Georgia Inez Holzhey v. United States

223 F.2d 823, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4024
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1955
Docket14948
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 223 F.2d 823 (Georgia Inez Holzhey v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Inez Holzhey v. United States, 223 F.2d 823, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4024 (5th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

An indictment charged appellant with receiving and concealing, with intent to> convert to her own use, certain property of the United States, “knowing same' to have been embezzled and stolen”, im violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641. The property in question 1 bore markings and numbers similar to those used on such property by the Department of the Navy at the Jacksonville Naval Air Station and was seized .during the search of. the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Williams, appellant’s son-in-law and daughter. Shortly after the seizure of the property, a signed statement amounting to a confession was taken from appellant at the air station (where she worked), and it was introduced into the evidence at the trial. Appellant’s estranged husband, federal agents and civilian employees of the air station testified for the Government, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty. Appellant was sentenced to six months in prison.

By a preliminary motion to suppress and an objection to the introduction of the evidence secured thereby, appellant contended below that the search was violative of the Fourth Amendment. She also objected to the introduction of her statement for the reason that it was obtained by psychological coercion while she was being illegally detained. Finally, she moved for acquittal on the ground that the evidence was insufficient either to establish that the property belonged to the United States and was stolen or embezzled, to prove the value of the property, or to show the required intent. Here she assigns as errors the trial court’s adverse rulings on these issues.

The record convinces us that appellant was not being “detained”, illegally or otherwise, when her statement was taken and that it was given by her volun *825 tarily in an attempt to explain her possession of the property. The agent merely went to her place of employment, told her the property had been found and asked if she wanted to make a statement. The statement itself discloses that she was informed of her rights as to self-incrimination; and there is no ■evidence indicating physical or psychological coercion. The statement was properly admitted. However, the objection to the admissibility of the seized property raises a serious question requiring full discussion.

Appellant’s motion to suppress the evidence contended primarily that ■she lived in the premises searched and paid rent to her daughter, and that entry thereto and search thereof without a search warrant and without her consent was not lawful. No action was taken on this motion, the trial court reserving the matter to be passed upon at the trial. When the Government attempted to introduce the evidence, appellant objected for the same reasons and the trial judge allowed a full hearing related to the legality of the search and seizure. The evidence taken during this hearing may be summarized as follows:

Acting upon information received from an investigator at the air station, agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation called upon Mr. and Mrs. Williams at their place of employment and sought permission to search their residence, which was given by the signing of a written waiver previously prepared by the agents. Accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Williams, they drove to the residence which they discovered was a garage apartment, with the Williams living quarters upstairs and a garage space of approximately equal area downstairs. At the request of the agents, Mrs. Williams opened the garage doors, and Mr. Williams removed the automobile parked therein. There was an area to the right of the car in which cartons, cabinets and other items were stored, from which the agents obtained the property in question. One of the agents testified that Mrs. Williams had previously told him appellant lived at her residence part of the time, but he thought she was referring to the living quarters upstairs. All of the agents stated they were never told by Mr. or Mrs. Williams that appellant resided in the garage area, that they saw no bed, that they saw nothing to indicate the area was being used as living quarters. There were, however, conflicts in their testimony concerning the physical description and contents of the area.

Appellant testified that she had separated from her husband and lived in the garage area of the Williams residence from that time until her daughter removed to Michigan several months after the search. She said she stayed there every night, sleeping upon an iron bed, or cot, which was in the area on the day of the search, but had her meals out because of the unusual hours her job required her to keep. She described in considerable detail the contents of the area, mentioning many items specifically denied by the agents, and stated she paid rent to her daughter of $40 per month when she could afford to do so. She stated that there were several locked containers belonging to her in the garage and that a lock on a cabinet owned by her had been forced open and property taken therefrom by the agents.

Mrs. Williams corroborated her mother’s testimony as to her residence in the garage area and the contents thereof, but stated that the rent payments were $10 per month, made when appellant desired. She testified that she had told the agents her mother lived in the downstairs area and that she specifically told them the locked boxes and cabinet belonged to appellant. According to her testimony, she suggested that the agents contact appellant before opening the boxes and cabinets and requested that she be allowed to call her mother.

One of the agents admitted questioning Mr. and Mrs. Williams as to the contents and ownership of the locked cabinet. According to his testimony, Mrs. Williams stated she had never seen the cabinet and had no idea who owned it but expressed the thought it might be *826 appellant’s. Another agent testified in connection with the cabinet and said it contained “a great deal of the property that we removed from the scene,” but he did not identify the particular items taken therefrom.

At the close of this evidence the trial court ruled that “no constitutional immunity of the defendant here has been •invaded by the search.” He made no specific findings of fact, but we may safely assume he concluded from the conflicting testimony that appellant did not reside in or rent the garage area. His ruling was necessarily based upon a finding that Mr. and Mrs. Williams had exclusive control and possession of that part of the premises. If the issue raised could be fully resolved by such a limited finding, we should be obliged to affirm, for there is ample evidence to support that conclusion.

However, the uncontradicted testimony of appellant and Mrs. Williams, coupled with the admissions of the agents, undeniably shows an entry and search of a locked cabinet not owned by Mrs. Williams, from which part of the evidence was taken. Even assuming, as implied by the agent’s testimony, that the cabinet was not identified unequivocally as being the property of appellant, certainly the agents were put to some further inquiry as to its ownership if Mrs. Williams made the statement attributed to her. At the very least, they knew Mrs. Williams was disclaiming ownership of or authority over the cabinet.

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Bluebook (online)
223 F.2d 823, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-inez-holzhey-v-united-states-ca5-1955.