People v. Shorr

198 N.W. 969, 227 Mich. 243, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 628
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1924
DocketDocket No. 128.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 N.W. 969 (People v. Shorr) 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. Shorr, 198 N.W. 969, 227 Mich. 243, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 628 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Defendants were convicted in the circuit court of Oakland county under a charge of illegally transporting intoxicating liquor within the township of Bloomfield in said county, on June 5, 1923. A stay of sentence pending an appeal was granted and the case is here for review on exceptions before sentence. Upon their trial neither of the defendants took the stand as a witness and no testimony was offered by the defense. Excepting the last, the substance of defendants’ 18 assignments of error condenses to the proposition that from start to finish there was no competent testimony in the case to justify the committing magistrate in holding the accused to the circuit court for trial, or the trial court to submit the case to the jury. When the case was called preliminary motions were made for the defense to quash the proceedings and discharge the accused because no primo, facie case was made before the justice who bound them over for trial and to suppress the evidence as incompetent because obtained by illegal arrest, search and seizure. Throughout the trial objections were made to the evidence of the prosecution for similar reasons. At conclusion of the evidence a motion for discharge of defendants and request for directed verdict followed on similar grounds. Right of review was saved by motions, ob *245 jections, requests and exceptions timely made as the trial progressed.

It is undisputed that the officers who arrested defendants and seized the liquor they were transporting in their automobile had no warrant for arrest, or search and seizure, and the gist of the defense, urged in various aspects, is that the officers had no reasonable ground when the arrest was made to believe defendants guilty of committing the offense for which they arrested them. The arrest was made early in the morning of June 5, 1923, on Grand avenue, in the outskirts of the city of Pontiac, just outside its corporate limits, in Bloomfield township, the location being known as “South End,” and was inhabited mostly by colored people and foreigners.

Apparently to provide that district with a measure of police protection the sheriff of Oakland county had appointed as deputy sheriffs two colored men named Moody and Whitfield who had resided in that locality for several years and were well informed as, to people and conditions there. They knew defendants by sight, knew they did not reside in that community and had seen them in that vicinity on several occasions. Complaints had been made to them, as Moody testified, "“that these two men were bringing in numerous amounts of liquor.” Whitfield saw them in South End the night before their arrest and as he states “shadowed them,” discovering they were going from house to house, and amongst other places saw they went to a house where a man he knew named Wallace, who was a drayman, happened to be. Later that evening, after defendants had left the neighborhood, the officers saw Wallace on the street and learned from him defendants’ mission in visiting that community. Whitfield testified he told them “these two men were taking orders and were to be in the next morning to deliver the booze.” Moody’s version of the communication was:

*246 “He told us the evening before the morning we did catch these two fellows, these two gentlemen over here, they were coming in regularly putting in liquor and he said, ‘Now, if you fellows are right on the job tomorrow morning about six o’clock or a little after,’ he said, ‘you will catch them.’ ”

Acting on this information, and suggestion, the two officers were out early next morning on the street, “dressed in overalls to go to work,” and a little after 6 o’clock saw defendants approaching in an Oakland automobile riding in the front seat. In the concluding part of their itinerary which the officers watched, they were coming from the north and turned in on Detroit street, went a block east to the corner where the officers were and turned north onto Grand avenue, went part of a block on that street and stopped in front of a house.

Whitfield testified that as the car approached the corner where they were he noticed some liquor spilling from it, and as they passed he detected the odor of moonshine whisky. The car stopped in front of a house where Whitfield had seen them go the night before. One of defendants then got out, the other remaining seated at the wheel. The officers then ran up with their revolvers drawn, ordered defendants to hold up their hands and arrested them. At that time liquor was still dripping over the running-board at the back part of the car. Both officers testified they saw it and readily recognized the odor of moonshine whisky. They then looked into the car and saw back of the front seat ten 5-gallon cans and a 2-gallon jug partly covered by a robe. These receptacles all contained whisky. The liquor they saw dripping from the car was running out of one of the cans the cork, or stopper, of which had loosened and about half of the contents had then escaped. The other cans and jug were well filled. Moody’s story *247 of the sequence of events relating to the arrest, search, and seizure, is in part as follows:

“We detected the odor of whisky when we first went up to the car.
“Q. Was that before or after you nlaced the men under arrest?
“A. The whole thing occurred at once. The minute we placed the men under arrest we discovered the odor of liquor, in the car and it was easily smelled. * * *
“Q. So all the things that happened in connection with this case, and what you found, this liquor, and what they said, etc., was after you first put them under arrest, was it not?
“A. All things happened, yes, after we put them under arrest.”

Whitfield’s account, on cross-examination, of the circumstances of the arrest, is in part as follows:

“Before Moody and I got to them they had stopped just long enough so the one driving was out on the ground. He didn’t tell me he had a flat tire. I had the gun in my hand when I ran up to them. I pulled it when I was about fifteen feet from the car. I immediately told them to stick up their hands and put them under arrest. The first thing I did was to stand them up at the point of a gun and put them under arrest, and after that we made an investigation to see what they had in the car. We did not investigate thoroughly, but what investigation we did make was after we held them up at the point of a gun and put them under arrest. I knew at the time I put them under arrest because the liquor was pouring out. I knew it was liquor because I smelled it.”

Counsel for defendants urges in his brief that it was for the trial court “to determine judicially as to whether or not the officers, under the circumstances in the case and according to their own testimony, which was undisputed, had reasonable grounds upon which to make an arrest,” and in submitting that question to the jury the court was in error. This is but the postulate to counsel’s contention that it was the duty of the court under the undisputed testimony to direct *248

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Related

People v. Parisi
208 N.W.2d 70 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1973)
State v. Mastriacchio
42 A.2d 496 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1945)
People v. Paremba
215 N.W. 345 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 N.W. 969, 227 Mich. 243, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-shorr-mich-1924.