Having "some information" that petitioner was selling narcotics,
three state officers entered his home and forced their way into the
bedroom occupied by him and his wife. When asked about two capsules
lying on a bedside table, petitioner put them in his mouth. After
an unsuccessful struggle to extract them by force, the officers
took petitioner to a hospital, where an emetic was forced into his
stomach against his will. He vomited two capsules which were found
to contain morphine. These were admitted in evidence over his
objection, and he was convicted in a state court of violating a
state law forbidding possession of morphine.
Held: The conviction is reversed, because it was
obtained by methods violative of the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
342 U. S.
166-174.
101 Cal. App.
2d 140, 225 P.2d 1, reversed.
In a California state court, petitioner was convicted of
violating a state law forbidding the possession of morphine. The
District Court of Appeal affirmed.
101 Cal. App.
2d 140, 225 P.2d 1. The State Supreme Court denied a review.
This Court granted certiorari. 341 U.S. 939.
Reversed, p.
342 U. S.
174.
Page 342 U. S. 166
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Having "some information that [the petitioner here] was selling
narcotics," three deputy sheriffs of the County of Los Angeles, on
the morning of July 1, 1949, made for the two-story dwelling house
in which Rochin lived with his mother, common law wife, brothers
and sisters. Finding the outside door open, they entered and then
forced open the door to Rochin's room on the second floor. Inside
they found petitioner sitting partly dressed on the side of the
bed, upon which his wife was lying. On a "night stand" beside the
bed, the deputies spied two capsules. When asked "Whose stuff is
this?", Rochin seized the capsules and put them in his mouth. A
struggle ensued in the course of which the three officers "jumped
upon him" and attempted to extract the capsules. The force they
applied proved unavailing against Rochin's resistance. He was
handcuffed and taken to a hospital. At the direction of one of the
officers, a doctor forced an emetic solution through a tube into
Rochin's stomach against his will. This "stomach pumping" produced
vomiting. In the vomited matter were found two capsules which
proved to contain morphine.
Rochin was brought to trial before a California Superior Court,
sitting without a jury, on the charge of possessing "a preparation
of morphine" in violation of the California Health and Safety Code
1947, § 11500. Rochin was convicted and sentenced to sixty days'
imprisonment. The chief evidence against him was the two capsules.
They were admitted over petitioner's objection, although the means
of obtaining them was frankly set forth in the testimony by one of
the deputies, substantially as here narrated.
On appeal, the District Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction,
despite the finding that the officer
"were
Page 342 U. S. 167
guilty of unlawfully breaking into and entering defendant's
room, and were guilty of unlawfully assaulting and battering
defendant while in the room,"
and "were guilty of unlawfully assaulting, battering, torturing
and falsely imprisoning the defendant at the alleged hospital."
101 Cal. App.
2d 140, 143, 225 P.2d 1, 3. One of the three judges, while
finding that "the record in this case reveals a shocking series of
violations of constitutional rights", concurred only because he
felt bound by decisions of his Supreme Court. These, he asserted,
"have been looked upon by law enforcement officers as an
encouragement, if not an invitation, to the commission of such
lawless acts."
Ibid. The Supreme Court of California
denied without opinion Rochin's petition for a hearing. [
Footnote 1] Two justice dissented from
this denial, and, in doing so, expressed themselves thus:
". . . a conviction which rests upon evidence of incriminating
objects obtained from the body of the accused by physical abuse is
as invalid as a conviction which rests upon a verbal confession
extracted from him by such abuse. . . . Had the evidence forced
from defendant's lips consisted of an oral confession that he
illegally possessed a drug . . . , he would have the protection of
the rule of law which excludes coerced confessions from evidence.
But because the evidence forced from his lips consisted of real
objects, the People of this state are permitted to base a
conviction upon it. [We] find no valid ground of distinction
between a verbal confession extracted by physical abuse and a
confession wrested from defendant's body by physical abuse."
101 Cal. App. 2d 143, 149-150, 225 P.2d 913, 917-918.
Page 342 U. S. 168
This Court granted certiorari, 341 U.S. 939, because a serious
question is raised as to the limitations which the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment imposes on the conduct of
criminal proceedings by the States.
In our federal system, the administration of criminal justice is
predominantly committed to the care of the States. The power to
define crimes belongs to Congress only as an appropriate means of
carrying into execution its limited grant of legislative powers.
U.S.Const. Art. I, § 8, cl. 18. Broadly speaking, crimes in the
United States are what the laws of the individual States make them,
subject to the limitations of Art. I, § 10, cl. 1, in the original
Constitution, prohibiting bills of attainder and
ex post
facto laws, and of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth
Amendments.
These limitations, in the main, concern not restrictions upon
the powers of the States to define crime, except in the restricted
area where federal authority has preempted the field, but
restrictions upon the manner in which the States may enforce their
penal codes. Accordingly, in reviewing a State criminal conviction
under a claim of right guaranteed by the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, from which is derived the most far-reaching
and most frequent federal basis of challenging State criminal
justice,
"we must be deeply mindful of the responsibilities of the States
for the enforcement of criminal laws, and exercise with due
humility our merely negative function in subjecting convictions
from state courts to the very narrow scrutiny which the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment authorizes."
Malinski v. New York, 324 U. S. 401,
324 U. S. 412,
324 U. S. 418.
Due process of law, "itself a historical product,"
Jackman v.
Rosenbaum Co., 260 U. S. 22,
260 U. S. 31, is
not to be turned into a destructive dogma against the States in the
administration of their systems of criminal justice.
Page 342 U. S. 169
However, this Court too has its responsibility. Regard for the
requirements of the Due Process Clause
"inescapably imposes upon this Court an exercise of judgment
upon the whole course of the proceedings [resulting in a
conviction] in order to ascertain whether they offend those canons
of decency and fairness which express the notions of justice of
English-speaking peoples even toward those charged with the most
heinous offenses."
Malinski v. New York, supra, at
324 U. S.
416-417. These standards of justice are not
authoritatively formulated anywhere as though they were specifics.
Due process of law is a summarized constitutional guarantee of
respect for those personal immunities which, as Mr. Justice Cardozo
twice wrote for the Court, are "so rooted in the traditions and
conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental,"
Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97,
291 U. S. 105,
or are "implicit in the concept of ordered liberty."
Palko v.
Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319,
302 U. S. 325.
[
Footnote 2]
The Court's function in the observance of this settled
conception of the Due Process Clause does not leave us without
adequate guides in subjecting State criminal procedures to
constitutional judgment. In dealing not with the machinery of
government, but with human rights, the absence of formal
exactitude, or want of fixity of meaning, is not an unusual, or
even regrettable, attribute of constitutional provisions. Words
being symbols do not speak without a gloss. On the one hand, the
gloss may be the deposit of history, whereby a term gains technical
content. Thus the requirements of the Sixth and Seventh Amendments
for trial by jury in the federal
Page 342 U. S. 170
courts have a rigid meaning. No changes or chances can alter the
content of the verbal symbol of "jury" -- a body of twelve men who
must reach a unanimous conclusion if the verdict is to go against
the defendant. [
Footnote 3] On
the other hand, the gloss of some of the verbal symbols of the
Constitution does not give them a fixed technical content. It
exacts a continuing process of application.
When the gloss has thus not been fixed, but is a function of the
process of judgment, the judgment is bound to fall differently at
different times and differently at the same time through different
judges. Even more specific provisions, such as the guaranty of
freedom of speech and the detailed protection against unreasonable
searches and seizures, have inevitably evoked as sharp divisions in
this Court as the least specific and most comprehensive protection
of liberties, the Due Process Clause.
The vague contours of the Due Process Clause do not leave judges
at large. [
Footnote 4] We may
not draw on our merely personal and private notions and disregard
the limits that bind judges in their judicial function. Even though
the concept of due process of law is not final and fixed, these
limits are derived from considerations that are fused in the whole
nature of or judicial process.
See Cardozo,
Page 342 U. S. 171
The Nature of the Judicial Process; The Growth of the Law; The
Paradoxes of Legal Science. These are considerations deeply rooted
in reason and in the compelling traditions of the legal profession.
The Due Process Clause places upon this Court the duty of
exercising a judgment, within the narrow confines of judicial power
in reviewing State convictions, upon interests of society pushing
in opposite directions.
Due process of law, thus conceived, is not to be derided as
resort to a revival of "natural law." [
Footnote 5] To believe that this judicial exercise of
judgment could be avoided by freezing "due process of law" at some
fixed stage of time or thought is to suggest that the most
important aspect of constitutional adjudication is a function for
inanimate machines, and not for judges, for whom the independence
safeguarded by Article III of the Constitution was designed and who
are presumably guided by established standards of judicial
behavior. Even cybernetics has not yet made that haughty claim. To
practice the requisite detachment and to achieve sufficient
objectivity no doubt demands of judges the habit of self-discipline
and self-criticism, incertitude that one's own views are
incontestable, and alert tolerance toward views not shared. But
Page 342 U. S. 172
these are precisely the presuppositions of our judicial process.
They are precisely the qualities society has a right to expect from
those entrusted with ultimate judicial power.
Restraints on our jurisdiction are self-imposed only in the
sense that there is from our decisions no immediate appeal short of
impeachment or constitutional amendment. But that does not make due
process of law a matter of judicial caprice. The faculties of the
Due Process Clause may be indefinite and vague, but the mode of
their ascertainment is not self-willed. In each case, "due process
of law" requires an evaluation based on a disinterested inquiry
pursued in the spirit of science, on a balanced order of facts
exactly and fairly stated, on the detached consideration of
conflicting claims,
see Hudson County Water Co. v.
McCarter, 209 U. S. 349,
209 U. S. 355,
on a judgment not
ad hoc and episodic, but duly mindful of
reconciling the needs both of continuity and of change in a
progressive society.
Applying these general considerations to the circumstances of
the present case, we are compelled to conclude that the proceedings
by which this conviction was obtained do more than offend some
fastidious squeamishness or private sentimentalism about combatting
crime too energetically. This is conduct that shocks the
conscience. Illegally breaking into the privacy of the petitioner,
the struggle to open his mouth and remove what was there, the
forcible extraction of his stomach's contents -- this course of
proceeding by agents of government to obtain evidence is bound to
offend even hardened sensibilities. They are methods too close to
the rack and the screw to permit of constitutional
differentiation.
It has long since ceased to be true that due process of law is
heedless of the means by which otherwise relevant and credible
evidence is obtained. This was not true even before the series of
recent cases enforced the constitutional principle that the States
may not base convictions upon
Page 342 U. S. 173
confessions, however much verified, obtained by coercion. These
decisions are not arbitrary exceptions to the comprehensive right
of States to fashion their own rules of evidence for criminal
trials. They are not sports in our constitutional law, but
applications of a general principle. They are only instances of the
general requirement that States, in their prosecutions, respect
certain decencies of civilized conduct. Due process of law, as a
historic and generative principle, precludes defining, and thereby
confining, these standards of conduct more precisely than to say
that convictions cannot be brought about by methods that offend "a
sense of justice."
See Mr. Chief Justice Hughes, speaking
for a unanimous Court in
Brown v. Mississippi,
297 U. S. 278,
297 U. S.
285-286. It would be a stultification of the
responsibility which the course of constitutional history has cast
upon this Court to hold that in order to convict a man the police
cannot extract by force what is in his mind but can extract what is
in his stomach. [
Footnote
6]
To attempt in this case to distinguish what lawyers call "real
evidence" from verbal evidence is to ignore the reasons for
excluding coerced confessions. Use of involuntary verbal
confessions in State criminal trials is constitutionally obnoxious
not only because of their unreliability. They are inadmissible
under the Due Process Clause even though statements contained in
them may be independently established as true. Coerced confessions
offend the community's sense of fair play and decency. So here, to
sanction the brutal conduct which, naturally enough, was condemned
by the court whose judgment is before us would be to afford
brutality the cloak of law. Nothing
Page 342 U. S. 174
would be more calculated to discredit law, and thereby to
brutalize the temper of a society.
In deciding this, case we do not heedlessly bring into question
decisions in many States dealing with essentially different, even
if related, problems. We therefore put to one side cases which have
arisen in the State courts through use of modern methods and
devices for discovering wrongdoers and bringing them to book. It
does not fairly represent these decisions to suggest that they
legalize force so brutal and so offensive to human dignity in
securing evidence from a suspect as is revealed by this record.
Indeed, the California Supreme Court has not sanctioned this mode
of securing a conviction. It merely exercised its discretion to
decline a review of the conviction. All the California judges who
have expressed themselves in this case have condemned the conduct
in the strongest language.
We are not unmindful that hypothetical situations can be
conjured up standing imperceptibly from the circumstances of this
case and, by gradations, producing practical differences despite
seemingly logical extensions. But the Constitution is "intended to
preserve practical and substantial rights, not to maintain
theories."
Davis v. Mills, 194 U.
S. 451,
194 U. S.
457.
On the facts of this case, the conviction of the petitioner has
been obtained by methods that offend the Due Process Clause. The
judgment below must be reversed.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE MINTON took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The petition for a hearing is addressed to the discretion of the
California Supreme Court, and a denial has apparently the same
significance as the denial of certiorari in this Court. Cal.Const.
Art. VI, §§ 4, 4c; "Rules on Appeal," Rules 28, 29, 36 Cal. 2d
24-25 (1951).
See 3 Stan.L.Rev. 243-269 (1951).
[
Footnote 2]
What is here summarized was deemed by a majority of the Court,
in
Malinski v. New York, 324 U. S. 401,
324 U. S. 412
and
324 U. S. 438,
to be "the controlling principles upon which this Court reviews on
constitutional grounds a state court conviction for crime." They
have been applied by this Court many times, long before and since
the
Malinski case.
[
Footnote 3]
This is the federal jury required constitutionally, although
England and at least half of the States have, in some civil cases,
juries which are composed of less than 12 or whose verdict may be
less than unanimous.
See County Courts Act, 1934, 24 &
25 Geo. V, c. 53, § 93; Arizona State Legislative Bureau,
Legislative Briefs No. 4, Grand and Petit Juries in the United
States, v-vi (Feb. 15, 1940); The Council of State Governments, The
Book of the States, 1950-1951, 515.
[
Footnote 4]
Burke's observations on the method of ascertaining law by judges
are pertinent:
"Your committee do not find any positive law which binds the
judges of the courts in Westminster-hall publicly to give a
reasoned opinion from the bench in support of their judgment upon
matters that are stated before them. But the course hath prevailed
from the oldest times. It hath been so general and so uniform that
it must be considered as the law of the land."
Report of the Committee of Managers on the Causes of the
Duration of Mr. Hastings' Trial, 4 Speeches of Edmund Burke (1816),
200-201.
And Burke had an answer for those who argue that the liberty of
the citizen cannot be adequately protected by the flexible
conception of due process of law:
". . . the English jurisprudence has not any other sure
foundation, nor consequently the lives and properties of the
subject any sure hold, but in the maxims, rules, and principles,
and juridical traditionary line of decisions. . . ."
Id. at 201.
[
Footnote 5]
Morris R. Cohen, "
Jus Naturale Redivivum," 25
Philosophical Review 761 (1916), and "Natural Rights and Positive
Law," Reason and Nature 401-426 (1631); F. Pollock, "The History of
the Law of Nature," Essays in the Law 31-79 (1922).
[
Footnote 6]
As to the difference between the privilege against
self-crimination protected, in federal prosecutions, under the
Fifth Amendment and the limitations which the Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment imposes upon the States against the use of
coerced confessions,
see Brown v. Mississippi, supra, 297
U.S. at
297 U. S.
285.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, concurring.
Adamson v. California, 332 U. S.
46,
332 U. S.
68-123, sets out reasons for my belief that state, as
well as federal, courts and law enforcement officers must obey the
Fifth Amendment's command that "No person . . . shall be
compelled
Page 342 U. S. 175
in any criminal case to be a witness against himself." I think a
person is compelled to be a witness against himself not only when
he is compelled to testify, but also when as here, incriminating
evidence is forcibly taken from him by a contrivance of modern
science.
Cf. Boyd v. United States, 116 U.
S. 616;
Counselman v. Hitchcock, 142 U.
S. 547,
142 U. S. 562;
Bram v. United States, 168 U. S. 532;
Chambers v. Florida, 309 U. S. 227.
California convicted this petitioner by using against him evidence
obtained in this manner, and I agree with MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS that
the case should be reversed on this ground.
In the view of a majority of the Court, however, the Fifth
Amendment imposes no restraint of any kind on the states. They
nevertheless hold that California's use of this evidence violated
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Since they hold
as I do in this case, I regret my inability to accept their
interpretation without protest. But I believe that faithful
adherence to the specific guarantees in the Bill of Rights insures
a more permanent protection of individual liberty than that which
can be afforded by the nebulous standards stated by the
majority.
What the majority hold is that the Due Process Clause empowers
this Court to nullify any state law if its application "shocks the
conscience," offends "a sense of justice," or runs counter to the
"decencies of civilized conduct." The majority emphasize that these
statements do not refer to their own consciences, or to their
senses of justice and decency. For we are told that "we may not
draw on our merely personal and private notions"; our judgment must
be grounded on "considerations deeply rooted in reason and in the
compelling traditions of the legal profession." We are further
admonished to measure the validity of state practices not by our
reason or by the traditions of the legal profession, but by "the
community's sense of fair play and decency"; by the "traditions and
conscience of our people"; or by "those canons of decency and
fairness
Page 342 U. S. 176
which express the notions of justice of English-speaking
peoples." These canons are made necessary, it is said, because of
"interests of society pushing in opposite directions."
If the Due Process Clause does vest this Court with such
unlimited power to invalidate laws, I am still in doubt as to why
we should consider only the notions of English-speaking peoples to
determine what are immutable and fundamental principles of justice.
Moreover, one may well ask what avenues of investigation are open
to discover "canons" of conduct so universally favored that this
Court should write them into the Constitution? All we are told is
that the discovery must be made by an "evaluation based on a
disinterested inquiry pursued in the spirit of science, on a
balanced order of facts."
Some constitutional provisions are stated in absolute and
unqualified language, such, for illustration, as the First
Amendment, stating that no law shall be passed prohibiting the free
exercise of religion or abridging the freedom of speech or press.
Other constitutional provisions do require courts to choose between
competing policies, such as the Fourth Amendment, which, by its
terms, necessitates a judicial decision as to what is an
"unreasonable" search or seizure. There is, however, no express
constitutional language granting judicial power to invalidate every
state law of every kind deemed "unreasonable" or contrary to the
Court's notion of civilized decencies; yet the constitutional
philosophy used by the majority has, in the past, been used to deny
a state the right to fix the price of gasoline,
Williams v.
Standard Oil Co. of Louisiana, 278 U.
S. 235; and even the right to prevent bakers from
palming off smaller for larger loaves of bread,
Jay Burns
Baking Co. v. Bryan, 264 U. S. 504.
These cases, and others, [
Footnote
2/1]
Page 342 U. S. 177
show the extent to which the evanescent standards of the
majority's philosophy have been used to nullity state legislative
programs passed to suppress evil economic practices. What
paralyzing role this same philosophy will play in the future
economic affairs of this country is impossible to predict. Of even
graver concern, however, is the use of the philosophy to nullify
the Bill of Rights. I long ago concluded that the accordion-like
qualities of this philosophy must inevitably imperil all the
individual liberty safeguards specifically enumerated in the Bill
of Rights. [
Footnote 2/2]
Reflection and recent decisions [
Footnote 2/3] of this Court sanctioning abridgment of
the freedom of speech and press have strengthened this
conclusion.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See n. 12 of dissenting opinion,
Adamson v.
California, supra, at p.
332 U. S.
83.
[
Footnote 2/2]
E.g., Adamson v. California, supra, and cases cited in
the dissent.
[
Footnote 2/3]
American Communications Ass'n v. Douds, 339 U.
S. 382;
Feiner v. New York, 340 U.
S. 315;
Dennis v. United States, 341 U.
S. 494.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, concurring.
The evidence obtained from this accused's stomach would be
admissible in the majority of states where the question has been
raised. [
Footnote 3/1] So far as
the reported cases reveal, the only states which would probably
exclude the evidence would be Arkansas, Iowa, Michigan, and
Missouri. [
Footnote 3/2]
Page 342 U. S. 178
Yet the Court now says that the rule which the majority of the
states have fashioned violates the "decencies of civilized
conduct." To that, I cannot agree. It is a rule formulated by
responsible courts with judges as sensitive as we are to the proper
standards for law administration.
As an original matter, it might be debatable whether the
provision in the Fifth Amendment that no person "shall be compelled
in any criminal case to be a witness against himself" serves the
ends of justice. Not all civilized legal procedures recognize it.
[
Footnote 3/3] But the choice was
made by the Framers, a choice which sets a standard for legal
trials in this country. The Framers made it
Page 342 U. S. 179
a standard of due process for prosecutions by the Federal
Government. If it is a requirement of due process for a trial in
the federal courthouse, it is impossible for me to say it is not a
requirement of due process for a trial in the state courthouse.
That was the issue recently surveyed in
Adamson v.
California, 332 U. S. 46. The
Court rejected the view that compelled testimony should be
excluded, and held, in substance, that the accused in a state trial
can be forced to testify against himself. I disagree. Of course, an
accused can be compelled to be present at the trial, to stand, to
sit, to turn this way or that, and to try on a cap or a coat.
See Holt v. United States, 218 U.
S. 245,
218 U. S.
252-253. But I think that words taken from his lips,
capsules taken from his stomach, blood taken from his veins, are
all inadmissible provided they are taken from him without his
consent. They are inadmissible because of the command of the Fifth
Amendment.
That is an unequivocal, definite and workable rule of evidence
for state and federal courts. But we cannot, in fairness, free the
state courts from that command and yet excoriate them for flouting
the "decencies of civilized conduct" when they admit the evidence.
That is to make the rule turn not on the Constitution, but on the
idiosyncrasies of the judges who sit here.
The damage of the view sponsored by the Court in this case may
not be conspicuous here. But it is part of the same philosophy that
produced
Betts v. Brady, 316 U. S. 455,
denying counsel to an accused in a state trial against the command
of the Sixth Amendment, and
Wolf v. Colorado, 338 U. S.
25, allowing evidence obtained as a result of a search
and seizure that is illegal under the Fourth Amendment to be
introduced in a state trial. It is part of the process of erosion
of civil rights of the citizen in recent years.
[
Footnote 3/1]
See People v. One 1941 Mercury Sedan, 74 Cal. App. 2d
199, 168 P.2d 443 (pumping of accused's stomach to recover
swallowed narcotic);
Rochin v. California, 101 Cal. App.
2d 140, 225 P.2d 1 (pumping of accused's stomach to recover
swallowed narcotic);
People v. Tucker, 88 Cal. App. 2d
333, 198 P.2d 941 (blood test to determine intoxication);
State v. Ayres, 70 Idaho 18, 211 P.2d 142 (blood test to
determine intoxication);
Davis v. State, 189 Md. 640, 57
A.2d 289 (blood typing to link accused with murder);
Skidmore
v. State, 59 Nev. 320, 92 P.2d 979 (examination of accused for
venereal disease);
State v. Sturtevant, 96 N.H. 99, 70
A.2d 909 (blood test to determine intoxication);
State v.
Alexander, 7 N.J. 585,
83 A.2d
441 (blood typing to establish guilt);
State v.
Gatton, 60 Ohio App. 192 (commenting on refusal to submit to
blood test or urinalysis to determine intoxication);
State v.
Nutt, 78 Ohio App. 336, 65 N.E.2d 675 (commenting on refusal
to submit to urinalysis to determine intoxication);
but cf.
Booker v. City of Cincinnati, 1 Ohio Supp. 152 (examination
and urinalysis to determine intoxication);
State v. Cram,
176 Or. 577, 160 P.2d 283 (blood test to determine intoxication);
Commonwealth v. Statti, 166 Pa.Super. 577, 73 A.2d 688
(blood typing linking accused to assault).
[
Footnote 3/2]
Bethel v. State, 178 Ark. 277, 10 S.W.2d 370
(examination for venereal disease);
State v. Height, 117
Iowa 650, 91 N.W. 935 (examination for venereal disease);
State
v. Weltha, 228 Iowa 519, 292 N.W. 148 (blood test to determine
intoxication, limiting rules on search and seizure);
but cf.
State v. Benson, 230 Iowa 1168, 300 N.W. 275 (comment on
refusal to submit to blood test to determine intoxication);
People v. Corder, 244 Mich. 274, 221 N.W. 309 (examination
for venereal disease);
but see People v. Placido, 310
Mich. 404, 408, 17 N.W.2d 230, 232;
State v. Newcomb, 220
Mo. 54, 119 S.W. 405 (examination for venereal disease);
State
v. Matsinger, Mo., 180 S.W. 856 (examination for venereal
disease).
[
Footnote 3/3]
See Ploscowe, The Investigating Magistrate in European
Criminal Procedure, 33 Mich.L.Rev. 1010 (1935).