OPINION OF THE COURT
This is the second appeal by a state prisoner from a denial of his petition for habeas corpus challenging the validity of his conviction and confinement. On first appeal we concluded that the district court had erred in dismissing the petition for alleged failure to exhaust state remedies, and in remanding the case for disposition on its merits we observed that the “illegal search and seizure claim, if established, is sufficient to require the vacation of petitioner’s conviction.” 3 Cir.,
On the evening of July 12, 1961, having received information that a burglary was to be committed, police officers observed a car leaving the petitioner’s home in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. They followed the ear to Trenton, New Jersey where they observed a burglary and identified the petitioner, Boyance, as one of the participants. They again identified the petitioner crossing a toll bridge back into Pennsylvania. After being informed by an officer stationed at the Boyance home that Boyance had returned, they proceeded to obtain a search warrant.
At 1:00 a. m., on the basis of a con-clusory affidavit supplemented by oral testimony relating the foregoing events, 1 a justice of the peace issued a warrant authorizing search of the Boyance home. On its face the printed warrant was limited to “search in the daytime”. Armed with this warrant the officers returned to the home and about 2:30 a. m. made their entry. While some of the officers were being admitted by Boyance’s wife at one door, others forced entry through a rear door. The search of the home occupied by Boyance, his wife and eight children, was conducted by at least eleven officers and lasted until about 4:00 a. m. The petitioner and a co-defendant were discovered and arrested and certain incriminating evidence was seized.
The time of a police search of an occupied family home may be a significant factor in determining whether, in a Fourth Amendment sense, the search is “unreasonable.” At common law, prior to the adoption of the Fourth Amendment, there was a strong aversion to nighttime searches. 2 Hale, Pleas of the Crown, Stokes & Ingersoll ed. 1847, 113; Cooley, Constitutional Limitations, 7th
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Ed. 1903, 430; Voorhies v. Faust, 1922,
During the early years of the republic this common-law tradition was embodied in two statutes passed by our first Congress that authorized only daytime searches, Act of July 31, 1789, § 24, 1 Stat. 43; Act of March 3, 1791, § 29, 1 Stat. 206. Thereafter, the reluctance to authorize nighttime searches except under exceptional circumstances continued as an integral part of our jurisprudence. Today, consistent with restrictions imposed by prior federal statutes, Rule 41(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides:
“The warrant shall direct that it be served in the daytime, but if the affidavits are positive that the property is on the person or in the place to be searched, the warrant may direct that it be served at any time.”
Similar limitations have been imposed under state statutes. See Petit v. Colmary, Del.1903,
Aversion to such police intrusion at night as a serious threat to ordered liberty also appears in authoritative contemporary judicial pronouncements. As Mr. Justice Frankfurter concisely stated in Monroe v. Pape, 1961,
“Searches of the dwelling house were the special object of this universal condemnation of official intrusion. Night-time search was the evil in its most obnoxious form.”
See also Frank v. State of Maryland, 1959,
Here it is claimed that the serach, though made late at night, was reasonable because authorized by a warrant issued by a magistrate.
2
The district court found that since the state courts had considered and rejected the illegal search and seizure claim, they had ruled as a matter of state law that the daytime limitation of the warrant did not invalidate the search.
If the warrant has been silent as to the authorized time of execution it might have presented- a substantial problem of interpreting language. See Johnson v. United States, 6th Cir. 1931,
Yet, armed with their limited warrant, the officers returned to the watched home, joined their colleagues there, observed the darkness of the house indicating that the householders had retired, and about 2:30 a. m. made their entry, forcing a rear door in the process. The record does not show, in possible justification for this action, any reason for apprehension that the evidence within the house would be removed, hidden or destroyed before morning. Accordingly, we hold the search constitutionally invalid.
With reference to a separate point, we are mindful that in addition to the items seized in the search of the house itself, two iron bars, identified as being used to break into the various burglarized buildings, were found in a search of a car belonging to Roberts, a co-defendant. The car was parked in Boyance’s driveway. The district court found that these were seized in a later search after Roberts, who had been discovered and arrested in the first search and was then in custody, gave his consent to the search of the car. This finding has been challenged on appeal but we need not consider whether it was clearly erroneous since the arrest of Roberts and his subsequent consent were fruits of the original search.
3
See Wong Sun v. United States, 1963,
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to grant the writ without prejudice to the state’s right to try the defendant again.
Notes
. We do not reach the point urged by the appellant that unrecorded oral statements to the magistrate may not be the basis for a finding of probable cause to issue a warrant. United States v. Sterling, 3d Cir. 1966,
. The court below found that the search was not incident to the arrest of Boyance. This factual finding was clearly justified by the record and has not been challenged by the Commonwealth on appeal. Consequently the search does not come within any exception to the requirement of obtaining a warrant. Agnello v. United States, 1925,
. The district court found it unnecessary to consider whether the consent was “tainted” since it found that the original search was lawful.
