Atz v. Andrews

94 So. 329, 84 Fla. 43
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 30, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 94 So. 329 (Atz v. Andrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atz v. Andrews, 94 So. 329, 84 Fla. 43 (Fla. 1922).

Opinion

Browne, C. J.

George Atz was convicted in the County Judge’s Court of Lake County for unlawfully having alcoholic and intoxicating liquor in his possession.

[45]*45On appeal to the Circuit Court of the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit the judgment was affirmed.'

The case is before us for review on certiorari. Several questions are presented that involve constitutional guarantees.

It appears that on the night of the 4th of July, 1921, a deputy sheriff and a policeman entered a restaurant where the defendant boarded. The policeman entered through the front door which was open, and the deputy sheriff obtained admission by knocking on the back door and being admitted by the defendant. Neither had a search warrant. They made no search of the premises, but, upon gaining admission, the deputy sheriff said to the defendant: “I understand you have got some shine around here and keeping some here for sale.” The defendant then said: “You know what you are talking about. I have got it, and I will give it to you. ’ ’ He then went to a little closet or pantry in the kitchen and got a couple of boxes containing bottles filled with some liquid, and gave it to the deputy sheriff, who then arrested him and took him to jail.

Both of the officers testified that they went in the res-. taurant, because they had seen Atz there a few minutes before. Nine bottles of the liquid that was delivered to the officers by Atz on the night of July 4th, were introduced in evidence on the trial.

After the State’s evidence was concluded, the defendant announced he would introduce none, and the arguments for both sides concluded, a motion was made by the attorneys for the State to reopen the case, and permit the State to introduce such testimony as it wishes “as to intoxicating liquor.”

The bill of exceptions recites: “But the said Judge did overrule the defendants objection and over the objection [46]*46of the defendant did reopen the ease and submit the said nine bottles to the jury to be tasted by them; whereupon some of the.jurors tasted the same and others did not.”

• One of the counsel for the. State in his argument to the court in behalf of his motion for a continuance and for leave to produce testimony that the bottles contained intoxicating liquor, stated in the presence of the jury that .“he was satisfied that the article produced was intoxicating,” and he further stated in the presence of the jury “that he was not only satisfied, but that he knows that it is intoxicating. ’ ’

Objection to this language was made by the defendant, but the court overruled the- objection, and did not instruct the jury not to consider the statements of the attorney for the State, and it. went to the jury as a solemn statement by an officer of the court of the very fact, and a material one, that the State Attorney said he needed to make proof of. '

The judgment is attacked upon five grounds: (1) The admission in evidence of articles obtained by the officers without a search warrant; (2) The admission in evidence of an alleged confession; (3) Charges of the trial court; (4) Allowing some of the jurors to taste the contents of the bottles; (5) Improper statements by the attorney for the State in the presence of the jury of a fact material to the issue, that was not otherwise proven.

1. The first question raised challenges the right to introduce in evidence the bottles and the liquid contained in them, that were taken possession of by the deputy sheriff on the night of July 4th.

It is not necessary to determine whether or not the place where the liquor was kept was the residence of the defendant, as that would only be material on the question of his right of possession, which is not involved here.

[47]*47On the question of whether it was legal to use as evidence articles found as a result of a search without a warrant, the constitutional guarantee is not confined to the residence or the home, but includes “their person, houses, papers and effects.” Sec. 22 Declaration of Rights, Constitution of Florida: 4th and 5th Amendments to Constitution of United States.

However improbable the testimony of the two officers may be, it is uncontradicted, and they do not say that they went there for the purpose of searching for liquor or that they made any search, but that upon the mere asking 1he defendant if he had any shine to sell, he produced it and delivered it to them. Had they made a search of the premises without a warrant, the fact that the defendant opened the door to the knock of the deputy sheriff and told him to come in, would not be construed as an invitation to enter for the purpose of making a search, or authority for searching after he had so obtained entrance. It is an act of ordinary courtesy to invite a person who knocks at the door of one’s home to invite him to enter, and such an act of courtesy will not be construed as a waiver of ‘ ‘ The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, pax>ers and effects against unreasonable seizures and searches, shall not be violated. ’ ’ Sec. 22 Declaration of Rights, Constitution Of Florida; 4th Amendment to Constitution of United States.

There was in this instance, however, no search made and none attempted, nor was there any demand by the officer that the defendant deliver to him any intoxicating liquor that he had in his possession.

Had there been, the introduction of the illegally acquired evidence would have been reversible error.

We do not say that there may not be instances where [48]*48property is taken possession of by officers who have obtained entrance to a house without objection .or even with the consent of the owner, or where the testimony of an officer that it was voluntarily delivered to him by the owner, possessor or any one else, is contradicted, where it would be improper to introduce the evidence so obtained. We only say that in this case, there being no contradiction by the accused or any one else of the statement of the officers as to the voluntary acts of the accused in giving him the bottles, that the evidence so obtained was not improperly admitted.

In rendering his decision affirming the judgment of the County Judge’s'Court on appeal, the Circuit Judge said that “even admitting that the liquor was seized without legal authority this court is not inclined to adopt as applicable to this case the view laid down in the recent case of Gouled v. U. S. 41 Sup. Ct. Rep. 261, nor the former case of Boyd v. U. S. 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 524,” and held that the illegally acquired evidence was not improperly admitted, citing 4 Wigmore on Evidence, p. 3126; Underhill on Evidence, 102-103, and 2 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, p. 1076.

These authors wrote their treatises during the. period when the constitutional guarantees of life, liberty and property were being modified and construed away to such a degree that wise statesmen and constitutional lovers inaugurated a back-to-the-eonstitution movement, that must find support in the courts, if our liberties are to be preserved.

It is of such a tendency that Mr. Justice Bradley said: “It may be that it is the obnoxious thing in its mildest and least repulsive form; but illegitimate and unconstitutional practices got their first footing in that way, namely, by [49]*49silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure.

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Bluebook (online)
94 So. 329, 84 Fla. 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atz-v-andrews-fla-1922.