Suspecting that petitioner McDonald was operating an illegal
lottery, police had kept him under surveillance for two months.
Thinking that they detected from the outside the sound of an adding
machine, they forced their way, without a warrant for search or
arrest, into a rooming house in which he had rented a room. They
proceeded to his room, looked through the transom, and observed
petitioners McDonald and Washington engaged in operating a lottery.
Demanding and obtaining entrance, they arrested both petitioners
and seized machines, papers and money which were in plain view.
These articles were admitted in evidence over the objection of
petitioners, who were convicted.
Held:
1. The seizure was in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the
seized articles were not admissible in evidence against McDonald,
and his conviction cannot be sustained. Pp.
335 U. S.
452-456.
2. A search without a warrant is not justified unless the
exigencies of the situation make that course imperative. Pp.
335 U. S.
454-456.
3. Even if it be assumed that Washington's constitutional rights
were not invaded, the denial of McDonald's motion to exclude the
evidence was, on these facts, prejudicial to Washington as well as
to McDonald. P.
335 U. S.
456
Page 335 U. S. 452
83 U.S.App.D.C. 96,166 F.2d 957, reversed.
Petitioners were convicted in a federal district court on
evidence obtained by a search without a warrant. The Court of
Appeals affirmed. 83 U.S.App.D.C. 96, 166 F.2d 957. This Court
granted certiorari. 333 U.S. 872.
Reversed, p.
335 U. S.
456.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners were convicted in the District Court on evidence
obtained by a search made without a warrant. The Court of Appeals
affirmed on a divided vote. 166 F.2d 957. We brought the case here
on certiorari because of doubts whether that result squared with
Johnson v. United States, 333 U. S.
10, and
Trupiano v. United States, 334 U.
S. 699.
Petitioners were tried without a jury in the District Court for
the District of Columbia on an indictment in four counts, charging
offenses of carrying on a lottery known as the numbers game in
violation of 22 D.C.Code, §§ 1501, 1502, 1504 (1940).
They were found guilty on all counts.
Petitioner McDonald, who had previously been arrested for
numbers operations, had been under police observation for several
months prior to the arrest. During this period and while he was
maintaining a home in the District of Columbia, he rented a room in
the residence of a Mrs. Terry, who maintained a rooming house in
the District. His comings and goings at this address were under
surveillance by the police for about two months. They had observed
him enter the rooming house during the hours in which operations at
the headquarters of the numbers game are customarily carried
on.
On the day of the arrest, three police officers surrounded the
house. This was mid-afternoon. They did not have a warrant for
arrest, nor a search warrant. While outside the house, one of the
officers thought that he heard an adding machine. These machines
are frequently used in the numbers operation. Believing that the
numbers game was in process, the officers sought admission to the
house.
Page 335 U. S. 453
One of them opened a window leading into the landlady's room,
and climbed through. He identified himself to her and admitted the
other officers to the house.
After searching the rooms on the ground floor, they proceeded to
the second floor. The door of an end bedroom was closed. But one of
the officers stood on a chair and looked through the transom. He
observed both petitioners in the room, as well as numbers slips,
money piled on the table, and adding machines. He yelled to
McDonald to open the door, and McDonald did so. Both petitioners
were arrested, and the officers seized the machines, a suitcase of
papers, and money. Whether these machines and papers should have
been suppressed as evidence and returned to petitioner McDonald is
the major question presented.
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution provides:
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses,
papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,
shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly
describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to
be seized."
This guarantee of protection against unreasonable searches and
seizures extends to the innocent and guilty alike. It marks the
right of privacy as one of the unique values of our civilization
and, with few exceptions, stays the hands of the police unless they
have a search warrant issued by a magistrate on probable cause
supported by oath or affirmation. And the law provides as a
sanction against the flouting of this constitutional safeguard the
suppression of evidence secured as a result of the violation, when
it is tendered in a federal court.
Weeks v. United States,
232 U. S. 383.
The prosecution seeks to build the lawfulness of the search on
the lawfulness of the arrest, and so justify the
Page 335 U. S. 454
search and seizure without a warrant.
See Agnello v. United
States, 269 U. S. 20,
269 U. S. 30;
Harris v. United States, 331 U. S. 145,
331 U. S.
150-151. The reasoning runs as follows: although it was
an invasion of privacy for the officers to enter Mrs. Terry's room,
that was a trespass which violated her rights under the Fourth
Amendment, not McDonald's. Therefore, so far as he was concerned,
the officers were lawfully within the hallway, as much so as if
Mrs. Terry had admitted them. Looking over the transom was not a
search, for the eye cannot commit the trespass condemned by the
Fourth Amendment. Since the officers observed McDonald in the act
of committing an offense, they were under a duty then and there to
arrest him.
See 4 D.C.Code, §§ 140, 143 (1940).
The arrest being valid, the search incident thereto was lawful.
We do not stop to examine that syllogism for flaws. Assuming its
correctness, we reject the result.
This is not a case where the officers, passing by on the street,
hear a shot and a cry for help and demand entrance in the name of
the law. They had been following McDonald and keeping him under
surveillance for two months at this rooming house. The prosecution
now tells us that the police had no probable cause for obtaining a
warrant until, shortly before the arrest, they heard the sound of
the adding machine coming from the rooming house. And there is
vague and general testimony in the record that, on previous
occasions, the officers had sought search warrants, but had been
denied them. But those statements alone do not lay the proper
foundation for dispensing with a search warrant.
Where, as here, officers are not responding to an emergency,
there must be compelling reasons to justify the absence of a search
warrant. A search without a warrant demands exceptional
circumstances, as we held in
Johnson v. United States,
supra. We will not assume that, where a defendant has been
under surveillance
Page 335 U. S. 455
for months, no search warrant could have been obtained. What
showing these officers made when they applied on the earlier
occasions, the dates of these applications, and all the
circumstances bearing upon the necessity to make this search
without a warrant are absent from this record. We cannot allow the
constitutional barrier that protects the privacy of the individual
to be hurdled so easily. Moreover, when we move to the scene of the
crime, the reason for the absence of a search warrant is even less
obvious. When the officers heard the adding machine and, at the
latest, when they saw what was transpiring in the room, they
certainly had adequate grounds for seeking a search warrant.
Here, as in
Johnson v. United States and
Trupiano
v. United States, the defendant was not fleeing or seeking to
escape. Officers were there to apprehend petitioners in case they
tried to leave. Nor was the property in the process of destruction,
nor as likely to be destroyed as the opium paraphernalia in the
Johnson case. Petitioners were busily engaged in their
lottery venture. No reason, except inconvenience of the officers
and delay in preparing papers and getting before a magistrate,
appears for the failure to seek a search warrant. But those reasons
are no justification for bypassing the constitutional requirement,
as we held in
Johnson v. United States, supra, p.
333 U. S.
15.
We are not dealing with formalities. The presence of a search
warrant serves a high function. Absent some grave emergency, the
Fourth Amendment has interposed a magistrate between the citizen
and the police. This was done not to shield criminals, nor to make
the home a safe haven for illegal activities. It was done so that
an objective mind might weigh the need to invade that privacy in
order to enforce the law. The right of privacy was deemed too
precious to entrust to the discretion of those whose job is the
detection of crime and the arrest
Page 335 U. S. 456
of criminals. Power is a heady thing, and history shows that the
police acting on their own cannot be trusted. And so the
Constitution requires a magistrate to pass on the desires of the
police before they violate the privacy of the home. We cannot be
true to that constitutional requirement and excuse the absence of a
search warrant without a showing by those who seek exemption from
the constitutional mandate that the exigencies of the situation
made that course imperative.
It follows from what we have said that McDonald's motion for
suppression of the evidence and the return of the property to him
should have been granted.
Weeks v. United States, supra;
Go-Bart Importing Co. v. United States, 282 U.
S. 344,
282 U. S. 358.
It was, however, denied, and the unlawfully seized evidence was
used not only against McDonald, but against Washington as well, the
two being tried jointly. Apart from this evidence, there seems to
have been little or none against Washington. Even though we assume,
without deciding, that Washington, who was a guest of McDonald, had
no right of privacy that was broken when the officers searched
McDonald's room without a warrant, we think that the denial of
McDonald's motion was error that was prejudicial to Washington as
well. In this case, unlike
Agnello v. United States,
supra, p.
269 U. S. 35,
the unlawfully seized materials were the basis of evidence used
against the codefendant. If the property had been returned to
McDonald, it would not have been available for use at the trial. We
can only speculate as to whether other evidence which might have
been used against Washington would have been equally probative.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE concurs in the result, and in the opinion
insofar as it relates to the petitioner McDonald.
Page 335 U. S. 457
With respect to the petitioner Washington, he is of the view
that the evidence, having been illegally obtained, was
inadmissible.
Cf. Malinski v. New York, 324 U.
S. 401, opinion dissenting in part page
324 U. S.
420.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, concurring.
I agree with the result and with the opinion of the Court. But
it rejects the search which two courts below have sustained without
saying wherein it was wrong. It may be helpful to lower courts and
to the police themselves to state what appears to some of us as the
reason this search is bad.
The police for several weeks had this defendant, McDonald, under
surveillance. The United States Commissioner was approached about a
search warrant but, for reasons which do not appear, declined to
issue it. The only additional information which led the officers to
take the law into their own hands and make this search without a
warrant was that they heard an adding machine or a typewriter --
the witness was not sure which -- operating on the premises.
Certainly the sound of an adding machine or typewriter, standing
alone, is no indication of crime, and it could become significant
only when weighed in connection with other evidence. A magistrate
might either have issued or refused a warrant if request had been
made.
However, the officer in charge of the investigation took the
matter into his own hands. He neither had nor sought a search
warrant or warrant of arrest; he did not then have knowledge of a
crime sufficient, even in his own opinion, to justify arrest, and
he did not even know that the suspect, McDonald, was in the rooming
house at the time. Nevertheless, he forced open the window of the
landlady's bedroom and climbed in. He apparently was in plain
clothes, but showed his badge to the frightened woman, brushed her
aside and then
Page 335 U. S. 458
unlocked doors and admitted two other officers. They then went
to the hall outside the room rented and occupied by defendant. The
officer in charge climbed on a chair and looked through a transom.
Seeing the defendant McDonald engaged in activity which he
considered to be part of the lottery procedure, he arrested him and
searched the quarters. The Government argued, and the court below
held, that, since the forced entry into the building was through
the landlady's window, in a room in which the defendant as a tenant
has no rights, no objection to this mode of entry or to the search
that followed was available to him.
Doubtless a tenant's quarters in a rooming or apartment house
are legally, as well as practically, exposed to lawful approach by
a good many persons without his consent or control. Had the police
been admitted as guests of another tenant, or had the approaches
been thrown open by an obliging landlady or doorman, they would
have been legally in the hallways. Like any other stranger, they
could then spy or eavesdrop on others without being trespassers. If
they peeped through the keyhole or climbed on a chair or on one
another's shoulders to look through the transom, I should see no
grounds on which the defendant could complain. If, in this manner,
they, or any private citizen, saw a crime in the course of
commission, an arrest would be permissible.
But it seems to me that each tenant of a building, while he has
no right to exclude from the common hallways those who enter
lawfully, does have a personal and constitutionally protected
interest in the integrity and security of the entire building
against unlawful breaking and entry. Here the police gained access
to their peeking post by means that were not merely unauthorized,
but by means that were forbidden by law and denounced as criminal.
In prying up the porch window and climbing
Page 335 U. S. 459
into the landlady's bedroom, they were guilty of breaking and
entering -- a felony in law and a crime far more serious than the
one they were engaged in suppressing. Having forced an entry
without either a search warrant or an arrest warrant to justify it,
the felonious character of their entry, it seems to me, followed
every step of their journey inside the house, and tainted its
fruits with illegality.
Cf. Weeks v. United States,
232 U. S. 383;
Taylor v. United States, 286 U. S. 1;
Johnson v. United States, 333 U. S.
10.
Even if one were to conclude that urgent circumstances might
justify a forced entry without a warrant, no such emergency was
present in this case. This method of law enforcement displays a
shocking lack of all sense of proportion. Whether there is
reasonable necessity for a search without waiting to obtain a
warrant certainly depends somewhat upon the gravity of the offense
thought to be in progress, as well as the hazards of the method of
attempting to reach it. In this case, the police had been over two
months watching the defendant McDonald. His criminal operation,
while a shabby swindle that the police are quite right in
suppressing, was not one which endangered life or limb or the peace
and good order of the community even if it continued another day or
two; neither was the racket one the defendant was likely to
abandon. Conduct of the numbers racket is not a solitary vice,
practiced in secrecy and discoverable only by crashing into
dwelling houses. The real difficulty is that it is so little
condemned by otherwise law-abiding people that it flourishes widely
and involves multitudes of people. It is to me a shocking
proposition that private homes, even quarters in a tenement, may be
indiscriminately invaded at the discretion of any suspicious police
officer engaged in following up offenses that involve no violence
or threats of it. While I should be human enough to
Page 335 U. S. 460
apply the letter of the law with some indulgence to officers
acting to deal with threats or crimes of violence which endanger
life or security, it is notable that few of the searches found by
this Court to be unlawful dealt with that category or crime. Almost
without exception, the overzeal was in suppressing acts not
malum in se, but only
malum prohibitum.
* While the
enterprise of parting fools from their money by the "numbers"
lottery is one that ought to be suppressed, I do not think its
suppression is more important to society than the security of the
people against unreasonable searches and seizures. When an officer
undertakes to act as his own magistrate, he ought to be in a
position to justify it by pointing to some real immediate and
serious consequences if he postponed action to get a warrant.
I am the less reluctant to reach this conclusion because the
method of enforcing the law exemplified by this search is one which
not only violates legal rights of defendant, but is certain to
involve the police in grave troubles if continued. That it did not
do so on this occasion was due to luck more, than to foresight.
Many homeowners in this crime-beset city doubtless are armed. When
a woman sees a strange man, in plain clothes, prying up her
Page 335 U. S. 461
bedroom window and climbing in, her natural impulse would be to
shoot. A plea of justifiable homicide might result awkwardly for
enforcement officers. But an officer seeing a gun being drawn on
him might shoot first. Under the circumstances of this case, I
should not want the task of convincing a jury that it was not
murder. I have no reluctance in condemning as unconstitutional a
method of law enforcement so reckless and so fraught with danger
and discredit to the law enforcement agencies themselves.
As to defendant Washington: he was a guest on the premises. He
could have no immunity from spying and listening by those
rightfully in the house. But even a guest may expect the shelter of
the rooftree he is under against criminal intrusion. I should
reverse as to both defendants.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, having joined in the Court's opinion,
also concurs in this opinion.
* For example, the instant case involves a statute forbidding
lotteries in the District of Columbia;
Trupiano v. United
States, 334 U. S. 699,
liquor control and revenue statutes;
Johnson v. United
States, 333 U. S. 10,
narcotic control and revenue statutes;
Nathanson v. United
States, 290 U. S. 41,
liquor control and tariff statute. Other cases involving liquor
control or taxing statutes, or both, are numerous;
see, e.g.,
Taylor v. United States, 286 U. S. 1;
United States v. Lefkowitz, 285 U.S 452;
Go-Bart
Importing Co. v. United States, 282 U.
S. 344;
Gambino v. United States, 275 U.
S. 310;
Amos v. United States, 255 U.
S. 313.
Agnello v. United States, 269 U. S.
20, involved cocaine control and taxing statutes, and
Weeks v. United States, 232 U. S. 383,
involved a statute forbidding use of the mails to distribute
lottery tickets.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE
REED join, dissenting.
In our opinion, the judgment should have been affirmed. This is
a case of a lawful arrest followed by a seizure of the instruments
of the crime which then were in plain sight. There was no search.
There is, therefore, no issue as to the need for a search warrant.
In regard to the arrest, the only issue is as to the need for a
warrant of arrest to make it lawful. For the reasons stated below,
we believe the arrest for the crime committed in the presence of
the officers was clearly lawful without the issuance of a formal
warrant for it. At the time of the raid, there were sufficient
grounds to justify the police in suspecting that the unlawful
lottery, which later proved to be in operation, was in progress
within the building which had
Page 335 U. S. 462
been under surveillance. A "numbers game," such as was there
conducted, is a form of lottery generally regarded as detrimental
to the communities where it flourishes. It is highly profitable to
its principals at the expense of its players. Yet it is so simple
in operation that its headquarters are readily movable.
Accordingly, it requires substantial police effort to stop such
unlawful operations at their source. It is difficult to locate the
principals, and it is still more difficult to secure proof
sufficient to convict them unless they are arrested in the midst of
one of the comparatively brief periodical sessions when the
essential computations for the operation of the lottery are being
made. Such sessions are held when the operators determine the day's
winners and arrange for the distribution among those winners of
their respective shares of the cash which has been collected
through a network of writers, collectors and runners.
Under the circumstances, a prompt entry by the police was
justified when they reasonably suspected that the crime of
operating a numbers lottery was being committed at that moment. The
petitioners, as tenants or occupants of a room, had no right to
object to the presence of officers in the hall of the rooming
house. The actual observance by the police of the commission of the
suspected crime thereupon justified their immediate arrest of those
engaged in it without securing a warrant for such arrest.
This case is primarily an instance where the police succeeded in
surprising the petitioners in the midst of the unlawful operations
which the police suspected were being carried on periodically by
McDonald as a principal operator and by others at the place in
question. It is generally not a violation of any constitutional
privilege of the accused for a police officer to arrest such
accused without a warrant of arrest if the arrest is made at
the
Page 335 U. S. 463
very moment when the accused is engaged in a violation of law in
the presence of the officer. It is generally not a violation of any
constitutional privilege of such accused for the arresting officer
thereupon to seize at least the articles then in plain sight and
which have been seen by the officer to have been used in the
commission of the crime for which the accused is being arrested. We
see no adequate reason for a distinction in favor of the accused
here. In this case, there was no search for the seized property,
because its presence was obvious. Also, there was no seizure of
anything other than the articles which the arresting officer saw in
use in some material connection with the crime which the accused
committed in the officer's presence. It therefore was not a
violation of the constitutional rights of the accused to permit
such seized articles to be presented in evidence in securing their
convictions of the crimes which they were charged with committing
in the presence of the arresting officer.