State v. Phillips

55 N.W.2d 384, 262 Wis. 303, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 229
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 55 N.W.2d 384 (State v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin 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. Phillips, 55 N.W.2d 384, 262 Wis. 303, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 229 (Wis. 1952).

Opinion

Brown, J.

For reasons not disclosed, on the evening of July 23, 1949, Detectives Bogart and Reitz, of the Milwaukee police force, were detailed to watch a certain automobile parked near Phillips’ residence. At 10:40 p. m. appellant came out of his third-floor apartment and drove away in the automobile, followed by the two detectives in their car. After some cruising around he was joined by Jerome and Samuel *305 DiMaggio, whom the detectives recognized from pictures of the two men in their possession. It was then about midnight. The three spent the next three hours cruising in the neighborhood of the International Harvester Company’s plant, making four circuits of the plant at slow speed, with occasional stops at filling stations and taverns. At 3 a. m. July 24th, Jerome DiMaggio drove the automobile away from such a filling station, followed by the detectives who were not able to see whether Phillips was then in the automobile. The detectives lost sight of the automobile at about 3 :15 a. m. and were unable to find it again. At 6 a. m., while they were searching for the car, they heard on their radio that there had been a burglary at the Harvester plant. They went there and found other police were in charge, and they observed the Harvester Company vault with a section of its steel door burned out by an acetylene torch which lay on the floor. Near the vault there were scattered fragments of fused steel and a white, powdery insulating material, and the floor showed tracks of shoes whose rubber soles made a distinctive, peculiar pattern. After leaving the plant, and at about 6:20 a. m., they heard a radio request to help Detective Cherney at a certain location. Cherney had previously been at the Harvester plant where he, too, had observed the evidence of burglary. Bogart and Reitz responded to the call and found Cherney had Sam and Jerome DiMaggio in custody and had taken from Sam a paper parcel from which a pair of tennis shoes protruded. Sam said they were his. Detectives Cherney, Bogart, and Reitz recognized that the pattern of the soles was the same as the shoe prints on the floor near the Harvester Company’s vault.

Bogart and Reitz then went to Phillips’ home which they reached about 7:15 a. m. They knocked at the door and said they were police officers. Phillips’ wife opened the door. The appellant stood behind her. Mr. Bogart at once informed John Phillips that he was under arrest for suspicion of bur *306 glary. Phillips, who was in his underwear, said he must put on more clothes. Followed by Reitz he went to a closet where he took some clothing and dropped it on the floor. Being suspicious, Reitz asked him what he was covering up. Phillips said the garment just fell. Reitz picked up the fallen garment and found it concealed the hat and shirt which he had seen Phillips wearing when they were following him. Reitz took possession of the hat, shirt, and a pair of shoes and socks and trousers, all of which were damp and sweaty. Material adhering to these garments was analyzed by the state crime laboratory and proved to be globules of fused steel, and fragments of paint, and insulating material, identical in composition and color to the materials of which the Harvester vault was constructed and to the debris lying around the burned safe. Many of the specimens taken from the clothing showed that they had been subjected to extreme heat. Phillips’ shoes also contained bits of cinders like those under the Harvester window.

The shoes taken from Sam DiMaggio were demonstrated by the state crime laboratory to be those which had made the prints on the floor near the safe and Sam DiMaggio’s clothing yielded specimens like those found in Phillips’ garments.

The trial court’s memorandum states:

. . the presence of the defendants Samuel Salvatore DiMaggio and John Franklin Phillips at the scene of the crime while it was being perpetrated and their participation therein is uncontrovertible. It is absolute. . . .
“Although the evidence connecting the defendants Samuel Salvatore DiMaggio and John Franklin Phillips with the offense charged is circumstantial, actually it connects them with the perpetration of the crime as positively, if not more so, than if actual eyewitnesses had been produced who had seen them actually assisting in cutting open the vault door when the offense was committed. . . .
“The fragments found in the cuffs of John Phillips’ trousers taken from him at the time of his arrest positively came *307 from his participation in the burglary. The proof is inescapable that he wore said trousers at the time of the burglary. The same situation is true with respect to the shoes and shirt taken from him at the time of his arrest.
“The cinders came from under the open window in the rear of the burglarized plant, and not from any other source.”

Appellant concedes that a valid arrest may be made without a warrant when the arresting officer has reasonable, probable cause to believe the person arrested has committed a crime, but he denies that the detectives had such cause under the circumstances of this case.

Bogart and Reitz knew, personally, that a felonious attempt had been made prior to 6 a. m. to open the Harvester safe; they knew, personally, that shoes carried by Sam DiMaggio at about 6:30 a. m. were worn by some person concerned in the attempt; they knew, personally, that at least until 3 a. m. Sam DiMaggio, Jerome DiMaggio, and Phillips had spent the night in company, driving around the scene of the burglary in Phillips’ automobile in an unusual and suspicious manner and that at 3:15 a. m. Jerome was driving the car and eluded the detectives. In our view any reasonably intelligent, cautious man would conclude that the three were engaged in some common enterprise and when, by the capture of the rubber-soled shoes, it appeared that one of them had participated in a burglary, reasonable men would conclude that in all probability the burglary was the enterprise and that they all participated in it in one way or another.

“An officer with authority to conserve the peace . . . may, without a warrant, arrest any person who has committed a felony in or out of his presence.. ... He may arrest any person whom he, upon reasonable ground, believes has committed a felony, ...” 4 Am. Jur., Arrest, p. 18, sec. 25.

We conclude that the detectives’ belief that Phillips had participated in the burglary was sufficiently supported by their own observations that night and morning to meet all require *308 ments enabling them to make a valid arrest without a warrant.

Bogart testified that when the door of the apartment opened, revealing Phillips, Bogart said to him that he was under arrest for suspicion of burglary. Appellant submits that since there is no offense of “suspicion of burglary” for which a person may be arrested, no arrest in fact was ever made. We are unable to discover that there is any formula whose utterance is essential to the validity of an arrest.

“An arrest, as the term is used in criminal law, signifies the apprehension or detention of the person or another in order that he may be forthcoming to answer an alleged or supposed crime.” 4 Am. Jur., Arrest, p. 7, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.W.2d 384, 262 Wis. 303, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-phillips-wis-1952.