The issue in this case involves the validity of a search warrant issued on information obtained by officers who entered upon part of farm premises rented and occupied by the defendant and observed marijuana growing in a garden.
Defendant was indicted with others under RSA 318-B:2 for manufacture of thе controlled drug marijuana without a license. His motion to suppress as evidence certаin plants, jars, and other containers containing marijuana which were seized under a warrant was denied subject to his exception. The jury returned a guilty verdict and defendant’s exceptions wеre transferred by Keller, C. J.
*690 The affidavit in support of the warrant stated in substance that a “creditable” рerson on January 5, 1970, had given information that drug transactions were taking place at the “old Mаck place” which investigation disclosed was rented by the defendant and his wife who were of the “hippie cult”, that several out-of-State vehicles with occupants of the “hippie cult”, were seen at the premises, that on August 17, 1970, and at other times the affiant and another officеr observed marijuana growing in a garden in a field southerly of the residence with a path leading to the residence, that persons were observed in the garden examining the plants, and that tents were observed in another field on the property. The warrant authorized a search of thе dwelling, the curtilage, and canvas tents.
It is defendant’s contention that the warrant was invalid because the facts and circumstances used to support its issuance were acquired by an illegal search of the defendant’s premises by the officers involved. If this were true, the warrant would of course be invalid.
McGinnis v. United States,
Defendant’s contention rests on a two-point base: First that the area from which the officers made their observation and the garden itself were part of the curtilage аnd second that the garden was a place where under the doctrine of
Katz v. United States,
Acсording to the uncontradicted testimony of the officers at the suppression hearing, the garden which they kept under surveillance was located in a field surrounded on three sides by woods and on the fourth by a grown-up field, that it was a quarter of a mile from the dwelling and not visible from it. The field in question in whiсh the garden was located was connected by a path to another field in which three other gardens and two tents were located. The officers, led by an informant, walked for about five minutes through woods to get to the field in question.
The curtilage includes those outbuildings which are directly and intimately connected with the habitation and in proximity thereto
(State v. Charette,
We hold that the gardеn first observed by the officers, located as it was a quarter of a mile away and not visible from the dwelling was not within the curtilage.
Hester v. United States,
It seems to us that with regard to areas around a dwelling, there is a close relationship between the basis for determining if an area is within the curtilаge and whether it is a place where there is a reasonable expectation of privacy. In the case before us we have held that the garden and field were not within the curtilаge, and we also hold that they were *692 not in such proximity to the dwelling that there was any reasonable expectation of privacy.
Exceptions overruled.
