The decisive question
1
in this hаbeas corpus proceeding is whether the exclusionary rule announced in Mapp v. Ohio,
We hold that Mapp is inapplicable to the Sisk search in 1950, that there is no federal question presented which would invoke the Preston rule, and that for those reаsons the district court properly denied the writ. 2
Sisk was convicted of murder in Indiana in 1951 and sentenced to life imprisonment. His conviction was affirmed by the Indiana Supreme Court, Sisk v. State,
After the Supreme Court’s 1961 decision in Mapp v. Ohio,
The district court, after a full hearing, and the Indiana trial and supreme courts, found from the following facts that the search of Sisk’s automobile was lawful as incident to a lawful arrest: He had been arrested by an Indiana officer at 7 a. m. on September 4, 1950, Labor Day morning, while in “immediаte control” of his automobile. He was driven to sheriff’s headquarters where his automobile was towed. A search of the automobile was begun immediately, without a warrant, and clothing and a large, incriminating sum of money were found. After this search the car was barricaded in a garage with a rоpe tied around it. Six days later the search was resumed, and mats with blood spots were taken from the car. This evidence was admitted, over his objection, at his trial.
After argument in the case at bar, the United States Supreme Court handed down its decision in Preston v. United States,
The Supreme Court in Mapp applied the new exclusionary rule retroactively to the 1957 search of Miss Mapp’s apartment. By its “explication” of the Mapp rule in Ker v. California,
Examination of the language of the Mapp opinion for an answer to the question has been unproductive. 6 Four circuits have given answers which are in disagreement. And we find no answer in decisions giving retroactive application to refined constitutional standards protecting the right to a fair trial.
The Ninth Circuit in People v. Hurst,
The Fourth Circuit in Hall thought the Mapp rule was always in the Fourteenth Amendment and that the Supreme Court found it in 1961 and applied it to a 1957 search. The Fourth Circuit was , . ., , . . , plamly influenced m its decision by the death sentence imposed on the evidence seized at a time when Maryland had no exclusionary rule in felony cases.
m, m n- ... ~
. , ,
The Tenth Circuit m Gaitan involved i • » r,..,, . , , . , claim of a Fifth Amendment violation . . .... . on admissibility of evidence m a nar- ,. cotíes case. The court had not the philo- , . , , . sophical assurance of the court m tt n
tj.
it. Hall. It thоught that Mapp s overruling of Wolf v. Colorado,
The Fifth circuit in Walker rejected the “traditional Blaekstonian view” 7 taken by the court in HalL It took the “more modern view, as espoused by * * * the legal realists” 8 that the Mapp rule was “made” in 1961 and was therefore prospective. The court refused to app]y Mapp retroactively to a 1958 search ieatjing- to a “simple burglary” conviction.
In the Hurst narcotics case the Ninth Circuit agreed with the court in Walker that the purpose оf the Mapp rule was deterrence of future illegal searches and seizures. However, it disagreed that in California a “wholesale reversal of past . ,. „ ,. convictions would result from retroac- „ , , , hJe application, as feared by the Fifth Circuit, because California had its own judicially imposed exclusionary rule since 1955. The court applied the Mapp rule to ,, TT. , , , the 1959 Hurst search because it was two , , years later than the search m Mapp and , , ,, , . . because the court thought the protection „ . . , , . afforded by the exclusionary rule was a ... ,. , ... constitutional privilege.
We think the exclusionary rule announced in Mapp has been implicit in the Fourth Amendment since the Bill of Rights was adopted, and implicit as against the states since the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. But we think that it was not made explicit as a controlling constitutional rule until the Mapp dеcision in 1961. Consequently we think retroactive application of the rule is not a necessity, as though the rule *239 existed before Mapp and bound state courts. Drawing the line in application of the rule, in our opinion, involves a prudential judgment for each court, until the Supreme Court, оf course, makes the ultimate decision.
Comparing the circumstances of this case and our view of the Mapp rule with the circumstances facing the other circuits and their reasons for decision, we find similarities and dissimilarities. The Sisk case before us is a murder case like Hall with a life sеntence instead of a death sentence, and Indiana, unlike Maryland in Hall, had its own judicially imposed exclusionary rule when Sisk was convicted. We share, too, the Tenth Circuit’s lack of “assurance” of the Fourth Circuit’s philosophical notion as our own view set out above indicates. We disagree with the Tenth Circuit’s reliance upon its analogy between review of ha-beas corpus under Mapp and under the prohibition eases after repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. No right implicit in the Bill of Rights was made explicit by the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment.
In view of Preston v. United States,
The retroactive application of the Fifth Amendment’s 1961 prohibition against coerced confessions to reverse a 1936 conviction in Reck v. Pate,
Nor does Griffin v. Illinois,
Indiana in 1923 anticipated the Mapp decision and drew its own constitutional exclusionary rule.
13
Flum v. State,
We see no promotion of the underlying purpose of deterrence of Indianа officers from future illegal searches and seizures I by setting aside Sisk’s conviction. Wha^ shock might result if Sisk’s conviction were set aside would likely pass soon, as most shocks do. We think a serious con-] sequence of such judgment would be an unseemly jar to the delicate balance between оur federal and state relationships and result in a serious discrediting of the judicial system and the administrad tion of justice. Weighing the probable gain of a temporary shock to law enforcement officials against these serious consequences, we think, points to the right result.
We concludе that Mapp should not be given retroactive application to this case, where the search took place seven years before the search of Miss Mapp’s apartment, 14 where Indiana had its own exclusionary rule and the trial took place at least six years before Miss Mapp’s trial, and where the conviction, was final before the Supreme Court’s decision in Mapp v. Ohio. On this conclusion we hold that the district court properly denied Sisk’s petition.
Attorney William E. Borror, a member of the Indiana Bar, was appointed by the district court to represent petitioner before it. He has continued his representation of petitioner in this court. We express our appreciation to Mr. Borror for his persistent, outstanding service in this assignment.
The denial of petitioner’s application is affirmed.
Notes
. The rule of res judicata is no bar to Sisk’s relief in this habeas corpus proceeding even though the legality of the search has been raised and decided by the Indiana courts, and raised in an earlier habeas corpus petition. Sanders v. United States,
. The exhaustive opinion of the district court is reported at
. The district court tested the search of Sisk’s automobile аgainst the “substantially contemporaneous” rule of several pre-Preston cases which upheld the validity of searches of automobiles as incident to lawful arrests. United States v. O’Brien,
. See also, Fahy v. Connecticut,
. See United States ex rel. Campbell v. Bundle,
. United States ex rel. Linkletter v. Walker,
. “The traditional Blaekstonian view was that a court does not pronounce a new law, but maintains and expounds the old one; when a decision has been overruled, the first one was merely evidence of the law, which had turned out to be erroneous evidence. See Note, 71 Yale L.J. 907, 908 (1962). That is, a judge
finds
the law; he does not
malee
it.” United States ex rel. Linkletter v. Walker,
. “[T]lie more modern view, as espoused by Mr. Justice Cardozo and the legal realists, is that judges exercise a law-creating function, although, of course, subject to the limitation of unreasonable ‘judicial legislation.’ Seе Note, 71 Yale L.J. 907, 911 (1962).” United States ex rel. Linkletter v. Walker,
. See Doughty v. Maxwell,
. “[T]he purpose of the exclusionary rule ‘is to deter — to compel respect for the constitutional guaranty in the only effectively available way — by removing the incentive to disregard it.’ ” Maрp v. Ohio,
“[T]he exclusionary rule’s purpose of deterrence, unrelated in any way with actual guilt or the probative value of the evidence has been recognized by the writers. See Traynor ‘Mapp v. Ohio at Large in the Fifty States,’ 1962 Duke L.J. 319, 320, 341; Bender, [The Retroactive Effect of an Overruling Cоnstitutional Decision: Mapp v. Ohio, 110 U.Pa. L.Rev. 650, 670 (1962)]; Note 71 Yale L.J. 907, 942 (1962); Note 16 Rutgers L.Rev. 587, 593 (1962).” United States ex rel. Linkletter v. Walker,
See also, People v. Hurst,
. We agree with the Second Circuit that “Gideon and Mapp present quite different questions, and * * * a holding that the former is retroactive by no means сompels a similar result” with the latter issue. United States ex rel. Durocher v. LaVallce,
. The Court held that if appellate review of conviction is an integral part of the trial system, refusal to give a free transcript for purposes of appeal to indigent defendants violated the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses. Griffin v. Illinois,
. We point out that the other states in this circuit, Illinois and Wisconsin, have conducted trials under judicially imposed exclusionary rules since 1924 (People v. Castree,
. The search of Sisk’s car took place on September 4, 1950. The searсh of Miss. Mapp’s apartment took place on May 23, 1957. In the two eases in which the Mapp rule was applied “retroactively” by federal circuit courts of appeal the searches took place after the search of' Miss Mapp’s apartment — on May 18, 1959, in Hurst, and on July 16. 1959, in Hall.
