Robertson v. State of Florida

114 So. 534, 94 Fla. 770
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 26, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 114 So. 534 (Robertson v. State of Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. State of Florida, 114 So. 534, 94 Fla. 770 (Fla. 1927).

Opinion

Strum, J.

The plaintiff in error, whom we shall designate the defendant, as he was in the court below, prosecuted this writ of error from a judgment convicting him of the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor.

Prior to his arraignment the defendant moved the court “to suppress all evidence discovered in the search of the defendant’s private dwelling house by deputy sheriffs M. D. McArthur and L. B. Morgan,” the grounds of said motion being, in substance, that the evidence which forms the basis of this-prosecution was obtained through an unlawful search of the defendant’s private dwelling, in that such search was conducted without a search warrant and was not made as an incident to a lawful arrest of the defendant.

*772 In support of that motion, testimony ore tenus was taken before the trial judge prior to the impaneling of the jury. From this testimony it appears that the two deputy sheriffs named in the motion were stationed at a recreation place for colored people near Pensacola, where on the evening in question a dance was in progress and where a large number of people had congregated. The officers noticed “a good deal of drinking around the dance hall, and lots of bottles scattered around. ’ ’ They undertook to ascertain the source of supply of the intoxicating liquor. Their attention was directed toward a nearby house by reason of the fact that a large number of people were passing to and from the house, one of such visitors being stopped by the officers and discovered to be in possession of a bottle of intoxicating liquor. By lying down on the porch of the house and looking inside through a crack under the door, and also by a view of the inside of the house through one of the windows, the officers saw the defendant and another person inside the house, the former being engaged in pouring a liquid from a large jug into Coca-Cola bottles, in which it was being dispensed to those calling at the house. The odor of “moonshine liquor” was very strong. One of the officers, while standing outside a window of the house, received direct from the hands of the defendant’s companion in the house a small bottle of the liquor. The officers thereupon at the point of a pistol compelled the occupants of the house to admit them thereto, where they arrested the defendant and possessed themselves of the jug and Coca-Cola bottles just mentioned. The jug contained moonshine liquor. The officers had no search warrant. The defendant testified, without contradiction, that the house which was thus scrutinized and entered by the officers was his dwelling house; that he carried on no business there; that it was ‘ ‘ just a place where he lived. ’ ’ *773 and that he had lived there for some time. The foregoing evidence was taken upon the motion to suppress, not upon the issues.

The trial judge denied the motion to suppress, to which order the defendant excepted. Thereupon the defendant was arraigned and pleaded not guilty. A jury was then sworn to try the issues. To support the information, the State introduced as a witness one of the deputy sheriffs previously mentioned, who again described, in the presence of the jury, the conditions at the recreation resort, the manner by which his attention and suspicions were directed toward the house where he found and arrested the defendant, how he and his companion looked under the door and through the window of the house, how they detected a strong odor of moonshine liquor, how they saw the defendant pouring liquor from a large jug into small bottles, and how they then entered and arrested the defendant and the latter’s companion and took possession of the liquor and bottles found there. The testimony concerning the circumstances just referred to was substantially the same as the testimony given upon the motion to suppress. This was the only witness for the State. The defendant introduced no evidence whatever upon the issues. In the testimony upon the issues, it does not appear, either by cross examination of the State’s witness or otherwise, that the deputy sheriffs were not armed with a valid search warrant when they entered the house in qiiestion, nor does it appear that such house was the dwelling of this defendant, or any other person. No objection was made by the defendant to the State’s evidence upon the issues, save one objection which was directed to a matter extraneous to the proposition relied on for reversal.

The errors assigned are that the trial court erred in *774 denying the defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence; and in denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial. The latter motion was based primarily upon the grounds that the conviction was obtained by the use of evidence which was illegally acquired “and which was properly objected to;” and that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict.

While the defendant in a criminal prosecution has the right to insist that only competent evidence be introduced against him, he may waive that right, and he does waive it by failing to make proper and timely objections. Ordinarily, and subject to certain exceptions not pertinent here, this principle applies to evidence incompetent ■ under constitutional as well as statutory provisions and the general rules of evidence. Martin v. State, 232 Pac. Rep. 966; State v. Hartsfield, 124 S. E. Rep. 629; Sedgwick, Stat. and Const. Law. p. 111; 6 R. C. L. 93; 27 R. C. L. 906; see also as illustrating the principle State v. Dowling, 107 South. Rep. 267. The reasons underlying the rule just stated differ from those which occasion the rule forbidding the waiver by an accused of certain constitutional rights resting upon the public policy of the State as distinguished from a right personal to the accused. State v. Hartsfield, supra. Error, if any, in admitting evidence is waived by failure to object thereto. See Webb v. State, 242 Pac. Rep. 784.

Although the defendant, prior to his arraignment, interposed a motion' to suppress certain evidence upon the ground that it was procured by means of an unlawful search and seizure, and although the defendant duly excepted to the order overruling that motion, he was not thereby relieved of the duty of objecting to the questioned evidence when it was offered on the trial of the issues if he desired to assign the admission of such evidence as error. *775 The preliminary interposition of such a motion prior to the trial, and an exception to an adverse ruling thereon, is not tantamount to a proper and seasonable objection to the questioned evidence at the trial upon the issues.

In and of itself, a motion to suppress evidence obtained by illegal means, when interposed prior to arraignment, is not a part of the trial upon the issues. It is a preliminary or ancillary proceeding for the purpose of determining an issue collateral or incidental to the issue raised by the indictment and plea, namely, whether or not the questioned evidence was lawfully obtained by the State. Weeks v. U. S., 232 U. S. 282; 58 Law Ed. 652; L. R. A. 1915-B 834; Ann. Cas. 1915-C 1177. While the evidence taken upon the motion may be resorted to in support of an objection at the trial, the question determined upon such motion has no immediate relation to the issue of the guilt vel non

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 534, 94 Fla. 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-state-of-florida-fla-1927.