United States v. Lindsly

7 F.2d 247, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1219
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 11, 1925
Docket8412
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 7 F.2d 247 (United States v. Lindsly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Lindsly, 7 F.2d 247, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1219 (E.D. La. 1925).

Opinion

BEATTIE, District Judge.

The principal ground for the motion for new trial is that the court overruled the motion to suppress evidence made and heard before the trial on the merits, and permitted the government witnesses to testify to certain faets learned as a result of their entering of the premises and dwelling of the defendant. This entering was without a search warrant, 'and because of this it.is claimed that all facts learned as a result of it should have been, excluded from the jury. There were sufficient faets discovered by the government witnesses before the entering of the defendant’s property to,justify a submission of the merits of the case to a jury, but still, if evidence of the faets learned as a result of the entering was illegal and should have been excluded, a new trial should be granted, despite the fact that there might have been sufficient evidence without this to justify a conviction.

Under the faets as developed on the motion to suppress the evidence, the court concluded that a search warrant was unnecessary, as the evidence showed that before the government officers entered the property, they had ample knowledge through their senses of sight and smell, that an offense was being committed in their presence, and. the court considered that 'the law. justified, the arrest of an offender and the entering of his property by the government officers for this purpose, as well as for the purpose of search, if and when a violation of the law was being committed in their presence, and the court considered that the law justified the introduction before the jury of any evidence discovered at the time of the arrest of the offender or of the entering of his property, if and when the officers were justified in making either such arrest (which in this ease was not made, as defendant was absent), or such entry because of their knowledge, through their senses, of the commission of an offense then taking place in their presence.

The Court of Appeals of this Circuit, in McBride v. U. S., 284 F. 416, 419, said: “At common law it was always lawful to arrest a person without warrant, where a crime was being committed in the presence of an officer and to enter a building without warrant, in which such crime was being perpetrated. * * * Where an officer is apprised by any of his senses that a crime is being committed, it is being committed in his presence, so as to justify an arrest without warrant.”

In the same case, on page 418, the court said: “Treating this stable as failing within the description of places covered by the Fourth Amendment, the question in this case is: Can an officer, without warrant, enter upon premises whereon he is informed by his senses a crime is being committed, and, having entered, finding a crime in progress, without warrant arrest the offenders and testify as to what such entry discloses? The case does not involve the taking of papers, or the use of any papers or property of the defendant in evidence against him.”

Again, on page 419, the court said: “The 'entry on these premises and into the stable was not to search for evidence, but, upon ascertaining that whisky was in process of manufacture thereon, to arrest those engaged in the commission of an offense then in progress. If an entry can be made without warrant in eases where the’ officers acquire information evidencing the present commission of a crime, then the use of knowledge acquired by such entry is not the use of knowledge illegally acquired.”

This case was decided long after the act of 1921, relied on in the case at bar, and the court made no reference to it. It is true, however, that in this case, there was no question involved of the search of a dwelling. But I understand the rule laid down by the court in this ease, relative to the present commission of a crime, made known to the officers by any of their senses, and relative to the right of entry and of arrest without a *249 warrant, applies as well to dwellings as to any other buildings, if and when a crime is being committed in the presence of the officers.

After the denial of the motion to suppress evidence, and after the admission of the evidence before the jury and the conviction of the defendant, his motion for a new trial, based upon practically the same grounds as the motion to suppress evidence, when first heard, was overruled, and sentence was imposed upon the defendant. Thereafter defendant called attention to section 6 of Act Nov. 23, 1921 (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, § 10184a), entitled “an act supplemental to the National Prohibition Act.”

This section provides “that any officer, agent or employee of the United States engaged in the enforcement of this act, or the National Prohibition Act, or any other law of the United States, who shall search any private dwelling as defined in the National Prohibition Act, and occupied as such dwelling, without a warrant directing such search, or whfo while so engaged shall without a search warrant maliciously and without reasonable cause search any other building or property, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.”

The court then set aside the sentence and reopened the motion for new trial and permitted additional argument, and the question now is whether this section of the act of 3921, which had not theretofore been called to the attention of the court, has changed the law in any respect from what it was before its enactment, so far as concerns the admissibility before the jury of the testimony in this and similar eases. Before the enactment of this section, it was an illegal trespass and invasion of a person’s property to unreasonably search it, and this whether it were a dwelling or not. And, as a result of the illegality of such a search, the courts have repeatedly held that evidence obtained thus illegally as a result of such a search should be suppressed and not admitted before the jury.

Section 6 of the act of 1921 merely makes a misdemeanor (authorizing a fine and imprisonment of one convicted thereof) of the same acts which prior to that time wore illegal trespasses and invasions of a person’s property, but not crimes. Though prior to 1921 such acts were not crimes, it had been repeatedly held, as above stated, that any evidence obtained as a result of such acts, which wore then illegal trespasses and invasions of a person’s rights in violation of the Fourth Amendment, should be suppressed and excluded from the jury.

I do not think that the making of the same acts a crime by the act of 1921 changes in any way the law that prior to that time existed relative to the admissibility of such evidence.

If, in the case at bar, the evidence was discovered and obtained as a result of an act which, prior to the act of 1921, was a,n illegal trespass and invasion of the defendant’s property in violation of the Fourth Amendment, then it was inadmissible without regard to section 6 of the act of 1921, and the passage of that act does not make it any the more inadmissible, for that act has merely the effect of making a crime out of acts which had theretofore boon illegal trespasses and violations of the Fourth Amendment.

The question, therefore, now to be determined in this case, is whether the evidence admitted before the jury should have been excluded because obtained as a result of a violation of the Fourth Amendment.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F.2d 247, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lindsly-laed-1925.