THOMAS FREDRICK TAVERNETTI et al., Petitioners, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY, Respondent; THE PEOPLE, Real Party in Interest.
L.A. No. 30895
Supreme Court of California
Sept. 22, 1978
12 Cal.3d 259 | 114 Cal.Rptr. 241 | 522 P.2d 1049 | 187
Dean A. Goetz, under appointment by the Supreme Court, Livingston, Grant, Stone & Kay, Laurence D. Kay, Maureen C. McGowan, Cronin & Cronin and Daniel J. Cronin for Petitioners.
No appearance for Respondent.
Edwin L. Miller, Jr., District Attorney, Peter C. Lehman, D. Michael Ebert and Richard D. Huffman, Deputy District Attorneys, for Real Party in Interest.
Evelle J. Younger, Attorney General, Jack R. Winkler, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Daniel J. Kremer, Assistant Attorney General, Alan S. Meth and Jay M. Bloom, Deputy Attorneys General, as Amici Curiae on behalf of Real Party in Interest.
OPINION
MOSK, J.—In this petition for writ of prohibition, we must decide whether a telephone company employee‘s conduct in intercepting private telephone conversations or in subsequently disclosing to law enforcement authorities the contents of such conversations violated either federal or state law concerning wiretapping and eavesdropping.
The following events gave rise to this prosecution: in November 1976 the Escondido police sought a warrant to search certain premises on the basis of an officer‘s affidavit, the sole source of information for which was the contents of two intercepted private telephone calls. The affiant, Officer Mosemak, declared that he had been contacted by Joseph Maco, a lineman for the Pacific Telephone Company assigned to “trouble shoot” and repair line malfunctions, and informed that Maco, while testing a line for a malfunction, cut in on a conversation and heard the party calling from the telephone unit offer 100,000 “bennies” for sale at $5,000. Some time later, Maco cut in on another conversation and heard the same voice offer to sell “pharmaceutical quality type ‘bennies’ in the quantity of one million . . . in minimum lots of 100,000 at $5,000 per lot.” Maco stated that he cut in on these conversations because, having metered the line electronically, he “was of the opinion that there was a malfunction in the line each of the two times . . . . [and] each time he cut in on the line he listened for a short time and did not monitor the entire conversation.”
Defendants then moved to set aside the information pursuant to
We first consider the interplay between the federal and state provisions which defendants invoke. In People v. Conklin (1974) 12 Cal.3d 259, 273 [114 Cal.Rptr. 241, 522 P.2d 1049], we concluded that the proscriptions of
It is clear that the telephone company employee whose conduct is challenged committed acts which, unless excepted by subdivision (b), are punishable by fine and imprisonment. It is undisputed, for instance, that twice he intentionally tapped a telephone wire, an act expressly proscribed in subdivision (a). The trial court, however, made certain factual findings that undercut defendants’ position. The court, in denying the motion to set aside the information, impliedly found that the employee tapped the telephone wire “for the purpose of construction, maintenance, conduct or operation of the services and facilities” of the telephone company, and was thus exempted by subdivision (b)(1) from
The People argue, alternatively, that the employee‘s disclosure of the contents of conversations overheard during the course of his intentional wiretaps was not violative of subdivision (a) either because disclosure of information learned during a legal interception cannot violate
We reject the assertion that disclosure of the contents of a private telephone conversation is not barred by subdivision (a) when such contents are obtained by an intentional, albeit legal, wiretap. To accept that concept would contravene the unambiguous language of
To effectuate the legislative purpose expressed in
We must therefore determine whether the telephone company employee‘s disclosure was “for the purpose of construction, maintenance, conduct or operation of the services and facilities” of the telephone company so as to bring such disclosure within the exemption provided in subdivision (b)(1). The People may not assert an implied finding of fact by the trial court to establish the application of subdivision (b)(1), for the ruling of the court below appears to have been based on the erroneous legal conclusion, urged by the People before this court, that disclosure—for whatever purpose—is not proscribed as long as the initial interception was legal under
The People offer a bifurcated and strained rationale in contending it is a necessary incident to the duties of telephone company employees to report evidence of crimes intercepted by them in the course of their work. It is first asserted that as the telephone company is a public utility, it is bound to serve the public, and failing to report evidence of a crime would be inconsistent with this purpose. The alternative aspect advanced involves the contention that disclosing evidence of a crime protects the company‘s rights, even though the criminal activity is not directed against the telephone company. Invoked is a right of the telephone company to insure that its systems are not used to facilitate criminal activity.
McKinnon, however, is inapposite. The issue there was whether cardboard cartons, improperly described and shipped via air carrier at the rate for “personal effects,” were “things readily moved” and thus, pursuant to Chambers v. Maroney (1970) 399 U.S. 42 [26 L.Ed.2d 419, 90 S.Ct. 1975], subject to search by a suspicious airline employee. In McKinnon there was no guiding statute, federal or state, relating to conduct by employees and no criminal sanctions or statutory exclusionary rule for conduct at variance with the statute.
The contentions in the instant case, designed to bring the employee‘s disclosure within the limited exemption of subdivision (b)(1), fail. His disclosure of the contents of private telephone conversations simply was not for the purpose of protecting the telephone company or promoting its interests, but no doubt derived, rather, from what the employee perceived to be his independent obligation to bring to the attention of law enforcement authorities suspicious conversations of which he had become aware. The People respond to this “example of good citizenry” by claiming that it would be anomalous to hold the employee potentially liable criminally for performing his duty of reporting suspicion of crime. Such a result, it is urged, would be inconsistent with the public policy expressed in McKinnon.
There is another fundamental principle involved, emphasized subsequent to McKinnon, that the People overlook: the public policy favoring protection of privacy rights. The California Constitution has been amended to include among the inalienable rights of all people the right to pursue and obtain privacy (
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that a search warrant should not have issued because the evidence presented to secure it was obtained in violation of
Let a writ of prohibition issue as prayed.
Bird, C. J., Tobriner, J., Manuel, J., and Newman, J., concurred.
CLARK, J., Dissenting.—Since the evidence challenged here was not obtained by an unlawful wiretap, suppression is not required.
Subdivision (a) of
Finally, subdivision (c) of
The word “obtained” in subdivision (c) most reasonably refers to the original acquisition of the information by wiretap. Such meaning is consistent with the use of the words “so obtained” in the phrase “or to communicate . . . any information so obtained” in subdivision (a). The original acquisition of the evidence challenged here was clearly lawful under
Even assuming for the sake of argument that
Finally, today‘s majority opinion both impedes effective law enforcement and discourages good citizenship. Now, one who innocently overhears a crime being planned or carried out by telephone cannot lawfully do anything to prevent it. Today, it is a narcotics transaction involving hundreds of thousands of contraband pills; tomorrow, robbery, rape or murder.
The petition for writ of prohibition should be denied.
Richardson, J., concurred.
