Birge, Dominick, and Coats were indicted for hindering apprehension and punishment of a criminal by *736 destroying the case file of the Carrollton Pоlice Department dealing with charges of possession of marijuana by Birge’s son. Dominick and Coats plead guilty. Birge was tried, convictеd and sentenced to three years in prison. Birge appeals. Held:
1. On the hearing of Birge’s jury challenge, the only evidence as to the сomposition of the jury panels was the opinion testimony of a statistician. The trial court, as trier of fact, was free to rejeсt this expert testimony.
Hays v. State,
2. When the investigation of law enforcement agencies led them to Dominick, he confessed and implicated Birgе. To determine the truth of allegations regarding Birge, Dominick agreed to have an electronic transmitting device concealed on his person. With the device in place Dominick participated in conversations with Coats, Birge, and Birge’s secretary which law enforcement officers monitored from a distance and recorded. There was no court order authorizing electronic eаvesdropping, and Birge contends that eavesdropping was therefore illegal.
Birge challenges the construction of Code Ann. § 26-3001 (Gа. L. 1968, pp. 1249, 1327, since amended, Ga. L. 1976, p. 1100) set forth in a two-judge opinion in
Cross v. State,
In Cross v. State, supra, a police officer was told by his informer that a certain Johnson wanted to reach him. The officer contacted Johnson and arranged to meet him. Prior to the meeting an electronic transmitting dеvice was concealed upon the person of the officer. During the meeting Johnson’s offer to bribe the officer was recеived and recorded by other officers. The opinion which sets *737 forth the law of that case held that the prohibitions set forth in Code Ann. § 26-3001, suprа, relate only to one who is not a party to the conversation itself and that those prohibitions were inapposite there. The special concurrence suggests that the language of the majority opinion was overly broad but the judgment correct becаuse the facts were covered by Code § 26-3006 (Ga. L. 1968, pp. 1249, 1333).
Examination of the New Criminal Code, Invasions of Privacy, Ch. 26-30 (Ga. L. 1968, pp. 1249, 1327-1334) reveals the enactment of criminal provisions prohibiting certain invasions of privacy within this state. The various Code sections of this Chapter (Ch. 26-30) must be construed together in order to determine the intent of the legislature.
Seaboard C. L. R. Co. v. Blackmon,
We believe Code Ann. § 26-3001, supra, is a general prohibition of invasion of privacy ■ which relates to all persons without regard to whether they are parties to the conversation itself. This construction gives meaning and effect to all provisions of Code Ch. 26-30. It is true that one does not "intercept” or "overhear” a conversation which is mаde directly to him, but one may "transmit” or "record” that message. In construing a statute, great weight must be given to the plain meaning of the words used in an effort to determine the intent of the legislature.
Garren v. Southland Corp.,
The decision in
Cross v. State,
supra, places
*738
considerable reliance upon the similarity of its construсtion of Code Ann. § 26-3001, supra, and the minimum protection of privacy provided by the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States (Code Ann. § 1-804; USCA Const. Amеnd. 14) as construed in United States v. White,
Unlike
Ansley v. State,
3. However, the Supreme Court
in Mitchell v. State,
Unlike Mitchell v. State, supra, this case does not deal with a citizen being prosecuted for a criminal offense *739 where he has presumаbly relied upon an appellate court decision. Therefore, we lack clear guidance upon this issue from the Supreme Court, it appearing that three justices would adopt Cross v. State (a Court of Appeals case), while three would reject Cross, and the seventh has expressed no opinion.
Examining the question in the absence of certain guidance from the Supreme Cоurt we note that the rejection of the Cross v. State decision does not deny law enforcement agents the use of electronic eavesdropping devices under appropriate circumstances and control. See Code Ann. § 26-3004 (Ga. L. 1972, p. 615; 1972, pp. 952, 953). We believe that the intent of the legislature is best revealed by the plain language of the statute as examined in this opinion, and we agree with the statement of Justice Ingram in his special concurrence that the General Assembly meant what it said in the statute. Inasmuch as the opinion of the Supreme Court, which certainly should control, is indefinite and uncertain, we must apply to that decision our interpretation which makes it compatible with the statutory law. We reverse the judgment of the lower court as the electronic eavesdropping evidence should have been suppressed.
Judgment reversed.
