6 Alaska 769 | D. Alaska | 1922
The question is governed by sections 2394, 2395, 2396, and 2397 of the Alaska Code, and general law on subject of arrests. These code sections read as follows:
“Sec. 2394. That the defendant is not to he subjected to any more restraint than is necessary and proper for his arrest and detention.
“Sec. 2395. .That the officer must inform the defendant that ho acts under the authority of the warrant, and must also show the warrant if required by the defendant.
“Sec. 2396. That if, after notice of intention to arrest the defendant, he either flee or forcibly resist, the officer may use all necessary and proper means to effect the arrest.
“See. 2397. That the officer may break open any outer or inner door or window of a dwelling house, or otherwise, to execute the warrant, if after notice of his authority and purpose he be refused admittance.”
Another section of the Alaska Code provides that an officer may make an arrest without a warrant when an offense has been committed in his presence, or when a felony has been committed and he has reasonable grounds to believe that the person he seeks is the guilty party.
The general law governing arrests may be briefly stated as .follows: In making arrest for a felony, either with or without a warrant, an officer may use any reasonable force necessary to detain the accused person, but he must use no more than is necessary. If the accused resists, or attempts to es
In misdemeanors, while an officer may use all reasonable force when making a lawful arrest, either with or without a warrant, he cannot go so far as to take life; the law setting too high a value on human life to permit it to be taken rather than allow a man charged with a misdemeanor to escape.
In the matter of searching houses, all the foregoing rules govern. As the statute provides, an officer may break into a house to apprehend an accused person, if he is refused admittance. He not only can enter the house of the man accused, but he may enter the house of another person, who is giving refuge to the accused, after stating his business, and being refused, and the owner of a house sheltering an accused person resists the officer at the same peril as the accused.
None of these rules apply to the present case. The statute expressly says that an officer may break into a house to serve a warrant after demand and refusal of admission. It is argued by the prosecution that when an officer knocks at a door and receives no response he is then warranted entering the house by force. This would be true in case the officer had reasonable grounds to believe that the man wanted was in the house, and would probably escape if not immediately apprehended. I think this would be true, even in case of a misdemeanor; but in this case the testimony of the officers not only fails to show that they had any apprehension that the defendant Chris Pappadementro might escape if not immediately arrested, but their testimony shows conclusively' that there was no grounds for any such apprehension.
The defendants were engaged in business in adjoining rooms ■ — George Pappadementro conducting a restaurant, and Chris Pappadementro a pool hall — both known as “The Nugget.” It is unthinkable that Chris Pappadementro would try to' leave
Let us see to what an extreme this argument in favor of the officers’ authority might lead, if it were accepted. Suppose a deputy marshal in Anchorage holds a warrant against a well-known property owner, charging him with possession of intoxicating liquor, and to serve that warrant he goes at 3 o’clock in the afternoon to the defendant’s house and raps at the door. It might happen that defendant’s wife, alone in the house, is bathing. According to the contention of the prosecution, if she fails to make a response to the rap on the door, the deputy marshal would have the right to break in the door and search the entire house, including the bathroom.
The prosecution argues that the right contended for here is necessary because, otherwise, accused persons might occasionally escape. There are two answers to this: One has already been pointed out — the unreasonableness of breaking into a residence seeking a defendant charged only with a misdemeanor merely on suspicion that he might be found there. The other is that, if the officer with a warrant fears the defendant might escape from the house he can easily post some one at the other end of the house, or one at each of the four corners of it, if 'necessary. In this case there were two deputy marshals; one might easily have gone to the back of the house, while the other remained at the front entrance, if they believed the defendant was there and might escape.
I have examined all the law I can find in Anchorage on this subject, and have found nothing inconsistent with the foregoing statement. The best review is to be found in a long case note to one of the cases cited by the prosecution. Hawkins v. Commonwealth, 61 Am. Dec. 147. There a great many
“Whether the lawful breaking is of an inner or outer door, it can be done only after the officer has notified the inmates of his business, and demanded admittance. ‘Otherwise’, asked Abbott, O. J., ‘how is it possible for a party to know what the object of the person breaking open the door may be? He has a right to consider it as an aggression on his private property which he will be justified in resisting to the utmost’ ”
The note to the Hawkins Case (61 Am. Dec. 157) states the following:
“An officer cannot lawfully break either an inner door or an outer door,, * * * until he has disclosed to the inmates of the house his purpose to arrest some one inside, and demanded admittance. Otherwise it would be impossible for one to know what the object of the person breaking open the door might be, and the owner has a right to consider it an aggression on his private property, which may be resisted to the utmost.”
On page 161 of 61 Am. Dec. the note continues:
“The amount of force which may be lawfully used in effecting an arrest is no more than is actually necessary to secure the arrest and safe custody of the accused.”
Further the note says: '
“Murfree, in his work on Sheriffs, section 148, remarks ‘that there is prevalent, not only among officers of every grade, but throughout the community, an exaggerated idea of the powers, in this respect which the law vouchsafes to its ministers. A sheriff, constable or policeman with a revolver and a warrant charging a misdemeanor, is popularly supposed to hold the keys of life and death, and, as he frequently shares in the delusion, he abuses his powers with sometimes very tragical results. What the law does allow in the use of physical force is the very minimum by which the desired object can be attained. Whatever a rash or overzealous officer may do in excess of this is without warrant of law.’ ”
The deputy marshals who made the search and seizure in question are experienced and usually discreet oflicers, but they erred in the exercise of their authority and powers under the warrant of arrest. It is important to repress and punish crime, but it is still more important that all proceedings against crime be in strict pursuance of law. Observance of legal procedure
“Illegitimate and unconstitutional practices get their first footing in that way, namely, by silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure. This can only be obviated, by adhering to the rule that constitutional provisions for the security of person and property should be liberally construed. A close and literal construction deprives them of half their efficacy, and leads to gradual depreciation of the right, as if it consisted more in sound than in substance. It is the duty of courts to be watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizen, and against any stealthy encroachments thereon.”
In People v. Glennon, 37 Misc. Rep. 1, 74 N. Y. Supp. 794, the court delivered the following forceful comment upon the same subject:
“If it were so that we are all open to have our houses invaded, ransacked, and searched by policemen, on nothing except what they may choose to call their suspicions, and that we may be arrested in the same way, we would not be living under a free government, but under a most intolerable despotism, the like of which former generations struggled against until they obtained those guaranties of individual rights and liberties which made them free, the chief of which were that their houses should not be invaded and searched, and that they should not be seized except by due warrant and process of law. The far-reaching constitutional maxim that every man’s house is his castle has a history and a literature all its own, and is still as expressive and pregnant of the individual rights and liberties of a free people as when it first emanated from what Coke called the unpolished genius of the people. It burst asunder the bonds of despotic power. It is as vital now as when Chatham said of it: ‘The p'oorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the crown. It may be frail; its roof may shake; the wind may blow through it; the storm may enter; the rain may enter; but the king of England may not enter; all his force dares not cross the threshold of the ruined tenement.’ Cooley, Const. I»im. 364.”
This matter appears to me to come under the Fourth Amendment to the federal Constitution, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. This was a case of search for a defendant charged with a misdemeanor, who could not possibly have escaped in defiance of even ordinary vigilance to apprehend him. Had he gotten out of town, he could have been
The objection to any testimony by the witnesses Mossman and Watson, describing what they did after entering the house, is sustained.
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