21 N.E.2d 756 | Ill. | 1939
Plaintiff in error was convicted in the criminal court of Cook county of receiving stolen property consisting of six fur coats, knowing them to be stolen. Prior to his arrest, entry was made into his apartment and his store, which appears to have been in the same building, and a number of fur coats taken from his vault. He pleaded not guilty and filed a motion to suppress these fur coats as evidence. This motion was denied. His first assignment of error here pertains to his motion to suppress evidence and to return the coats to him.
Plaintiff in error with his wife, Bernice, lived in an apartment hotel in the city of Chicago, over the Dalpe-Riordan Fur Company store. On the morning of January 28, 1938, at the request of one J.R. McWhorter, a postal inspector for the Federal government, police officers Kelly and Disseldorf went with McWhorter to the apartment of defendant. It is admitted that neither McWhorter nor the police officers had a warrant for the arrest of defendant nor for the search of his apartment or store. The police officers testified they did not know why they were requested to go with McWhorter to defendant's apartment or place of business and had no reason to believe that he had committed any crime. McWhorter testified that he did not apprise the officers of the reason for going there but that he went because of some information which he had from a confidential source, concerning a matter which, apparently from what he did testify to, had nothing to do with the crime here charged. He made no charge against Dalpe of any crime either then or thereafter, so far as the hearing of this case shows. *609
A large number of coats, books, papers and other property was taken from the store, and defendant and his wife testified that the drawers of their apartment were searched and property taken. McWhorter testified that he did not know of any search being made in the apartment, while officer Disseldorf testified he did not remember whether he made any search in the apartment or not. The police officers testified that the furs were taken at the order of McWhorter while McWhorter's testimony was that he did not order any one to take the furs out.
According to the evidence for the defense, when the officers arrived at the apartment, defendant and his wife were still in bed; that a knock came at the door and Mrs. Dalpe went to the door and asked who was there; that a voice outside replied "It is the houseman, I want to talk to you a minute." It appears from the evidence that Mrs. Dalpe was in charge of the housemen of this apartment hotel, and defendant and his wife testified that when she turned the doorknob the officers pushed their way in; that they refused to state who they were until Mrs. Dalpe insisted and one of them threw back the lapel of his coat saying: "We are police officers." There is no testimony denying these statements as to how the officers gained admission to the apartment. In fact, the statement of McWhorter on his testimony in the main case, in response to the question whether he knew who opened the door, was: "Well Dalpe or his wife. They were both standing there when he broke it open." The police officers testified that Dalpe opened the door, while defendant, his wife and McWhorter testified that it was Mrs. Dalpe. There is no further explanation on the part of the police officers how admission was gained to the apartment.
Whether defendant demanded that he be shown a search warrant before search was made in the apartment and the store, is a matter of dispute. Both he and Mrs. Dalpe testified that he did demand a search warrant and the officers *610 replied that they didn't need a warrant. A young man named Lira, and a woman named Gray, who were in the store, both testified to hearing defendant demand such a warrant. This testimony is denied by the officers who stated that Dalpe was willing to proceed to the store and to open the vault.
The position of defendant is that the officers, who had no warrant, violently forced their way into his apartment and forced him to accompany them to his place of business, and compelled him to open a safe in which valuable articles belonging to the corporation were kept, and seized many articles including fur coats, raw furs, books, papers, dressed skins and corporation reports. Defendant also testified that the officers searched his clothes and took from him a billfold and papers and keys to his store. It appears from the evidence that the officers caused the door of defendant's apartment to be opened by subterfuge and gained entrance by pushing their way in. Their entrance into his premises was, therefore, illegal, and all that took place thereafter was likewise illegal. The People's witnesses identified some of the fur coats seized as having been stolen from a store in Champaign, Illinois, during a robbery shortly prior to the time the officers found them in defendant's store.
Defendant contends under his first assignment of error that the search and seizure by a Federal officer accompanied by State officers was unlawful; that the entry into his apartment and store was illegal and that the trial court, in refusing to suppress evidence obtained by such illegal search and seizure, violated section 6 of article 2 of the State constitution providing that the people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, and providing that no warrant shall issue without probable cause supported by affidavit particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized, and likewise the fourth amendment to the Federal constitution, which is, in effect, the same. *611
The question of unlawful search and seizure and the admission in evidence of articles so seized, has been frequently considered by this court. In People v. Castree,
In the case before us the officers went to Dalpe's apartment without a search warrant and without any reasonable ground for believing he had committed a crime. It follows that any search and seizure made by them, unless it be with his permission, was an illegal search and seizure, and the *612
property taken should be suppressed as evidence. (People v.Patterson,
An unlawful search upon illegal entry cannot be justified by what is found in the search, but if the search be unlawful in the beginning it is not made lawful by the discovery of contraband articles. People v. Poncher,
In Gouled v. United States, supra, it was held that whether entrance to the home or office of a person suspected of crime be obtained by a representative of any branch of government by stealth, or through social acquaintance, or through the guise of a business call, and whether the owner be present or not when he enters, any search or seizure subsequently and secretly made in his absence falls within the scope of the prohibition of the fourth amendment to the Federal constitution.
From a review of this record it seems apparent that McWhorter and the police officers procured entry into defendant's apartment by subterfuge and force, and without being invited in by defendant, and this before defendant or his wife could ascertain who they were. They, by subterfuge and trick, succeeded in getting her to turn the knob of the door on the pretense of one of them that he was a houseman. This was clearly an illegal entry and any property taken as a result of a search thereafter, unless it clearly appears to have been with the consent of defendant, should be suppressed as evidence. Illegal entry vitiated the proceeding. The duty rests upon the courts to prevent and discourage a growing tendency on the part of some officers, not only of the Federal government but of the State, to violate the constitutional rights of freedom from unreasonable search, simply on the ground that they feel they have some reason to believe that the person has committed a crime. In this case, so far as the record discloses, not even the excuse of suspicion of any crime committed by Dalpe appears. It should be said for the police officers that they were working entirely under McWhorter's instructions. While McWhorter testified he made the raid on information, neither the source of it nor its character was disclosed on the trial of this case. It seems apparent from this record that the action of these officers constituted a most flagrant case of violation of important constitutional rights of a citizen, and the trial court committed grave *614 error in failing to sustain the motion to suppress the evidence thus obtained by illegal search and seizure and in allowing the coats seized in defendant's store to be admitted in evidence against him. For this error the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Other questions urged by defendant arise principally out of his contention concerning illegal search and seizure. They are of such a character as not likely to arise on a retrial of the cause and therefore it is unnecessary to further consider them.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.