Coleman v. Commonwealth

292 S.W. 771, 219 Ky. 139, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 302
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 22, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 771 (Coleman v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman v. Commonwealth, 292 S.W. 771, 219 Ky. 139, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 302 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

*140 Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Hobson—

Reversing.

Appellant was indicted in the Pike circuit court for the offense of unlawfully manufacturing intoxocating liquors. On the trial of the case he was found guilty and his 'punishment fixed at a fine of $300.00 and sixty days in.jail. The evidence for .appellant was obtained by means of a search warrant under which the officers entered the dugout about a hundred yards from his house, where they found a still and outfit, seven barrels of mash, some' middlings, etc. The search warrant was issued by John Maynard, the police judge of Phelps, a town of the sixth dates. The place searched was ten miles from Phelps, and .the first question is, did the police judge of Phelps have jurisdiction to issue a search warrant for the searching of premises outside of the corporate limits of the town? Section 3710, Ky. Stats., which creates this police court, thus defines its jurisdiction in criminal cases:

“Said police court shall have jurisdiction concurrent with the justices’ courts of all criminal cases and proceedings; but isuch jurisdiction .shall be confined to cases- occurring within the city, and said courts shall always be -open for the trial of penal and criminal ‘ caus es. ”

,By -section 13, s,uibd. 4 and section 19 of the Criminal • Code, police courts; are given concurrent jurisdiction of prosecutions for misdemeanors committed in 'the town. Section 26 provides:

“A warrant of arrest may be issued by the following officers, who are called magistrates in this 'Code, viz.: judges of the county courts, judges of city or police courts (mayors, chairmen' of the trustees of towns), -and justices of' the peace; and may be executed by the following officers, who -are called peace officers in this Code, viz.: sheriffs,' constables, coroners, jailers, marshals and policemen.”

Under this section it has been held -that the marshal of a town of the sixth class may make -an arpest anywhere in the county. But this is because by section 3629 he is given “the powers, that -are now-or may hereafter be conferred upon the sheriffs by the law of the state.” ' This power is' conferred on the marshal, because many offenses *141 are committed in these towns by persons not living in the town, and if the marshal could only arrest them in the town the execution of the law upon the offender would, in many cases, be unduly delayed. Helm v. Com., 81 S. W. 270, and cases cited. But there is nothing in the statute giving the police court any jurisdiction of offenses committed outside of the- town. The 'search warrant was also a warrant of arrest for the offender, and appellant was arrested under the warrant for having committed an offense ten miles away from the town. The court is constrained to hold that the jurisdiction of the police court being confined to the limits of the town, the search warrant was issued without authority and was void.

While subsection 1, section 2554d, Kentucky Statutes, provides that any judge or justice of the peace may issue a'seareh warrant, this does not mean that a justice of the peace in one county may_ issue a .search warrant to search premises in another county; and the jurisdiction of the police judge being confined to the town limits, he has no more authority to issue a warrant to- search premises outside of the itown than a justice of the peace has as to a search of'premises in another county. By section 41 of the act of 1922, the jurisdiction of police courts is confined to “offenses committed in their respective jurisdictions.” The jurisdiction of a justice of the peace is “coextensive with the county,” but that of' the police judge is confined to “the limits” of the town. (Constitution, -secs. 142,143.)

The affidavit upon which the search warrant was issued states these facts as the basis of the belief of the affiant that appellant had violated the law:

£ £ The affiant says that Shade Smith told bim that Harve Smith’s boys had been buying liquor from the said Curtis Coleman; and the affiant state® that the said Curtis Coleman bears the name of a bootlegger.”

It does not appear when Shade Smith told him this or when it was that Harve Smith’s boys bought liquor there. These statements furnish no ground for a belief that the law was violated at that time, unless it was shown that the liquor had been bought there so near the time as to warrant the inference that the condition existed at the time the. affidavit was made.. Griffin v. Com., 209. Ky. 143, / .. , •

*142 It is insisted for the commonwealth that appellant waived his objection to the search warrant and cannot complain of its illegality. The officer testified as follows:

“I told him when we went to leave Jim’s — he was down there — Jim lived about two or three hundred yards, below him. I says, ‘We have a search warrant for your place, ’ and he says, ‘ Go on-up there and search all you want to; you don’t need any ¡search warrant.’ ”

The other -witnesses testify that appellee said, “Go ■ahead, ’ ’ but do not say that he said more. This, however, is not very material. People who have nothing to conceal are usually willing to show this. To object to a search is usually to place one under the suspicion of having something to conceal. Appellant had a right to assume that the officer had a valid ¡search warrant and was going to execute it. His only purpose probably was to appear innocent. That he consented to the search after he was told that the officer had a search warrant was not a waiver of his right to object to the search; for when he was told that the officer had a search warrant for his place it was idle for him to object. The rule would be 'different if he had told them to search before he was told that they had a search warrant and were going to ■search under'it, or if the objection was that the officer had ■searched-premises not included in the search warrant. Tn Mattingly v. Com., 199 Ky. 30, under proof very similar to that here, the court, holding that there was no consent to the search, and. that the evidence thereby obtained ■was incompetent, said:

“To authorize the search of one’s premises in the absence of a valid warrant his consent or permission must be voluntary and not compulsory. Where a peace officer presents to a citizen a warrant against him, regular on its face, and reads or offers to read It to him, and the latter agrees for him to proceed under it by a search of the premises, if a search war-nan t, or by accompanying the officer if a warrant of ■arrest, it cannot be said, that such consent is voluntary. The officer is acting under color of authority, and in agreeing for him to proceed the accused is merely submitting to constituted authority and not -agreeing to waive his constitutional rights; indeed, -for him to do otherwise might constitute resisting *143 an officer in the discharge of his duty. Clearly this consent was given under compulsion, and the evidence thereby obtained was inadmissible.”

■ In that case Bruner v. Com., 192 Ky. 386, and Gray v. Com., 198 Ky. 610, were overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 771, 219 Ky. 139, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1927.