State v. Scott

286 P. 390, 41 Wyo. 438, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 20
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1930
Docket1604
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 286 P. 390 (State v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Scott, 286 P. 390, 41 Wyo. 438, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 20 (Wyo. 1930).

Opinion

*441 KimbaiAí, Justice.

The defendant was convicted and sentenced on an information charging that he owned a still used, designed and intended to be used for the unlawful manufacture of intoxicating liquor in violation of Chapter 28, Laws of 1927;

*442 The ease was tried in the District Court March 20, 1929. February 16, 1929, defendant filed a motion in the form of a petition for the suppression of evidence obtained January 31 in a search of premises which he occupied as a home. The prosecuting attorney filed an "answer” to the petition, and defendant filed a "reply.” February 21 the petition was disposed of by an order reciting that the matter came on to be heard on the "petition to suppress certain evidence obtained by an alleged unlawful search and seizure, and upon the answer and resistance of the State, and the reply thereto of the defendant,” and the court "having examined the files and being fully advised and informed in the premises,” the petition was denied. The evidence was used by the State at the trial. The defendant contends that the denial of the petition to suppress was error, and that is the only question we need to consider.

The parties evidently assumed that defendant’s petition to suppress was a pleading that should be answered by the State, and that the State’s "answer” called for a reply. The petition was sworn to by defendant, the answer by the prosecuting attorney and the reply by defendant’s attorney. The- oath in each instance was that the statements were true as the affiant "verily believed.” The State now contends that the petition and reply so verified were no proof of the facts alleged (citing Smith v. Mississippi, 162 U. S. 592, 16 S. Ct. 900, 40 L. Ed. 1082), and that, as the record shows no evidence was introduced to establish such facts, the petition was properly denied. The contention cannot be sustained. "We may concede that the petition and reply were not proof of the facts alleged, but we think all the material facts on which the defendant relied were either admitted by the so-called answer of the prosecuting attorney or shown by the search warrant and the affidavit that caused .the issuance of the warrant.

In the petition to suppress it was alleged that the search warrant was issued without probable cause. If that was *443 so, the evidence obtained by the search should have been suppressed. State v. Peterson, 27 Wyo. 185, 194 Pac. 342, 13 A. L. R. 1284; State v. George, 32 Wyo. 223, 231 Pac. 683.

The admitted facts are these. On the filing of an affidavit with a justice of the peace, a search warrant was issued for the search of defendant’s home premises including his dwelling house and other buildings. In execution of the warrant, the sheriff and assistants searched the premises and seized the property described in the return of the warrant. The seized property was held by the sheriff for use as evidence in the trial of defendant on the charge of owning a still. The affidavit filed with the justice of the peace was in the following form:

“Before me, Francis E. Johnston one of the Justices of the Peace, in and for said County, personally appeared Harold F. DeWitt who being duly sworn according to law, deposes and says, that on or about the 31st day of December, 1928, A. D., in the County and State aforesaid, that intoxicating liquors to-wit: One pint contained in glass bottle or jar, one quart contained in glass bottle or jar; one-half gallon contained in glass bottle or jar; one gallon contained in glass bottle or jar; and one gallon or more contained in wooden keg, commonly called moonshine whiskey; a quantity of fermented mash contained in a jar or wooden keg or barrel, intended for use in the illegal manufacture of intoxicating liquor, and one complete still used, designed and intended to be used for the illegal manufacture of intoxicating liquor, commonly called moonshine whiskey, are manfifactured, possessed, sold, furnished or given away, contrary to law in a certain building, dwelling house, cave, hen-house] dug-out, garage and other out building; located and situated on the NE% N% SEJ4 SE % SW14 NE14 SWi/4 Section 35 Township 26N Range 62 West Meridian, in Goshen County, State of Wyoming, for the purpose of being sold, furnished, possessed or given away contrary to the form of the statutes in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State of Wyoming.”

*444 The command of the search warrant was as follows:

“To the Sheriff or any Constable of said Connty Greetings :
“Whereas, there has been filed with me the undersigned, a complaint of which the annexed is a true copy: You are therefore commanded in the name of the State of Wyo.-ming, together with the necessary and proper assistance, to enter the premises described as: dwelling house, barn, cave, hen-house, dug-out, garage or other out building, located and situated on the NEJ4 N14 SE1/^ SE1/^ SW% NE^ SW14 Section 35 Township 26N Range 62 West Meridian, in Goshen County, and State of Wyoming, and you are hereby commanded forthwith to apprehend any and all persons, and there search for said intoxicating liquors, fermented mash, used still, and implements described in said complaint, and you bring the said intoxicating liquors, fermented mash, used still, and implements or any part thereof, found in such search before me, to be disposed of and dealt with according to law.”

In the search of defendant’s premises the sheriff found and seized two and one-half pints of moonshine whiskey, 1 pressure cooker, 2 gasoline burners with attached pressure tanks, and 10 empty pint bottles.

The most noticeable peculiarity of the affidavit and warrant is that they are printed forms, with nothing changed or stricken and very little added. The affidavit is entirely printed except the names of the justice of the peace and the affiant; the date, 31st of December, 1928, and the description by governmental subdivisions of 320 acres of land. The warrant is entirely printed except the description of the land. Disapproving of the practice of using forms of this kind in a case of an arrest for vagrancy, Chief Justice Campbell, in Sarah Way’s Case, 41 Mich. 299, 301, 1 N. W. 1021, said:

“The remarkable character of such a complaint is only explained by the fact that it is entirely a printed form, except as to names and dates. It certainly is not such a document as ought to be presented under the constitu *445 tional provision requiring that no warrant shall issue without probable cause. Such comprehensive and wholesale swearing to a whole catalogue of conditions, some of which cannot possibly have been known to the complainant, and none of which are specific, and the habitual use of such documents, evident from the printed forms of complaint and commitment, are not calculated to recommend the proceedings to favorable consideration.”

And in Lippman v. People, 175 Ill. 101, 112, 51 N. E. 872, 875, the court, considering a printed complaint and warrant for search, said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 P. 390, 41 Wyo. 438, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-scott-wyo-1930.