State v. Mullaney

16 P.2d 407, 92 Mont. 553, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 121
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1932
DocketNo. 7,020.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 P.2d 407 (State v. Mullaney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mullaney, 16 P.2d 407, 92 Mont. 553, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 121 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

HONORABLE R. M. HATTERSLEY, District Judge,

sitting in place of MR. JUSTICE FORD, disqualified, delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant, M. J. Mullaney, has appealed from a judgment convicting him of possessing morphine, a felony.

The sole question presented in this case is whether the district court erred in refusing to suppress evidence used on the trial. Timely motion to suppress such evidence was made.

The only point for determination in this case is whether or not the arrest of the defendant was lawful. If it was, the search of defendant’s person and seizure of the narcotics found on him were also lawful, and such evidence was properly admissible in evidence on the trial (State ex rel. Neville v. Mullen, 63 Mont. 50, 207 Pac. 634; State ex rel. Kuhr v. District Court, 82 Mont. 515, 268 Pac. 501; State v. Hum Quock, 89 Mont. 503, 300 Pac. 220); if not, the motion *557 to suppress the evidence should have been granted by the trial court.

The arrest was made on June 4, 1931, by one Larry Weir, the then sheriff of Silver-Bow county, state of Montana without a warrant. On the hearing of the motion to suppress the evidence, Larry Weir testified: That some time in the latter part of April, 1931, one night about 11 o’clock, at thé corner of Mercury and Main Streets, he noticed Mullaney’s car driving around the block, blowing the horn, a long blow and three short blows, the car having an odd horn. Weir called up his office, and one Mr. Peoples came down, the two taking opposite sides of Dakota Street in the dark. The ear kept pulling up to the comer or near the corner of Mercury and Dakota Streets, stopping and standing there for a few minutes, then pulling away. Finally another car drove up, at which time Peoples grabbed one car, Weir the other, when a bindle of cocaine was thrown out of the window, evidently the window of Mullaney’s car, it being the only window of either car open on the side it was thrown. The ear was occupied at that time by Grace Brown and defendant’s wife, defendant not being present. The women were taken to the county jail, searched, nothing found on either, then were released. Earlier the same evening defendant had been in the car. That Weir was told by one “Blonde Babe” about the first part of May of the same year that “she had been getting her dope from the Mullaneys.” This person lived at 55 E. Mercury Street, in a portion of the old restricted district of Butte. Weir had known her for a couple of months prior to arrest of defendant. Weir believed, but did not know, that she was a user of narcotics, having that appearance, and had such belief at the time of the arrest. That people of her type are not very reliable. That he (Weir) had numerous telephone calls from people in the vicinity of defendant and wife’s residence in the city of Butte, who told “us” there were “dope heads” frequenting the Mullaney house, same 'being distant about two miles from the Silver City Club. The people calling said they were neighbors *558 of defendant and wife; none would give their names. The calls were not checked to see whether they were made by people living in the district of defendant’s home. Witness did not see any of the persons calling. The calls were in the two 'months preceding the arrest, some being in April and some in May, 1931; those calling asked if witness knew where the Mullaneys lived, and, upon receiving an affirmative answer, told him that drug addicts had been going and coming from the Mullaney house on Amherst Street every day. Witness was acquainted with a place at 226 or 228 South Wyoming Street, where two drug addicts by name Irene Collins and Grace Brown lived. The Mullaney ear made several trips there every night. Sometimes defendant and wife were in the car, sometimes defendant alone. This place is in the restricted district. That witness saw the Mullaney car at 228 South Wyoming Street about every night he was down that way, the last time being the night before June 4, either the defendant or his wife driving it. On reaching these premises, they would give a certain signal, a long blow and two or three short blows on the horn, and in a minute or two the door would open, and someone from the inside would run out to the car and run back in again; the car not stopping for any time without someone coming out. They either went in or someone always came out. That Weir personally saw the stopping of the car at this place, and heard the signal. There are records of Irene Collins and Grace Brown being “hop heads” or narcotic addicts. Prior to June 4, 1931, the defendant’s car had been around the Silver City Club giving that signal, the club being another “hop head joint.” The last time Weir saw the car going by the club was June 3, 1931, at about 12 o’clock. Prior to the arrest Weir had records under date of May, 1930, from the chief of police at Great Falls, Montana, showing defendant to be suspected of being a “dope peddler,” at that time and place. After receiving the telephone calls and the information from “Blonde Babe,” witness, for a period of approximately two months prior to the arrest, watched the defendant. Defendant’s wife *559 had a sister by the name of Jess, a dope fiend. Defendant and wife frequented her house at different times during the night and early morning; also they had gone to 288 South Wybming Street, and in and out of the Silver City Club, but at no time did Weir get close to them; this was always at night, after dark. Prior to the arrest, Weir had read a certain letter to the effect that the defendant and wife were in Yakima, Washington, for two days, and that they bought a can of morphine, paying $110 for it. Weir did not remember who signed the letter or to whom it was addressed, and could not find the letter in his office, stating it must . have been destroyed. On return of defendant and wife from Yakima, Weir saw them again and watched them right along; they running to these different places, making from fifteen to twenty trips a day away from the Silver City Club, where Weir was informed they had quite a good many telephone calls each night. The Silver City Club is located at the comer of'Silver and Main Streets, and is “a club where dope peddlers and hop fiends, and the riff • raff sort hang around.” It is a colored club, and Weir had seen people there whom he knew to be drug addicts or “hop heads,” some of such persons being negro prostitutes. That Weir talked to various members of the detective force of the city of Butte about defendant’s reputation for being a dope peddler, and was told “he was one of the shrewdest dope peddlers there is.” Weir was also told by street-car men and by a fireman that there had been “dope heads” getting on the street-ear at the corner of Amherst Street. Various persons known to Weir to be drug addicts were arrested as drug addicts, one at the Silver City Club, and others were known to be frequenters of such club.

In regard to the circumstances at, or immediately prior to, the time of the arrest of defendant by Larry Weir, Weir further testified: That on the early morning of June 4, 1931— the morning of the arrest — at about 12:10 A. M. he saw the defendant driving north on Main Street in the city of Butte. Weir next saw the defendant at the comer of Silver and Main *560 Streets in Butte about 2:20 A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Application of Gray
473 P.2d 532 (Montana Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 P.2d 407, 92 Mont. 553, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mullaney-mont-1932.