Convicted of a violation of Section 5604, 26 U.S.C. (i. e., transportation and possession of untaxed distilled spirits), the defendant appeals, assigning error in the District Court in failing to sustain his motion to suppress evidence.
The facts, so far as pertinent to the motion to suppress, are undisputed. Two State Alcoholic Beverage Control Agents observed the defendant drive a car registered in the name of Robert T. McKnight into Jasamine Alley in Wilmington, North Carolina, and stop in front of a residence in such Alley. The defendant got out of the car, went back “to the trunk of the car” but, noting the officers, as they assumed, turned and entered a house in the Alley. 1 They immediately sought assistance for the purpose of maintaining surveillance of the *718 defendant. With this added assistance, the Alley was “completely covered” by the officers. In the meantime, the officers requested by radiophone a warrant to search the car driven by the defendant. Told that the defendant had been seen about a block and a half away, they overtook the defendant and placed him in custody, advising him they were taking him “back to the car” and that they were “going to get a search warrant and wanted to search his car”. The officers with the defendant returned to the car and, when the search warrant came, they “searched the car and found the liquor”, which formed the basis of the charge against the defendant.
The search warrant itself was identified as being issued in a prosecution against Robert T. McKnight, the owner of the car. The affidavit, on the basis of which the search warrant was issued, however, referred exclusively to the defendant. He manifestly was the person against whom the search was directed and whose reputation alone formed the basis for a search of the vehicle. Thus, the affidavit referred to the circumstance that the car proposed to be searched had been seen in the defendant’s yard and that, based on information received from “reliable sources that wish to remain confidential”, it was understood “that Jake Cobb uses(d) this vehicle from time to time to transport nontaxpaid liquor into the Wilmington area”. The affidavit identified the defendant as having “a long record for making and transporting nontaxpaid liquor”. On that basis, the affidavit concludes with the statement that the affiant and his associated officers feel “that there is a strong possibility that this vehicle now contains nontaxpaid liquor.”
The motion to suppress was not made until, during the examination of the arresting officers at the trial, evidence of the search was offered. At that point, the defendant moved to suppress. 2 In disposing of the motion, the District Court did not rule on the sufficiency of the affidavit supporting the search warrant; it held that, since the defendant had made no showing of either a proprietary or possessory interest in the vehicle searched, he was without standing to challenge the validity of the search. We disagree and reverse.
It should be observed at the outset that the Government does not seriously contend that the affidavit supporting the issuance of the search warrant met the test of Aguilar v. Texas (1964)
It will be noted that, in summarizing his supporting facts, the affiant, G. E. McLean, did not assert that such facts constituted “probable cause” but merely “a strong possibility” that the defendant had in his possession and was engaged in transporting untaxed spirits. 3 In short, by his own statement, the affiant affirmed merely a suspicion or conjecture. That he properly evaluated his own facts seems obvious. The only two *719 facts alleged in his affidavit were that the defendant “has a long record for making and transporting nontaxpaid liquor” and, based on “information received from reliable sources that wish to remain confidential”, the deféndant “uses this vehicle from time to time to transport nontaxpaid liquor”. There is nothing given to support the claim of a “long record” of law violations on the part of the defendant. No arrests or convictions are cited. For all the affidavit shows, this conclusion rests wholly on rumor and hearsay, verified by no specific instances. 4 Again, the statement that the defendant “uses” the vehicle proposed to be searched “from time to time” to transport illegal liquor rests on information supplied by “reliable sources” whose reliability was not vouchsafed in the affidavit by a single circumstance. 5 Nor does the affidavit indicate how the “reliable sources” obtained their information, if any, upon which they rested their statement of fact. 6 Equally silent is the affidavit as to why on this occasion the officers felt that the defendant had in his possession untaxed liquor. Actually this affidavit would, if sustained, justify the search of any automobile being driven at any time by the defendant. Mere “possibility”, “conjecture” or “suspicion” is insufficient to support the issuance of a search warrant; and that is the utmost that can be claimed for the affidavit in this case. 7
The government, however, contends strenuously — and this is really the burden of its argument on appeal — that, whatever the insufficiency of the affidavit, the defendant, not having made claim to either a proprietary, or a possessory interest in the vehicle, has no standing to attack the validity of the search.
In Jones v. United States (1960)
Beyond doubt, the defendant in this case fell within the first class. He was the person “against whom the search was directed”. The search was manifestly not “directed at someone else”. The only basis claimed for the search was the alleged reputation of the defendant. He was the one whose possession of the car excited the suspicion of the arresting officers and prompted them to follow it. He was the one under surveillance as the officers awaited the search warrant. He was the one taken into custody and brought back to the car preparatory to the search. He was the one who was immediately arrested, advised of his rights, and taken to jail, when the search was made. The officers assumed throughout that the car was in the possession of the defendant and requested him to return with them to the car, referring to the car as “his car”. They repeated this same phrase as they undertook the search. From beginning to end, the defendant was the object of the search and his possession of the vehicle to be searched was accepted and declared by the searching officers.
Moreover,
Jones
established the rule that one charged with a crime of which possession is an essential element has standing to challenge the validity of a search, without regard to whether he asserts an invasion of his privacy because of either a proprietary or possessory interest in the premises or vehicle searched.
10
This rule was reaffirmed in Simmons v. United States (1968)
In Velasquez v. Rhay (9th Cir. 1969)
“The district court held that petitioner lacked standing to challenge the constitutionality of a search and seizure since he denied that the premises searched were his. Petitioner was convicted of possession of the property seized in the search, and his standing is therefore established by Jones v. United States,362 U.S. 257 , 263-264,80 S.Ct. 725 ,4 L.Ed.2d 697 (1960).”
In Williams v. United States (5th Cir. 1969)
*721
In Colosimo v. Perini (6th Cir. 1969)
United States v. Allsenberrie (7th Cir. 1970)
The Government concedes that “for all practical purposes this is a crime by possession case”, but it argues that the rule in Jones, which establishes that where the possession is an essential element in the offense the defendant is relieved of the obligation to establish standing by proving a proprietary or possessory right in either the property seized or the vehicle searched, has been overruled “sub silentio” by Simmons. More specifically, the Government contends that Jones was predicated upon the unfairness of requiring a defendant to admit possession, the equivalent of a confession of guilt, as an essential basis for his motion to suppress, and that Simmons removed such unfairness by establishing that an admission of possession upon hearing of the motion was inadmissible on the subsequent trial of the substantive offense. Accordingly, by this argument, Simmons removed the reason for the rule in Jones and this, the Government urges, inferentially overruled it.
This argument is untenable for several reasons. First,
Simmons
gives no support to any idea that the Court was weakening in any particular the rule in
Jones,
much less overruling it
“sub silentio”.
On the contrary, as shown in the excerpt quoted
supra
from
Simmons,
the Court restated and reaffirmed the rule in
Jones so
far as it applied to crimes in which possession was an essential element. Secondly,
Simmons
was not concerned with a possessory crime: that situation had already been disposed of in
Jones
by giving one charged with such crime standing without requiring as a predicate for his motion a claim of a proprietary or possessory interest in either the vehicle searched or the property seized. Thus, in
Simmons,
the Court said, in marking out the issue before it, that, “The dilemma faced by defendants like Garrett is most extreme in prosecutions for possessory crimes, for then the testimony required for standing itself proves an element of the offense. We eliminated that Hobson’s choice in Jones v. United States,
supra,
by relaxing the standing requirements. This
*722
Court has never considered squarely the question whether defendants charged with non-possessory crimes, like Garrett, are entitled to be relieved of their dilemma entirely. It was to this latter question that
Simmons
directed itself, not the right of one charged, as this defendant was, with a possessory crime. See, also, Mancusi v. De Forte (1968)
There is accordingly no merit in the contention by the Government that Simmons altered the rule in Jones which gives the defendant here standing to attack the search, despite his failure to assert a proprietary or possessory interest in either the vehicle searched or the contraband seized. 12
For the above reasons, the judgment of the District Court must be
Reversed.
Notes
. This action of the defendant was not referred to in the affidavit on which the subsequent search warrant was issued nor was there any testimony in this regard submitted to the issuing magistrate. It cannot be used to justify the issuance of the search warrant, which must rest exclusively on the facts stated in the supporting affidavit. Aguilar v. Texas (1964)
. Rule 41(e), Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure contemplates that a motion to suppress should be made prior to trial. The Rule, however, provides that the trial court “in its discretion may entertain the motion at the trial * * By considering and ruling on the motion, the District Court exercised the discretion given it under the Rule and the motion was properly before it, though first made at the trial. Glisson v. United States (5th Cir. 1969)
. Cf., Saville v. O’Brien (1st Cir. 1969)
. See, United States v. Melvin (4th Cir. 1969)
See, also, United States v. Manetti (D.C.Del.1970)
. Cf., Spinelli v. United States, supra: “Though the affiant swore that his confidant was ‘reliable,’ he offered the magistrate no reason in support of this conclusion.”
See, also, United States v. Melvin, supra.
. See, United States v. Flanagan (5th Cir. 1970)
See, also, Von Utter v. Tulloch (D.C.Mass.1969)
Cf., United States v. Bridges (8th Cir. 1969)
. United States v. Flanagan,
supra;
United States v. Whitlow (7th Cir. 1964)
. See, Baker v. United States (D.C.Cir. 1968)
. United States v. Graham (6th Cir. 1968)
. Actually, the Supreme Court, in establishing its rule of standing under the Fourth Amendment, has abandoned reliance on technical common law concepts of private property and bases its rule on an “interest in privacy despite the complete absence of a property claim * * finding that “the principal object of the Fourth Amendment is the protection of privacy rather than property”. Warden, Maryland Penitentiary v. Hayden (1966)
. See, also, to the effect that it is only necessary that possession be an “essential element of the offense” as distinguished from the sole basis, Niro v. United States (1st Cir. 1968)
. It is the view of many legal commentators that any person against whom the fruit of an illegal search is offered in evidence should have standing to challenge the search. See A.L.I. Model Code of Pre-Arraignment Procedure, Tentative Draft No. 3, pp. 103-4 where the problem of standing is described as “productive of aridly technical discussion and decision.” The Court referred to such contention in
Simmons:
“It has been suggested that the adoption of a ‘police-deterrent’ rationale for the exclusionary rule, see Linkletter v. Walker,
