People v. Keller

213 N.W. 683, 238 Mich. 543, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 683
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1927
DocketDocket No. 150.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 683 (People v. Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Keller, 213 N.W. 683, 238 Mich. 543, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 683 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Defendant was convicted in the Monroe county circuit court of having, on August 16, 1925, unlawfully possessed and transported, at LaSalle township in said county, a certain quantity of intoxicating liquor, consisting of 100 cases of Canadian beer. .The township of LaSalle is bounded on the east by Lake Erie. In outline, the people’s testimony shows that Joseph Kinsey was the sheriff of Monroe county and Edward Kinsey was a deputy. What the latter’s activities were in his official capacity up to August 15, 1925, are left to conjecture; but, as his story starts and runs, near midnight of August 15, 1925, he was alone in a Ford roadster driving on a stone road in LaSalle township which “runs from the old Dixie east to where you turn on North Shore,” and passed a Reo speedwagon which he saw ahead of him. When passing he recognized defendant as its driver and the truck as one he had before seen him driving, it having a covered top that ran the full length with curtains on the side back of the cab. He drove on out of sight, and describes his subsequent maneuvers as “trailing him.” He saw defendant again about an hour and a half later, driving his truck just north of what he designates as “Toledo Beach,” where the road runs down to the lake. He drove his own car *545 so that he could observe the truck until it stopped at the lake front. This was shortly after midnight in the morning of August 16, 1925. After making these observations he went to a farmer’s house where there was a telephone, called up the sheriff at Monroe, notified him of what he had discovered, and asked for help. The sheriff testified that when calling for help Edward said “Keller’s beer truck was headed toward the lake, and he was at Godfrey Saul’s, in LaSalle township.” The sheriff promptly sent three deputies in a larger car, who found the deputy who had called for help and the four drove under his directions by devious ways towards the lake shore. They finally reached the shore by a winding road at a point where they saw defendant starting away from the beach with his unlighted truck. They were just at the side of the road, angling towards it, and had obscured their lights, but turned them full on the truck as he passed. They saw it was driven by defendant and loaded with what they recognized as beer cases or cartons piled up in the truck behind the driver higher than the back of his seat. Part of them jumped out as he passed and called upon him to stop, but he drove rapidly by without checking, and they fired several shots at the tires of his truck, but he sped away in the darkness out of their sight. They then got into their car, swung around and followed but did not overtake him or his truck for nearly a quarter of a mile, when they found the truck with its load, ditched in a low place at the side of the road partially concealed in the’brash growing there, with its lights out, the pet cock under the gas tank opened and defendant gone. They took possession of the track and found it was loaded with 100 eases of Regal’s Canadian beer, 24 bottles to the case. One of the deputies was left in charge of the truck and it was later delivered to the sheriff. Two of the deputies went back to the *546 beach where the truck came from, heard a motor boat going out on the lake, found where the truck had been loaded from the shore and four cases of beer which had been left there. They were unable to find defendant that night, but he was apprehended later. Customary preliminary proceedings were had, resulting in defendant being held for trial. When trial was reached in the circuit court, he was convicted.

The defense upon the facts was an absolute alibi. The events of that night, as testified to by the four participating officers, stands undisputed, except their identification of defendant as driver of the truck. He testified, with some supporting testimony by members of his family, that on the night and at the time of these transactions he was at home, in bed, and knew nothing of what transpired; he neither owned, or drove a truck on that day or night, and “wasn’t in that truck as testified to by the officers between 2 and 3 o’clock in the morning.” He did not see the truck claimed to have been seized, but his brother Irving “had a truck that he kept, over at Bill’s farm. About a mile from our farm.”

The material issues of fact were submitted to the jury under a fair and impartial charge. Defendant’s counsel say in their brief:

“The grounds upon which the defendant relies for reversal may be grouped in two subdivisions, to wit: (a) That the court erred in denying defendant’s motion to suppress evidence. (b) That the court erred in rejecting and striking evidence as to prejudice, bias, and adverse interest of witnesses Joseph Kinsey and Edward Kinsey toward defendant.”

Prior to the trial, a special motion was made in defendant’s behalf for an order suppressing “all evidence consisting of intoxicating liquors, and upon the alleged possession of which the within cause is based,” on the ground that it was seized without a search warrant and without “the existence of sufficient facts *547 to justify the search for or seizure of the evidence.” Denial of this motion is defendant’s first and most strenuously urged ground for reversal. It is apparently predicated upon the following proposition, made by his counsel:

“That where there exists, an intimately correlated and continuous succession of effort and action having for its sole object the search and seizure of certain, property regardless of any pertinent knowledge acquired or facts disclosed subsequent to the initiation of such succession of effort and action, it may very reasonably endow the entire series of such effort and action with the character of seizure and search; that the actual instant of physical and active search and seizure becomes merely incidental to the whole chain of circumstances constituting the real search and the real seizure.”

Carried to its logical conclusion and practically applied in the administration of criminal law, that proposition, if tenable, would seem to introduce a far-reaching and potential element in the science of criminal jurisprudence for suppression of any intimately correlated and continuous effort of police officers to detect and suppress crime. The law of search and seizure, as applied to motor cars and other vehicles of transportation and travel, has been so recently and frequently under consideration in many courts of last resort, that, as applied to this case, it seems sufficient to point out that here the seizure was only of the truck after the officers had seen it rushing by them from the lake shore in the dead of the night with its lights out, and by turning their lights upon it plainly saw its load and driver, who refused to halt and drove rapidly on in the darkness. The facts and circumstances then seen and known by those officers were such as to warrant prudent and cautious men in believing an offense was being committed. Carroll v. United States, 267 U. S. 132 (45 Sup. Ct. 280, 39 A. L. R. 790).

*548 As said in that case, the courts may take judicial notice of public facts and geographical positions.

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42 N.W.2d 120 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 N.W. 683, 238 Mich. 543, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-keller-mich-1927.