273 F. 600 | N.D. Ohio | 1921
Defendant-was by information charged with having unlawfully in his possession 114 quarts of Old Tucker whisky. Upon trial to a jury he was found guilty, and now moves for a new trial.. The only error urged in support of this motion is the admission in evidence of some bottles of this whisky and 'of the circumstances under which it was obtained, which, it is asserted, were seized and removed from defendant’s private dwelling without a lawful search warrant.
The whisky' in question was found in a one-story frame building used exclusively for lodging or dwelling purposes. The defendant was the lessee of the premises. It will be assumed that it was his dwelling, although he was unmarried, and his brother and father lived there with him. Two police officers of the city of Cleveland, acting without a search warrant and without any direction from any federal officer, entered these premises and found this whisky. At the time of such entry the defendant was absent, and tire officers were admitted and permitted to make the search by his brother. The whisky bore
This seizure was made August 3, 1920. The criminal information against the defendant was filed February 3, 1921. A petition was filed herein by him March 23, 1921, requesting its redelivery on the ground that the seizure had been made without a search warrant and in violation of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The court, when the petition was thus presented, declined to consider it, and ordered the trial to proceed, announcing that the question would be reviewed upon objections to the admissibility of evidence. A trial was had the same day, with the result above stated.
The United States Supreme Court have so far not applied this doctrine, except to documents having only evidential value, procured by an unreasonable search and seizure. It has not yet held that a thief is entitled to have returned to him stolen goods found in his possession and seized by an officer without a search warrant. It has not yet held that a burglar, a counterfeiter, or a smuggler, has a similar right to the return of the implements and tools of his trade and crime, merely because possession of them was obtained as the result of an unreasonable search and seizure. The property seized in this case is like unto stolen property. No title to it or property in it can exist in the defendant. Section 25, title 2, National Prohibition Enforcement Act (41 Stat. 315), explicitly declares that no property rights shall exist in such liquor. The only exception in the law pertains to liquor which was lawfully acquired and is not being illegally used.
It results from these observations that it would be an unsound policy and unwarranted extension of the doctrine of the Weeks Case to order the surrender either of stolen goods or contraband whisky to a known thief or a proved bootlegger, merely because that property had been taken from his possession by a private individual or by a state official without a search warrant. So far the United States Supreme Court has ordered the return only of documents having merely an evidential value thus procured. It has also declared that the object and purpose of the Fourth Amendment is limited to federal agencies, and was designed to prevent autocratic and despotic action under color of national authority. The object and purpose thus declared does not require the extension of the rule to the acts of state officials or private persons.
That these views are sound, and that evidence is not inadmissible because seized by state officers without a search warrant, is evidenced by the Weeks Case. In that case the documents seized by state police officers were not ordered to be redelivered, and it was held not to be error to admit them in evidence. The same holding was explicitly made in Youngblood v. U. S. (8 C. C. A.) 266 Fed. 795. This is in accord with the ancient and undisputed rule that confessions wrongfully ob
The motion for a new trial is overruled. An exception may be noted.
6 Sup. Ct. 524, 29 L. Ed. 746.