The question for decision is whether property seized by federal officers under a federal search warrant can be used against defendants in a federal court trial for the violation of a federal statute.
Defendants Alfred and Veronica Pop-pitt, husband and wife, were charged by separate informations with the commission of a misdemeanor, i. e. accepting wagers without paying the special tax required by 26 U.S.C. § 4411, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7203. The cases have been consolidated for trial.
Veronica was arrested in her home at 707 Lore Avenue in New Castle County, Delaware. The arrest was made by Harold J. Maloney, a special agent of the Internal Revenue Service, under an arrest warrant. Immediately following the arrest, Maloney, and other federal officers who accompanied him, acting under a search warrant, seized twenty-six bet sheets and other writings and articles, appearing to relate to numbers and horse betting activities. Alfred was not at home at the time.
Defendants have moved under Rule 41 (e) to suppress the seized property as evidence, and to have it returned to them, for the alleged reason that “there was not probable cause for believing the existence of the grounds on which the [search] warrant was issued.”
*75 The motions were supported and opposed by affidavits. They have been the subject of two hearings. At the first, two arguments were advanced by defendants: (1) the affidavit upon which the warrant issued failed to show probable cause for its issuance, and (2) the warrant was issued before the supporting affidavit was executed. Both points were resolved against the defendants in a memorandum dated November 7, 1963.
During the first hearing two other questions suggested themselves:
1. Did the search warrant describe the premises with sufficient particularity to satisfy the IV Amendment of the Constitution of the United States? 1
2. Was the search warrant executed in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 3109? 2
A second hearing was held at which testimony was taken upon these two questions.
Since the same principles govern both motions and a disposition of Veronica’s motion will govern Alfred’s, only the former will be discussed.
The Sufficiency Of The Description Of The Property To Be Searched
The warrant directs that a search be made of “707 Lore Avenue, being a white, two-story, stucco and shingled detached house with a glassed enclosed porch on the west side facing Lighthouse Eoad, situated on the northeast corner of Lighthouse Eoad and Lore Avenue, Gordon Heights, New Castle County, Delaware.” The name of defendant did not appear in the warrant, and the warrant did not restrict the search to a particular part of the premises.
The Commissioner issued the warrant upon the basis of an affidavit executed by Joseph A. Camplone, a special agent for the Intelligence Division of the Internal Eevenue Service. It stated that 707 Lore Avenue was “a one family * * * dwelling”. The present problem arises because this was not true. ..¡
The defendant testified that while she and her husband occupied the first floor and basement of the house, the second floor was rented to three men as a furnished apartment, consisting of a living room, two bedrooms, a bath and a kitchen. The apartment was not accessible to the defendant and her husband, entry being by a stairway from the front porch. When at the time of arrest defendant told the officers that other persons lived on the second floor, the officers refrained from entering it.
Because the warrant directed the search of 707 Lore Avenue in its entirety, defendant argues that instead of describing “particularly” the place to be searched as the IV Amendment requires, the warrant directed that two places be searched, and hence it is invalid under the principle stated in United States v. Barkouskas,
Although defendant has discussed the problem as one of constitutional specificity of description, this would appear to be a misconception. The warrant on its face identifies the property to be searched, i. e. a house at 707 Lore Avenue, with sufficient precision to enable an officer with reasonable effort to ascertain and identify the place. This is all that the IV Amendment requires. Steele v. United States,
When a warrant directs the search of a multiple occupancy apartment or building, without identifying the particular apartment or room to be searched, the validity of the Commissioner’s act in issuing the warrant will depend upon whether probable cause for so describing the premises is shown in the affidavit. A search warrant may validly direct the search of an entire building if probable cause is shown for searching each separate apartment, or for believing that the entire building is actually being used as a single unit; but absent such a showing, a conviction based upon evidence obtained under a warrant commanding a search of the entire building cannot stand. Tynan v. United States,
When the warrant here involved is examined in the light of the Camplone affidavit there can be no doubt that the Commissioner was justified in issuing a warrant for a search of 707 Lore Avenue in its entirety. Upon the basis of the affidavit the Commissioner had reasonable cause to believe that the premises were being used in accepting bets on horses in violation of the law, and that gambling paraphernalia and related items were located on the premises. The affidavit stated that a deed for 707 Lore Avenue was recorded in the name of the defendant and her husband and that the building was “a one-family dwelling”. The Commissioner had no reason to suppose that anyone other than defendant and her husband lived in the house.
It has been held that if a Commissioner has probable cause to issue a search warrant, a defendant may not, by
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a motion to suppress, attack the factual accuracy of the affidavit upon which the Commissioner has acted. United States v. Gianaris,
The question to be resolved is whether evidence obtained under a search warrant which has been properly issued initially by the Commissioner, must be suppressed when later evidence discloses that it applies not only to premises occupied by the defendant, but also to an apartment occupied by three other persons who, so far as appears, are in no way implicated in the alleged crime. The answer would appear to depend upon whether Camplone, in executing the affidavit, had probable cause to believe that the house at 707 Lore Avenue was, as he stated, a single family dwelling.
When in Dumbra v. United States,
Implicit support for this view is found in the reasoning and results reached by other courts. In United States v. Santore,
So that the critical question is whether Camplone had reasonable grounds for believing that defendant’s residence was a one family dwelling when he so characterized it in his affidavit.
Camplone did not testify. But defendant testified that access to the second story apartment was by means of a doorway inside of a glassed-in porch, which led to a vestibule inside the house, from which a stairway led to the apartment. On the outside of the house there was no indication that it was anything other than a one family dwelling. Defendant has pointed to nothing which would have put Camplone on notice that the second floor was rented to third persons. Camplone has reasonable grounds to believe that the house was occupied only by defendant and her husband, and he was justified in describing it as he did in his affidavit. The fact that the warrant was broader than it should have been had the true facts been stated in the Camplone affidavit, does not invalidate the search.
The Manner In Which The Warrant Was Executed
If the execution of a search warrant by federal officers is in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 3109, the evidence obtained must be suppressed in a federal court action. Woods v. United States, 99 U.S. App.D.C. 351,
*79 The facts pertaining to the execution of the warrant are these: At about 1:30 P.M. on May 4, 1963, Maloney, accompanied by state and federal officers, arrived at defendant’s residence. After disbursing certain members of the party around the house, Maloney and two of the state officers proceeded to the kitchen door. Maloney went up the steps and banged on an outer screen door at least three times and yelled, “federal officers with a search warrant, open the door”. The solid kitchen door was ajar. After waiting approximately twelve or fifteen seconds one of the police officers, presumably peering into the kitchen through the partially opened door, said to Maloney, “there’s a woman standing there”. Thereupon Maloney opened the screen door which was unlocked, and, preceded by two state officers, entered the kitchen by pushing open the solid door which was already ajar. A woman was standing in the doorway between the living room to the kitchen. An elderly man, later identified as defendant’s father-in-law, was sitting on a sofa in the living room. Upon inquiry by Maloney, the woman identified herself as the defendant. Ma-loney stated that he was a federal officer, that he had a warrant for her arrest, and that she was under arrest. He then told her that he had a search warrant and was going to search the house. When defendant stated that other people lived upstairs in an apartment, Maloney directed that no search be made of the second floor. The officers searched only the kitchen and the basement. Papers appearing to pertain to numbers bets and horse bets and certain other items were seized.
Defendant argues that the officers broke open an outer door without being refused admittance and hence the execution of the warrant was in violation of § 3109.
The threshold question is whether the opening of the closed, unlocked screen door and the entry into the kitchen through the permanent door which was open, constituted a breaking open of an outer door within the meaning of § 3109. Only two cases appear to have considered whether an officer who enters a closed, unlocked door for the purpose of executing a warrant is deemed to have broken open the door within the intendment of § 3109. United States v. Bowman,
The opening the unlocked screen door by Maloney and the other officers was therefore a breaking of an outer door within the contemplation of § 3109.
Before entering defendant’s residence, Maloney gave notice of his authority and purpose. Hence, the entry was not in violation of § 3109, if the failure of defendant to respond to Maloney’s knocks was the equivalent of a refusal to admit him. “[T]he [statutory phrase] 'refused admittance’ is not restricted to an affirmative refusal.” Masiello v. United States,
After knocking and identifying himself and his purpose, Maloney waited twelve or fifteen seconds. It was not until he was told by a state officer that “there’s a woman standing there” that he entered. The place where defendant was standing was only four or five feet from the door through which the officers entered. Defendant testified that when she first heard the knock she was on the way from the bathroom to the kitchen. This required her to pass through the living room. From the description of the house defendant could easily have reached the outside kitchen door in less than twelve seconds after hearing the knock. In any event she had ample time to call out to the officers either to enter or await her arrival at the door, if such had been her wish. Defendant’s failure to pursue either of these courses was tantamount to a refusal to admit the officers. 10
Maloney conceded that before entering the house he encountered no resistance and that he had seen no one running around as if trying to destroy evidence. He said, however, that when an officer is about to enter a place where wagering activities are being conducted, it is to be assumed that the evidence will be destroyed after the officer has identified himself. The fact that Maloney had never seen the defendant and did not know that she was inside the house before entering it, is immaterial.
The manner in which the search warrant was executed did not violate § 3109.
When a motion is made to suppress evidence upon the ground that it has been obtained by an illegal search, the burden rests upon defendant to establish all facts necessary to sustain the motion. Wilson v. United States, 218 F. *81 2d 754, 757 (10th Cir. 1955). Defendant has not borne that burden.
The motion of the defendants to suppress the property which was seized, and to have it returned to them will be denied.
Notes
. The IV Amendment reads: “ * * * no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, * * * ”
. § 3109 reads:
“Breaking doors or windows for entry or exit.
“The officer may break open any outer or inner door or window of a house, or any part of a house, or anything therein, to execute a search warrant, if, after notice of his authority and purpose, he is refused admittance or when necessary to liberate himself or a person aiding him in the execution of the warrant.”
. This case antedated the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure which became effective on March 21, 1946. It apparently arose, as did many others involving the same problem, under the National Prohibition Act. Section 25, Title 2 of the National Prohibition Act, c. 85, 41 Stat. 305, 315 provided for the issuance of a search warrant to seize liquor intended for use in violating the Act, and that the warrant should be issued as provided in Title XI of the Espionage Act of June 15, 1917, c. 30, 40 Stat. 217, 228, 18 TJ.S.C. §§ 611-631. The latter Act was repealed when the Rules of Criminal Procedure were adopted. Notes of Ad . *76 visory Committee on Rules, F.R.Crim.P. 41.
Rule 41 which deals with “Searches and Seizures” is a codification of the law and practice which existed prior to its promulgation. Notes of Advisory Committee' on Rules pertaining to Rule 41; 4 Federal Practice & Procedure (Barron) § 2401, p. 348.
. What the consequences would have been if the second floor apartment had been searched, need not be decided. Some courts that have sustained searches under warrants directed against multiple occupancy premises have emphasized the fact that the search was actually limited to the property which there was reason to search. United States v. Lepper,
. The house had been converted into a two family dwelling without obtaining permission from the proper authorities, in contravention of local ordinances. No comparable fact appears in the instant case.
. Section 39 of Title 27 (Oct. 28, 1919, c. 85, Title II, § 25, 41 Stat. 315) provided: “No search warrant shall issue to search any private dwelling occupied as such unless it is * * * in part used for some business purpose such as a store, shop, saloon, restaurant, hotel or boarding house. The term ‘private dwelling’ shall be construed to include * * * rooms used and occupied not transiently but solely as a residence in an apartment house, hotel, or boarding house.”
. In United States v. Freeman,
. An entry through an open door has been held not to be a breaking either under the common law, United States v. Dross,
. Under the Delaware burglary statute “break” means “[ojpening * * * by any means whatever, any outer door * * * ”• 11 Del.C. § 391 (1962 Supp.) Prior to the statute the turning of the knob of an outer door which a person was not entitled to enter constituted a breaking for purposes of burglary. State v. Edell,
. The length of time which an officer must wait for a response before making an entry by “breaking”, will, of course, depend upon circumstances. United States v. Barrow,
