United States v. Joseph Lemon Boyette, Bert Franklin Mooring, and Temasia Bruce Hill Mooring

299 F.2d 92
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1962
Docket8248_1
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 299 F.2d 92 (United States v. Joseph Lemon Boyette, Bert Franklin Mooring, and Temasia Bruce Hill Mooring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Joseph Lemon Boyette, Bert Franklin Mooring, and Temasia Bruce Hill Mooring, 299 F.2d 92 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinions

[93]*93HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

Out of sordid little cases such as this, important constitutional questions sometimes arise. The appellants, convicted of having procured the interstate transportation of a woman for purposes of prostitution, contend this is such a case. Asserting a violation of their Fourth Amendment rights when their establishment was searched at the time of their arrest, they seek to upset their conviction because of the receipt in evidence of records, seized during the search, made of their earnings by prostitutes working in the establishment. We think, however, that the search was not unreasonable, and that records of the earnings of the prostitutes were not improperly received in evidence.

Shortly after her return to her home in North Carolina, from whence she had been transported to the “truck stop” of the defendants, Mooring, in Virginia, the victim reported her experience to the police. She told of having been persuaded by Mr. and Mrs. Mooring and her lover, Boyette, all residents of North Carolina, to go to Virginia to work for the Moorings as a prostitute. The Moorings explained to her how she should arrange assignations with truck drivers who visited the Moorings’ establishment, what her charges would be, the division of her earnings, and her maintenance of a record of her receipts upon guest checks of the sort commonly used in restaurants. She informed the law enforcement officials that, when working for the Moorings as a prostitute, she recorded her receipts after each transaction upon such a guest check, which, with her receipts, were kept in a drawer in the kitchen portion of the establishment.

Upon the basis of the information given by the victim, warrants for the arrest of Boyette and of the Moorings were issued. The warrants for the arrest of the Moorings were executed at their truck stop in Virginia, Mr. Mooring-being arrested in the restaurant portion of the establishment and Mrs. Mooring in a room which she and her husband used as a bedroom when they were in residence there. Immediately after these arrests, FBI agents searched the premises. They looked in the cash register and in cabinets and drawers. They found and seized three guest checks of the sort that had been described by the victim, upon each of which the figures $5.00 had been repeatedly recorded, and upon two of them there was a notation of a $10.00 transaction. One of these checks was found in the kitchen drawer described by the victim as the place where she had been instructed to keep such records. The others were found in a waste paper basket in one of the three rooms in the establishment, which, apparently, were maintained for the fulfillment of the assignations arranged by the ladies of the place.

These barren rooms, furnished with little that was not requisite to their utilitarian purpose, contained in them no personal articles suggestive of use of these rooms for residential purposes. Each mattress was covered only by a spread. Upon a chair in one of the rooms, a prophylactic contraceptive was conveniently laid out, together with a lubricant, and hung in the two bathrooms in that portion of the building were five douche bottles. The victim testified that she used these rooms for her business purposes, but, when the end of her duty period arrived, she repaired with her lover, Boyette, to a motel where she slept.

The only room in the place which was apparently used for residential purposes was the one room occupied by the Moorings, and in which Mrs. Mooring was arrested. Nothing was seized in that room.

The Moorings do not question the lawfulness of their arrest, or the validity of the warrants which authorized them. They concede that the officers entered the building lawfully.1 They claim no use of force.2 They do not even assert [94]*94a contemporaneous protest on their part, though, of course, under the circumstances no inference of consent can be founded upon the absence of protest. There is nothing to indicate that the arrests were intended as a basis of a search for evidence of other crime,3 for the defendants were tried only for offenses suggested by the charges upon which they were arrested, and the record contains no suggestion that the agents were looking for anything other than records of the transportation of the women and of their earnings. There was no wanton seizure of the contents of the establishment;4 the only things seized were the three guest checks bearing upon their face a fragment of the record of the pitiable receipts of the house. The assertion of unreasonableness is founded solely upon the fact that these pieces of paper were found in part in a kitchen drawer and in part in a waste paper basket in one of the rooms provided for the business purposes of the prostitutes.

We need not here enter into the debate over the permissibility of a search without a warrant incident to a lawful arrest when not confined to the •clothing of the person arrested. The Supreme Court has held that the Fourth Amendment prohibits only unreasonable searches, and that a reasonable search ■of the premises where a lawful arrest is made may be conducted incident to the arrest.5 In the absence of any other aggravating circumstance, premises where the arrest occurs, if under the immediate ■control and in the possession of the arrested individual, are regarded as an extension of his person for purposes of a search incident to his arrest. The only difference is that the search of the pockets in the clothing of the arrested individual may be general but that of the premises, where the arrest occurs, may be neither general nor unreasonable. No one suggests that a thoroughgoing search of a man’s home could be justified merely because he was arrested in his home upon a minor misdemeanor charge. Here, however, the search of this business establishment for instrumentalities of the crime was reasonably related to the arrest and there were no aggravating circumstances which carried the search beyond the bounds of reasonableness. Unreasonableness is asserted solely on the basis of the fact the area of the search extended to the kitchen drawer and the waste paper basket in the “bedroom.” If, however, the search of the entire apartment in Harris 6 incident to the lawful arrest there was a reasonable one, surely the much more limited search of this small restaurant and sporting house, incident to the lawful arrest of its proprietors, was a reasonable one. Mooring’s arrest arose out of his panderage. Reasonableness did not require confinement of the search to the restaurant portion of the building where the arrest occurred. The search was reasonably extended to that portion of his building where prostitution was practiced and its wages recorded.

Though the search be reasonable, every article discovered is not subject to seizure. The Supreme Court has frequently adverted to the distinction between seizures of contraband, fruits of crime and the instrumentalities for its accomplishment, weapons and similar articles on the one hand, and the seizure of purely evidentiary materials on the other.7 Perhaps the influence of the [95]*95Fifth Amendment is felt here. At least, it has been thought that a diary in which its author has recited his criminal conduct, seized in an otherwise lawful search, should not be used against him, just as any other kind of involuntary confession is unusable under the Fifth Amendment.'

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Bluebook (online)
299 F.2d 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-joseph-lemon-boyette-bert-franklin-mooring-and-temasia-ca4-1962.