Harvey Gene Fowler v. United States of America, (Two Cases) - Haskell D. Scott v. United States of America, (Two Cases), 239 F.2d 93, 10th Cir. (1956)
Harvey Gene Fowler v. United States of America, (Two Cases) - Haskell D. Scott v. United States of America, (Two Cases), 239 F.2d 93, 10th Cir. (1956)
Harvey Gene Fowler v. United States of America, (Two Cases) - Haskell D. Scott v. United States of America, (Two Cases), 239 F.2d 93, 10th Cir. (1956)
2d 93
The defendants, Fowler and Scott, were indicted and convicted on two
indictments which charged them with violation of the Internal Revenue laws
relating to intoxicating liquor. They were sentenced to a total of eighteen
months imprisonment, together with fines on each conviction, the sentences to
run concurrently. The cases are here on a consolidated record, but considered
separately.
In cases number 5360 and 5361, the indictment contained four counts, three of
which charged the defendants with the possession of an unregistered still,
carrying on the business of a distiller without giving bond, and the possession
of thirty gallons of non-tax paid whiskey. An additional count charged the
defendants, along with a third person, with working at a distillery upon which
no sign was placed as required by law. The convictions were obtained by the
use of evidence which was seized by Alcohol Tax Unit Agents under a search
627, 629,2 certiorari denied 286 U.S. 567, 52 S.Ct. 647, 76 L.Ed. 1298; Kaiser
v. United States, 8 Cir., 60 F.2d 410, certiorari denied 287 U.S. 654, 53 S.Ct.
118, 77 L.Ed. 565; Vaught v. United States, 9 Cir., 7 F.2d 370; see also 22
C.J.S., Criminal Law, 733. We therefore hold that the motion to suppress,
together with a defendant's testimony in support thereof, which has been
properly overruled on the ground that the search was legal, is admissible in
evidence as an admission against interest.
4
The question presented in cases 5362 and 5363 is whether there was a valid
search of an automobile operated by the defendants. After a motion to suppress
was overruled, the defendants submitted the case to the court on the evidence
taken at the hearing on the motion. The Court found both defendants guilty.
Although the evidence is in some respects different than in Carroll v. United
States, 267 U.S. 132, 45 S.Ct. 280, 69 L.Ed. 543, and Brinegar v. United States,
10 Cir., 165 F.2d 512, affirmed 338 U.S. 160, 69 S.Ct. 1302, 1310, 93 L.Ed.
1879, we think the officers had probable cause to search the car under the tests
established in those cases.3 The defendants had reputations as bootleggers;
Alcohol Tax Unit Agents had information to the effect that non-tax paid
whiskey was being stored and kept on premises formerly owned and later
leased to Fowler; they had the premises and a Mercury automobile operated by
the defendants under surveillance from April 27, 1955, to May 5, 1955, in an
attempt to determine if there were liquor law violations. The Fowler place was
in the country near a stream, where the agents, on April 27th, were observing
the premises while posing as fishermen. The defendants appeared in a light
colored Mercury automobile and, after parking their car some distance from the
premises, visited briefly with the agents. They then proceeded on foot through
a wooded area and approached the buildings by an indirect route. The agents
spent most of the day of May 5th watching the premises, and about midnight an
automobile approached which appeared to be the same as the one which was
seen there on April 27th. As it came near to the access road leading from the
highway to the buildings on the Fowler place, the lights on the car were turned
out and it proceeded to the house and from there to a sheet iron building. The
agents observed considerable activity there which appeared to them to be the
loading of cartons into the automobile. A short time later the automobile left
the premises, with its lights off, and the officers followed and determined from
the license number on the automobile that it was the same Mercury seen on
April 27th in possession of the two defendants. After proceeding for a short
distance, the Mercury turned off on a side road. The agents continued and
stopped their car along the highway. Within a few minutes the Mercury
returned to the highway and proceeded toward the agents. The agents used the
police siren to stop the Mercury and they approached it, one of them carrying a
shotgun. When the defendants were asked what they had in the car, one of them
replied that it was whiskey. One of the agents then said: "Haskell, how much
have you got?" Scott replied: "About 60 gallons". The cartons stacked in the
automobile were plainly visible from the outside. The agents then searched the
Mercury automobile and found sixty gallons of non-tax paid whiskey. These
facts are very close to those in the Brinegar case in which this Court held that
an admission to government agents of possession of whiskey by the defendant
when the car was stopped, furnished probable cause for search even though the
agents did not have such probable cause prior to the admission. On appeal the
Supreme Court held that the facts without the admission were sufficient to
constitute probable cause for search, and affirmed. The Supreme Court in the
majority opinion did not discuss or refer to the right of agents to search upon
admissions made after an automobile has been stopped on the highway. In
addition to holding that there was probable cause to stop and search the car, we
adhere to the rule in the Brinegar case that voluntary admissions of guilt made
upon interrogation, after being stopped by agents, and before a search, are
sufficient probable cause. The Brinegar case followed the rule of Morgan v.
United States, 10 Cir., 159 F.2d 85, where the admissions were not unlike those
here.
Case No. 5360 is reversed and remanded for a new trial; cases Nos. 5361,
5362, and 5363 are affirmed.
Notes:
1
Generally the courts have held that the protection against unreasonable searches
and seizures afforded by the Fourth Amendment is personal and one who
objects to the introduction of evidence unlawfully seized must claim some
proprietary or possessory interest in the property. Steeber v. United States, 10
Cir., 198 F.2d 615, 33 A.L.R.2d 1425, and cases cited
In the Heller case, the Court said, "Having voluntarily become a witness upon
one issue in the case, what he there testified may thereafter be shown against
him upon trial of any other issue therein. This was held in principle, but upon
somewhat differing facts, in Raffel v. United States, 271 U.S. 494, 46 S.Ct.
566, 70 L.Ed. 1054, and Powers v. United States, 223 U.S. 303, 32 S.Ct. 281,
56 L.Ed. 448; and upon like facts in Vaught v. United States, [9 Cir.,] 7 F.2d
370, and United States v. Lindsly, [D.C.La.] 7 F.2d 247. We find in this no
invasion of appellant's constitutional immunity against compulsory selfincrimination."
In the Brinegar case, the Supreme Court said "`the substance of all definitions'
of probable cause `is a reasonable ground for belief of guilt.'"