State v. Anonymous (1972-3)
State v. Anonymous (1972-3)
Opinion of the Court
An assistant prosecuting attorney for the Circuit Court, accompanied by members of a municipal police department, entered the defendant’s place of business and searched and .seized, without a search or seizure warrant, a large quantity of magazines, a long list of which was introduced at the evidentiary hearing. The police report, also introduced into evidence, recites that the prosecutor
The defendant was charged with a violation of § 53a-194 of the Penal Code, which provides as follows: “(a) A person is guilty of obscenity when, knowing its content and character, he promotes, or possesses with intent to promote, any obscene material or performance.” Obscenity is a class B misdemeanor.
The claim on the motion to suppress, to use the ' language contained in the motion, is: “The entrance [into the defendant’s place of business] was made without any legal process, without a warrant of search and seizure, without any sort of semblance of warrant or authority issued out of a judicial office, and without express or implied permission of any person on the premises.” In other words, the basic claim is that the procedure preceding the search and seizure was constitutionally deficient.
“The history of American freedom is, in no small measure, the history of procedure.” Malinski v. New York, 324 U.S. 401, 414 (separate opinion). While this comment was made in the context of criminal procedure, courts have come to realize that procedural guarantees play an equally large role in
In Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan, 372 U.S. 58, a case challenging the activities of a state obscene literature commission, the commission exerted considerable informal pressure on local retailers to withdraw objectionable literature from their newsstands. The commission’s activities ranged from vigorous “advice” to the local retailers to threats of criminal prosecution. The Supreme Court held that the com
If this court were to adopt and follow the argument advanced by the state, law enforcement officers, however well intentioned and acting in good faith,
Mass seizure of magazines and material, as in this ease, without judicial intervention of any kind is far more repressive than civil injunctive procedures designed to prevent further sale of books or magazines. Long ago, Blackstone acknowledged the importance of an adjudicatory procedure as a protection against the suppression of inoffensive publications. See 4 Blackstone, Commentaries *151-52.
This court is of the opinion that the procedures as applied in this case lacked the safeguards which procedural due process demands to assure nonob-seene material the constitutional protection to which it is entitled. No opportunity was afforded the defendant to elicit and contest the reasons underlying the law enforcement officer’s belief, or otherwise to argue against the propriety of the seizure; the seizure was made and effected on the strength of the conclusory assertions of a single assistant prosecuting attorney, without any scrutiny by a judge of any of the materials considered to be obscene. It is no reflection on the good faith or judgment of the
The procedures followed in the case at bar sweep so broadly and with so little discrimination that they constitute deficient constitutional techniques required by the due process clause to prevent erosion of constitutional guarantees.
This court concludes, upon the authority of Marcus v. Search Warrant of Property, 367 U.S. 717, and A Quantity of Books v. Kansas, 378 U.S. 205, that indiscriminate mass seizure of the magazines violates constitutional requirements because the fashion by which the seizure was effected was without any safeguards to protect legitimate expression. Moreover, the procedure which was followed, here not only amounted to a general search of thousands of titles in the defendant’s stock but also constituted a prior restraint on any publication that the police officers determined in their search to confiscate.
It must be strongly emphasized that this court does not reach and therefore does not pass upon the merits of the issues. The court intimates no view upon the question whether the magazines and materials in question are obscene. This court has strictly confined this opinion to the procedures which were followed and which the court holds were constitutionally insufficient.
And finally, obscene books may not be treated as contraband as are narcotics, gambling paraphernalia and other types of contraband. That proposition was explicitly rejected in Marcus v. Search Warrant of Property, 367 U.S. 717, 730-31; see note, 26 Missouri Law Rev. 501.
The defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence and for the return of the property illegally seized must be and hereby is granted for reasons set forth herein.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.