Upon the call of the case for trial, and before pleading to the indictment, the defendants made a motion to suppress the State’s evidence, for the reason that the State’s evidence was procured by an unlawful search warrant, or secured without a search warrant, and was, therefore, incompetent as evidence. The court stated that it would reserve its ruling on the motion, until after the State had rested its case. Whereupon, the defendants entered pleas of Not Guilty.
After the jury was impanelled the State offered its evidence, which tended to show these facts. On 12 May 1955 Wayne Lane, a Deputy Sheriff of Greene County, accompanied by Frank Pierce, a Policeman at the county seat, and William Sugg, a Constable in the county, went to the defendants’ home. Lane had with him a search warrant issued by Fred Carraway, a Justice of the Peace in the county. Lane told the male defendant he had a search warrant and read it to him. The three officers entered the house, and searched it. In the kitchen were four or five people, including the defendants. In the kitchen there was an odor of whiskey, and next to the stove there was a 10 or 12 quart bucket, and in the bucket was a half-gallon jar turned upside down. Lane grabbed the j ar, and when he did, the feme defendant took a pan containing water off the stove, and poured it into the bucket. , Lane jerked the jar out of the bucket. He was asked: “What does this jar contain?” The defendant objected. The objection was overruled, and the defendant excepted, and assigns this as error. Lane answered: “Non-taxpaid whiskey and whatever was in the slop bucket.” The solicitor stated he would like to offer this whiskey in evidence. The defendant objected. The objection was overruled, and the defendant excepted, and assigns this as error.
The State did not produce a search warrant. No search warrant is in the record or case on appeal. At the close of the State’s evidence the court denied the motion to suppress the State’s evidence, and the defendants excepted. When a motion like this to suppress the State’s evidence is made, the court should rule upon it, and not defer its ruling until after the State’s evidence has been introduced. 20 Am, Jur., Evidence, Sec. 396.
The North Carolina Constitution, Article I, section 15, provides: “General Warrants, whereby any officer or messenger may be commanded to search suspected places, without evidence of the act committed, or to seize any person or persons not named, whose offense is *773 not particularly described and supported by evidence, are dangerous to liberty and ought not to be granted.”
G.S. 15-27 provides: “No facts discovered or evidence obtained without a legal search warrant in the course of any search, made under conditions requiring the issuance of a search warrant, shall be competent as evidence in the trial of any action.”
The search of defendants’ home was “made under conditions requiring the issuance of a search warrant.”
In re Walters,
Where the search is made under conditions requiring the issuance of a search warrant, and it is attempted, over objection, to justify the search and seizure by the possession of a valid search warrant in the hands of the searchers, the State must produce the search warrant, or, if it has been lost, the State must prove such fact and then introduce evidence to show its contents and regularity on its face, unless the production of the warrant is waived by the accused. To render admissible evidence obtained by a search made under conditions requiring the issuance of a search warrant, this legal foundation must be laid.
Acree v. Commonwealth,
Lane testified that he had a search warrant issued by a Justice of the Peace of the county. In the absence of the search warrant, and the complaint on which it was issued, we are left to surmise its contents. Were the premises to be searched the defendants’ home? Were the premises to be searched and the things to be seized sufficiently described, as required by G.S. 18-13? We do not know. It might have been a general warrant, which is “dangerous to liberty.”
The Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia said in State v. Slat, supra: “If, when a search warrant and affidavit are at hand, but are not produced, it can be presumed that there is a valid and lawful search warrant, there would be little necessity in preserving such papers; all that would be necessary for the officers to say in justification of their *774 search would be that they had a search warrant issued by a justice of the peace. Such holding would be an open door for all kinds of abuses, and the constitutional guarantee would be of little practical value in the protection of the home and person from unreasonable searches and seizures.”
It is said in 47 Am. Jur., Searches and Seizures, sec. 31: “A search warrant must conform strictly to the constitutional and statutory provisions for its issuance. . . . However, under the rule that public officials are presumed to act legally in the performance of their duties, a duly issued search warrant is prima facie valid.” However, the record here does not show that the search warrant was duly issued.
S. v. Gaston,
S. v. Shermer,
The court committed prejudicial error in permitting the introduction in evidence, over the defendants’ objection, of the jar containing whiskey, and of the contents of the jar, for the reason that the State had not produced in court a valid search warrant to search defendants’ home.
The defendants assign as error the refusal to allow their motion for judgment of nonsuit. That motion cannot be sustained in this Court. Though the court below, in denying the motion for nonsuit, acted upon evidence, which we now hold to be incompetent, yet if this evidence had not been admitted, the State might have followed a different course, and produced in court a valid warrant to search defendants’ home.
Cherry v. Warehouse Co.,
The defendants are entitled to a
New trial.
