delivered the opinion of the court:
The defendant, Samuel Saiken, was indicted by the circuit court of Cook County for the crimes of murder and conspiracy to obstruct justice. A jury returned a verdict of not guilty on the murder charge and guilty on the charge of conspiracy to obstruct justice.
The defendant claims that the search which lead to the discovery of the body of the victim was impropеr and in violation of constitutional and statutory provisions; that the jury verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence; and that the trial court abused its discretion in denying probation and in sentencing him to the penitentiary for a term of not less that 2 nor more than 3 years.
The defendant was indicted for murdering Ella Jean Scott, also known as Tina Mumma, and for conspiring with his son, Joel Saiken, to obstruct justice by concealing the victim’s body in a steel drum and burying it on his farm in Chesterton, Indiana.
The victim was a friend of both the defendant and his son. The defendant testified that he met her at O’Hare Airport on November 4, 1967, and that they drove to the defendant’s farm in Chesterton, Indiana, where they picked up Joel, the defendant’s son, and the three оf them, along with the victim’s cat, then returned to the defendant’s warehouse, in Chicago; that when they arrived at the warehouse, Joel and the victim went in, but Joel returned alone after five minutes; that shortly thereafter, Joel admitted that he had killed Mrs. Mumma. The defendant denied that he in any manner conspired to obstruct justice.
Joel testified that he never saw the victim alive on November 4 or 5; that he had been at the farm in Chesterton; and that his father had gone to O’Hare Airport to meet Mrs. Mumma. He further stated that his father came back-alone the next day, and admitted to him that he (the father) had killed Mrs. Mumma; that he and the defendant then went to the warehouse and placed the victim’s body in a steel drum; that the defendant thеn asked him to bury the body on the farm; and that he buried the body behind the goose barn on the eastern side of the farm.
The defendant’s version was corroborated by a gas station attendant, who had seen the defendant, Joel, the victim and the cat, at, and about, his service station while minor repair work was done on the defendant’s car at about '2 A.M. on Novеmber 5.
At the hearing on the motion to suppress evidence, Officer Young, on whose affidavit the search warrant was issued, testified that on the evening of February 18, 1969, he had a conversation with the defendant’s son, Joel, for about one and one-half hours; that Joel told him that he had buried the body on the farm under a manure pile behind the goose barn; and that the victim had died from a gunshot wound.
As a result of this information, Officer Harry Young obtained a search warrant on February 19, 1969, and made a search for the body. He dug near the goose bam for about two hours. The ground was frozen hard and he was unable to find the body. That evening he again talked to Joel, who further pinpointed the location of the body. The next day, Officer Yоung returned to the spot behind the goose barn and continued the excavation at the place where he had been digging the day before, and about 4 hours later he found the body.
The defendant contends that the affidavit of Officer Young on which the search warrant was issued, was insufficient in that it was based upon hearsay. The affidavit, subscribed to before Harry W. Estler, Justice of the Peace, stated:
“HARRY YOUNG swears that by virtue of information voluntarily conveyed to him by one JOEL SAIKIN on Tuesday, the 18th day of February, 1969, affiant has good reasons to believe, and does believe, that a dead human body, to-wit: a white, female approximately seventeen (17) years of age is secreted in and about the following real estatе in Porter County, Indiana:
The East Vz of the Southeast 14 of the Southwest 14 of Section 17, Township 37 North, Range 5 West of the Second Principal Meridian, containing about 20 acres more or less,
said real estate being the property of Sam D. and Minnie Saikin, said dead body being secreted in the following place and manner, to-wit: buried beneath the ground behind the goosе house on said premises, originally buried under or near a manure pile located behind or near the goose house on said premises, said manure pile subsequent thereto having been removed.
“Under and according to the provisions of Acts 1905,
page 169, paragraph 61, the same being codified as Burns Indiana Statutes 9 — 607, that the Honorable Judge of this Court, taking with him such constables and police officers as he shall designate, enter, inspect and search said premises for such dead female human body as soon as may be reasonably convenient to said Court and said judge.”
The courts of the State of Indiana have held that an affidavit based upon hearsay information and conclusions of the affiant is insufficient to show probable cause and will not support the issuance of a search warrant. (Johns v. State,
Thеse circumstances give rise to the question of whether an Illinois circuit court in a prosecution before it should suppress evidence gained from a search in Indiana, which was illegal there because based upon hearsay information contained in the affidavit supporting the search warrant.
In Burge v. State (Tex.Crim.App. 1969),
Traditional conflict principles prescribe that issues of clearly procedural nature are governed by the internal laws of the forum, whereas substantive matters are controlled by the laws of the State where the transaction occurred.
Conflicting State views concerning the scope of the fourth amendment and of the additional rights granted to a party by a State, present a novel situation in the area of conflict of laws. The doctrine of lex loci delicti has been extensively criticized and there has been a propensity to replace it by a more flexible rule, i.e., the rule of “significant relationship” embodied in tentative draft No. 9 of section 379, Reinstatement of the Law, Second, Conflict of Laws (1964). See Graham v. U.S. Grant Post,
In United States v. Teller, (7th cir. 1969)
Ker v. California,
In Elkins v. United States,
Thus under either constitutional or choice of law principles, the evidence in question was admissible in Illinois, if the Indiana search met with the requirements of the fourth amendment.
Under the requisites of the fourth amendment, the matters presented in the affidavit in support of the warrant must be adequate to enable the magistrate to form an independent conclusion as to whether from the facts and underlying circumstances presented to him under oath, probable cause exists for the issuance of the warrant. However, reviewing courts will more readily accept the judicial determination of a magistrate with reference to probable сause and will uphold his issuance of a warrant on evidence of a less persuasive character than would have justified an officer acting on his own determination and without a warrant. (Aguilar v. Texas,
The United States Supreme Court has held that hearsay information set forth in an affidavit, may be sufficient to support the issuance of a search warrant, as long as the affidavit contains a substantial basis to support the credibility of the hearsay information. (United States v. Harris,
In Aguilar, the court said that for hearsay to justify the issuance of a warrant, the affidavit must set forth some underlying circumstances tending to substantiate the informant’s conclusions and some underlying circumstances from which it could bе believed that the informant’s information was credible or reliable.
In Spinelli v. United States,
In the case at bar, the informant, Joel Saiken, personally saw оr perceived the facts asserted. He buried the body. A number of facts are recited as to the location of the body, and we have the first situation referred to by Mr. Justice White. The remaining question is whether there is a basis presented in the affidavit to suggest that the informant is honest in what he has said. The assertions of the informant — that he buried and hid a dead body-cоns titutes an admission of his implication in a crime, which is sufficient to lend credence to what he has said. We believe there was substantial basis for crediting the hearsay information, and that the search warrant was properly issued upon the affidavit.
The defendant claims that even if the search warrant were valid, the search on the second day was an independent search, not pursuant to the original warrant. He refers us to McDaniel v. State,
In executing the warrant, the officers commenced digging in search for the body but because the ground was frozen hard they were unable to complete the seаrch the first day. Upon further pinpointing the burial location, they resumed the work of the search the following morning and found the body. They had proceeded with diligence, and their conduct the second day constituted a continuation of the initial search.
Section 9 — 607 of Burns Indiana Statutes, Ann. (Acts of 1905, ch. 169, sec. 61, p.584) provides that when an affidavit is filed before a justice of the peace or city judge alleging that a dead human body is hidden, such justice of the peace or city judge, taking with him a constable or police officer, may enter, inspect and search for such dead body “and in making such search, they shall have the powers of officers executing search warrants.” The search was conduсted under the provisions of this section. The defendant claims that the search was improper because the justice of the peace, who went to the premises on the first day, did not return the second day. We have been unable to find any interpretation of this section of the statute by the Indiana courts. However, we do not believe that the stаtute can reasonably be interpreted to mean that the justice of the peace must remain on the premises during the entire search. The statute states that the justice of the peace shall take with him a constable or police officer and that “they” shall have powers of officers executing search warrants. The word “they” clearly refers to the officer as well as the justice of the peace. Inasmuch as the search on the second day was a continuation of the initial search, we find no greater basis for holding that the justice of the peace had to return to the site on the second day of the search than for finding that he had to remain on the premisеs during the entire period of the search on the first day. Neither such determination is required and we find the search to be a legal one.
The jury chose to disbelieve the version of events testified to by Joel regarding who actually committed the murder, but by its verdict, apparently it believed that part of his story relating, to the manner of disposing of the body. There was, of course, a great deal of self-interest in the matters testified to by Joel — especially as to who committed the murder. However, the conclusion reached by the jury is not so improbable or unreasonable, particularly in view ,of the defendant’s vague testimony regarding the disposition of the body, that we should substitute our conclusion in its stead.
The defеndant has urged that the verdicts were inconsistent. He was indicted in separate counts for the crimes of murder and conspiracy to obstruct justice. We cannot speculate as to why the jury found him not guilty of murder, but such finding did not invalidate the jury finding of guilty on the conspiracy charge. The evidence concerning such charge was sufficient to sustain the convictiоn. We find 'that the verdicts here were not inconsistent.
The sentence imposed by the trial court was within the limits prescribed by statute. Our power to reduce and modify sentences should be exercised with caution. Considering all of the elements of this case and the matters brought to the attention of the trial court, we do not find that the imposition of the penalty imрosed by the court constituted a great departure from the fundamental law and its spirit and purpose, or that it was manifestly in excess of the proscription of section 11 of article II of the Illinois constitution. People v. Taylor,
The granting of probation was within the discretion of the trial court. Its determination is subject to review to the extent of asсertaining whether the trial court did, in fact, exercise discretion or whether it acted in an arbitrary manner. (People v. Sims,
Judgment affirmed.
