Ex Parte City of Mobile

38 So. 2d 330, 251 Ala. 539, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 20, 1949
Docket1 Div. 345.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 330 (Ex Parte City of Mobile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte City of Mobile, 38 So. 2d 330, 251 Ala. 539, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 8 (Ala. 1949).

Opinion

SIMPSON, Justice.

Mandamus to review a pre-trial order of the circuit judge in a prosecution by the City of Mobile against one Sidney Prince for violating a provision of the City Ordinance against the possession of lottery paraphernalia.

The City Ordinance reads:

“Possession of Gambling Paraphernalia Prohibited. — It shall be unlawful and an offense against the City’of Mobile for any person, firm, association or corporation to have in his or its possession any paraphernalia commonly used in the carrying on of any lottery or device of like kind or any gift enterprise or scheme in the nature of a lottery or gift enterprise, including, but without limiting the generality of the "foregoing, lottery tickets, lottery sheets, lottery receipts, ‘birdcages’ or barrels or other containers used for drawing numbers or lots.”

The police officers of the City of Mobile, without a search warrant or warrant of arrest, entered the defendant’s home and, over his protest, searched his premises and seized certain lottery parapher *541 nalia and interposed the prosecution against him for the possession thereof in violation of said ordinance. Prosecution was instituted in the recorder’s court and on conviction Prince appealed to the circuit cou'rt, where the case is now pending.

After the appeal to the circuit court, Prince filed a motion to suppress the evidence thus obtained and prayed the court to order the paraphernalia returned to him, on the ground that the search and seizure were, and, to use the evidence thus procured would be, in violation of §§ 5 and 6 of the Constitution of Alabama and the 4th and 5 th Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. A pre-trial hearing was had on this motion and the court granted same, ordered the evidence suppressed and the seized property returned to the movant. This proceeding is to review that order.

The court, sitting en banc, after studious consideration of the whole question and the earnest and elucidating arguments of counsel, both orally on submission and in written briefs, entertains the view that the order of the circuit judge was laid in error and that the writ should be granted. The two leading cases in this jurisdiction of Shields v. State, 104 Ala. 35, 16 So. 85, 53 Am.St.Rep. 17, and Banks v. State, 207 Ala. 179, 93 So. 293, 24 A.L.R. 1359, clearly sustain the' view.

The Shields case, as regards the effect of the mentioned sections of the Alabama Constitution on the question, deduced the following concepts:

1. The violation by a police officer of the constitutional interdict against unreasonable searches and seizures, § 6, Alabama Constitution 1875, now § 5, Constitution 1901, is held to be one by an individual, in which the State has no part —a private wrong, subject to private redress, which the law affords. That case pointed out that if a police officer, by force, makes search of persons, “or compels them to submit to it, he becomes a trespasser, and for the wrong is civilly answerable; and he commits an indictable misdemeanor, the offense being aggravated because of his official relation, and the abuse of its rightful powers”; that “The state had no connection with, and had no agency in, the wrong committed * * *. The law appoints the remedy for the redress of the wrong, but the exclusion of the evidence criminating the defendant is not within the scope of the remedy, or the measure of redress.” 104 Ala. 38, 39, 16 So. 86.

2. Evidence thus gained by the independent, unlawful acts of an officer of the law in violation of such constitutional mandate, is nonetheless admissible and its introduction in evidence in a criminal prosecution is not violative of the prohibition of § 7 (§ 6, Const.1901) of the 1875 Alabama Constitution against compelling •the accused to give evidence against himself, the principle being thus analyzed:

“ * * * The defendant made no admission or confession; he was passive * * * if he had made an admission or confession, its exclusion, because not free and voluntary, would have been unavoidable. It is not that which he has said or done which is supposed to offend the constitutional guaranty, but the independent, unlawful acts of the sheriff, by and through which it was discovered that he bore upon his person the ‘mute witness’ of a criminal offense. * * * ” 104 Ala. 40, 16 So. 87.

3. “However unfair or illegal may be the methods by which evidence may be obtained in a criminal case, if relevant, it is admissible, if the accused is not compelled to do any act which criminates himself, or a confession or admission is not extorted from him, or drawn from him by appliances to his hopes or fears.” 104 Ala. 42, 16 So. 88.

The foregoing rationalizations deduced the principle which is now and has been for many years firmly settled in Alabama that:

“Evidence obtained by a search, which was illegal and unauthorized, is admissible to fix the guilt of a criminal.offense upon the person searched; and the admission of such evidence so obtained is not violative of the constitutional guaranty that a person accused shall not be compelled to give evidence against himself, or of the further guaranty ‘that the people shall be secure in their persons, homes, papers,, *542 and possessions from unreasonable seizures or searches.’ ” 1st headnote, Shields case.

There are many decisions of this court reaffirming the principle, such as Chastang v. State, 83 Ala. 29, 3 So. 304; Scott v. State, 113 Ala. 64, 69, 21 So. 425; Pope v. State, 168 Ala. 33, 40, 53 So. 292; Robertson v. City of Montgomery, 201 Ala. 198, 77 So. 724; Banks v. State, supra; Tranum-v. Stringer, 216 Ala. 522, 133 So. 541; Owens v. State, 215 Ala. 42, 109 So. 109; Jackson v. State, ante, p. 226-, 36 So. 2d 306, 308(8).

The question again had the full consideration of the court and the entire field of authorities was recanvassed in the case of Banks v. State, supra, where it was firmly decided that the use of evidence so obtained was legal and admissible and uninfluenced in that regard by the mentioned prohibitions of ou'r own State Constitution and, also, that use of such evidence in a criminal trial violated no right secured a citizen under the 4th, 5th, and 14th Amendments to the Federal Constitution. That case was one of the several in the course of this rule’s judicial history where acerbate invection had been leveled against it and this court’s interpretation of the stated sections of the Alabama Constitution with respect to the question. In adhering to the rule the court, speaking through -the late Mr. Justice Thomas, said:

“This ancient rule of law, so well stated by Judge Brickell (Shields v. State, supra), has-» obtained among English-speaking people for 200 years, since the trial of Bishop Atterbury in 1723 (16 How.St.Tr. 323). With this construction by our court of sections 6 and 7 of article 1 of the Constitution of 1875, the same was reordained in the Constitution of 1901 as sections 5 and 6, with the additional provision in section 6 that the accused has the right ‘to testify in all cases, in his own behalf, if he elects so to do.’ Ex parte Pepper, 185 Ala. 284, 294, 64 So. 112; Taylor v. Woods, 52 Ala. 474; authorities collected in Johnson v. Craft, 205 Ala. 386, 87 So. 375, 395.

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Ex Parte City of Mobile
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38 So. 2d 330, 251 Ala. 539, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-city-of-mobile-ala-1949.