Aрpellant Williams was convicted of possessing and operating an unregistered still and of possessing five gallons of moonshine whiskey. He appeals on fourth amendment grounds, contending that the still was located as a result of an illegal search conducted by federal agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF). We disagree and affirm the convictions.
Federal Agent Harry Braxton received a tip from an undisclosed source that a still was being operated on Hyrun Crutcher’s property in Marshall County, Mississippi.
1
Armed with the information obtained in this investigation, the agents prepared an affidavit and procured a search warrant for Crutcher’s property. When they executed the warrant, both Crutcher and appellant Williams were arrested on the premises, the latter carrying three one-gallon jugs of moonshine. Crutcher later pleaded guilty, while Williams unsuccessfully maintained his innocence. 2
Since
Katz v. United States,
Our prior case law forcеs us to conclude that the still shed in this case was within the curtilage of the dwelling occupied by Hyrum Crutcher’s daughter. While this shed was approximately fifty yards
The fact that the shed itself is within the curtilage is not necessarily dispositive, however, since the agents never actually entered the shed. This circumstance forces us to attempt to drаw a rational line between the curtilage and the “open fields.” Clearly, if the agents had gone no farther than the wrecked truck we would have upheld the search under the “open fields” doctrine, since the wreck was no part of the farmstead and merely defined a point in those fields. Nor do we think that the dilapidatеd hogpen fence, stepped over by the agents on their foray to the back wall of the shed, defines the curtilage. In the past we have not considerеd the crossing of a fence significant unless the fenced area included the house.
See, e. g., Brock v. United States,
The fence in question here was not a privacy fence or an exclusionary one; in its best dаys, it was meant to do no more than keep the hogs in, not to keep anyone out. In its condition when the agents stepped over it, it offered little, if any, impedimеnt either to vision or to ingress. In view of these considerations, we think that the fence was not such as to create either any reasonable expectation of added privacy or to either join the still shed to or separate it from the residences. We therefore conclude that, whatever minor practical significance it may have retained for the hogs, it has no legal significance for us.
In legal contemplation, therefore, the case is to be viewed as though the agents had merely approached the back wall of an extreme outbuilding across open fields. Our prior case law affords us no guidance in determining the extent of the curtilage beyond the most remote building in the curtilage in the absence of a fence that encompasses the house.
United States v. Holmes,
Three possible ways of defining the curtilage suggest themselves: drawing the line an arbitrary distance from the most remоte outbuilding in the curtilage, holding that the curtilage includes a “reasonable zone” beyond the most remote outbuilding in the curtilage, or holding that the outer walls of the extreme outbuildings of the curtilage define the outer limits of the curtilage. Rejecting an arbitrary distance as being irrational and a “reasonable zone” as being too vague for guidance, we hold that, as to outbuildings that are not encompassed by a fence that also includes the house, or perhaps a privacy or exclusionary one around them, the outer limits of the curtilage are defined by the walls of the remote outbuildings. Certainly such buildings give an added expectation of privacy for their contents, but we see none as to the area outside and beyond them.
Because the agents in this case did not intrude upon the curtilage sо defined but merely detected the odor of mash while standing outside the curtilage, their furtive trespass, though carried to the very verge of propriety, does not render the search warrant invalid.
Hester v. United States,
Accordingly, the judgment below is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The government admits that this tip did not constitute probable cause for a search of Crutcher’s land.
. Although the still shed rested on property owned by neither Williams nor Crutcher, but by Crutcher’s daughter, the government unaccountably concedes standing, and that issue is not before us.
