Sackler v. Sackler

33 Misc. 2d 600, 224 N.Y.S.2d 790, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3967
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 33 Misc. 2d 600 (Sackler v. Sackler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sackler v. Sackler, 33 Misc. 2d 600, 224 N.Y.S.2d 790, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3967 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

Benjamin Brenner, J.

The defendant wife, legally separated by a decree of this court, moves to suppress evidence of her alleged adultery. The evidence, complete with photographs, is claimed to have been secured by the plaintiff husband upon his forceful entry and raid of the wife’s separately maintained apartment. She contends that her right to exclude the evidence has newly arisen by virtue of the decisional mandate of the United States Supreme Court in Mapp v. Ohio (367 U. S. 643) which, she says, now gives real effect to her constitutional and [601]*601statutory rights to the privacy of her person. In effect, she maintains that a spouse may no longer establish the adultery of the other if it be uncovered through unreasonable search of her legally established private residence.

The husband, opposing suppression, claims that Mapp has made no such drastic change of the exclusionary rule in this State as to evidence obtained by a private individual and offered in a civil case. He says it has been altered only to the extent of requiring all State courts to exclude evidence in criminal cases secured by police and governmental authorities through unreasonable search and seizure. Moreover, the husband denies the use of force and contends that evidence of his wife’s adultery in the separately maintained residence may not be suppressed as she has no constitutional right to commit it. In essence the defendant insists upon the right to invade the legally established separate residence of the spouse and to uncover and prove adultery committed therein, intimating that he may at least take one look and tell what he saw, whether or not he was invited to do so.

Mapp did indeed radically alter the exclusionary law in this and other States which had not previously adopted their own exclusionary rule (see Appendix in Elkins v. United States, 364 U. S. 206, 224). It now requires all State courts to apply the exclusionary rule, previously confined to Federal courts by the Supreme Court, to evidence procured by law officers and governmental officials through unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. [The requirements of the Fourth Amendment had previously been made operative against the States by virtue of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment (Wolf v. Colorado, 338 U. S. 25). But there the court specifically refused to apply the rule to State courts to effectuate those requirements (Wolf v. Colorado, supra, p. 33)].

The Court of Appeals in People v. Loria (10 N Y 2d 368) acknowledged and confirmed this change in the rule. That decision went further declaring (p. 374) “ There appears to be no bar to defendant’s making an application to the court in advance of trial to supress the challenged evidence ”. Thus, if the exclusionary rule may now, as the wife urges, be extended to evidence procured by a private individual through unreasonable search when offered in a civil trial, then there is authority for suppression upon motion prior to trial.

In arguing for the extension of the rule, the wife frankly admits riding the crest of these current holdings. Her observation that New York is on the threshold of applying the doctrine [602]*602of the exclusionary rule in civil suits is a tacit admission that Mapp did not directly do so nor did the Court of Appeals in People v. Loria (supra) do so. Moreover, unreasonable search by law officials and intrusion by Government authority are the plain concern and objectives of the safeguards provided by the first 10 amendments to the United States Constitution and particularly to the Fourth Amendment. (Silverman v. United States, 365 U. S. 505, 511; People v. Tarantino, 45 Cal. 2d 590; Marshall v. State, 182 Md. 379.) Moreover, the defendant cannot rely upon section 12 of article I of our State Constitution which bars unreasonable searches and seizures as it is settled law that “ The provisions of section 12 of article I of the State Constitution * * * relate solely to the soverign authority and its agencies and not to individuals ”. (People v. Appelbaum, 277 App. Div. 43, 45, affd. 301 N. Y. 738.)

All this does not mean that Mapp is not helpful to the wife’s cause, or that it does not justify a logical extension and liberalization of the rule. On the contrary, I think it does. While Mapp is no authority for the proposition that the State and Federal Constitutions offer safeguards against the actions of private individuals, it surely does point the way to a re-examination of those very same rights protected by the statutory law of this State (Civil Rights Law, § 8). For, it seems to me, Mapp does give rise to the reasonable inference that if States may no longer accept evidence which tends to “ flout the insolence of office” (People v. Defore, 242 N. Y. 13, 25, cert, denied 270 U. S. 657) despite the salutary need to protect society against crime, that evidence of invasion of privacy by nonofficials should also be rejected even in private litigation. In other words, if the State courts may no longer permit disclosure of crime ferreted out by unreasonable search, in the name of crime prevention and detection, is there any further necessity or incentive to give judicial sanction or to lend the forum of the civil courts to individuals who would use evidence obtained in the course of flouting basic civil rights? So, too, if decisional law in this State, prior to Mapp, is relied upon, it seems fair to say that this body of law rests upon what was, until Mapp, thought to be a need to give a freer hand to governmental authority to ferret out crime and thereby protect society. (People v. Defore, supra.) As such motivation can no longer be urged the courts of this State would appear to be free to give force to the plain intendment of the strictures of our Civil Rights Law against unreasonable search if such law can fairly be said to be applicable to private conduct. For, as urged here “ the protection is even more necessary against a private citi[603]*603zen, who is not especially trained or enjoined to enforce the law, as is a public officer, who is less likely to stray.”

This leads to a close examination of section 8 of the Civil Rights Law which employs the precise language found in section 12 of article I of the State Constitution and of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution forbidding unreasonable intrusion upon privacy. This statute antedated our constitutional provision by some 100 years. (It first appeared in the Revised Statutes of 1828 [Pt. I, ch. IV, § 11]), and even when the Constitutional Convention of 1938 added section 12 of article I in words identical to that of section 8 of the Civil Rights Law, the statute was not eliminated. I believe that the statute was permitted to remain intact because the constitutional provision has applicability only to official acts (People v. Appelbaum, supra) while section 8 of the Civil Rights Law affects both private persons and representatives of the sovereign State.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Misc. 2d 600, 224 N.Y.S.2d 790, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sackler-v-sackler-nysupct-1962.