Edwards v. State

156 N.W.2d 397, 38 Wis. 2d 332, 1968 Wisc. LEXIS 900
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 156 N.W.2d 397 (Edwards v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. State, 156 N.W.2d 397, 38 Wis. 2d 332, 1968 Wisc. LEXIS 900 (Wis. 1968).

Opinion

Wilkie, J.

Officers’ Activity at Residence and Validity of Arrest.

In urging his principal contention on this writ of error, defendant’s arguments may be aptly characterized as seeking a rehearing of Jackson. In Jackson we concluded:

“Upon these facts we determine that there was no violation of defendant’s constitutional rights in either the observations made by the two officers preceding the arrest for illegal use of heroin or in the arrest itself without a warrant.” 3

Defendant argues that the officers had to use considerable effort to look into his room because the better observations could only be made by looking through the *338 vent at the bottom of the storm window. These observations, it is argued, constituted a “search.” Because of the “effort” required, the argument runs, the officer did not have the constitutionally antiseptic “open view” of the premises, therefore the search was “unreasonable.” The defendant argues that if he is successful on this claim his arrest on the misdemeanor charge and the subsequent observations, narcotics arrest, admissions and search and seizure would be invalid because a misdemeanor arrest without a warrant in this situation would be unlawful.

In Jackson this court examined the conduct of the policemen on first reaching the premises as against the principal test that their activities must be reasonable. 4

This court held that the two officers were apprised by the log entry of the location of Edwards’ one-room apartment in the building so “that they knew that the window through which they looked from the step of the porch was that of his apartment. In making their observations through the window they did not invade any portion of the premises leased to Edwards. What they saw at once disclosed conduct on the part of Edwards which was a breach of the criminal laws of the state, viz., encouraging defendant to violate her parole.” (Emphasis ours.) 5

In Jackson the court did not label the police activities on arriving at the rooming house a “search,” but it determined that “there was no violation of defendant’s constitutional rights” in the observations made by the two officers through the window. 6

A search can be conducted by one’s eyes alone. However, “A search implies a prying into hidden places for that which is concealed.” 7 It is not a search to observe what is in plain view. 8 Even though visual surveillance of things within plain view may be regarded as a search *339 the real issue to be settled is whether or not such activities are regarded as an unreasonable search as circumscribed by either the Fourth amendment of the United States constitution or art. I, sec. 11 of the Wisconsin constitution. 9

Defendant cites Brock v. United States, 10 People v. Kramer, 11 People v. Terrell, 12 Hurst v. California 13 and Smith v. State, 14 as cases closely paralleling the situation present in the instant case. 15

In all of these cases the searches (involving a view of seeming misconduct) were found to violate the constitutional safeguards on the fundamental rationale that they were conducted by officers who were engaged in an unlawful trespass. None involved a plain view from a recognized public part of a premises.

In the instant case, Officers Randa and Thelen were not trespassers. Their observations were made from the common stairway and porch. As the court in Jackson expressly held: “In making their observations through the window they did not invade any portion of the premises leased to Edwards.” 16 Even if the officers had trespassed, that fact alone would not govern the constitutionality of a search. In Browne v. State this court considered the two conflicting values of personal privacy and the need for probative evidence in combating crime by asking the question: “Do trips through the technicalities of the law of trespass aid in the balancing task?” 17 The court concluded that such trips are ill advised, stating:

*340 “Thus, whether or not a search or investigation is reasonable is not a matter for the application of the comparatively rigid rules of tort and property law, but is rather a matter of an inquiry as to whether the search or investigation is constitutionally reasonable under the circumstances. If police conduct is not considered unreasonable in the circumstances, it is not made unreasonable if it is deemed to have involved a civil trespass.” 18

In the very recent case of Katz v. United States, 19 the United States Supreme Court delivered the cotip de grace to the trespass theory as being determinative of Fourth amendment rights. Katz involved the use of evidence obtained when FBI agents attached an electronic listening and recording device to the outside of a public telephone booth from which the defendant was transmitting wagering information. The government contended that the surveillance technique it employed involved no physical penetration of the telephone booth. The court disregarded this argument, holding that the trespass doctrine is no longer controlling and the fact that no penetration had occurred was of no constitutional significance.

Thus, as we stated in Browne, 20 the test to be applied in determining whether a search is constitutional is one of reasonableness under the circumstances.

When the officers left the station after examining the logbook, they may not have had probable cause to arrest defendant or to obtain a warrant to search Edwards’ room. But the officers did have a reasonable basis for conducting a reasonable investigation following up that information from the logbook entry that Edwards was likely to be in his room and that others were likely to be in a “community deal” there. This investigation was also reasonably prompted by the officers’ general knowledge that Edwards and Mrs. Jackson had been associating to *341

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.W.2d 397, 38 Wis. 2d 332, 1968 Wisc. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-state-wis-1968.