279 S.W. 200 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1925
Lead Opinion
Prior to the trial of the case defendant filed a motion to suppress certain evidence alleged to have been obtained by unlawful search of his dwelling house. The basis for his motion was the allegation that the petition for the search warrant, although it purported verity on its face, had not in fact been sworn to by the prosecuting attorney until after the warrant itself was issued by the justice of the peace and the search thereunder made by the officers, and that the entry, search and seizure under such warrant were illegal as was also the use against defendant in the trial of the case of evidence so obtained.
Before the jury was called, evidence was heard on this motion and the following facts disclosed: W.S. Hayden, the justice of the peace by whom the warrant was issued, testified that on November 7, 1923, Mr. Gross, a deputy sheriff of Marion county, Mr. Scothorn, the foreman of the grand jury, and a gentleman unknown to the justice, called at his home, where he at the time was engaged in repairing the roof, at which time they presented him with the application for the search warrant and the warrant itself, both on prepared legal forms, requiring only the jurat of the justice to the application and his signature to the warrant. The justice did not read the application, but signed his name to the warrant, omitting, however, to attach his jurat to the application therefor, which purported to have been previously signed by Roy Hamlin, prosecuting attorney of Marion county. *454 On the same day defendant's home was searched by the officers in his absence and one-half pint of liquor found. A few days later, the search warrant and the application were returned to the justice's office, at which time he noticed that he had failed to affix his jurat to the prosecuting attorney's application upon the occasion of the issuance of the search warrant. Thereupon he made the correction, dating the jurat, however, November 7, 1923, as though the application had in fact been sworn to before him on that date. Although the State purported to object to the introduction of any evidence in contradiction of the record of the justice, nevertheless Hayden was cross-examined by the prosecuting attorney at some length as to whether or not his acknowledgment to the petition had been taken over the telephone, but the justice denied any knowledge of such fact.
At the close of all the evidence heard on the motion to suppress, the court overruled the motion on the theory that the verity of the records of the justice's court could not be impeached by parol evidence, to which action of the court defendant at the time objected and excepted.
For the reasons set up in his motion to suppress, defendant renewed his objection to the use of evidence obtained under the search warrant when offered against him in the State's case, and kept the point alive in his motion for a new trial. The adverse ruling of the court on the motion to suppress is assigned as error in this court.
Addressing ourselves, therefore, to a determination of the correctness of the court's ruling, we find that section 25, page 244, Laws 1923, under the authority of which the search warrant in the instant case was sought to be obtained, provides in respect to the issuance of such warrant as follows:
"The attorney general of the State of Missouri, or the prosecuting attorney of any county, . . . is hereby empowered to file in the circuit court . . . or any other court having criminal jurisdiction in the county, *455 or before the judge thereof in vacation, or justice of the peace, an application for a search warrant, which application shall be by petition setting forth substantially the facts upon which the same is based, . . . which petition shall be verified by the oath of the officer filing the same. If it shall appear to the satisfaction of the . . . justice of the peace before whom said petition shall be filed, either from the facts set forth in said petition, or from evidence heard thereon, that there is probable cause to believe that intoxicating liquor is being unlawfully manufactured, sold, stored or kept in any building, structure, or at any place described in said petition . . ., it shall be the duty of such court or such officer before which or whom said petition was filed, to issue or cause to be issued a search warrant thereon. . . ."
There can be no dispute that under the clear and unambiguous language of the statute the warrant for the search of defendant's home could have been legally issued only upon a petition stating probable cause therefor and verified by the oath of the prosecuting attorney. It is equally beyond dispute (if the evidence of the justice is to be admitted) that, at the time the search warrant in question was issued and defendant's home entered and his property seized thereunder, the prosecuting attorney's petition had not been verified and that consequently there was no basis in law for the issuance of the warrant. But the omissions in the application for the warrant were later supplied by the justice so that when the same was introduced in evidence upon the hearing on defendant's motion to suppress, the application purported regularity on its face and appeared to have been verified in compliance with the statute. The question for determination, therefore, is whether or not it was proper to impeach the recitals of the jurat to the application for the search warrant by the oral testimony of the justice. If such evidence was properly admitted, *456 the motion to suppress should clearly have been sustained; if not, the ruling of the trial court was correct.
The decision of this question necessarily hinges upon a consideration of the status in law of the records of whatsoever nature which may be kept by a justice of the peace. In arriving at our conclusion in this case we are mindful of the rule that justices' courts are inferior tribunals, possessing limited and statutory jurisdiction only, do not proceed according to the course of the common law and therefore no intendment is allowed in their favor. [Sutton v. Cole,
Generally speaking, the records of a justice of the peace fall into two groups: Those that he is required by law to keep, and those as to which there is no such legal requirement.
Section 2727, Revised Statutes 1919, requires every justice of the peace to keep a docket, in which he shall make nine separate classes of entries required by said section. In construing this statute our courts have invariably held that when an entry required by law to be made by the justice in his docket is regularly entered therein, it imports verity and is the best and only competent evidence as to the fact covered by such entry. [Garnett v. Stacy,
However, it has lately been held that even an entry required by law to be made in the docket may be attacked collaterally for fraud, accident or mistake. [Tyree v. Navrau and Hedgewood v. Sheik, supra.] But the protection extended to the records of a justice of the peace under the law of evidence applies only to those entries required by law to be made in his docket and the records which he does keep but is not required to keep may be impeached. [Brown v. Pearson,
The State in its brief in this case admits that there was no legal requirement of the entry by the justice of a minute of the proceedings attending the issuance of the search warrant in question, but contends that the application for the search warrant and the warrant itself constituted the only records of the justice and that, since the application affirmatively showed that the petition was verified before the justice on November 7, 1923, such record should no more have been the subject of collateral attack than entries required by law to be made in the docket. But the rule of evidence invoked by the State has never been held to apply to the record of any acts of a justice of the peace save those of a judicial nature and in cases commenced before him in which the defendant was a party with the right to appear and make his defense. It is true that, inasmuch as the justice of the peace was required to determine probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant, he performed a judicial act, but of this there is no record unless we are to say that the issuance of the search warrant itself necessarily presupposed such finding. Certainly the act of the justice in attaching his jurat to the application for the search warrant at a time when there was no action pending in his court (nor in any other court) against defendant and when from the very nature of the proceedings defendant could not have been present to have invoked his legal rights was not such an act as contemplated by the cases prohibiting the impeachment in a collateral proceeding by parol evidence of docket entries required by law to be kept. Furthermore, in so far as the jurat to the petition might be considered a record of a judicial proceeding, it was improperly entered, for the reason that a justice of the peace has no power to make nunc *458 pro tunc entries. [Norton v. Porter,
What we have said precludes a discussion of other points raised by defendant. Inasmuch as the record in this case discloses no evidence in the possession of the State which could be used against defendant, save that which we hold should have been suppressed, there is no necessity for remanding this case for another trial. Accordingly the Commissioner recommends that the judgment of the circuit court be reversed and the defendant discharged.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion of BENNICK, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly reversed and the defendant discharged. Daues, P.J., andBecker and Nipper, JJ., concur.