The defendant was convicted of a violation of § 53-298 of the General Statutes under each of two counts of the first part of the information. He was arrested under a bench warrant issued by a judge of the Superior Court upon an original information filed by the state’s attorney. There is no claim that the procedure followed was not the usual Connecticut procedure and in strict conformity with § 54-43 of the General Statutes, governing the issuance of bench warrants.
Rather, it is the defendant’s claim that the statutory procedure is itself in violation of the fourth amendment to the constitution of the United States, which provides that “no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”
This claim attacks the court’s jurisdiction of the defendant’s person
1
and, if sound, would require a judgment dismissing the case against him. It is a claim which should have been raised prior to the entry of a plea of guilty or not guilty.
State
v.
Wolcott,
The burden of claiming and proving, however, that consent rendered lawful an otherwise illegal seizure of person or property is on the state.
State
v.
Hanna,
This brings us to the crux of the motion to dismiss. It is based on the claim that the federal constitution invalidates an arrest made under authority of a bench warrant where, as in this case, the warrant is issued without any facts, supported by oath or affirmation, from which the court or judge issuing the warrant can make an independent determination of probable cause. It should be noted that the state makes no claim that the defendant’s arrest could be justified as a valid arrest without warrant under our law as set forth in cases such as
Martyn
v.
Donlin,
Through the fourteenth amendment the fundamental federal constitutional safeguards as to the issuance of warrants embodied in the fourth amendment, as interpreted and applied in decisions of the United States Supreme Court, are made obligatory upon the states.
Ker
v.
California,
It is now established law that the fourth amendment applies to arrest warrants as well as to search warrants.
Giordenello
v.
United States,
The provision of the fourth amendment that “no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation” clearly requires, inter alia, that a state’s attorney applying for a bench warrant submit facts, supported by oath or affirmation, from which the judge or court can make an independent determination that probable cause exists for the issuance of the bench warrant under General Statutes § 54-43. See cases such as
Ker
v.
California,
supra;
Albrecht
v.
United States,
273
*133
U.S. 1,
Hurtado
v.
California,
While, as emphasized in
Ker
v.
California,
supra, 34, the states have latitude in developing workable procedures governing arrests, searches and seizures, these procedures must conform to fourth amendment requirements. This is true, of course, of proceedings under our bench warrant statute. § 54-43. The bench warrant was issued for the arrest of the defendant upon an information unsupported by oath or affirmation. The warrant failed to conform to federal constitutional requirements as now established for all courts by the United States Supreme Court. Necessarily, it was fatally defective. It follows that the court was in error in failing to grant the motion of the defendant to dismiss the proceedings against him. Whether the same disposition would now be required by article first, § 8, of the Connecticut constitution need not be determined. Compare
Hyde
v.
Hyde,
In view of this conclusion, we do not discuss the other claims of error, including the claim that the bench warrant was invalid because of the failure of the state’s attorney, in the information or elsewhere, adequately to submit facts from which the judge, before issuing the bench warrant, could
*134
make an independent finding of the existence of probable cause under the rule set forth in cases such as
Jaben v. United States,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the ease is remanded with direction to dismiss the information against the defendant for lack of jurisdiction of his person.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
There is, of course, and could be, no question as to the jurisdiction of the court over the subject matter. General Statutes §§ 54-17, 54-42.
The constitutional requirements now under discussion of course do not affect the validity of the information prepared in accordance with $§ 54-42, 54-44 and 54-46 of the General Statutes. It is only when, as here, the information is used as the application for the issuance of a bench warrant calling for the arrest of the accused that the information becomes subject to those fourth amendment requirements. See eases such as
United States
v.
Hughes,
