 Ohio Laws, 137), under the title "Search Warrants," the Legislature adopted the following provision controlling the future issue of search warrants (Section 13430-3, General Code): "A warrant for search shall not be issued until there is filed with the judge or magistrate, an affidavit particularly describing the house or place to be searched, the person to be seized, if any, the things to be searched for and seized, and alleging substantially the offense in relation thereto, and that the complainant believes and has good cause to believe that such things are there concealed, and he shall state the *478 facts upon which such belief is based. The judge or magistrateshall have authority to demand other and further evidencebefore issuing such warrant."
This section supplanted what was formerly Section 13483, General Code, adding thereto the foregoing italicized words and clauses which are now found in the newly enacted section. In this case it is admitted that the complainant, who signed the affidavit, did not go before any judge or magistrate, but went to the clerk's office where he had the affidavit signed by the municipal court clerk's deputy. It is needless now to decide what powers the clerk of the municipal court may or may not have had to issue warrants under the Ohio laws as they existed prior to 1929; for it is plainly evident that, by the new legislation, the Legislature contemplated that a judge or magistrate, and not a clerk, could issue a warrant for search. The present section contains no ambiguous language; it explicitly states that a search warrant shall not be issued until the affidavit is filed with the judge or magistrate. After the affidavit is filed, the power of determining whether a search warrant shall issue is clearly judicial. This is evidenced not only by the fact that the affidavit must be filed with the judge or magistrate, but the complainant is now required not only to state that he believes, and has good cause to believe, that the things to be searched for are concealed, but must also "state the facts upon which such belief is based." This was not required under the old section governing search warrant procedure. That the act of search warrant issuance is judicial and not ministerial is further evidenced by the last clause of Section 13430-3, General Code, which recites that "the judge or magistrate shall have authority to demand other and further evidence before issuing such warrant." Should we so construe Section 13430-3, General Code, as conferring judicial powers upon a clerk, we would be subject to the just criticism of legislation by judicial decision. *479
The clerk is merely a ministerial officer; his function is to carry out the orders of the judge. When the judge has decided in favor of the issuance of the writ, he may, if he so desires, authorize his clerk to issue the warrant in conformity with his order. Section 1579-41, General Code, authorizes the municipal court clerk "to issue and sign all writs, process and papers issuing out of the court." "The granting of a search warrant is a matter for judicial determination and not within the much more limited field of the discretion vested in executive or administrative officers." Hoyer v. State,
By the adoption of Section 13430-3, the Legislature has endeavored with scrupulous care to safeguard the rights of the people against unreasonable searches and seizures of their private dwellings, a right guaranteed by the Constitution of the state. The search law now requires that an affidavit must be filed with the judge describing (1) the place to be searched; (2) the person to be seized; (3) the thing searched for; (4) that the complainant believes or has good cause to believe that the things are there concealed; and (5) the complainant must state the facts upon which such belief is based. It was undoubtedly the purpose of the Legislature to require the complainant filing an affidavit to conform to the various particulars of that section, so that an officer executing a John Doe warrant, as in this case, could search only the particular place described in the affidavit and could seize only the person named in the affidavit, if his name be known.
In view of the clear and express language employed in the later legislation controlling the issue of warrants for search, there is no need for judicial interpretation, and, at this point, we might rest this decision, were it not for the fact that the prosecution relies especially upon another section of the General Code, as conferring upon a municipal clerk power to issue *480
a search warrant without the intervention of a judge. This is Section 4594, General Code, considered by this court in the case of Rosanski v. State,
Liquor prosecutions under the state law are generally brought under what is known as the "Crabbe Act." Section 6212-16, General Code, provides that, in liquor prosecutions under the act, "a search warrant may issue, and proceedings had thereunder, as provided in * * * [Section 13483] General Code," so far as it may apply. However Section 13483, General Code, was specifically repealed by the legislation of 1929 and there is now no method of obtaining a search warrant under the "Crabbe Act" except by invoking the provisions of Section 13430-3, which supersede Section 13483, General Code. It is obvious that the Rosanski case, supra, is no longer applicable, for Section 13483, General Code, which was there under consideration, has been repealed. Under the new legislation the issuance of a search warrant is no longer a ministerial act conferred upon a clerk, but a judicial act conferred upon the judge or magistrate. Nor does the Rosanski case hold that a seizure made in a bona fide dwelling, without a warrant or under an illegal warrant, is lawful. The holding is otherwise, as the syllabus discloses.
Guided by the clear and express provisions of Section 13430-3, which are now in force, this court can come to no conclusion but this — that no clerk of any court now has power to issue search warrants except *482 upon the order of the judge before whom the affidavit was filed; and that the sole power of determining whether or not a search warrant shall issue rests with the judge, who, by the terms of the statute, has authority "to demand other and further evidence before issuing such warrant."
There is another impelling reason why the search warrant in this case is illegal and void. It was obtained and executed in the teeth of the statute. The courts, with substantial unanimity, hold that a search made upon an illegal or void warrant is tantamount to a search made without any warrant. This case involves the search of a private dwelling. The affidavit for the warrant so states, and the officer who executed it admits it; nor was there any evidence of sale or traffic upon the premises. The present law, Section 13430-3, General Code, requires the complainant not only to state in his affidavit that he believes, or has good cause to believe, that the things are concealed, but it also requires that "he shall state the facts upon which such belief is based." There were no facts stated in the affidavit for search in the instant case. The affidavit left the determination whether there was probable cause for search in the judgment of the complainant. The complainant may not have had any fact or justifiable information to sustain his belief, or he may have obtained his information from an anonymous source which no reasonable man would take cognizance of; or the complainant may have been actuated by malice, or by some ulterior motive against the accused. Under the old statutory procedure there was no method provided for determining whether the facts and surroundings justified the existence of the probable cause for search. The institution and execution of the warrant were confided to the conscience and honesty, or dishonesty, of the complainant himself. Upon this feature of the case, in characterizing such forms of accusation, Judge Cooley said: "Charges are *483
not verified by an affidavit that somebody is informed and believes they are true. This is mere evasion of the law: the most improbable stories may be believed of any one, and the man most free from any reasonable suspicion of guilt is not safe if he holds his freedom at the mercy of any man three hundred miles off who will swear that he has been informed and believes in his guilt. It is easy to tell falsehoods, and those who are least fitted to judge of their credibility are generally the very persons who will believe them because they are told. But to substantiate charges within the meaning of the law evidence is required, and not merely suspicions or information or beliefs." Swart v. Kimball,
In Agnello v. United States,
While we are not bound by federal decisions upon this feature of the case, since the Bill of Rights in the Constitution of the United States is in almost the exact language of that found in our own, the reasoning of the United States court upon this aspect of the case should be very persuasive. The state courts, however, with practical unanimity, have adopted the same principle as the federal courts. Article
In Weeks v. United States,
Many cases may be found in the reports touching the constitutional feature safeguarding the rights of the people to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures; and they uniformly uphold such rights when a search is made of abona fide dwelling or residence of the accused; and if the search be without warrant or upon a void warrant, incriminating articles found within such dwellings cannot be used against the occupant to bring about his conviction.
The court is of the opinion that a search can be made in this state only by complying with the amended statute (now Section 13430-3, General Code) which specifically requires that in the affidavit for search the complainant must state the facts upon which his belief is based; and that this requirement was placed in the statute in order that the judge or magistrate issuing such warrant might determine, for himself, whether the facts stated in the affidavit were sufficient for him to issue it, and not leave that determination, as formerly, to the whim, caprice or belief of the complainant.
In the instant case the affidavit for search was not filed with a judge; nor did it state the facts upon which the complainant's belief was based. For these reasons the search warrant was void; and being void, the things seized in the defendant's dwelling cannot be used against the accused to incriminate him. It follows that the judgments of the lower courts should be reversed and the cause remanded to the municipal court with instructions to suppress the evidence seized *487 in the unlawful search, and for further proceedings according to law.
Judgments reversed and cause remanded.
MATTHIAS, DAY, ALLEN, KINKADE and STEPHENSON, JJ., concur.
MARSHALL, C.J., not participating.