The defendant, convicted of illegal possession of a gun and sentenced to 30 months in prison, challenges the constitutionality of the search that discovered the gun. He argues that the warrant that authorized it failed to specify with particularity the things the searchers were looking for and therefore violated the Fourth Amendment. He is right that there was a violation but wrong that it invalidates his conviction.
Local police, having reason to believe that there was stolen property in a house (or its garage, or vehicles on the proрerty) occupied by the defendant, presented to a state court judge an application for a search warrant together with an affidavit in support of the application and a draft warrant materially identical to the application. The affidаvit listed the stolen goods believed to be on the property as “several items which included a black in color gas grill with the brand name Aussie, a yellow in color welder with ‘multi-mig’ written on the side, a cutting torch with Hobart gauges and chrome in color snap on brand tools with initials GAG engraved.” But the list was left out of the application and the draft warrant. The omissions apparently were inadvertent, because after specifying the places to be searched these documents state: “Or any other evidence indicative of a criminal offensе of Burglary, Theft or Possession of Stolen Property.” Probably the drafter of the warrant intended to list before “or any other evidence ...” the items listed in the affidavit. Perhaps not noticing the omissions, the judge signed the draft warrant and so it was issued and the search conducted acсordingly; and it was in the course of the search that the illegal gun was discovered in a bag in the house. Since the bag was large enough to have contained tools that the police were looking for, they were entitled to look inside it and seize any contraband or еvidence of crime visible to someone looking inside. E.g.,
United States v. Eschweiler,
The Fourth Amendment states that “the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shаll issue, but upon probable cause,
The warrant in this case lackеd a particular description of the things to be seized (if found). Nor did it incorporate by reference the description in the warrant affidavit; incorporation by reference would have sufficed.
Groh v. Ramirez,
Against this, Professor Davies argues that despite its wording, the only purpose of the Fourth Amendment was to outlaw general warrants, but that the framers, reluctant to recognize any discretion in law-enforcement officers, thought that searches of a home would require a warrant (a specific warrant, that is). Davies,
supra,
at 715-24; see also
Payton v. New York,
So just as in
United States v. Stefonek,
Even so, it would not follow that in cases such as this, in which the judicial screening had failed to prevent the search (although it certainly succeeded in creating a written record), the fruits of the search should be suppressed at the defendant’s trial. A person whose rights have been violated by a search can be remitted to a suit against
Concerned with such anomalies though unwilling as yet to abrogate the exclusionary rule (although it has no constitutional basis — it is a doctrine of federal common law), the Supreme Court has in the name of “inevitable discovery” created an excеption to the rule for cases like this in which the harm caused by an illegal search to the values protected by the Fourth Amendment is not merely slight in relation to the social benefits of the search, but zero. It is zero because, as in
United States v. Stefonek, supra,
In
Stefonek
we considered but rejected the possibility that we had “overlooked another purpose of the requirement of particularity, that of informing the person whose premises are to be searched of the scope of the search, so that he ... can monitor the search while it is being conducted and make sure it stays within bounds.”
Id.
at 1034. As we pointed out, nothing in the amendment requires that thе warrant be shown to the person whose premises are to be searched. As a matter of prudence, police will show a search warrant to the person whose premises are to be searched if he questions their authority to conduct the search. But thеy do not have to. E.g.,
United States v. Grubbs,
But we must reconsider our analysis in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Groh v. Ramirez, supra,
decided after
Ste-fonek
though before
Grubbs.
In the course of holding that a search pursuant to a warrant that as in this case failed to describe the things to be seized with the required particularity even though (as in this case) the warrant affidavit contained an adequate description, the Court quoted with approval the statement in an earlier case that the requirement of particular description “assures the individual whose property is searched or seized of the lawful authority of the executing officer, his neеd to search, and the limits of his power to search.”
Groh
was a tort case, moreover, not a criminal case. There was no question of excluding illegally seized evidence, henсe no concern that the sanction for violating the Fourth Amendment would be disproportionate to the harm caused by the violation. If the plaintiffs in
Groh
could not prove harm, they would get no damages, rather than escaping punishment for a crime — they were never charged with having committed a crime. We do not think that the fact that our defendant might have obtained some slight psychological benefit from being able to monitor the police search had the police shown him a warrant that described the things they were looking for takes this case out of reach of the “inevitable discovery” doctrine (we might call it the no harm, no foul, doctrine). As we explained in
United States v. Cazares-Olivas, supra,
AFFIRMED.
