United States v. Murray

51 F.2d 516, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1528
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 11, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 51 F.2d 516 (United States v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Murray, 51 F.2d 516, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1528 (D. Md. 1931).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

The defendant is indicted for the illegal transportation and possession of intoxicating liquor. In accordance with the now well-established practice, a motion has been made by the defendant in advance of the trial, to suppress evidence proposed to be offered against him in the trial of the ease on the ground that it was obtained by an unreasonable and therefore allegedly illegal seizure, in contravention of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.

The facts are within a narrow compass. The evidence in support of the motion offered by the defendant consists of the testimony of certain Prohibition Agents who made the seizure and contemporaneous arrest of the defendant. The substance of this testimony is as follows: Agent Thomas F. Andrew, who had been a prohibition agent for about a year and was formerly an automobile salesman, while patrolling the Baltimore-Washington state highway, noticed an automobile of a particular license number (127371), described as a dark blue Chevrolet five-passenger two-door closed car, on April 15,1931. His attention was attracted to this car, because, as he described it, the body of the ear was “riding high” in the rear. The significance of this fact to him, based on his experience as Prohibition Agent in discovering and detecting illegal transportation of liquor, arose from the fact that it has become necessary in order to escape detection in the transportation of liquor, for ordinary passenger automobiles to have additional leaves added to the rear springs of the ear so that when heavily loaded with liquor the body of the ear will, by reason of the added resistance of the springs, give no indication of an unusual load by the body of the car being obviously depressed on the springs as would be the case if resistance of the springs were not increased by the addition of the extra leaves. The effect of thus equipping ordinary passenger cars is to make them noticeable or abnormal in appearance when the rear of the car is empty and also to make them entirely normal in appearance when heavily loaded.

The defendant also offered the testimony of a witness engaged in the business of making and supplying springs for automobiles, that it is not unusual to add leaves to the springs of passenger automobiles where, for' any reason, the springs of the particular car are not sufficiently stiff for comfortable use of the car and that the number of leaves added varies with the particular car and the condition of its particular springs. But from the testimony of the same witness it also appeared that the effect of so adding additional leaves to the ordinary passenger automobile was not ordinarily to make the appeai'anee of the automobile in the rear abnormal but only to make the rear set about one inch higher. That is to say, the rear of the ear would not seem to be “riding high,” as was the case with the Chevrolet ear mentioned in the evidence.

I, therefore, find as a fact under the evidence that the ordinary passenger automobile such as in this case, so equipped with extra leaves in the springs to the unusual and abnormal extent of making it “ride high in the rear ” so noticeably as in the particular case, is such an unusual condition of a passenger automobile and so identified in the experience of the Prohibition Agents with the purpose of illegal transportation of liquor, that a car of such an appearance is a very reasonable object of strong suspicion to Prohibition Agents who have specialized in detecting such offenses.

Agent Andrew, having noted the particular appearance of this automobile and having made a memorandum of the license number, again saw the same automobile on the Baltimore-Washington road on April 29, 1931, about 3 p. m., while he and other agents *518 were in a government automobile patrolling the road to deteet violations of the law. On this latter occasion the blue Chevrolet was again being driven toward Baltimore and Agent Andrew again noticed that it was “riding high” in the rear. About two and one-half hours later on the same afternoon the Prohibition Agents, having reversed their direction, were proceeding toward Baltimore on what is known as the Crain highway when Agent Andrew again noticed the same blue Chevrolet automobile proceeding toward Washington from Baltimore, and this time he noted that the r*ear of the car was not “riding high,” but that the body appeared to be entirely normal in relation to the springs. He immediately exclaimed to his associate, “There goes a load.” At the first convenient turning point the government ear turned around and gave chase to the blue Chevrolet. On the prior occasions when Agent Andrew had noticed the car in passing he got the general impression from observation as it was receding from his vision that the springs were extra thick, but of course the rate of speed of the passing ears was such that he had no opportunity for detailed inspection. As, however, the government automobile was overhauling the blue Chevrolet on the last occasion mentioned the unusual thickness of the rear springs was clearly noticeable to him. Agent Andrew stepped out on the running board'of his car on the right side as the government car drew abreast of the blue Chevrolet on its left. At this time, Agent Andrew in lookng through the windows of the Chevrolet, saw that its only passenger was the driver and that the front seat by the driver had been removed and the space thus made in the ear, together with the rear portion of the car, carried large paper cartons of the kind frequently, if not customarily, used for holding liquor, although the contents of the cartons were not visible. There was a rug or some similar covering over a large part of the cartons, but it did not suffice to entirely conceal them. Agent Andrew requested the driver of the car to pull over to the side of the road, which he did. He then showed his badge and asked the driver what was in the ear. To this particular question he received no reply. The agents then searched the blue Chevrolet and found fifteen cases of whisky, each ease containing six gallons. The driver at first gave the name of Tom Davis and said, “Can’t we fix this up.” The driver’s license or permit showed that his name was Harry Murray, and he is the defendant in this ease. After the search he said that the liquor was “Bourbon, I guess” and that he paid $8 or $10 a case for it and had gotten it in Baltimore, from a man that he had met on the street (apparently by appointment), but whom he did not previously know. When asked “How did this man know you?” Murray replied, “Same as you did, I guess, by the springs.” Murray, however, stated that he did not know who put the heavy springs on the car. When the automobile was examined in detail it was found that it had the abnormally large number of 14 leaves in each rear spring thus making the thickness of the springs 3% inches as compared with 2 inches in the normally built ear of that type.

The search and arrest was made without a warrant. The crime, since the passage of the Jones Act (27 USCA §§ 91, 92), is of the grade of a felony. The question in the case is whether the seizure of the liquor found in the car, samples from which are proposed to be offered in evidence by the government at the trial of the case, constitutes an unreasonable search which is prohibited by the Fourth Amendment. The applicable law is fully and clearly stated in two recent decisions of the Supreme Court: Carroll v. United States, 267 U. S. 132, 45 S. Ct. 280, 69 L. Ed. 543, 39 A. L. R. 790; Husty v.

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Bluebook (online)
51 F.2d 516, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-murray-mdd-1931.