Stewart v. City of Jackson

Decision Date03 May 1937
Docket Number32699
Citation174 So. 56,178 Miss. 709
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesSTEWART v. CITY OF JACKSON

Division A

1. CRIMINAL LAW. Searches and seizures.

Where at request of officers acting under valid search warrant but not under warrant for arrest, shop manager voluntarily gave them keys to locker in shop, liquor found in locker held competent as evidence in prosecution of shop manager for unlawful possession of liquor, as against contention that it was obtained by unlawful search, since officers could have broken locker open and shop manager's conduct amounted to waiver of objections.

2. CRIMINAL LAW.

In prosecution for unlawful possession of liquor, error in giving instruction held not prejudicial, where there was no dispute as to defendant's guilt and honest jury could have returned no other verdict.

HON. J P. ALEXANDER, Judge.

APPEAL from the circuit court of Hinds county HON J. P. ALEXANDER, Judge.

William Stewart was convicted of unlawful possession of liquor, and he appeals. Affirmed.

Affirmed.

Jaap & Higgins, of Jackson, for appellant.

We take it as undisputed that a warrant to search a person is invalid, and that a search made of a person at a time when no crime has been committed in the officers' presence, of when he has no warrant for the arrest of a person, of has no creditable information that the person searched has committed a felony, is unlawful, and that evidence obtained thereby is inadmissible.

Comby v. State, 141 Miss. 541, 106 So. 827; Duckworth v. Taylorsville, 142 Miss. 440, 107 So. 666.

Search of person before intoxicating liquor is found and lawful arrest made by officer based thereon is unauthorized.

Robinson v. State, 143 Miss. 247, 108 So. 903; Burnside v. State, 144 Miss. 405, 110 So. 121.

It is respectfully submitted that the demand of the officers made on the appellant that he deliver to them the keys to the locker was an unlawful search of his person just as much as if the officer had run his hand into his pocket and taken the keys therefrom.

In the case of Goodman v. State, 130 So. 285, 158 Miss. 269, which seems to have confused the learned circuit judge, the defendant admitted the possession of the liquor, not in an extrajudicial, but in a judicial confession, and testified that his possession was merely transitory, he having taken it for the purpose of taking a drink, and that when he saw the officers he concealed it in an inside pocket. In the case at bar there is no judicial confession, the defendant not having taken the stand. There is alleged to have been ah extra-judicial confession, which, manifestly, would not be admissible until the corpus delicti of the crime had been proven aliunde the confession, and by competent testimony. Defendant's confession, without proof of corpus delicti, not sufficient to sustain conviction of having possession of liquor.

Morton v. State, 136 Miss. 284, 101 So. 379; Williams v. State, 129 Miss. 469, 92 So. 584.

John G. Burkett, of Jackson, for appellee.

The search warrant covered the room in which the whiskey was found, to-wit, the boiler room of the pressing shop. It was a part of said pressing shop and a part of the Royal Hotel Building.

There is no merit in the contention of appellant that an unlawful search was made of his person when he turned the keys to the locker over to the officers. It is undisputed that this action was entirely voluntary on his part, wholly without protest, that no hand was laid upon him, and further that he freely and voluntarily admitted the ownership of the whiskey, and furnished the right key to the locker.

Goodman v. State, 158 Miss. 269, 130 So. 285.

OPINION

McGowen, J.

William Stewart, appellant, was convicted of unlawfully having whisky in his possession in the city court; appealed to the county court where, by a jury, he was again convicted; and then appealed to the circuit court, where his conviction was affirmed.

His conviction rests upon the evidence of two city policemen Byrd and Rogers, who made a search by an affidavit and search warrant, the validity of which was not challenged. The warrant authorized the search of a pressing shop in the rear of the Royal Hotel, 123 East Capital street in the city of Jackson. The policemen proceeded to this place; found Stewart there in charge, and served a copy of the warrant on him. In the boiler room, shown to be connected with and a part of the pressing shop, the officers observed a locker and asked Stewart if he had the keys thereto, to which he replied, "I have them," and Byrd then asked Stewart for the keys. Both officers said no demand was made upon Stewart for the keys. Thereupon, the...

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