Rigoberto CASO, Petitioner,
v.
STATE of Florida, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
Bennett H. Brummer, Public Defender, and Lisa Berlow-Lehner, Sp. Asst. Public Defender, Miami, for petitioner.
Robert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen., and Michael J. Neimand and Julie S. Thornton, Asst. Attys. Gen., Miami, for respondent.
EHRLICH, Justice.
We have for review Caso v. State,
On May 12, 1983, Norma Montecdino and Luis Murgado were murdered at a residence in Hialeah, Florida. On or about July 7, 1983, the Hialeah Police Department received information from at least one confidential informant that Caso, as the "wheelman," had participated in the crime with two other individuals. Based upon this information, two detectives went to Caso's place of employment in October of 1983, displayed identification and asked if Caso would voluntarily go to the police station and talk to them. Caso asked his employer if this would be okay and then agreed to go. Caso asked the detectives how he would return to work and one of the detectives informed Caso that he would take him back.
After arriving at the police station, Caso was taken to an interrogation room where officers confronted him with the information they had gathered that implicated him in the crime. Caso was then presented with an advice of rights form which did not *423 advise him of the right to appointed counsel at the state's expense if he could not afford an attorney. The officers testified that Caso eventually verified the information that the detectives already had and was then returned to his place of employment. The interrogating detectives then proceeded to the State Attorney's office, where they related the information that they had obtained from Caso to the Assistant State Attorney in charge of the investigation. A warrant was then issued for Caso's arrest.
Caso's defense counsel objected at trial to the testimony of the detectives that revealed the confession. The objection was based upon the inadequacy of the advice of rights form, which failed to state that an attorney would be appointed if the defendant could not afford one. The prosecuting attorney responded that Caso was not in custody and Miranda warnings were therefore not required. The trial court stated: "That's not so. Any time you are going to formally interrogate somebody that's a suspect ... I think you have to be in custody." Although finding that Caso was in custody at the time of the interrogation and the advice of rights form could have been better, the trial court concluded that the confession was voluntary and made with full knowledge of his rights. The jury found Caso guilty of two counts of second-degree murder and one count of burglary of a structure. Caso was sentenced to two concurrent terms of life imprisonment.
On appeal, the district court noted that the trial court's finding that Caso was in custody was supported by substantial competent evidence.
Whether the decision in Alvord v. State,322 So.2d 533 (Fla. 1975), holding admissible in the State's case-in-chief the defendant's confession obtained in a post-Miranda custodial interrogation and in the absence of advice regarding the defendant's right to appointed counsel if he could not afford an attorney, should be reexamined in light of Oregon v. Elstad,470 U.S. 298 [105 S.Ct. 1285 ,84 L.Ed.2d 222 ] (1985).
We answer the certified question in the affirmative.
We first address the issue of whether Caso was in custody at the time of questioning by the detectives. In Miranda, the United States Supreme Court established a procedural safeguard to protect an individual's fifth amendment privilege against compelled self-incrimination from the coercive pressures of custodial interrogation. Miranda v. Arizona,
The statements by the trial judge regarding custody in the present case indicate that the judge felt Caso was in custody because he was a suspect and was being questioned by the police. Therefore, we agree with the state that the trial court's finding of custody was not based upon proper analysis. We decline, however, to accept the state's argument that because the trial court failed to apply the correct standard in determining the issue of custody the trial court's decision cannot be sustained. A conclusion or decision of a trial court will generally be affirmed, even when based on erroneous reasoning, if the evidence or an alternative theory supports it. See Applegate v. Barnett Bank of Tallahassee,
The state relies upon the decisions of the United States Supreme Court in Beheler,
As to the question certified by the district court below, Caso contends that this Court's opinion in Alvord signified a marked departure from established state and federal precedent in which it had consistently been ruled that a defendant's custodial confession, given without the full Miranda warning, was inadmissible in the state's case-in-chief. Caso argues that it is clear from the decisions in Oregon v. Elstad,
In reaching the decision in Alvord v. State, this Court relied on Michigan v. Tucker, in which the United States Supreme Court was "asked to extend the Wong Sun fruits doctrine to suppress the testimony of a witness for the prosecution whose identity was discovered as the result of a statement taken from the accused without benefit of full Miranda warnings." Oregon v. Elstad,
The Supreme Court stated that the "procedural safeguards [in Miranda] were not themselves rights protected by the Constitution but were instead measures to insure that the right against compulsory self-incrimination was protected."
Because there was no controlling precedent regarding the issue of admissibility of the "fruits" of a confession obtained without full Miranda warnings, the Tucker Court examined the matter as a question of principle. The two principles that governed were the deterrent effect on police conduct and protection of courts from untrustworthy evidence. The Tucker Court concluded that "[w]hatever deterrent effect on future police conduct the exclusion of those statements may have had, we do not believe it would be significantly augmented by excluding the testimony of the witness Henderson as well."
It was from the analysis of the deterrent value in suppressing the witness's testimony that the Alvord opinion drew support. The Tucker Court's discussion of the additional deterrent of suppressing the fruit of the Miranda violation, however, provides no support for admitting the confession itself. As Justice Rehnquist noted in Tucker, it was significant that the "statements actually made by respondent to the police ... were excluded at trial in accordance with Johnson v. New Jersey,
Further support for the conclusion that this Court may have misinterpreted Michigan v. Tucker in the Alvord decision is found in Oregon v. Elstad, a recent decision of the United States Supreme Court. Justice O'Connor, in an overview of the Miranda exclusionary rule, noted that the fifth amendment only prohibits the use of compelled testimony by the prosecution in its case in chief, but stated that the "[f]ailure to administer Miranda warnings creates a presumption of compulsion. Consequently, unwarned statements that are otherwise voluntary within the meaning of the fifth amendment must nevertheless be excluded from evidence under Miranda. Thus, in the individual case, Miranda's preventive medicine provides a remedy even to the defendant who has suffered no identifiable constitutional harm."
The erroneous admission of statements obtained in violation of Miranda rights is subject to harmless error analysis. Kight v. State,
Accordingly, we quash the decision below affirming Caso's conviction and remand to the district court with directions to remand the case to the trial court for a new trial.
It is so ordered.
OVERTON, SHAW, BARKETT, GRIMES and KOGAN, JJ., concur.
McDONALD, C.J., dissents.
