DISSENTING OPINION. The appellant is admittedly guilty of possessing, in violation of the law, a still or distilling apparatus and of using the same for the unlawful manufacture of intoxicating liquor.
The record shows that he had for his place of business a bakery at 1430 Broad street in the city of Newcastle, *Page 340 Indiana, and that his working hours were from a little after midnight until eight or nine a.m. He had bakery equipment on the ground floor and a very elaborate distilling outfit in the basement, used for the unlawful manufacture of intoxicating liquor. The still was installed inside an old saloon refrigerator eight by twelve feet in size and six feet high. The return to the search warrant showed "1 still and distilling apparatus (which constitute Exhibits 1 to 24), 90 gallons of mash and 18 gallons of intoxicating liquor," and the officers testified that there were three barrels of mash (fifty to sixty gallon barrels) which were warm and in the process of fermentation. A water pipe ran down from the ground floor and supplied water for the cooling process of condensation, and other equipment consisted in part of coils, pipes, rubber hose, funnels, chemists' measuring glass, alcohol testing thermometer, yeast, barrels, jugs, kegs, buckets, earthenware jars, bottles, a bag of one-half inch corks, and jugs of white mule whisky, brandy and alcohol.
We do not believe that any of appellant's constitutional rights have been invaded but, on the contrary, believe that he was given a fair trial, which was free from error. He offered no evidence in dispute of the facts proved by the state and relies solely on the alleged invalidity of a search which we believe was in all things sufficient. He was found guilty and was fined and sentenced by the court to imprisonment, and we respectfully dissent from the decision of this court reversing the judgment.
The court in its opinion announces two radical changes in important parts of the intoxicating liquor law and overrules two well-settled rules of law that have prevailed in Indiana for many years. We cannot agree with the other members of the court in making these changes in the law, for the reasons hereinafter set out.
The first of the changes is that the burden of proof is upon the state to establish the validity and legality of *Page 341 the search warrant rather than upon the defendant to establish its invalidity and illegality. The court says: "The appellee assumed the burden upon the issue presented by the general denial of appellant's verified motion to quash the writ for the search, to sustain the writ for the search."
If this is intended to be a statement of the record, it is erroneous, because the record shows that thereupon "the defendant (appellant) to maintain and support the issues in his behalf gave, offered and introduced the following evidence . . .," and after the record notation "defendant rests," the state introduced its evidence. If it is intended to be a statement of the law, we believe that it is unsupported either by reason or by precedent, and an examination of the three cases cited to support the proposition shows that they do not so hold.
While the court, in State v. Blumenstein (1925),186 Wis. 428, 432, said: "It devolved upon the State, before the warrant could be introduced in evidence, to show the constitutional and statutory requisites had been complied with," the court held that the recital in the search warrant that the justice was "satisfied that there was reasonable cause" for the belief that defendant was violating the law, was a sufficient finding of probable cause; and that, independent of such recital, the issuance ofthe warrant itself was equivalent to a formal adjudication ofprobable cause. The case of Wells v. State (1924), 135 Miss. 764, 100 So. 674, merely held that where evidence obtained by a search warrant is offered and objected to and a demand made that the affidavit and warrant be produced before the evidence is received, the affidavit and warrant must be produced or its loss proved, or proof of a waiver at the time of the search be shown, before the evidence is admissible. No question as to the sufficiency or validity of the affidavit or search warrant was raised in that case. In the third case cited, *Page 342 Meno v. State (1925), 197 Ind. 16, 148 N.E. 420, it was said: "The attack here is not against the search warrant; there was not a motion to quash the writ." Citation of the Blumenstein case was there made to support dictum to the effect that if the validity of the writ had been questioned, it was the duty of the state to show "that all the constitutional and statutory requirements had been complied with."
The law on this question of where the burden of proof lies, has heretofore been exactly opposite to the present decision of the court. Where a search warrant is regular upon its face, the burden to prove that it was irregularly issued is upon the defendant. Underhill, Criminal Evidence (3d ed.) § 745, p. 1025. In Morgan v. State (1923), 194 Ind. 39, 141 N.E. 790, the appellant contended that a search and seizure had been made in violation of designated sections of the State and Federal Constitutions and this court said: "One who seeks affirmative relief on the ground that officers of the court have violated his constitutional rights in the execution of process has the burden of establishing facts from which it will affirmatively appear that his rights were invaded." In Terrell v. Commonwealth (1922), 196 Ky. 288, 244 S.W. 703, the Court said: "While the information upon which a search warrant is issued must be furnished by affidavits of the character required by the Constitution and laws of the state . . . if the search warrant is regular and sufficient in its terms and upon its face and is issued by an officer authorized by law to issue such writ the same presumption respecting its validity must prevail that is required by law to be accorded any other process, civil or criminal, that is regular on its face and if the information upon which it was issued is so defective or insufficient as to render the warrant invalid, that fact can and must be relied on by the defendant by way of defense, and be established by evidence introduced by *Page 343 him, just as he must assume the burden of proving any other ground of defense upon which he relies." In Flora, Trustee, v.Brown (1923), 79 Ind. App. 454, 138 N.E. 767, the court said: "The presumption is that the officers are doing their duty, keeping within the law, and hence the party who challenges the act of an officer must show that there is no authority in the officer to do the act in question."
On the hearing on appellant's verified motion to suppress evidence and quash the affidavit for the search warrant, the warrant and the return, the appellant, to sustain his motion, introduced no evidence except his Exhibit No. 1, which was his said verified motion. The justice of the peace who issued the warrant, the prosecuting attorney, and the police officer who made the affidavit for the search warrant were all present, yet appellant, to make out his case in support of his motion, did not call upon them or upon any other witness to testify to any fact with reference to the question as to whether probable cause existed for the issuance of the warrant, but relied solely upon the affidavit of appellant.
The state, in resisting appellant's motion, proved by the justice of the peace, the prosecuting attorney and the desk sergeant of the police department who executed the affidavit, that the search warrant was issued regularly and in accordance with the statutory requirements.
The desk sergeant also testified that there had been a great deal of complaint at police headquarters about the appellant running a still and that he had walked past appellant's bakery on the sidewalk where there was an opening below, with some kind of covering, in which there was holes, and that he had smelled an odor like "swill." In describing this smell, he said that he had never before smelled liquor being made, but that it was the same kind of a smell or odor as when "we used to feed hogs and put bran and water in the trough until it *Page 344 fermented." He said that he could not detect the odor in front of any of the other stores in the neighborhood, but only in front of the bakery, and that the policemen had had many conversations at police headquarters about what was going on and what this smell was, and that, after hearing what the officers said and after smelling it himself, he had a firm belief that the appellant was manufacturing intoxicating liquor. He thereupon made the affidavit for a search warrant.
We believe that the appellant had the burden to prove that probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant was not shown and that he failed to make such proof. He failed to offer any proof, although all the witnesses who knew the facts were present, to substantiate his allegation that the justice of the peace had nothing before him which constituted "probable cause" for the issuance of the search warrant. The circuit court heard the evidence and decided in favor of the state. This court, entirely overlooking the evidence which we have set out above, and notwithstanding the long-established rule that it will not undertake to weigh conflicting evidence, says: "The affidavit before the court is the sole and only proof in support of probable cause upon which the search warrant was to issue, as is conclusively shown by the motion to quash the writ." It considers as "conclusive" the matter stated in the verified motion of this illicit manufacturer of liquor, although the matter set forth in the motion can only be stated by him on his information and surmise, and disregards the evidence we have referred to.
Because of the allegations in appellant's motion, the court attempts to and does, in effect, say that the justice of the peace did not have sufficient information in his mind to convince him that there was "probable cause" for the search. The affidavit for the search warrant was made by a police officer to whom complaint *Page 345 had been made and who had made a personal investigation and smelled the moonshining process, it was in proper form according to the statute and the justice of the peace, acting in his judicial capacity, issued the search warrant. The subsequent finding of a still and at least ninety gallons of mash in the process of being made into whisky certainly confirms the fact that the justice of the peace was correct in his judicial determination that there was probable cause.
It seems to us that the judicial proceeding of the issuing magistrate — the issuance of a search warrant regular in all its respects and complying with the exact wording of the statute ought not to be open to collateral attack in the circuit court, and that, having been there attacked and sustained on the controverted issue of fact, there is no basis for this appeal.
In the prevailing opinion, a number of cases are cited to establish the proposition that "the action of the court or magistrate, in determining the question of the existence of probable cause, upon which to base the issuing of a search warrant, is judicial." If that be true, there was a judicial determination by the justice of the peace that the facts set forth in the affidavit show that "probable cause" existed for the search, and that determination cannot be collaterally attacked.
"The issuance of a search warrant is a judicial finding by the officer issuing the warrant of the necessary facts set forth in the affidavit therefor. It is an adjudication by the officer issuing the warrant that there is probable cause for the search sought to be made." Hendricks v. State (1926), 144 Miss. 87, 109 So. 263; Loeb v. State (1923), 133 Miss. 883, 98 So. 449.
"When a magistrate issues a search warrant, he thereby declares that he is satisfied that probable cause exists." Frihart v.State (1926), 189 Wis. 622, 208 N.W. 469; Bergman v. State (1926), 189 Wis. 615, 208 N.W. 470. *Page 346 State v. Shelton (1926), 314 Mo. 333, 284 S.W. 433, holds that it cannot be presumed, in a collateral inquiry on a motion to quash a search warrant issued by a justice of the peace on application of the prosecuting attorney and served by the sheriff, that such officers have failed to perform their duties properly and that a defendant may not thus impeach the search warrant by oral testimony. The court said:
"The contention of appellant, in respect to probable cause, if followed to its logical conclusion, would practically nullify the prohibition laws of the state relating to search warrants. If the sheriff actually sees the defendant unlawfully making intoxicating liquors, he needs no warrant to back him in enforcing the law. On the other hand, should the state be required to divulge to the defendant the evidence on which it relies for conviction? The real purpose of the law is to require the prosecuting attorney to state the facts, as he did in this case, and when the justice of the peace, whose duty it is to pass upon probable cause, has acted judicially and determined that the warrant should issue, his judgment and order should not be controverted by oral testimony. If the justice should refuse to issue the warrant, the state would be bound thereby. The defendant should likewise be concluded by the judgment of the justice of the peace."
In Edmunds v. State (1917), 199 Ala. 555, 74 So. 965, it was held that the weight of evidence to establish probable cause for issuing liquor search and seizure warrants under temperance acts cannot be reviewed upon the trial where the statute was substantially complied with. The court said:
"The ascertainment of probable cause for the issue of the writ involved the exercise of the judicial function. Having acquired and exercised jurisdiction in the premises by taking the affidavit of a person, and having issued the warrant substantially as required by the statute, the weight of the evidence *Page 347 to establish probable cause could not be made the subject of inquiry, nor could the judgment in that regard of the issuing magistrate be made the subject of review on the trial of the cause." (Our italics.)
The law presumes the regularity of official acts and when the information is prima facie valid, it is held that the warrant was issued in conformity to law. Burtch v. Zeuch (1925),200 Iowa 49, 202 N.W. 542; People v. Cech (1926), 236 Mich. 75,209 N.W. 944.
Even in jurisdictions which hold (contrary to the Indiana rule announced in the Rose case, infra) that affidavits may not be made on "information and belief," it is held that in case of a collateral attack on a search warrant, it will be presumed that it was regularly issued. The court in Burtch v. Zeuch, supra, which was an action in contempt against a defendant who destroyed liquor during a search, said: "The information and warrant wereprima facie valid. We will not presume that the issuing magistrate failed to respect constitutional and statutory provisions. On the contrary, we recognize the presumption that sworn public officials in the performance of their duties have legally acted."
The theory upon which the court holds that the affidavit of the police officer did not constitute "probable cause" for the justice of the peace to issue a search warrant, appears to be that the court believes the affidavit was not testimony nor evidence of the ultimate fact alleged therein. The Supreme Court of Kentucky, however, has recently held in a case involving the question of whether a wife who had made an affidavit for a search warrant had thereby "testified" against her husband, that such affidavit was "testimony." The court said: "It was a judicialproceeding in which the judge was required to review thestatements contained in the affidavit and determine the existence of probable cause. We are therefore of the opinion that when the affidavit was made *Page 348 by appellant's wife, and read by the judge as the basis of the search warrant, she testified against her husband within the meaning of the Code." (Our italics.) Osborne v. Commonwealth (1926), 214 Ky. 84, 282 S.W. 762.
Briefly stated, the second of the radical changes in the law made by the decision of this case, being the principal point decided, is that the requirements of the search warrant statute, "If any person shall make an affidavit before any mayor, justice of the peace or judge of any court that such affiant has reason to believe, and does believe, that on any described or designated premises or tract of land, there is intoxicating liquor or a still or distilling apparatus which is being sold, bartered, used, or given away, or possessed, in violation of the laws of this state, such justice of the peace, mayor or judge shall issue his warrant to any officer having power to serve criminal processes, and cause the premises designated in such affidavit to be searched, as in other cases where such warrants are issued as now provided for by law," etc. Ch. 48, § 31 Acts 1925 p. 157, § 2746 Burns 1926, are not sufficient to comply with the constitutional provisions: "The rights of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable search or seizure shall not be violated; and no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the person or thing to be seized." Art. 1, § 11, Constitution, § 63 Burns 1926, that a search warrant shall not be issued "except upon probable cause"; and that, in order that a search warrant may legally be issued, it must affirmatively appear, as a part of the state's case, that the facts tending to establish the belief of the person who makes the affidavit that intoxicating *Page 349 liquor or distilling apparatus exists on the premises described were presented to the issuing magistrate.1
A careful review of many cases, as well as an examination of the statutes dealing with this subject in every state in the Union, leads us to the conclusion that the majority of the court has been led into error by applying to our own law rules laid down by courts in other states where statutes defining search warrant procedure are entirely different from our own, and by disregarding the decided cases in Indiana and in all these states which have statutes similar to ours.
There are fifteen states which have statutes similar to ours: Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Ohio, Texas, Vermont, Washington, and West Virginia, and their decided cases, as well as a number of cases from other states, some of which are briefly reviewed herein, infra, hold, as does the case ofRose v. State (1909), 171 Ind. 662, 87 N.E. 103, 17 Ann. Cases 228, that the procedure set out in our statute and used in the case at bar complies with the constitutional requirements, and that the rights of an owner of premises searched by authority of a warrant duly issued by a magistrate upon an affidavit on information and belief are not infringed. Salley v. State (1913), 9 Ala. App. 82, 64 So. 185; *Page 350 Lowery v. Gridley (1862), 30 Conn. 450; Koch v. DistrictCourt (1911), 150 Iowa 151, 129 N.W. 740; State v. Doremus (1915), 137 La. 266, 68 So. 605; City of Shreveport v. Nejin (1917), 140 La. 786, 73 So. 996; State v. Nejin (1917),140 La. 793, 74 So. 103; State v. Norris (1926), 161 La. 988, 109 So. 787; Commonwealth v. Certain Lottery Tickets (1850), 5 Cush. (Mass.) 369; State v. Hobbs (1855), 39 Me. 212; State v. Nowlan (1874), 64 Me. 531; State v. Plunkett (1874),64 Me. 534; State v. Welch (1887), 79 Me. 99; State v.Mallett (1923), 123 Me. 220, 122 A. 570; State v. Breen (1923), 123 Me. 562, 122 A. 571; State v. Watson (1923),133 Miss. 796, 98 So. 241; Loeb v. State (1923), 133 Miss. 883, 98 So. 449; Bufkin v. State (1923), 134 Miss. 1, 98 So. 452; City of Jackson v. Howard (1924), 135 Miss. 102, 99 So. 497; Hendricks v. State (1926), 144 Miss. 87, 109 So. 263;State v. Cobb (1925), 309 Mo. 89, 273 S.W. 736; State v.Hall (1926), 312 Mo. 425, 278 S.W. 1028; State v. Cockrum (1925), 278 S.W. (Mo.) 700; State v. Shelton (1926), 314 Mo. 333, 284 S.W. 433; Sharp v. State (1901), 61 Neb. 187, 85 N.W. 38; Watson v. State (1922), 109 Neb. 43, 189 N.W. 620;Ciano v. State (1922), 105 Ohio St. 229, 137 N.E. 11;Cochran v. State (1922), 105 Ohio St. 541, 138 N.E. 51;Rosanski v. State (1922), 106 Ohio St. 442, 140 N.E. 370;Commonwealth v. Schwartz (1923), 82 Pa. Super. 369;State v. Snow (1854), 3 R.I. 64; Zimmerman v. Town ofBedford (1922), 134 Va. 787, *Page 351 115 S.E. 362; Marshall v. Commonwealth (1924), 140 Va. 541, 125 S.E. 329; Lincoln v. Smith (1855), 27 Vt. 328;State, ex rel., v. Gordon (1917), 95 Wn. 289, 163 P. 772;State v. Brown (1922), 91 W. Va. 709, 114 S.E. 372; State v. Montgomery (1923), 94 W. Va. 153, 117 S.E. 870; State v.Kees (1922), 92 W. Va. 227, 114 S.E. 617, 27 A.L.R. 681;State v. Davie (1885), 62 Wis. 305, 22 N.W. 411; Frihart v.State (1926), 189 Wis. 622, 208 N.W. 469; Bookbinder v.United States (1923), 287 Fed. 790; Hawker v. Queck (1924), 1 F.2d 77, 79, certiorari denied 266 U.S. 621, 45 Sup. Ct. 99. 69 L.Ed. 472.2
Practically all of the state constitutional provisions regarding searches and seizures are substantially the same as our own. See citations to earliest constitutions in article by Fraenkel, 34 Harvard Law Review 361 and to latest constitutions in Cornelius, Search and Seizure, 9-11. Eighteen states, recognizing that their constitutions do not require more than: (a) A statement on oath specifically describing; (b) the place; and (c) the property to be seized, and desiring, no doubt, to render more difficult the issuance of search warrants, have passed special statutes setting forth various procedures and requirements which must be met before search warrants can be issued. (Failure to comply with these statutes has given rise to a number of cases that may appear, to one who does not examine the statutes, to be in conflict with Rose v. State, supra, and the other cases referred to.)
Of these 18 state statutes, Alabama, § 5474 Code 1923; *Page 352 California, §§ 1526-7 Gen. Laws 1923; Idaho, § 9322-3 Comp. Stat. 1919; New Jersey, § 100-282 Comp. Stat. 1924; New York, §§ 794-5 Parker's Anno. Code 1910; South Dakota, §§ 4607-8 Rev. Code 1919; Utah, §§ 9371-2 Comp. Laws 1917, are general search warrant statutes requiring that "the magistrate before issuing the warrant, must examine on oath the complainant and any witnesses he may produce, and take their depositions in writing, and cause them to be subscribed by the persons making them; and the depositions must set forth facts tending to establish the grounds of the application or probable cause for believing that they exist." Florida Gen. Laws 1925, Vol. 1, p. 504, § 19, provides that ". . . such affidavit shall set forth the facts on which such reason or belief is based . . ." and § 6 provides that the magistrate may also "receive further testimony from witnesses or supporting affidavits or depositions in writing"; Illinois, § 30, ch. 43, Ill. R.S. 1923 provides that the complaint in writing shall contain "the facts upon which said belief is based"; Massachusetts, § 62 Gen. Laws 1921 provides that "such complainants shall state the facts and circumstances on which such belief is founded, and such allegations shall be recited in the complaint and warrant"; Michigan, § 25 Public Acts 1925 p. 751 amended the 1919 act by eliminating the words "that he has reason to believe and does believe," *Page 353 thus requiring a positive statement of fact in the sworn complaint; Missouri, § 25 Laws 1923 p. 244 requires that probable cause shall appear to the satisfaction of the court "either from the facts set forth in said petition or from evidence heard thereon"; Montana, § 11071 Rev. Code 1921 Vol. 4 as amended by ch. 116, laws 1923, requires in the complaint in writing verified by affidavit "the facts upon which such belief is based"; Nevada Acts 1923 ch. 31, p. 37, and ch. 37 p. 43, repealed its liquor law of 1918, including § 9 relating to searches and seizures, and made "the provisions of the national prohibition (Volstead) act of the United States of America the law of the State of Nevada"; North Dakota, § 10145 p. 18 Supp. 1925 provides that search warrants may issue "whenever any person shall appear before such court and make affidavit that he has discovered," etc.; Rhode Island, § 1822, § 9 Gen. Laws 1923, in case of the search of a dwelling house, requires the complainant on oath to "state the facts on which such belief is founded, which facts shall be recited in the complaint"; South Carolina, § 46 Code 1912 requires statement supported by oath "which shall set forth fully and particularly all the facts upon which such application is based"; Virginia, § 1, Acts 1920 p. 516 requires an affidavit "alleging briefly the material facts constituting the probable cause . . ." The search and seizure section of theUtah Intoxicating Liquor Law § 3354 Comp. Laws 1917 provides that the written information under oath shall state "the facts within his knowledge and upon which he bases his belief." TheUnited States statute on this subject, Act June 15, 1917, tit; 11, § 3, § 4 and § 5, 40 Stat. at L. 228 et seq. [U.S. Comp. St. 1918, U.S. Comp. St. Ann Supp. 1919 § 10496 1/4c] is as follows: *Page 354
"SEC. 3. A search warrant cannot be issued but upon probable cause, supported by affidavit, naming or describing the person and particularly describing the property and the place to be searched.
"SEC. 4. The judge or commissioner must, before issuing the warrant, examine on oath the complainant and any witness he may produce, and require their affidavits or take their depositions in writing and cause them to be subscribed by the parties making them.
"SEC. 5. The affidavits or depositions must set forth the facts tending to establish the grounds of the application or probable cause for believing that they exist."
It is claimed by those who demand that a showing of facts be made by definite and positive evidence submitted to the issuing magistrate, that the homes of innocent persons might sometimes be searched if all that is needed to set the law in motion is an affidavit made by an individual or by a member of the police department, prohibition force or other law enforcement agency, who may have received his information from some hearsay source. We are not advised as to the number, if any, of searches made which are not justified by an honest belief that the law is being violated. Fruitless searches must occasionally occur, but it may be that many of such cases are instances where the still or intoxicating liquor sought has been disposed of, rather than instances where there was no reasonable ground for the search.
If unjustifiable affidavits are being filed with issuing magistrates and unwarranted searches are being made in this state, a serious matter for legislative consideration is presented. Confronted by the same problem, a number of states have enacted statutes prohibiting the search of private residences under certain conditions, as for example: Conn. Acts 1921, § 7, p. 3279; Ill. § 30, ch. 43, R.S. 1923 p. 1442; La. Acts 1921, No. 39, p. 43; Mass. § 62 Gen. Laws 1921, Vol. 2, p. 140; Okla. § 7013 Com. *Page 355 Stats. 1921; Ore. § 3, ch. 180, Gen. Laws 1923 p. 256; Penn. § 8, p. 37-8, Laws 1923; R.I. § 1882, § 9 Gen. Laws 1923, p. 577; S.C. § 830 Code 1912, Vol. 2, p. 436; Tex. Crim. Stat. 1925, Art. 691, p. 186; Wis. § 4840, (6) 11 Stats 1921, p. 2363. Nevada, Acts 1925, ch. 10, p. 16 has provided that the making of a false affidavit to secure the issuance of a search warrant is an offense punishable by a prison term of one to fourteen years, and eighteen states, as already pointed out, have enacted statutes requiring a definite statement of facts to be placed in the affidavit for the search warrant. But we do not believe that this court should read into the law that which is not there and which cannot rightfully be put there except by legislative enactment. The court judicially knows that a bill for an act which was defeated by a large majority was introduced at the recent (1927) session of the general assembly which sought to enact into law exactly the same thing that the decision of the instant case makes the law by a forced, and as we shall presently show, an historically false construction. This bill, popularly known as the "Scott amendment to the Wright Bone Dry Law," was as follows, the italics representing the proposed new matter:
"If any person shall make an affidavit before any mayor, justice of the peace or judge of any court that such affiant has reason to believe and does believe, and setting forth in such affidavit the facts tending to establish such belief, that on any described or designated premises or tract of land, there is intoxicating liquor or a still or distilling apparatus which is being sold, bartered, used or given away, or possessed, in violation of the laws of this state, such justice of the peace, mayor or judge, if satisfied of the existence of such intoxicating liquor or still or distilling apparatus on the premises or tract of land so described or designated, or that there is probable cause for believing that such intoxicating liquor or still or distilling apparatus exists thereon, shall issue his *Page 356 warrant to any officer having power to serve criminal processes. . . ."
If the strict compliance with the requirements of our present statutes concerning search warrants which was had in the case at bar is not sufficient to meet the constitutional guaranty of "no search but upon probable cause supported by affidavit," then the court might rightfully declare our search warrant statute unconstitutional or define what steps in addition to our statutory requirements are necessary to comply with the Constitution. But we believe that the provisions of our statutedo comply with the Constitution's requirement. Search warrant acts, in almost exactly the same language, have always existed in Indiana, but it is only since the flood of liquor cases have engulfed our courts and submerged our dockets, that there had been any objection made to their constitutionality. In Rosanski v. State (1922), 106 Ohio St. 442, 140 N.E. 370, the court said:
"There has been a great deal of misguided sentiment foisted upon a patient people during these latter days about the constitutional rights and privileges of the criminal classes. If all the doctrines which are being urged by attorneys representing liquor law violators should be adopted by the courts as the true interpretation of our sacred Bill of Rights, it would no longer be recognized as a charter of government and as a guaranty of protection of the weak against the aggressions of the strong, but rather as a charter of unbridled license and a certificate of character to the criminal classes."
In State v. Shelton (1926) 314 Mo. 333, 284 S.W. 433, the court said:
"The amazing temerity and boldness with which the prohibition laws of our state are now deliberately violated in almost every community presents a strong appeal to the courts for a practical and common sense construction of our laws, that will lead to the punishment of those who violate its provisions." *Page 357
Chief Justice Taft of the United States Supreme Court, in an address before the American Law Institute in Washington on May 12, 1927, said: "No lover of his country can have gone through the last three or four years without having been stirred deep in his heart over the failure of the administration of our criminal law."
Examining the question of the sufficiency of our search warrant statute and procedure in the light of both constitutional history and law, we do not find anything that requires more than the procedure set out in our statute. The unreasonable searches and seizures objected to by the American colonists before the war of the Revolution were those provided for in the "writs of assistance" or "general warrants" issued, without any complaint under oath, to officers of the crown, permitting them to search generally anywhere and any time the houses of any persons for any smuggled goods.
In his famous argument against writs of assistance3 in 1761, James Otis said:
"Your Honors will find in the old books concerning the office of justice of the peace, precedents of general warrants to search suspected houses. But in more modern books, you will find only special warrants to search such and such houses, specially named, in which the complainant has before sworn that he suspects his goods are concealed; the same manner I rely on it that the writ prayed for in this petition, being general, is illegal." Life of James Otis (Adams) 55.
The established rule at common law was that "in case of a complaint and oath of goods stolen, and that (affiant) suspects the goods are in such a house, and shows the cause of his suspicion, the justice of the peace may grant a warrant to search in those suspected places *Page 358 mentioned in his warrant, and to attach the goods and the party in whose custody they are found." Hale, Pleas of Crown (1680), pp. 113, 150. Otis, Adams and the others, engaged in the contest with the British Government over the right of search and seizure, claimed nothing more than the rights of Englishmen at common law. And, at common law, the recognized form of affidavit by which to institute any proceeding in court, whether of arrest, or search, or otherwise, always was, and still is, to aver that the affiant believes and has probable cause to believe the facts therein stated. The evil against which Otis declaimed was the issuance of warrants or writs of assistance which gave general authority to any officer of the King, of whatever degree, to search any place in the province of Massachusetts that he might choose, on mere suspicion, and to seize anything found there which he might deem proper to seize, as smuggled goods. These warrants were issued as continuing authority during the life of the King and continuance in office of those who held them. The form of writs that had been issued in Boston during the reign of George II had commanded the surveyor of customs "and his deputies and servants from time to time at his or their will, as well in the day as in the night, to enter and go on board any ship, boat or any other vessell . . . and to view and search and strictly to examine the same . . . and also . . . to enter and go into any vaults, cellars, warehouses, shops or other places . . . and to open any trunks, chests, boxes, fardells or packs made up or in bulk, whatever," for the purpose of finding smuggled goods. And these writs had been issued in answer merely to a letter of request, without any affidavit whatever. Upon the death of the King and the accession of his grandson as George III, citizens of Boston, led by James Otis, opposed renewing these general writs. But, so far were James Otis and *Page 359 John Adams and their party from opposing the issue of a search warrant upon an affidavit that the affiant "believes" the facts authorizing it to be issued, that, at the next session of the Colonial Legislature (the General Court), only three months after Otis made his second celebrated argument, they procured an act to be passed (which the Governor of the colony refused to approve) to the following effect: That upon application of any officer of the customs to any court or justice stating, on oath, "that he has had information of the breach of the acts of trade, and that he verily believes or knows such information to be true" and giving "the name of the person informing and the place informed against," a warrant should issue to aid the custom officer "in the due execution of his office relating to the information aforesaid." Quincy's Mass. Report (1762) 495.
While the general writ was issued, notwithstanding the able argument of Otis in Paxton's cases (1762), 1 Quincy 51 and 541; (see review of the law on Writs of Assistance, 1 Quincy Appendix I and II, p. 395-572), the courts in the colonies of Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Virginia refused to grant them, 1 Quincy (Mass.) 509, 5104 and the subsequent cases of Entick v. Carrington (1765), 2 Wils. 275, 19 Howell's State Trials, 1030; Money v. Leach (1765), 3 Burrow 1692 and 1742, 1 Wm. Blackstone 555, 19 Howell's State Trials 1002; Case of JohnWilkes, (1770), 2 Wils. 151, 4 Burr 2527, 19 Howell's State Trials 1075 and 1382, and Wilkes v. Wood (1763), *Page 360 19 Howell's State Trials 1154, and an act of parliament in 1766, (following resolutions by the House of Commons condemning general warrants for the seizure of persons or their books or papers), established forever in the law of England (and her colonies) the invalidity of general warrants and writs of assistance5 authority for which had never really existed. See the Law of Arrests (London 1742) Brit and Sandby, Ch. 5, p. 173, 174, ch. 8 p. 186.
While the improper exercise of the royal prerogative of the British crown by writs of assistance through the Admiralty drew spirited opposition and resistance from the colonies, it was not one of the direct causes of the American Revolution, since the invalidity of the writs was acknowledged before the war, and no mention of them was made in the Declaration of Independence. However, the experience with the illegal writs was no doubt a factor of considerable influence in the writing *Page 361 into the Constitution of the United States (Amendment IV) of the provision against unreasonable searches and seizures. When the original draft of the Constitution was submitted to the states for ratification, a number of the states recommended that such a provision be placed in a Bill of Rights. 1 Elliot, Debates on the Constitution (New York) p. 328, (Rhode Island), Vol. 1, p. 335, (Maryland) Vol. 2, p. 551, (Virginia) Vol. 3, p. 658, (North Carolina) Vol. 4, p. 244.6 None of these recommendations asked more than (1) an affidavit or information on oath (2) naming the person and (3) describing the place and that (4) general warrants should *Page 362 not be issued. The amendment as originally adopted was as follows:
"Art. VI. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue, but upon principal cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." (1 Elliott's Debates 339.)
The provision of the Constitution of Indiana referred which was copied from Art. 4 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, only guarantees to persons the rights which freemen had always possessed under the common law wherever it was in force, and does not confer any new rights. Carey v. Sheets (1879), 67 Ind. 375, 377.
The common law of England, as it existed when the Colony of Virginia was settled in 1607, modified by general statutes previously enacted, is and always has been the law of Indiana, except as changed or modified by Constitutions and statutes adopted or enacted since that date. § 244 Burns 1926, 2 R.S. 1824 p. 256, § 1.
Following the common-law rule, before there was any statute on the subject, special warrants were issued in Indiana to search for stolen property and for other purposes covered by the common law, upon affidavits of belief, the common law precedents being recognized as controlling. But in 1843, certain parts of the law of procedure were reduced to a code, and it was then provided by statute that:
"It shall be lawful for a justice of the peace, upon complaint made before him on oath or affirmation, that a larceny, burglary, or robbery has been committed, and that the person swearing or affirming does verily believe that the stolen property (goods or other property) is concealed in any dwelling house, *Page 363 out-house, garden, yard, or other place or places, to issue a warrant under his hand and seal, commanding every such dwelling house or place to be searched in the day time . . . or such warrant may issue to search any house or place in the night time, if the affidavit be positive that the stolen goods or property are concealed therein." R.S. 1843 p. 1006, § 24.
Thus the law stood when the present Constitution of Indiana was adopted in 1851, the provision as to unreasonable searches and seizures, and forbidding warrants to issue except upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the person or thing to be seized, being an exact copy of similar provisions in the Constitution of 1816. R.S. 1843, p. 42, § 8, 1 R.S. 1852 p. 43, § 11.
And the legislature, at its first session under the new Constitution, passed an act which provided as follows:
"Search warrants may be issued, by justices, on complaint on oath, charging stolen goods to be, as the affiant believes, concealed in any place, and particularly describing such place and the goods alleged to be stolen . . ." 2 R.S. 1852 p. 500, § 20. "Justices shall use substantially the following forms, with such variations as the circumstances of each case may require; . . . affidavit for search warrant, `The State of Indiana, County of . . . . . . . . . SS: A.B. swears (or affirms, as the case may be) that he verily believes that (here describe the property) of the value of. . . . . . . . . . . . dollars, the property of said affiant, and heretofore feloniously stolen from him, is concealed in or about the dwelling house of C.D. situated in the township of Charlestown in said county' (signed and sworn to)." 2 R.S. 1852 p. 502, § 31.
The general search warrant statute now in effect, § 56 etseq., ch. 169, Acts 1905 p. 596, § 2085 et seq. Burns 1926, requires an affidavit "that affiant has reason to believe and does believe," etc., and applies in cases: *Page 364 (1) Of stolen or embezzled goods; (2) of devices used for taking fish unlawfully; (3) of forged or counterfeit money; (4) of gambling apparatus; (5) of obscene printed matter, and § 57, same act (§ 2086 Burns 1926), sets out a form for the affidavit which "shall be deemed sufficient," wherein the affiant "swears (or affirms, as the case may be) that he believes and has good cause to believe," etc.
In the statute regarding searches for dead human bodies, it is provided that the justice or judge and accompanying peace officer shall enter, inspect and search when an affidavit is filed "alleging that affiant has good reasons to believe and does believe" that such body, etc. is secreted in a building or place therein particularly described. § 61, ch. 169, Acts 1902 p. 598, § 2091 Burns 1926.
In the statute regarding the issuance of search warrants in cases of cruelty to animals, the complaint must be made on oath or affirmation "that the complainant believes," and the magistrate "shall issue and deliver a search warrant," "if satisfied that there is reasonable cause for such belief." § 588, ch. 169, Acts 1905 p. 725, § 2770 Burns 1926.
In the statute regarding searches for trade-marked containers, the complainant must make oath "that he has reason to believe" and "said court must thereupon issue a search warrant." § 4, ch. 178, Acts 1917 p. 689, § 14420 Burns 1926.
In the new statute regarding the issuance of warrants authorizing searches for fish or wild birds or animals possessed unlawfully or for devices used in taking the same unlawfully, it is provided that the affidavit must describe the place to be searched, the things to be searched for and alleging substantially the offense in relation thereto, and "that the affiant believes and has good cause to believe, that such things as are to be searched for are there concealed." § 35, ch. 35, Acts 1927 p. 107.
The act providing for the issuance of search warrants *Page 365 for intoxicating liquor, stills, etc., ch. 48, § 31, Acts 1925 p. 157, § 2746 Burns 1926, has already been set out, in part. It is substantially the same in form as the general search warrant statute above referred to, changed only so as to be more inclusive since the advent of state and national prohibition, and provides that the affidavit shall set out, "That such affiant has reason to believe and does believe that on any described or designated premises or tract of land, there is intoxicating liquor or a still," etc.
No case has ever held that anything more is necessary than a compliance with the plain wording with these several statutes.
An affidavit that affiant believes a certain fact to be true has always been held by the courts of Indiana and of many other states, to have the same effect, for the purpose of instituting a proceeding and conferring jurisdiction on the court, as a positive assertion on oath that such fact is true. Simpkins v.Malatt (1857), 9 Ind. 543; State v. Ellison (1860),14 Ind. 380; Curry v. Baker, Governor (1869), 31 Ind. 151; Franklin v. State (1882), 85 Ind. 99; Toops v. State, supra; Thayer v. Burger (1885), 100 Ind. 262, 264; Rose v. State (1909),171 Ind. 662, 667, 87 N.E. 103; Champ v. Kendrick, Trustee (1892), 130 Ind. 549, 552, 30 N.E. 787; Harris v. Heberton (1841), 6 Miss. 575; Steamboat Osprey v. Jenkins (1845), 9 Mo. 643; Pratt v. Stevens (1884), 94 N.Y. 387; ElectionCases (1870), 65 Pa. 20; Gibbons v. Sheppard (1868), 2 Brewst. (Pa.) 1; Koch v. District Court (1911), 150 Iowa 151, 155; Shaw v. State (1925), 196 Ind. 39, 146 N.E. 855; Chas.Hegewald Co. v. State, ex rel. (1925), 196 Ind. 600,149 N.E. 170.
And making a false affidavit to institute such a proceeding has been held to constitute perjury. Commonwealth v. Cornish (1814), 6 Binney (Pa.) 249; Simpkins v. Malatt, supra, Taylor v. Robinson (1870), 26 Wis. 545; *Page 366 State v. Davie (1885), 62 Wis. 305, 311, 22 N.W. 411.
"It was formerly thought that an oath did not amount to perjury unless sworn in absolute and direct terms, and that if a man swore according as he thought, remembered, or believed only, he could not be convicted of perjury. 3 Inst. 166. But the modern doctrine is otherwise. It is said by Lord Mansfield to be certainly true, that a man may be indicted for perjury in swearing that he believes a fact to be true which he knows to be false. R. v. Pedley (1784), 1 Leach 327." Roscoe, Crim. Evid. (7th ed.) 822.
The conscience of the person making the affidavit may be as firmly bound, and perjury as well assigned, when the averments are made upon information and belief as when they are direct and positive. If he makes the affidavit without having reasonable grounds for believing, and without believing, that all the material facts and allegations are true, in whichever form they may be stated, he is foresworn, and, upon proper proof, may be convicted of perjury. Morley v. Guild (1861), 13 Wis. 644;Taylor v. Robinson, supra; State v. Davie, supra.
A person wrongfully instituting a proceeding by making such an affidavit is liable for damages in a civil action in the same manner and to the same extent, whether he swore in positive terms or only upon belief, the gravamen of the action against him being that he caused the search warrant to issue, maliciously and without probable cause. Harlan v. Jones (1896),16 Ind. App. 398, 400, 45 N.E. 481; Carey v. Sheets (1879), 67 Ind. 375;Whitson v. May (1880), 71 Ind. 269.
In the case of Watson v. State (1922), 109 Neb. 43, 189 N.W. 620, it was said:
"The defendant says that the provision, `No search warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation,' is an express and positive prohibition against search warrants issued *Page 367 upon complaints verified by information and belief. The argument is, an oath upon information and belief is not an oath at all, and therefore does not meet the constitutional requirement. It will be noticed, however, that the Constitution does not define an oath, and when the defendant says an oath upon information and belief is not an oath he is resorting to construction which is not necessary where provisions are express and positive. The sufficiency of an oath to complaints and information is not fixed by the Constitution, but is a matter of legislative and judicial determination. In some jurisdictions, notably the Federal districts represented by the courts cited supra, it has been held that an oath upon information and belief is not an oath, and that a complaint or information verified upon information and belief is void. This court is committed to a different rule." (Citing statutes and cases. Our italics.)
In this state, prosecutions of all criminal offenses except treason and murder may be by affidavit as well as by indictment, § 2150 Burns 1926, § 118, ch. 169, Acts 1905 p. 611, and it has frequently been held by this court that such affidavits may be made on information and belief. Simpkins v. Malatt, supra;State v. Ellison, supra; State v. Buxton (1869), 31 Ind. 67;Franklin v. State (1882), 85 Ind. 99; Toops v. State (1883), 92 Ind. 13.
The statute providing for trials before justices § 2093 Burns 1926, § 63, ch. 169, Acts 1905 p. 599, prescribes the form of the affidavit which is "A.B. swears, (or affirms, as the case may be), that on or about the ____ day of ____ 19__, at said county, C.D. as affiant verily believes (here state the offense)." Upon such complaint, charging any person with the commission of any felony or misdemeanor, made on oath before him, the justice of the peace or city judge "shall issue his warrant for the arrestof such person and cause him to be brought forthwith before him for examination or trial." *Page 368
Surely it cannot be claimed that a person's house or his property is more sacred in the eye of the law than that person's liberty. The Constitution applies alike to warrants for arrest and warrants for search, yet for many years nothing more than the filing of an affidavit has been required as the basis for the issuance of a warrant for arrest of a person. In the face of the language of both the Constitution and the statutes, who can say that more is required to search the person's property than to arrest and incarcerate the person himself. See Rosanski v.State, supra.
In the case of Lowery v. Gridley (1862), 30 Conn. 450, a leading case on this subject, the Supreme Court of Connecticut, sixty-five years ago, decided that an oath that affiants "have reason to believe and do believe to be substantially true the allegations of" a complaint charging that intoxicating liquors were kept in a certain brick store intended to be sold in violation of law, was a sufficient affidavit for a search warrant, and the court said:
"But further, the constitution does not in terms provide that the particular facts from which probable cause is to be inferred shall be sworn to, or that the magistrate who issues the warrant shall find probable cause. The constitution merely provides that the warrant shall not issue `without probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation.' If anything more is required than an oath or affirmation that there is probable cause or what is equivalent, as an oath that the complainant believes and has reason to believe that an offense has been committed would be, it must be made out by construction. . . . An examination of the clause in question will show that there is the same necessity for an oath of probable cause in the case of an ordinary arrest for a crime, as in the case of a search warrant. Indeed it would be strange if a cask of liquor was more sacred in the eye of the law than a man's person. But it has never been thought necessary that in the case of a *Page 369 common warrant it should be preceded by anything but the complaint or information of a prosecuting officer. He is never understood as making oath that the facts alleged are within his personal knowledge. He could in scarcely an instance honestly take such an oath. The meaning of such a complaint or information is, that he has officially made an investigation, and has reason to believe and does believe, that the allegations are true. . . . We are therefore clearly of the opinion that the warrant was legal." (Our italics.)
Until today, Indiana has been committed to the doctrine ofLowery v. Gridley, supra, which was the principal authority followed in Rose v. State, supra. In arriving at the present decision of the court, Rose v. State is overruled andLowery v. Gridley is not followed, just as Cornelius in his text on Search and Seizure, page 29, predicted more than a year ago:
"So far as the validity of the Indiana statute is concerned the question seems to have been decided by the decision of Rose v. State . . . in favor of upholding such a statute. Recent developments have made it doubtful whether or not Rose v. State will be adhered to when the question of this later act comes before the Indiana Supreme Court."
The case of Rose v. State, supra, held that Acts 1907 p. 27, § 2, providing that "if any person shall make an affidavit . . . that such affiant has reason to believe and does believe" that liquors are unlawfully kept at a certain place, a search warrant shall issue, did not violate the Constitution (Art. 1, § 11), providing that no search warrant shall issue "but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation"; and it is not necessary that the facts inducing such belief be set out. The court in its opinion said:
"It is next insisted by appellants that `Article 1, § 11, of the Constitution of the State requires that *Page 370 the facts upon which the belief of the affiant is based must be set out in the affidavit, and that an affidavit on information and belief is not sufficient, and, as the act of 1907, supra, authorizes the issuance of such a warrant on such an affidavit, it is in violation of said section of our Constitution.' Said section of the Constitution only requires that `no warrant shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the person or thing to be seized.' In Lowery v. Gridley (1862), 30 Conn. 450, under a constitutional provision substantially the same as ours, it was held that an act which authorized the issuance of a warrant to search and seize property upon the oath of the affiant that he `had reason to believe and did believe' the facts alleged in the affidavit to be true, was valid and not in violation of said provision of the constitution; that such oath was sufficient and that it was not necessary that the facts upon which the belief was founded should be set out in the affidavit."
The prevailing opinion in the case at bar, which in effect overrules Rose v. State, supra, holds that although the Rose case decided that an affidavit for a search warrant made on information and belief in the language of the statute is sufficient and that it was not necessary to set out in the affidavit the facts upon which the belief is founded, that the court did not there decide that a further and additional showing of facts by oral testimony, deposition or otherwise was not necessary; in other words that, in the Rose case, only the technical sufficiency of the affidavit was discussed, that some other showing of facts might have been made and that the court did not hold that an affidavit tracking the statute constituted probable cause. A better plan than to speculate on what was before the court and what the court actually decided in the Rose case is to examine the record of that case. This we have done. The record shows an entry as follows: *Page 371
"Comes William O. Thomas, Prosecuting Attorney who prosecutes the pleas of the State in this behalf and files the affidavit of John W. Brannan asking that search warrant issue and that a room in a frame brick veneered building on lot thirty Market street in the original plat of the town of Monon, White County, Indiana, be searched for liquors therein kept, sold, bartered and given away, and the court now orders that such search warrant issue which is now issued and delivered to Ham E. McCully Sheriff of White County, Indiana, and comes now said sheriff and makes return upon the warrant thus issued to him, which affidavit, warrant and the return of the sheriff thereon endorsed, all read as follows, to wit:"
It also shows that the judge indorsed on the back of the warrant the following: "Clerk will issue search warrant for the within described premises in conformity with the within affidavit." It is thus seen that this court in the Rose case had exactly the same question before it that is presented by the case at bar. There does not seem to us to be any reason now to overrule that decision, made almost twenty years ago, which upheld the validity of our search warrant procedure which has been in effect for almost a century. (§ 24, ch. 55, R.S. 1843, p. 1006.
Language used in many other recent Indiana cases shows that this court has recognized that an affidavit following the provisions of our search warrant statute is all that is required to be presented to the issuing magistrate for the issuance of the warrant.
"It is . . . objected that the search warrant was invalid because, it is asserted, the affidavit . . . on which the search warrant issued was insufficient, as a matter of pleading, to authorize its issuance by reason of being drawn in the form prescribed by statute. The objection is not well taken." (Our italics.) Tongut v. State (1926), 197 Ind. 539, 151 N.E. 427. *Page 372 "All that the statute or the constitution requires is that an affidavit particularly describing the place to be searched and the person or things to be searched for shall first be filed." (Our italics). Morgan v. State (1923), 194 Ind. 39, 141 N.E. 790.
"The affidavit," said the court in Meno v. State (1925), 197 Ind. 16, 148 N.E. 420, ". . . is nothing more than a transcript of the proper showing upon which the warrant is based, which is some information to the person against whose property the warrant is directed as to its legality."
The affidavit is referred to in the case of Callender v. State (1922), 193 Ind. 91, 138 N.E. 817 as follows: "The law requires the affidavit, upon which a search warrant is issued to be filed and to remain on file, in the office." (Our italics.)
In affirming a judgment of conviction in Snedegar v. State (1926), 198 Ind. 182, 150 N.E. 367, the court said: ". . . an affidavit for a search warrant in the form prescribed by statute was filed with the mayor . . ., who thereupon issued a search warrant to Julius Bryan commanding him to search. . . . Prior to the filing of the affidavit . . . the circumstances and activities of appellant in, around and about the premises . . . were brought to the attention of Bryan, a prohibition enforcement officer . . . by residents of the vicinity. . . . The evidence," said the court, referring to the evidence adduced at the trial of the cause, "well supports the inference that . . . the officer . . . was advised of appellant's activities . . . by reliable persons residing in the neighborhood. . . . For aught appearing these circumstances were before the mayor. . . . There was no error in admitting the questioned evidence." (Our italics.)
In Thompson v. State (1921), 190 Ind. 363, 130 N.E. 412, where an affidavit for a search warrant was sworn-to before a superior court judge, and the warrant was issued and served the same day but the affidavit was not filed until a later date, the court said: "under these facts we hold that the *Page 373 warrant was not supported by `oath and affirmation' as required by the constitutional provision against unreasonable search and seizure, and was illegal." The court quoted Art. 1, § 11, Indiana Constitution, and § 4, Acts 1907 p. 27, § 8340 Burns 1914, and said: "This latter section is not in conflict with § 25 supra (§ 25 Prohibition Law 1917) and is not repealed by it. These statutes when construed together, are not in conflict with Art. 1, § 11, supra. When construed together they forbid issuing a search warrant without an affidavit being filed as provided by § 8340 Burns 1914, supra."
In Mowlan v. State (1926), 197 Ind. 517, 151 N.E. 416, the court said: "The search warrant in this proceeding was issued by a justice of the peace, after an affidavit for a search warrant had been filed with him. . . . In § 2 of said ch. 33 of the acts of 1923, the law in regard to search warrants is stated as follows: `Search warrants to search any place for still or distilling apparatus may be issued as now provided by law for searching for intoxicating liquor.' And at the time said act became effective and when the alleged offense was committed by appellant, § 25 of the prohibition law of 1917 provided: `If any person shall make an affidavit before any mayor, justice of the peace, or judge or any court that such affiant has reason to believe and does believe that any person, firm or corporation has in his, its or their possession any intoxicating liquor which is being sold, bartered or given away as a beverage or kept for the purpose of being sold, bartered, used or given away in violation of the laws of this state, such justice of the peace, mayor or judge shall issue his warrant to any officer having power to serve criminal processes'" etc.
In the brief of the attorney for appellee, it is said:
"But for the agitation which the present prohibition act causes, we are convinced that this question would never have been seriously urged upon this court again in view of the decision in Rose v. State and in view of the accepted practice antedating *Page 374 that case as far back as the very beginning of our state government. We submit, that no exigencies can change the meaning of § 11 of Art. 1 of the Constitution. It means now what it did under Rose v. State, what it did since 1851, indeed, what it meant when it was § 8 of Art. 1 of the prior Constitution. The state has many occasions to exercise the power to search in respect of crimes far more serious than those committed under the prohibition statute. We make no contention against a full and complete extension of § 11 of Art. 1 for the security of the citizens of the state, but to hold with appellant's views would require an extension not contemplated by § 11 itself and never heretofore so deemed necessary by either the people, the bar or the bench of this state.
"It is earnestly urged that no exigencies be permitted to induce a construction of § 11 of Art. 1 which has never heretofore been deemed a proper construction, and that the proper construction placed thereon in Rose v. State, so long acquiesced in before and since that decision was rendered, be adhered to."
The proper limits of this opinion will not permit a review of the many cases in other states which support the rule laid down in Rose v. State, supra, but brief quotations will be made from a few of them, all of which were apparently overlooked in the prevailing opinion, which, without citing any cases (other than those which we hereinafter distinguish), says "further discussion . . . is unnecessary, in order to add to or supplement the composite, which results from so great a number of judicial opinions of these courts, nearly all of which are of one mind."
The case of Lowery v. Gridley, supra, has already been quoted from (p. 368). Even earlier than the decision of that case, the Supreme Court of Vermont held that a certified complaint stating that affiants "have reason to believe and do believe that intoxicating liquors are kept *Page 375 or deposited" in a certain dwelling house and intended for unlawful sale, was sufficient to justify issuing a warrant for the search of the house thus described. The court said of the section of the Bill of Rights now under consideration:
"This article of the constitution is directed against the use of general warrants; and it is the searches and seizures under such warrants, which are pronounced unreasonable. It was claimed in England up to the sixth year of the reign of George III, that at the common law, general warrants were valid, and such was the resolution of the twelve judges of the time of Charles II and James II. See vol. 3 State Trials, 53; the trial of Carr for a libel. And certain it is that it had been the practice to issue general warrants up to the year of the reign of George III (1765), when they were adjudged to be illegal, both in the court of common pleas and the King's bench. See Entick v. Carrington (1765), 2 Wilson (Eng.) 275, and Money v. Leach (1765), 3 Burrow (Eng.) 1766." Lincoln v. Smith (1855), 27 Vt. 328, 346.
In Loeb v. State (1923), 133 Miss. 883, 98 So. 449, a policeman in the city of Meridian made affidavit before a justice of the peace that:
"He believes and has good reason to believe that vinous, spiritous, malt, alcoholic, and intoxicating liquors are being kept and offered for sale and barter are sold and bartered in a building occupied by Susie Lowe or Loeb at a residence on Thirty-Third avenue, house No. 1009, in the city of Meridian, Mississippi. . . . Thereupon, the justice of the peace issued a search warrant, commanding the search of the buildings," etc.
The Mississippi statute, § 2088 Hemingway's Code, Laws 1908, ch. 115, provides that:
"Upon the affidavit of any credible person that he has reason to believe and does believe that any *Page 376 intoxicating liquors, . . . etc., . . . it shall be the duty of any justice of the peace . . . to issue a search warrant."
The appellant, in objecting to the overruling of her motion to suppress the affidavit, contended:
"That this statute is unconstitutional because it authorizes and directs the justice of the peace to issue the warrant `upon the affidavit of any credible person that he has reason to believe and does believe that any intoxicating liquors . . . are . . . kept or offered for sale,' etc.; that the language of the statute takes away all discretion of the justice of the peace as to whether there is probable cause and that, under section 23 of the Constitution, that the existence of probable cause is a judicial question for the determination of the judicial officer, and not for the determination of the affiant. It is contended that the Constitution requires positive, direct evidence of the facts alleged to be produced before the justice of the peace, and for the justice of the peace to determine judicially the truth of the facts set forth, before the warrant can issue."
Continuing, the court said:
"It is true that the question of probable cause is a judicial question, but in many cases judicial action may be reasonably controlled by statute, and it is not essential to probable cause that the alleged facts shall be absolutely true." (Our italics.)
Further, the court said:
"We think the statute should be given a construction that would enable the justice of the peace to pass judicially upon the credibility of the person making the affidavit. This view will harmonize with the constitutional purpose of securing the peace and enjoyment of persons, homes and property from unreasonable seizure or search, and to so construe the statute it will be clearly constitutional." (Our italics.) *Page 377
The court, quoting from the case of State v. Quintini (1898), 76 Miss. 488, 25 So. 365, said:
"A person may be arrested only on probable cause, but probable cause in law is a charge of crime made on oath, without regard to the fact whether the oath is made on personal knowledge or upon information and belief merely. By common law certain officers made information without oath, and such unsworn information was probable cause by the law. Here Carver was a constable, a sworn officer of the law, and his affidavit, made upon information and belief, charging Quintini with a crime, was probable cause, and constituted a valid charge against Quintini for his arrest and trial."
In State v. Hall (1926), 312 Mo. 425, 279 S.W. 102, the court, in considering the question of probable cause, recognizes the correctness of the law as it existed until today in Indiana. The court said:
"The existence of probable cause for the issuance of the warrant was under the statute (Sec. 25, p. 244, Laws 1923), to be determined by the justice of the peace from the facts set forth in the petition or from evidence heard thereon; the petition being ample in its averments in this respect, a resort to a hearing was not required to sustain the legality of the justice's action. Under the constitutional provision against unreasonable searches and seizures forbidding the issuing of a search warrant except upon probable cause the Legislature may declare what showing shall constitute probable cause for the issuance of the warrant, provided the petition therefor does not require less to be shown than was required for the issuance of such a warrant at common law. [State v. Kees, 92 W. Va. 277, 114 S.E. 617, 27 A.L.R. 681.] The Kees case, declaratory of the foregoing rule, is in line with numerous other authorities on this subject. [Comm. v. Certain Lottery Tickets, 5 Cush. 369; Dupree v. State, 102 Tex. 455, 119 S.W. 301; Rose v. State, 171 Ind. *Page 378 662, 17 Ann. Cas. 228; Lowery v. Gridley, 30 Conn. 450; State v. Nowlan, 64 Me. 531; Lincoln v. Smith, 27 Vt. 328; State v. Davie, 62 Wis. 305, 22 N.W. 411.] The requirements of an application for a search warrant, at common law, were that the affiant had probable cause to suspect and did suspect that an offense was being committed at a particular place or on designated premises under the control of the party or parties named and show his reasons for the suspicion. [2 Hale's P.C. (Am. ed.) p. 149r et seq.; Davis Cr. Justice, 60.] Our statute conforming to the requirements of the State Constitution requires a more specific and definite application for the warrant than was held to be sufficient at the common law. These requirements which have been stated, were fully complied with in the application for the warrant and the latter embodied the affirmative averments contained in the former. The matters of fact constituting the reasons for the issuance of the writ appearing on the face of the application it was only necessary for the justice to determine, as a matter of law, whether these facts as stated constituted such probable cause as to authorize the issuance of the warrant. Acting judicially, as the justice was authorized to do, he determined from the statement of the facts that such probable cause existed and issued the warrant. In thus acting he was within the purview of the statute. (Sec. 25) which confers this power upon him when satisfied as to the facts set forth in the application and in conformity with the rule, generally recognized, that the question of probable cause is always to be determined by the court from the facts in each particular case. [Miller v. Brown, 3 Mo. 127; 24 R.C.L. sec. 9, p. 707 and notes, Matson v. Michael, 81 Kan. 360, 105 P. 537, as annotated L.R.A. 1915D p. 5, note III, general rule; Simmons v. Gardner, 46 Wn. 282, 89 P. 887, as annotated, L.R.A. 1915D p. 16, note 2 p. 43, as to a question of law and fact.]"
The prevailing opinion states that it was claimed in *Page 379 oral argument by the state that when the legislature prescribed by statute the form of the affidavit, it intended to declare that an allegation in the statutory form was proof sufficient to determine the question of probable cause and that, upon such an allegation being made, "the magistrate must find that probable cause existed upon which to issue a search warrant"; and the court says that the legislature has not power to say to any judicial officer "that when he has heard proof of certain facts, the evidence thus adduced before him shall constitute conclusive proof," etc.
We did not understand counsel for the state to make any such claim. Counsel agreed that the function of the issuing magistrate was judicial, and contended that the magistrate, in determining whether probable cause existed, might consider the affidavit itself as some evidence, and might consider the credibility of the person making the affidavit. The cases just quoted from:Loeb v. State, supra, State v. Quintini, supra, State v.Hall, supra, as well as some of the cases hereinafter cited, show clearly that such a statute as ours does not say to a judicial officer how he shall decide a matter before him.
Some of the cases however have gone so far as to hold that when the legislature has expressly set out exactly what is required to be alleged in a sworn affidavit in order that the magistrate "shall issue" a search warrant, that, when such an affidavit is filed, there is nothing judicial to be done by the magistrate, the statute being mandatory and the act of issuing the warrant ministerial. State v. Conwell (1902), 96 Me. 172, 51 A. 873, 90 Am. St. 333; Rosanski v. State (1922), 106 Ohio St. 442, 140 N.E. 470. In the latter case, the search warrant was issued by the clerk of the lower court. The Supreme Court pointed out that it had recognized the validity as a ministerial act of the universal practice for more than fifty years, of issuing warrants for arrests (under § 13486 *Page 380 Ohio Gen. Code) and that it had always been considered the proper practice to issue search warrants (under 13486) without a preliminary order in conformity to the similar practice in cases of arrests.
In Dupree v. State (1909), 102 Texas 455[102 Tex. 455],119 S.W. 301, where a statute required the issuance of a search warrant upon the filing of an affidavit of belief, the court said:
"The legislature has thus, in effect, determined that such oaths, in themselves, show probable cause, and we are confronted by the question whether or not it had power to do this. It is obviously true that the legislature cannot dispense with the requirement of the Constitution that probable cause be shown, and that, therefore, it cannot evade this limitation upon its power by an attempt to make that probable cause which plainly is not such. But have we such a case? In determining a question like this, we must take into consideration the history of the subject, and what has been regarded as probable cause, and when we find that that which the legislature has, in this instance, treated as being sufficient, been thus long and extensively so regarded here and elsewhere, by both legislature and judicial authority, it would be difficult to say that there is such a plain and palpable violation of the Constitution as to justify the courts in declaring the statute void." (Our italics.)
In State, ex rel., v. Gordon (1917), 95 Wn. 289, 163 P. 772, under a statute providing that "if, upon the sworn complaint of any person, it shall be made to appear to any judge . . . that there is probable cause to believe" that intoxicating liquor was being manufactured, sold, kept, etc., "such judge shall . . . issue a warrant . . . to search," and a complaint alleging that complainant "has probable cause to believe and in fact does believe" etc., the court held that there is no requirement that the "probable cause" necessary *Page 381 before any warrant may issue must be stated in the complaint. The court said:
"The only requirement is that probable cause must be shown sufficient to create the belief in the mind of the judge or justice that liquor is being sold, or otherwise disposed of, contrary to law. The ascertainment of probable cause is, under this statute, a judicial function involving judicial discretion. Toole v. State, 170 Ala. 41, 54 So. 195; State v. Hobbs, 39 Me. 212. That there is `probable cause' must be determined before the issuance of a warrant, but being determined to the satisfaction of the judge or justice, it is sufficient without its statement or formal charge in the complaint. DeGraff v. State, 2 Okla. Cr. 519, 103 P. 538; Kniseley v. Ham, 39 Okla. 623, 136 P. 427, 49 L.R.A. (N.S.) 770.
"It is next urged that a search warrant cannot be based upon a complaint made upon belief. Both the search warrant and the complaint stated all that was required to be stated. Neither one is confined to the existence of a mere belief in the mind of the complainant, but follows the language of the act in stating that the belief of the complainant is founded upon probable cause for the existence of such belief. Whether or not this probable cause is sufficient to initiate legal process is to be determined by the judicial officer, and when the judicial officer is so satisfied, process may properly issue without a statement in the warrant or complaint of facts upon which such belief is founded. Rose v. State, 171 Ind. 662, 87 N.E. 103; Lowery v. Gridley, 30 Conn. 450; Gray v. Kimball, 42 Me. 299; State v. Nowlan, 64 Me. 531; Salley v. State, 9 Ala. App. 82, 64 So. 185."
In State v. Kees (1922), 92 W. Va. 277, 145 S.E. 617, 27 A.L.R. 681, it was held that an affidavit by a sheriff, "that he has cause to believe and does believe that intoxicating liquors . . . are being manufactured, . . . and stored for sale or barter" in certain described *Page 382 premises was sufficient to authorize the issuance of a search warrant; that "it is competent for the legislature to prescribe what shall constitute probable cause for the issuance of such warrant, so long as it does not permit the issuance thereof otherwise than upon an information under oath or affirmation." The court, after citing authorities both for and against the sufficiency of such a warrant said:
"A perusal of the authorities we have cited will illustrate the divergence of judicial decisions upon this question. It occurs to us that the conflict arises because of the different views that the courts apparently have as to the purpose sought to be accomplished by the constitutional provision. Some of the courts apparently have the view that the constitutional inhibitions against unreasonable searches and seizures, and against the issuance of any warrant therefor, except upon complaint made upon oath or affirmation, were for the purpose of guaranteeing to the citizen an immunity which he did not theretofore possess, while the other line of authorities is based upon the view that these constitutional inhibitions were for the purpose of guaranteeing to the citizen a right of immunity already possessed by him. In the application of any constitutional provision it is always important to inquire what was the state of the law at the time such provision became part thereof. Under the common law in effect in this country at the time of the adoption, not only of the federal Constitution, but of the various state constitutions, search and seizure warrants were issued, but they were only allowed to be issued upon a complaint made upon the oath or affirmation of the party seeking the same. The English Constitution had guaranteed to the citizen this immunity to his person, and premises from search and seizure from a time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary, and we think it may be said that, when the constitutional provision relied upon came into the *Page 383 organic law of the American states, the purpose was to preserve to the citizen the right then enjoyed by him under the common law of England. It cannot be doubted but that under the common law a complaint made upon the information of the party desiring the issuance of the warrant, in the form of the complaint involved in this case, would have constituted probable cause for the issuance thereof. In fact, an examination of the authorities shows that the usual complaint upon which a search warrant was issued at that time was that the affiant had probable cause to suspect, and did suspect, that an offense was being committed upon particular premises under the control of particular parties. Davis's Criminal Law, p. 527; 2 Hale, P.C. 150. Our statute requires more than was required at common law. Under the statute involved here the informer must not only have reason to suspect, and actually suspect, that an offense is being committed; he must believe, and have reason to believe, that such offense is being committed before the warrant may be issued. If the legislature undertook to permit the issuance of a search warrant upon a complaint not so informative in its terms as the complaint upon which such a warrant could be issued at common law, then it might be contended that such statute would transcend the legislative competence. When, however, the legislative act requires more of the informer than was required at common law, we cannot say that it was not competent for the legislature to prescribe such a rule of evidence, and to make such a complaint probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant. We do not mean to say that a justice would have to issue a warrant upon the presentation of such complaint to him. That question does not now arise. What we do hold is that it was competent for the legislature to pass the act which it did, so far as it prescribed what shall constitute probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant, and that a search warrant issued by a justice upon such showing is not void. It may be that the justice, under some circumstances, *Page 384 would be justified in refusing to issue a warrant upon such a showing. The character of the party making the complaint, or other circumstances appearing, might lead him to the belief that there was lack of good faith or lack of substance in the charge, in which event it may be that he would be entirely justified in refusing the warrant until he made further inquiry as to the ground upon which it was asked. We are not called upon at this time, however, to pass upon that question. Upon a careful review of all of the authorities which we have been able to consult, we are of the opinion that a search warrant issued by a justice, or other officer authorized to issue the same, upon such a complaint as was filed in this case, is a proper warrant, and that evidence procured by means thereof may be properly introduced upon the trial of one charged with an offense, if otherwise pertinent."
In State v. Norris (1926), 161 La. 988, 109 So. 787, it was contended that the Louisiana statute permitted the judge or committing magistrate to issue a search warrant without "probable cause" in violation of the Constitution. This statute, § 5, Act. No. 39, Acts La. 1921, p. 43, provides in part, that no place shall be searched except by an officer designated in a search warrant issued by a competent court "upon the filing with said court of an affidavit reciting the facts that affiant has reason to believe and believes" etc. "together with such additional evidence as the court may require." The court said: "The language of the affidavit on which the search warrant was issued tracked the statute literally; so that the complaint in that respect was, not that the affidavit did not conform with the requirements of the statute, but that the statute itself was violative of the Constitution." The court declared the statute valid and said:
"The constitutional inhibition against the issuance of search warrants without probable cause does not undertake to command the lawmaker to establish *Page 385 a definition or formula for determining what shall be `probable cause.' It merely forbids the lawmaker to authorize the issuing of search warrants except upon probable cause. As to what is probable cause, in a given case, is left, largely and necessarily, to the judgment and discretion of the judge or magistrate having authority to issue the warrant." (Our italics.)
In Commonwealth v. Schwartz (1923), 82 Pa. Super. 369, 374, a statement under oath that affiant "has been informed by credible persons that they have bought from the defendant intoxicating liquor at the place hereinafter described, and from his own observation is satisfied that there is probable cause to believe," etc., was held to be a sufficient showing of probable cause, supported by oath. The court said:
"The same provision of the Constitution which protects the people from unreasonable searches also protects them from unreasonable arrests; and yet it was held in Commonwealth v. Green (1898), 185 Pa. 641, 40 A. 96, that an information is sufficient to support a warrant of arrest where the affiant affirms `to the best of his knowledge, information and belief,' which is certainly no stronger than the words from the act above quoted. . . . The affiant is not restricted to violations of law within his own knowledge, nor is he bound to set forth the names of witnesses or the details as to what they would testify. Probable cause does not import absolute certainty. It only implies reasonable grounds for belief, and the justice issuing the search warrant is the authority to be satisfied that probable cause exists."
In Cochran v. State (1922), 105 Ohio St. 541, 138 N.E. 54, it was held that certain liquors taken by officers by virtue of search warrants were competent evidence where the affidavits upon which they were issued *Page 386 alleged in the language of the Ohio statute, (Crabbe Act, Gen. Code § 6212 et seq.) that "affiant believes and has good cause to believe." etc. The court said:
"The affidavit employs the precise language of Section 13483, General Code, which is substantially the same language as has been in force in this state since 1837, and seems never to have been previously attacked. It is contended that such warrant was not issued on probable cause, and that such affidavit was not the oath or affirmation which the constitution and statute contemplated shall support the issuing of a writ, and that the affidavit, not having set forth facts justifying the belief, is insufficient. Section 14, Article 1, of the Ohio Constitution is substantially the same as the fourth amendment of the Federal Constitution (reciting it). The question of the sufficiency of an affidavit based on information and belief in making out probable cause and thereby meeting the constitutional requirements has been passed upon by the courts of last resort of many states, but we find the decisions far from uniform upon the proposition. Before a statute will be held to be in contravention of the constitution the conflict must be found to be clear and irreconcilable, and that is particularly true where there has been general acquiescence in the validity of such statutes by legislative and judicial authority throughout the many years of its application and enforcement. (And after reviewing many authorities): These cases and others which might be cited are authority for the proposition that determination of probable cause is a matter for the magistrate issuing the warrant, and that such finding may properly be based upon an affidavit of `belief and good cause for belief.'"
In Rosanski v. State (1922), 106 Ohio St. 442, 140 N.E. 370, the matter again came before the Ohio Supreme Court. The court there reviewed the constitutional provision against search and seizure (§ 14, Art. 1, Ohio Bill of Rights), the search and seizure provision of *Page 387 the Crabbe Act (Ohio Gen. Code 6212-13 et seq.) and also the older provisions of the code relating to searches and seizures (Ohio Gen. Code § 13483). The court said:
"It will further be seen that that section makes no requirement that there be a preliminary hearing or that other evidence in support of the affidavit be offered, or that there be a preliminary finding by the magistrate of probable cause, but it is sufficient if an affidavit be filed containing the necessary allegations as to the offense committed, the description of the property and the affiant's good faith in invoking the process of the court."
The court then quoted the provisions of the code respecting arrests (Ohio Gen. Code § 13496) which provides that when an affidavit is filed with a justice of the peace, mayor or police judge he shall issue a warrant for the arrest of the accused, "if he has reasonable ground to believe that the offense charged has been committed." The court said:
"It is very clear . . . that the statutory requirement relating to arrest of persons is more stringent than the statutory requirement relating to search and seizure of property, and this is as it should be. Both of these sections of the Code were enacted at the same time and have been in force for more than fifty years, and, while the practice has not been definitely settled with relation to the necessary preliminary steps in issuing a search warrant, the practice has been quite uniform for more than a half century to require nothing more than the filing of an affidavit as the basis for the issuance of a warrant, for arrest. Since the statutes are so similar, except for the statute relating to arrest being somewhat more stringent, and since the same section of the Bill of Rights must necessarily apply to both, manifestly the rule contended for by counsel for the accused in these cases could not be sustained without declaring the same rule in proceedings for arrest of the person, and no change could be *Page 388 made in either without overturning the well-settled practice of more than half a century."
The court, in the case at bar, to sustain the principal proposition set out in the prevailing opinion, cites one case each from California, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Mississippi, North Dakota, New York and Wyoming, three cases from Michigan, nine from the federal courts and one case from Ontario. We shall briefly consider these cases and endeavor to show that they do not sustain the court in its holding.
The language used in State v. Derry (1908), 171 Ind. 18, 85 N.E. 765, 131 Am. St. 237 had no reference to the sufficiency of an affidavit upon information and belief as the foundation for issuing a search warrant, but only referred to the lack of any right to confiscate and destroy, without an adjudication that they were kept or used for unlawful purposes, articles, the possession of which was not necessarily unlawful, and only became unlawful when such articles were used for purposes forbidden by law. In State v. Derry, supra, the property consisted of slot machines, tables and other articles seized as gambling apparatus under a search warrant issued upon an affidavit charging that they were being used in a specified building for gaming purposes. No question was made as to the sufficiency of the search warrant or the affidavit on which it was issued, and the only question decided on appeal was that the trial court was not bound to order the property destroyed without a prior adjudication that the articles were being kept for gaming purposes, or were being permitted to be used for gaming purposes. And holding that such an adjudication must precede destruction, the Supreme Court dismissed an appeal by the state from the refusal of the trial court to order their destruction on motion, and its order that the property remain in the custody of the sheriff until disposed of according *Page 389 to law, on the ground that there had been no final judgment from which to appeal.
In Ex parte Dimmig (1887), 74 Cal. 164, no search warrant was involved. It was an action for a writ of habeas corpus by one who had been charged in an affidavit on information and beliefwith the crime of murder. He was arrested and imprisoned apparently without any compliance with an express statute requiring the magistrate to examine the informant and witnesses under oath and take in writing their depositions tending to establish the guilt of the defendant.
In Lippman v. People (1898), 175 Ill. 101, a search warrant had been issued under the Illinois Trade Mark Act of 1873. The court after holding the law invalid as a special law said:
"The search warrant provided for can be issued only at the instigation of the owner of the property to be searched for, or his agent, and, as already shown, is to be employed merely for the maintenance of his rights by making the officers of the State searchers for his bottles, kegs, etc. The premises of a citizen cannot be intruded upon, under a search warrant, for any such private purpose." (Our italics.)
In People v. Heffron (1884), 53 Mich. 527, no search warrant was involved. The prosecuting attorney filed an affidavit charging that persons appeared intoxicated on the streets of Manistique, in which village, no person was authorized by law to sell liquor, that Heffron pretended to be the proprietor of a saloon and dealer in liquor and that affiant had reason to believe he was engaged in selling liquor without having executed a bond. The court held that the affidavit did not "charge any offense known to the laws of this state," and that to be sufficient it "must set up facts constituting the offense on theknowledge of the person making the complaint."
The case of State v. Patterson (1904), 13 N.D. 70, *Page 390 decided concurrently with and upon the authority of State v.McGahey (1904), 12 N.D. 535, was an action for the abatement of a liquor nuisance under a statute, § 7605 Rev. Code (N.D.) 1899, which provided that the judge, at the time of granting the injunction, must issue a warrant commanding a diligent search of the premises. The statute did not authorize an affidavit on information and belief such as the one filed but provided for an affidavit "stating or showing that intoxicating liquor, particularly describing the same, is kept for sale," and, at that time, the general search warrant law of North Dakota, § 8464 Rev. Code (N.D.) 1899, provided that "the magistrate must, before issuing the warrant, examine on oath the complainant and any witnesses he may produce, and take their deposition in writing. . . . The depositions must set forth the facts."
The search and seizure provisions of the Wyoming Prohibition Act of 1919 were considered in State v. Peterson (1920),27 Wyo. 185, 194 P. 342, 13 A.L.R. 1284. The court held that an affidavit on information and belief was insufficient, and that the finding of probable cause could only be vested in a court and not elsewhere as by this law, which provided "that anyone may make complaint to the prosecuting attorney and the prohibition commissioner . . . and if such officer `deems the showing good and sufficient' he shall present the matter on his own complaint to any court, etc." The court expressly recognized that, on the question of affidavits on information, it departed from the rule laid down in Rose v. State, supra, and Lowery v. Gridley,supra, which cases it cited. It pointed out that "this Indiana case is based on the fact that in that state it had been held that a warrant for an arrest for crime may issue on an affidavit based on information and belief," and expresses the opinion that the Connecticut-Indiana doctrine: "It is better that innocent men should suffer temporary inconvenience *Page 391 than that the guilty should escape punishment" conflicts with the doctrine that "it is better that a hundred guilty men should escape than one innocent man should suffer." We do not see wherein these two doctrines are incompatible nor any reason for departing from the former.
In like manner, the cases of People v. Effelberg (1922),220 Mich. 528, 190 N.W. 727 and Smoot v. State (1925),160 Ga. 744, 128 S.E. 909, can be distinguished, and it is interesting to note that the Michigan Supreme Court has recently held that where an affidavit gave jurisdiction to issue a search warrant, jurisdiction was not lost by proof aliunde that the facts stated therein positively were in reality stated on information and belief. People v. Kerwin (1926), 234 Mich. 686,209 N.W. 157. See, also, Smee v. Commonwealth (1923),199 Ky. 488, 251 S.W. 622, and Bowen v. Commonwealth (1923),199 Ky. 400, 251 S.W. 625.
People, ex rel., v. Kempner (1913), 208 N.Y. 16, 46 L.R.A. (N.S.) 970, 975, does not decide what an affidavit to secure a search warrant should contain, and is not an authority for the purpose cited in the prevailing opinion. Swart v. Kimball (1880), 43 Mich. 443, 445, is only an authority to the point that the affidavit to an information which states that affiant has good reasons to believe and does believe is not such verification as will warrant an arrest.
State v. Lock (1924), 302 Mo. 400, 259 S.W. 116, arose under a law (Session Laws 1919 as amended by Session Laws 1921, § 6595) which provided that when the attorney general, prosecuting attorney or prohibition officer "filed a statement verified by oath with the clerk of a court having criminal jurisdiction, . . . it shall be the duty of the sheriff to enter the building. . . ." Not only did it fail to provide for any judicial determination, but it failed to provide even for the issuance of a *Page 392 search warrant. Missouri passed another law on the same subject in 1923 and, in considering it, the Supreme Court of that state has followed the Rose case (Ind.), supra, Kees case (W. Va.),supra, and Lowery v. Gridley (Conn.), supra. See quotation from State v. Hall, supra.
The case of Regina v. Walker (1887), 13 Ont. 83, cited by the court, is not in point here, because it appears (p. 95) that the statute under which the search warrant was issued required "the informant, in addition to stating that he has just and reasonable cause to suspect and doth suspect that intoxicating liquor . . ., etc. is concealed, etc., to state the cause of suspicion and particulars of the offense alleged to have been committed."
The cases concerning the issuance of search warrants for intoxicating liquor which have been decided by the United States courts are not applicable or controlling in the case at bar, because they are all based on the specific statutory procedure prescribed in the national Prohibition Act, viz. the provision of title XI Act June 15, 1917 known as "the Espionage Act," hereinbefore quoted on pages 353 and 354 of this opinion. It will be observed that whatever is required by this act in addition to an affidavit for a warrant may be shown by way of "depositions."
And, notwithstanding this statute, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held (and the Supreme Court refused to disturb the holding) that an affidavit, sworn to on July 17, by a prohibition agent, stating that he had "good reason to believe" a quantity of whisky was concealed on the premises of Q. at a place described, and that his information as to sales of liquor by "Q" was obtained from affidavits made by M. and G. respectively, was sufficient to support a search warrant, although the warrant did not recite an adjudication by the commissioner that he found probable cause to exist, *Page 393 it appearing that affidavits made by M. and G., respectively, in June, had each stated that the affiant bought a drink of whisky from Q. at said place, on June 26, three weeks before the prohibition agent made his affidavit on which the warrant was issued. The court said:
"The inhibition is not against every search and seizure, but against unreasonableness, and what constitutes the basis and warrant for reasonable searches and seizures is defined, namely, the existence of a fact, and that fact is probable cause; and secondly, the evidence of that fact, namely, an `oath or affirmation and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.' The foundation of a reasonable search and seizure, as constitutionally defined, is the existence of probable cause, and the Constitution does not provide that a finding of probable cause by a magistrate is either a foundation for warrant issue, [that] will justify the warrant where the fact of probable cause does not exist, or that such finding of probable cause by the magistrate is necessary. It is `particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized' which the Constitution requires should be evidenced by affidavit, and when the affidavit measures up to this constitutional requirement, then a warrant may lawfully issue." Hawker v. Queck (1924), 1 F.2d 77, 79, certiorari denied 266 U.S. 621, 45 Sup. Ct. 99, 69 L.Ed. 472.
The texts of Corpus Juris and Ruling Case Law (so far as they state the rule in Indiana and the Indiana citations) aredirectly opposed to the proposition to which they are cited in the prevailing opinion.
"In several states an affidavit based on information and belief is sufficient to show probable cause. . . ." Citing Toops v. State, 92 Ind. 13; Franklin v. State, 85 Ind. 99; Deveny v. State, 47 Ind. 208; State v. Buxton, 31 Ind. 67; State v. Ellison, 14 Ind. 380. 16 C.J. 292. *Page 394
"The affidavit must comply with the statutory requirements regulating the issuance of such writs. . . . It is sufficient if it alleges reasonable grounds for suspecting a felony by the defendant. . . . It is generally held that an affidavit is not sufficient if it is made on information and belief and is not corroborated or supported in any way (citing one North Dakota and one Ontario case) though the opposite conclusion has also been reached." Citing Rose v. State, (1909), 171 Ind. 662, 87 N.E. 103, 17 Ann. Cas. 228 and note. 24 R.C.L. p. 708.
Likewise, in 6 Words and Phrases (1st series) 5619 and 5625, it is said:
"The phrase `probable cause' does not mean a positive cause. An indictment imports only probable cause, and probable cause is sufficient ground of an indictment by a grand jury. A party may be arrested and tried on a complaint made before a justice of the peace under oath, charging him on the information and belief of the complainant," etc.
"Probable cause does not depend upon the actual state of the case in point of fact, but upon the honest and reasonable belief of the party prosecuting." (Citing cases).
Neither are the "erudite pronouncements of those sages of the law," quoted in the prevailing opinion, authority for the decision of this case. What is quoted as the language of Chief Justice Marshall seems, from the report of the case in Ex parteBurford (1806), 3 Cranch (U.S.) 448, 2 L.Ed. 495, really to have been what was said in argument by attorney Hiort, who represented the prisoner. But, by whomever spoken, the words had reference to a case where certain justices of the peace had ordered that the prisoner be arrested, and then had committed him to a jail of the District of Columbia, without any affidavit whatever having been filed by anybody, whether upon information and belief or otherwise, so they have no bearing on the question here involved. *Page 395
The decision of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in Fisher v. McGirr (1854), 1 Gray (Mass.) 1, 61 Am. Dec. 381, is thus (correctly) stated by the reporter in the syllabus:
"The fourteenth section of Massachusetts statute of 1852, C. 322, concerning the manufacture and sale of spirituous or intoxicating liquors, is contrary to the 14th article of the Declaration of Rights, declaring the right of the subject to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures; because it neither requires the name of any person, keeping or depositing the liquors with intent to sell, to be named in the complaint or in the search warrant for the liquors; nor limits the officer's authority and right of seizure to the liquors described in the complaint, nor to those intended for sale, but directs him to seize any liquors found in the place described in the complaint. This section also disregards other precautions and safeguards for the security of persons and property prescribed by the Declaration of Rights," (in particulars as stated).
The discussion throughout the opinion is of the insufficiency of the warrant as being general, instead of particular, and as providing for the destruction of private property and the punishment of its owner or keeper without his being charged with any offense and without a legal trial upon proof offered and an opportunity to defend. A necessity for affidavits as to the personal knowledge of the affiants instead of their belief and reason to believe is not even suggested in the opinion. And it does not appear from the report of the arguments of counsel that any such a point was suggested in argument. The report and syllabus were prepared by Horace Gray, who afterward became, successively, Chief Justice of Massachusetts and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.
In re Rule of Court (1877), 3 Woods (U.S.C.C.) 502, *Page 396 was the promulgation of a "general order for the guidance of the commissioners" of the United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia. This ex parte order provided that no commissioner should issue a search warrant except upon an affidavit "in which shall be stated the facts within his own knowledge constituting the grounds for such a belief or suspicion." The judge stated that great inconvenience was caused by the arrest of persons charged with offenses against the revenue laws against whom no sufficient evidence could be produced, either before the grand jury or the traverse jury. This was, doubtless, reason enough for making the order. He added a constitutional argument which cited no authority and offered no reasons except the language of the Constitution itself. The adoption of this rule of court effected the same result in the jurisdiction of that court as was obtained by the several state statutes and the United States statute hereinbefore noted. It cannot be of binding force, nor even advisory in this jurisdiction, in view of our statute.
Judge Baker, in Veeder v. United States (1918), 252 Fed. 414, graphically outlines a number of facts which show a vast difference between the affidavit there and the one in the case at bar. There, an examiner for the Federal Trade Commission sought to obtain a large number of documents from the office of Veeder, who was attorney for one of the five big Chicago meat packing companies. The statute applied only to property that "was used as the means of committing a felony" yet the affidavit — unlike the one in the instant case which was for property the mere possession of which is a crime — "included Veeder's In Memoriam file, his lists of law books, his copies of the smoke and wide tire ordinances of Chicago, his office keys, etc." The court said:
"No search warrant should be broader than the justifying basis of facts. For example, if a murder *Page 397 has been committed by means of a shot from a gun and by no other means, the search warrant should not direct the officer to enter the accused's home and seize the family register of births and deaths."
The felony must be one that is presently prosecutable, the court saying: "No judge would issue a search warrant directing the officer to break into a museum and seize and carry away the dagger Brutus used in assassinating Caesar."
Attorney General Knox did say that § 3462 U.S. Rev. Stat. regarding searches by internal revenue officers "does not state all of that which must be stated in the application" but the remainder of the statement attributed to him does not appear in 24 Op. Attys. Gen. 685. The opinion there rendered, was, that it is the duty of United States commissioners to issue search warrants when properly applied for even though no fees are allowed for issuing them.
We approve the lofty sentiments, expressed in the prevailing opinion, regarding the imperious nature of the Constitution, and the fact that it is "a refuge to protect our very social and political life," but we believe the application here of those well-phrased sentiments requires the upholding of our long-established and well-settled procedure, which is designed to protect our social and political life.
The judgment should be affirmed.
1 The prevailing opinion holds that the evidence was secured and taken under a search warrant not legally issued and that such evidence is therefore inadmissible in evidence. This is in accordance with the rule laid down by the later Federal cases and by a minority of the state courts, including Indiana. See authorities collected in 24 A.L.R. 1417 (1923) from Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia. The majority rule is that where there is nothing in the character of the article taken which affects its competency as evidence, the courts will not investigate the source from whence it comes or the means by which it is obtained and will admit it even though the search was not valid. See authorities collected in 24 A.L.R. p. 1411 (1923) from Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and West Virginia. These decisions are based on the old and elementary rule of evidence that the admissibility of evidence is not affected by the illegality of the means by which it was obtained and which was never seriously doubted until the obiter dictum stated in the case of Boyd v. UnitedStates (1886), 116 U.S. 616, 29 L.Ed. 746. See exhaustive history of this matter in 4 Wigmore, Evidence (2d ed.) § 2183, and in notes in 136 Am. St. Rep. at p. 153, and 3 A.L.R. 1514, 24 A.L.R. 1508. This was the old common-law rule in England (Bishop of Atterbury's Trial (1723) 16 Howell's State Trials 490-498) and still prevails there. Even the United States courts will admit evidence obtained under invalid search warrant, if the warrants were state warrants and not federal warrants.
2 The United States courts, although bound by the provisions of an express statute (hereinafter cited and quoted) requiring the commissioner to hear evidence before issuing a warrant, have held that it is not "imperative that the only evidence which will justify the issuance of a search warrant and the seizure of property thereunder be common-law evidence. If that were so, it would be very difficult to sustain the granting of search warrants or the seizure of property held for the purpose of violating the Volstead Act." In re No. 15 East Third St. (1922), 284 Fed. 914; that where smuggled liquors are involved, search warrants may issue upon the affidavit of one "who has no personal knowledge of the illegal transaction other than what has come to him upon information and belief," and that where smuggling is alleged, it is not necessary that facts must be averred . . . which would make out a prima facie case . . . nor that the affidavit to these facts must be made "by some one whose testimony would be evidentiary." United States v. Bookbinder (1922), 278 Fed. 216; In United States v. Lepper (1923), 288 Fed. 136, the court, in holding that probable cause was shown to justify the issuance of the warrant, said: "It is not required that the evidence should show that a crime was actually committed, or that the facts should be alleged strong enough to convict the defendant. It is enough if probable cause exists, or a reasonable ground of suspicion supported by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves to warrant a discreet and prudent man in believing that a crime is being committed."
3 See colorful description in Van Tyne's Causes of the War of Independence, Chap. VII, of the court scene of Paxton's case (Quincy's Mass. Report.)
4 Writs of assistance were issued by Lord Baltimore's government under the Act of 1673, Osgood, American Colonies 17th Century Vol. 3, p. 236, but the convention of the province of Maryland in 1776, declared that "all warrants without oath or affirmation to search suspected places or to seize any person or property are grievous and oppressive and all general warrants to search suspected persons, without naming or describing the place or the person in special, are illegal and ought not to be granted." American Archives, 5th Series, Vol. 3, p. 145. A like provision is found in the Vermont Constitution of 1777. In 1769 Lord Botetourt, royal governor of Virginia, granted a petition of the people against the use of writs of assistance.
5 The decisions of Chief Justice Pratt (afterward Lord Camden) in Entick v. Carrington, supra, and of Lord Mansfield in Money v. Leach, supra, merely held that "general warrants" which did not describe any particular place to be searched nor any specific thing to be seized, and did not fix any time for making the search commanded, and which were not based on any affidavits whatever, whether of facts or belief, were illegal. The case of Entick v. Carrington grew out of the following facts: The Earl of Halifax, as a Lord of the King's Privy council and one of the principal secretaries of state, without the filing of any affidavit, issued a warrant directing that certain "Messengers in ordinary," taking a constable to assist them, should search for and arrest plaintiff, as being the author of an alleged libel, and seize his books and papers and bring them before the Earl. The messenger went to plaintiff's dwelling, which was not named or described in the warrant searched it, and arrested him and seized many books and papers found there, none of which were particularly described in the warrant. And the case of Money v. Leach, grew out of the fact that the Earl of Halifax, six months later, without an affidavit being filed, issued a like warrant to search for "the authors, printers and publishers of the seditious libel entitled `The North Briton No. 45,'" and to seize them "together with their papers," nobody being named and no place to be searched or papers to be seized being specified, under authority of which, the dwelling house of Leach, in which he did business as a printer, was entered and searched, and he was arrested and certain papers were seized. As was stated above, neither of these warrants was based upon any affidavit whatever. No question as to an affidavit stating what affiant "believed" being a sufficient basis for issuing a search warrant was involved, or was even suggested by the court or by counsel.
6 The text of these recommendations was as follows:
New York. "That every freeman has a right to be secure from all unreasonable searches and seizures of his person, his papers, or his property; and therefore, that all warrants to search suspected places, or seize any freeman, his papers, or property, without information, upon oath or affirmation, of sufficient cause, are grievous and oppressive; and that all general warrants (or such in which the place or person suspected are not particularly designated) are dangerous, and ought not to be granted."
Rhode Island. "XIV. That every person has a right to the secure from all unreasonable searches and seizures of his person, his papers, or his property; and therefore, that all warrants to search suspected places, to seize any person, his papers, or his property, without information upon oath or affirmation of sufficient cause, are grievous and oppressive; and that all general warrants (or such in which the place or persons suspected are not particularly designated) are dangerous, and ought not to be granted."
Maryland. "That all warrants without oath, or affirmation of a person conscientiously scrupulous of taking an oath, to search suspected places, or seize any person or his property, are grievous and oppressive; and all general warrants to search suspected places, or to apprehend any person suspected, without naming or describing the place or person in special, are dangerous and ought not to be granted."
Virginia. "14th. That every freeman has a right to be secure from all unreasonable searches and seizures of his person, his papers, and property; all warrants, therefore, to search suspected places, or seizure of any freeman, his papers, or property, without information on oath (or affirmation of a person religiously scrupulous of taking an oath) of legal and sufficient cause, are grievous and oppressive; and all general warrants to search suspected places, or to apprehend any suspected person, without specially naming or describing the place or person, are dangerous, and ought not to be granted."
North Carolina: "14. That every freeman has a right to be secure from all unreasonable searches and seizures of his person, his papers and property; all warrants, therefore, to search suspected places, or to apprehend any suspected person, without specially naming or describing the place or person, are dangerous, and ought not to be granted.