Lead Opinion
*267**179The State is prosecuting Andrea Elliott for driving under the influence of alcohol. When Elliott was arrested, she refused to submit to a breath test. Georgia statutes allow the State to use her refusal against her in her criminal trial, and the State has sought to do precisely that. The United States Supreme Court has held that the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution does not bar the State from using such a refusal, in part because the Fifth Amendment gives Elliott no right to refuse to act in the first place. But we have held - and hold again today - that the protection against compelled self-incrimination provided by Article I, Section I, Paragraph XVI of the Georgia Constitution does afford the right to refuse such a test. So Elliott argues to us that Paragraph XVI gives her the protection that the Fifth Amendment does not, and thus renders invalid the portions **180of the statutes allowing her refusal to be admitted against her. We agree.
In Olevik v. State,
After a review of the undisputed facts, we begin by reviewing three principles that guide our constitutional interpretation in this case. Turning then to the State's argument that we should overrule Olevik, a careful application of those interpretive principles leads us to adhere to Olevik . We properly interpreted Paragraph XVI in the light of this Court's consistent holdings that Paragraph XVI's materially identical precursors protected defendants from being compelled to perform affirmative acts. We then review the relevant history and case law regarding admission of a defendant's refusal to act and the drawing of adverse inferences therefrom. We conclude that although the pre-Revolution English common-law right against self-incrimination did not preclude admission of defendants' refusals to incriminate themselves or adverse inferences therefrom, legal developments in the United States and specifically *268in Georgia in the years leading up to and around the time of the adoption of the 1877 Constitution demonstrate that the original public meaning of the 1877 Constitution's precursor to Paragraph XVI (the "1877 Provision") did preclude the admission of such evidence. Finding no basis to conclude that the meaning of Paragraph XVI itself as adopted in 1983 is different in that respect, we conclude that the Georgia statute permitting admission of Elliott's refusal violates Paragraph XVI.
I. Background
The relevant facts are not in dispute. In August 2015, a police officer stopped Elliott after observing her commit several traffic **181violations, including a failure to maintain her lane. During the stop, Elliott admitted to consuming alcohol earlier that day. After smelling the odor of alcohol and observing several signs of impairment, including several clues during a field sobriety test, the officer arrested Elliott for DUI and other traffic offenses and read her the statutorily mandated implied consent notice. See OCGA § 40-5-67.1 (b).
II. Principles of Georgia constitutional interpretation
Both Elliott's arguments challenging the denial of her motion to suppress evidence of her refusal and the State's arguments that we should reconsider our decision in Olevik require us to begin by reviewing some important principles that guide our interpretation of the Georgia Constitution in this case.
We have often explained that we interpret the Georgia Constitution according to its original public meaning. And, of course, the Georgia Constitution that we interpret today is the Constitution of 1983; the original public meaning of that Constitution is the public meaning it had at the time of its ratification in 1982. But many of the provisions of the Constitution of 1983 first originated in an earlier **182Georgia constitution; unlike the United States, the State of Georgia has had ten constitutions since declaring independence from Great Britain.
A. The presumption of constitutional continuity.
Original public meaning is an interpretive principle that we apply to each of our constitutions. See Padelford, Fay & Co. v. Mayor and Aldermen of City of Savannah,
B. A constitutional clause that is readopted into a new constitution and that has received a consistent and definitive construction is presumed to carry the same meaning as that consistent construction.
A second interpretive implication arises from applying an original public meaning analysis to a constitutional provision that has been readopted without material change in multiple constitutions, and this principle involves our interpretations of the previous constitutions. In Olevik, we reasoned that "history compel[led] our conclusion" that Paragraph XVI protected individuals from being forced to perform incriminating acts.
We have long applied this interpretative approach. In McKnight v. City of Decatur,
Soon after our decision in McKnight, we explained the presumption that the framers of a new constitution are not only aware of the provisions of the earlier constitution, but when
[they] adopt provisions contained in a former Constitution, to which a certain construction has been given, [they] are presumed as a general rule to have intended that these provisions should have the meaning attributed to them under the earlier instrument.
**185Thompson v. Talmadge,
*271Griffin v. Vandegriff,
Many of our sister states apply a similar principle. See, e.g., Fla. Dept. of Revenue v. City of Gainesville,
**186The State takes issue with this principle, arguing that its implications would prevent us from ever reconsidering previous decisions no matter how wrong. But our long-standing articulation of this principle is not so restrictive. Indeed, in one of the first cases referring to this principle, we expressly rejected the notion that we could never reconsider such precedent. See Thompson,
The State also argues that this principle should apply only when constitutional text is ambiguous, citing statements from this Court more than 166 years ago that the first rule of construction is that an unambiguous statute *272or provision "stands self-interpreted, and Courts have nothing to do but to enforce it." Neal v. Moultrie,
The State is wrong; when we determine the meaning of a particular word or phrase in a constitutional provision or statute, we consider text in context, not in isolation. See Chan v. Ellis,
C. Georgia constitutional provisions may confer greater, fewer, or the same rights as similar provisions of the United States Constitution, and decisions of the United States Supreme Court interpreting those similar provisions are persuasive in our interpretation of the Georgia Constitution only to the extent that those decisions are rooted in shared history, language, and context.
When we consider the meaning of a provision of the United States Constitution, we faithfully apply the decisions of the United States Supreme Court as to the meaning of that provision. Such a faithful application is not an act of judgment on our part; it is an act of obedience. But when the provision we consider is a provision of the Georgia Constitution, our approach is different.
When interpreting a provision of our Constitution that parallels a provision of the United States Constitution, we should take seriously decisions of the United States Supreme Court that have interpreted that parallel provision. And here, the federal self-incrimination clause of the Fifth Amendment, see U.S. Const. Amend. V ("No person ... shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself[.]"), is similar to the state self-incrimination clause of Paragraph XVI ("No person shall be compelled to give testimony tending in any manner to be self-incriminating."). But we owe those federal decisions no obedience when interpreting our own Constitution. "Questions of the construction of the State Constitution are strictly matters for the highest court of this State. The construction of similar federal constitutional provisions, though persuasive authority, is not binding on this State's construction of its own **188Constitution." Pope v. City of Atlanta,
This is scarcely a Georgia-specific idea. State constitutional rights were "meant to be and remain genuine guarantees against misuse of the state's governmental powers, truly independent of the rising and falling tides of federal case law both in method and in specifics."
*273State v. Kennedy,
And so, as we have previously explained, any decision about the scope of a provision of the Georgia Constitution must be "rooted in the language, history, and context" of that provision. Olevik,
With these guiding principles in mind, we should not simply recite holdings of the United States Supreme Court regarding the Fifth Amendment and uncritically import them into our interpretation of Paragraph XVI of the Georgia Constitution. Rather, we must first discern the original public meaning of Paragraph XVI in order to **189address the merits of the parties' arguments. See Olevik,
III. We adhere to our decision in Olevik .
Olevik posed the question of whether Paragraph XVI's mandate that "[n]o person shall be compelled to give testimony tending in any manner to be self-incriminating" applied to chemical breath tests. 302 Ga. at 235 (2) (c),
Unhappy with our decision in Olevik and its potential implications, the State has, in this case and in other appeals currently before the Court, asked us to reconsider our decision in Olevik. In this case, the State does not challenge our conclusion in Olevik that the sustained strong blowing necessary for a breath test properly is analyzed as an affirmative act. Instead, the State challenges the holding itself, arguing that this Court's decisions in Day and Calhoun were wrong because they contravened the plain meaning of the word "testimony" found in the constitutional *274self-incrimination provision, and because their reasons for expanding the scope of the right to include affirmative acts was based on a misunderstanding of the common-law right from which the constitutional right is derived. The State also argues that this Court stands alone in affording protection to incriminating acts, and we should start over with our **190interpretation of Paragraph XVI according to the plain meaning of its text - without considering the prior constructions given to the right against compelled self-incrimination - because the 1983 Constitution was a "new" constitution that was meant as a departure from established jurisprudence. The State concludes that a plain reading of Paragraph XVI would limit the right against compelled self-incrimination to only oral and written testimony, which would be coterminous with the Fifth Amendment's self-incrimination right.
Undertaking that review, we conclude that, although the scope of the common-law right against compelled self-incrimination is indeed debatable, our case law around the time the 1877 Provision was adopted had extended the right to more than oral and written testimony. That case law included our decision in Day, which research reveals was not out of step with other courts that considered the issue around the same time. Indeed, the right against compelled self-incrimination was previously understood in many courts, including federal courts, to be more expansive than it is now. The fact that most of those jurisdictions have since narrowed the scope of the right against compelled self-incrimination does not require that we do the same for Paragraph XVI. We have consistently and definitively construed the right against compelled self-incrimination to bar compelled acts, and there is nothing about Paragraph XVI that rebuts the presumption that the scope of the right remains unchanged.
A. The common-law right against compelled self-incrimination arose from a limited context, but evolved considerably from the time of the founding of the Republic to Georgia's constitutionalization of the doctrine in 1877.
The right against compelled self-incrimination borrowed heavily from England's common law of criminal procedure. See Charles Gardner Geyh, The Testimonial Component of the Right Against Self-Incrimination ,
**191Despite the importance placed on this essential right during the founding era, the scope of the right historically is not entirely clear and has been the subject of considerable debate. See, e.g., John Fabian Witt, Making the Fifth: The Constitutionalization of American Self-Incrimination Doctrine, 1791-1903 ,
*275(i) Given the nature of criminal procedure in pre-Revolution England, the common-law right arose in a limited context, finding its roots in objections to compelled self-incrimination through torture or required oaths.
The conventional view (which long ago found its way into our case law) is that the right against compelled self-incrimination is modeled on the maxims nemo tenetur seipsum accusare and nemo tenetur seipsum prodere (either of which might be translated, "no man is bound to accuse himself"). See Calhoun,
Common-law courts at some point began to apply this principle as giving rise to a right that "no man was bound to incriminate himself" on "any charge" or "in any court[.]" See Davis,
(ii) Outside of the context of torture or compulsory oaths, the right against compelled self-incrimination was of limited value at common law in England and the American colonies.
Nonetheless, any right against compelled self-incrimination had minimal value in the criminal justice systems of pre-colonial Britain and the American colonies, given pretrial investigatory procedures, defendants' legal incompetence to testify under oath, and defendants' inability to rely on counsel to make their case for them. See Moglen, 92 Mich. L. Rev. at 1092-1093, 1104. Early colonial pretrial procedure was based on British statutes that required a defendant to be examined after apprehension. See, e.g., Amar & Lettow, 93 Mich. L. Rev. at 897. When an accusation was made, a magistrate or justice of the peace would conduct a preliminary examination of the defendant, but not under oath; the defendant's statements and admissions were used at a later criminal trial; and if he refused to answer questions, his refusal could be admitted for whatever inferences might be drawn from his refusal. See Amar &
*276Lettow, 93 Mich. L. Rev. at 897-898 ; Langbein, 92 Mich. L. Rev. at 1059-1062. This practice continued in England without modification until 1848, when Parliament provided **193that the accused must be advised that he need not answer and warned that what he said might be used against him. See Levy, supra, at 375; Langbein, 92 Mich. L. Rev. at 1061.
Defendants' incompetence to testify under oath - as well as their need to defend themselves without the aid of lawyers - made questions about the breadth of the right against compelled self-incrimination somewhat "metaphysical" as a matter of English common law through the time of the founding of America. See De Luna v. United States,
The practice of magistrates questioning accused perpetrators before trial continued in our new Republic, with suspects' silence continuing to be introduced against them at trial at least until the mid-1800s. See Mitchell,
As in England, American criminal defendants in the years after the founding could not testify under oath but were nonetheless forced to defend themselves at trial without counsel. It was only in 1859, beginning with Maine, that American states began permitting criminal defendants to give sworn testimony, with every state except Georgia allowing such testimony by the end of the century. See Ferguson v. Georgia,
(iii) The right against compelled self-incrimination took on increased value - and greater scope - in the early years of the Republic, as the criminal justice system changed.
Although English criminal practices, as well as the English common law's narrow view of the right against compelled self-incrimination, carried over into the American colonies, American law and practice in this regard evolved considerably in the decades leading up to Georgia's adoption of a constitutional provision against compelled self-incrimination in 1877. For one thing, the nature of the privileges that comprised the common-law right against self-incrimination - the witness privilege rule, the confession rule, the rule barring defendants from testifying under oath, and the rule disqualifying *277interested parties from testifying
Abolition of the rule against criminal defendants testifying under oath came with a parallel trend. Most states, at the same time they granted defendants the ability to testify, prohibited comment by the prosecution on the accused's failure to do so. See, e.g., Ferguson,
**195statement at trial. See, e.g., Bird v. State,
In addition, the increased availability of defense counsel strengthened the right against compelled self-incrimination, as defendants could remain silent and let counsel defend them. Langbein, 92 Mich. L. Rev. at 1068-1071 ; Amar & Lettow, 93 Mich. L. Rev. at 897. It is against this backdrop - in which a longstanding right took on new importance in changing circumstances - that Georgia adopted the 1877 Provision.
B. The scope of the right against compelled self-incrimination originally covered more than oral testimony.
As discussed above, some states and the federal government constitutionalized the right against compelled self-incrimination soon after the Revolution. The state constitutions contained bills or declarations of rights that phrased their clauses in terms of a right not to be compelled to "give evidence" or to "furnish evidence." See United States v. Hubbell,
**196See *278Olevik,
(i) Our precedent prior to passage of the 1877 Constitution described the scope of the right as protecting "any evidence."
Prior to the adoption of a provision on self-incrimination in the 1877 Constitution, Georgia courts described the right against compelled self-incrimination as forbidding a "man ... to accuse himself of **197any crime, or to furnish any evidence to convict himself of any crime[.]" Marshall v. Riley,
Day's language mirrors language used in our decisions issued prior to the 1877 Constitution, and the temporal proximity of these decisions to adoption of the 1877 Constitution make them critical indicators of the original public meaning of the self-incrimination protections of that constitution. See District of Columbia v. Heller,
(ii) Around the time Day was decided, the United States Supreme Court construed the Fifth Amendment as covering more than oral testimony.
In 1886, less than 10 years after passage of the 1877 Constitution, the United States Supreme Court unanimously held that compelling production of a defendant's private papers to be used as evidence against him was equivalent to compelling him to be a witness against himself in violation of the Fifth Amendment. See Boyd v. United States,
Boyd was about the compelled production of existing documents, and said nothing about compelling a person to act. The United States Supreme Court later rejected the view that the Fifth Amendment protected affirmative acts, see Holt v. United States,
(iii) Other states had interpreted their self-incrimination clauses to protect affirmative acts.
If the construction of the Fifth Amendment today is narrower than it was in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, today's construction of many states' constitutional provisions has narrowed even further - they now largely mirror the Supreme Court's present interpretation of the Fifth Amendment, but began more broadly than the Fifth Amendment was ever interpreted. Despite the State's claim here that Georgia's broad self-incrimination protection is a unique outlier in this country and in other countries that have followed English common law, that same rule was quite ordinary a century ago. See Amar & Lettow, 93 Mich. L. Rev. at 884 ("[M]any courts in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries held that using the defendant's body as physical evidence was in effect compelling the defendant to be a witness against himself."); Geyh, 36 Cath. U. L. Rev. at 621-22 ("[A] majority of courts addressing the issue were of the opinion that the right to refuse to give evidence, to be a witness, or to testify ... meant that the accused cannot be compelled to do or say anything" that was incriminating (citation and punctuation omitted)).
From the middle of the nineteenth century through the middle of the twentieth century, at least nine states, including three of our neighboring states (Alabama, North Carolina, and Tennessee), concluded that defendants could not be compelled to perform affirmative acts that were incriminating; many of these jurisdictions cited their state constitutional provision or the common law. See, e.g., Allen v. State,
**200Beachem v. State,
Forty years after recognizing that affirmative acts were protected under the state's constitutional protection against compelled self-incrimination, the Oklahoma Criminal Court of Appeals held that the results of involuntary chemical testing in a DUI case would be inadmissible as violative of the state's constitutional self-incrimination clause that was "broad enough to encompass more than just oral testimony," and ruled that the court properly instructed the jury not to consider the results of the test if it found that the defendant did not voluntary submit to such testing. See Cox v. State,
(iv) The meaning of our constitutional right against compelled self-incrimination does not change simply because that of other jurisdictions has changed.
In the light of the history described above, the State's sweeping pronouncements that Day and Calhoun were uniquely out of step with the rest of the country are simply wrong. And though many jurisdictions have since abandoned their affirmative-acts standard in favor of a right that is limited to the present scope of the Fifth Amendment,
And although the United States Supreme Court has said that the Fifth Amendment *282does not apply to affirmative acts, see, e.g., **202United States v. Wade,
Similarly, we reject the State's argument that our jurisprudence is at odds with foreign jurisdictions that have adopted English common law and we should therefore conform to the prevailing view. Of course, we may consider other jurisdictions' definition of a right that is rooted in English common law, but only to the extent those jurisdictions consider the original public meaning of those rights based on shared language, history, and context. It is the role of this Court, not the United States Supreme Court, other states' courts, or courts of foreign countries, to construe the meaning of the Georgia Constitution in the light of its particular language, history, and context.
C. Olevik properly applied the consistent and definitive construction presumption .
The State argues that we were wrong in Olevik to give Paragraph XVI of the 1983 Constitution the same meaning that we had given to the materially identical clause in the constitutions of 1877, 1945, and 1976. First, the State argues that we misapplied the prior construction canon referenced in Olevik because the canon applies only to ambiguous provisions, which the State argues Paragraph XVI is not. We rejected this argument above in Division II (B) and need not address it further. Second, the State argues that we should have interpreted Paragraph XVI according to its plain, literal meaning divorced from our prior precedent on the right against compelled self-incrimination, because the Constitution of 1983 was meant as a "new" constitution that should be interpreted on its own terms. We reject the State's arguments. Olevik rightly applied the presumption that flowed from this consistent and definitive construction, because, as is explained below, there is no evidence that Paragraph XVI of the 1983 Constitution was meant to depart from the settled construction.
(i) Our case law shows a consistent and definitive construction .
Our case law shows that at least six of our decisions under the 1877 Constitution cited or applied the holding of Day, all of them reinforcing the construction that the self-incrimination clause protected affirmative acts, but did not prohibit taking evidence from the defendant. See Calhoun,
Our opinion in Aldrich,
In short, the compelled self-incrimination provision at issue, which has remained materially the same since the 1877 Constitution, has received a consistent and definitive construction from its inception through the ratification of the 1983 Constitution. And
[a]t no point through this history was the constitutional language changed to abrogate Day's interpretation, nor did we reconsider Day. To the contrary, we have consistently and repeatedly applied the state constitutional protection against compelled self-incrimination in accord with Day.
Olevik,
Indeed, even before Olevik, we continued to apply the Day/ Calhoun construction of the self-incrimination right in the 1983 Constitution. Before our decision in Olevik, we referred repeatedly to the broader right afforded by Paragraph XVI compared to the right against compelled self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment. See Bell v. State,
Nothing in the cases decided under the 1983 Constitution reflects a considered departure from the consistent and definitive construction that had been placed on the self-incrimination right. In Olevik, we simply applied the presumption that flowed from the consistent and definitive construction existing prior to the 1983 Constitution, and concluded that the presumption regarding the construction of Paragraph XVI - that it covers affirmative acts - was not rebutted by a clear indication to the contrary. Olevik, 302 Ga. at 240-241 (2) (c) (ii),
The State argues that around the time of the adoption of the 1983 Constitution, one commentator and one court asserted that Georgia had "shown signs of retreating" from the affirmative act standard. See American Fork City,
In Presnell, we rejected the defendant's claim that testimony of an expert witness should not have been allowed because it was based upon a compelled psychiatric exam, whereby the defendant was forced to be a witness against himself as to his mental capacity.
**206Presnell,
In Fouts, the defendant sought to suppress the introduction of samples of his hair, which he claimed was in violation of his right against compelled self-incrimination. 240 Ga. at 43-44 (3),
(ii) Nothing in the adoption of the 1983 Constitution rebuts the consistent and definitive construction of Day and its progeny.
The State argues that, in the absence of evidence that the public understood the full scope of the provision that became Paragraph XVI and the lack of evidence that the voters accepted or rejected the **207given meaning of the former provision when ratifying the 1983 Constitution, we should presume that the voters understood the right against compelled self-incrimination as applying only to oral testimony. But contrary to the State's argument, it is "the understanding of the text by reasonable people familiar with its legal context" that is important, not whether every citizen understood the particular meanings of a constitutional provision. See Jerman,
The State also argues that we erred in Olevik because we ignored the "realities that surrounded the ratification of" the 1983 Constitution. First, the State argues that the 1983 Constitution was ratified not as an amendment to existing organic law, but as an entirely new constitution that should be read anew according to its plain language. In support, the State cites to a provision that repealed "all previous constitutions and amendments thereto," see Ga. Const. 1983, Art. XI, Sec. I, Par. VI, and to various statements - some made near the time of ratification and some made in March 2018 - that the 1983 Constitution was meant as a "new and revitalized organic law" that should "stand on its own terms."
And even for those who may believe that the subjective views of individual drafters are relevant, there is no evidence whatsoever that the "new" 1983 Constitution was meant to wipe away nearly 200 years of Georgia constitutional law. To the contrary, the transcripts from the various meetings of the committee charged with revising Article I (our Bill of Rights) showed that the committee meant to keep existing law - even if all of the implications of the language were not fully explored or even understood - unless otherwise stated. See, e.g., Select Committee on Constitutional Revisions, 1977-1981 ("Select Committee"), Transcript of Meetings, Committee to Revise Article I, meeting of the Subcommittee to Revise Section I, Oct. 4, 1979, pp. 3-4 (Justice Jesse Bowles, subcommittee chairman, noting that Georgia's Bill of Rights had remained "pretty much" the same since the first constitution and proposing that the committee review the 1976 Constitution "paragraph by paragraph" and revise as necessary). Moreover, there was acknowledgment that many of the rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights came from the English common law.
Some committee members also expressly admitted that they did not understand the meaning of certain clauses of the Bill of Rights. The committee nevertheless elected not to change the words of such clauses, because to do so would signal that a change was intended.
In conclusion, none of the State's arguments discussed above undermines the soundness of Olevik. Although we do not determine conclusively that Day was correctly decided, that case (and others like it) established a well-settled interpretation of the self-incrimination right, one that was not unique but within the mainstream of American judicial decisions at the time. That interpretation was carried forward into subsequent Georgia constitutions, and there was no error in Olevik in concluding that Paragraph XVI preserved the protections of prior constitutional self-incrimination provisions because the previous provisions were materially identical.
IV. Admission of evidence that a defendant refused to submit to a chemical test of breath pursuant to OCGA § 40-5-67.1 (b) violates Paragraph XVI of the Georgia Constitution.
Our reaffirmance of Olevik means that Elliott's refusal to submit to a breath test fell within the protections of Paragraph XVI. But that does not necessarily mean that introduction of evidence of that refusal at trial violates Paragraph XVI. That issue presents a separate question. After thorough review of the relevant history and case law, we conclude that the admission of such a refusal violates Paragraph XVI.
**210The pre-Revolution English common-law right against compelled self-incrimination did not preclude admission of a defendant's refusal to incriminate herself or adverse inferences therefrom. And the text of Paragraph XVI does not by its plain terms preclude admission of evidence that a defendant refused to speak or act. But legal developments in the century between the Revolution and our state's adoption of the 1877 Provision - in particular, decisions of this Court preceding and contemporaneous with that adoption - support the conclusion that the 1877 Provision prohibited admission of a defendant's invocation of his privilege against compelled self-incrimination. We find nothing sufficient to rebut the presumption that the 1983 Constitution incorporated this meaning and thus conclude that Paragraph XVI generally prohibits admission of a defendant's pretrial refusal to speak or act. And we conclude that OCGA §§ 40-5-67.1 (b) and 40-6-392 (d) violate the Georgia Constitution by allowing the admission of a defendant's refusal to submit to a breath test to prove that the defendant had been drinking alcohol.
A. The United States Supreme Court's interpretation of the Fifth Amendment is unpersuasive as to the meaning of the Georgia Constitution on this point.
To be clear, this conclusion is not dictated by the United States Supreme Court's decision in Griffin v. California,
B. Although the text of the 1877 Provision considered in isolation does not clearly preclude admission of evidence that a defendant refused a breath test, that does not end our analysis of the provision's meaning.
Although the state constitutional provision at issue here is sometimes referred to as embodying a right against self-incrimination, by its text the 1877 Provision prohibited only "compelled" self-incrimination. Paragraph XVI also uses the term "compelled." "Compel" is generally defined as to "constrain" or "force" a person to do something. See Webster's New World Dictionary 289 (2d College ed. 1980).
**212But as we explained in Division II, we do not read the text in isolation; rather, "[w]e interpret a constitutional provision according to the original public meaning of its text," Olevik,
C. The historical record prior to Georgia's adoption of the 1877 Provision indicates the provision prohibited admission of a defendant's refusal to incriminate herself or the drawing of adverse inferences therefrom.
The pre-Revolution English common-law right did not preclude admission of a defendant's refusal to incriminate herself or adverse inferences therefrom. But the second half of the nineteenth century was a time of great change in the American criminal justice system. And decisions of this Court in the years leading up to, and around the time of, the adoption of the 1877 Provision indicate a significant deviation from the common law of England on the question of whether a defendant's silence could be presented as evidence of guilt. We thus conclude that the original public meaning of the 1877 Provision prohibited admission of a defendant's refusal to incriminate herself or the drawing of adverse inferences therefrom.
**213(i) Inferences from refusal to testify were permissibly drawn at common law.
The common law as it was understood in 1776 does not support construing the 1877 Provision as forbidding admission of a defendant's refusal to incriminate herself or the drawing of adverse inferences therefrom. The common law as it was understood in 1776 did not prohibit a trial court from admitting evidence that a defendant refused to speak or otherwise provide incriminating evidence against himself. And it did not prohibit jurors from drawing adverse inferences from such a refusal. Until 1848, English magistrates would conduct preliminary examinations of defendants without advising them that they need not answer or that their unsworn statements could be used against them in a later trial. See Langbein, 92 Mich. L. Rev. at 1060-1061. If the defendant refused to answer questions, his refusal could be admitted, and any adverse inferences might be drawn therefrom. See id. at 1061-1062. The question of whether adverse inferences could be drawn from the accused's failure to "testify" at trial did not even arise, as defendants were deemed incompetent to testify under English law until 1898. See De Luna,
(ii) Developments between the time of Georgia's adoption of the common law of England and our ratification of the 1877 Constitution indicate that the 1877 Provision barred admission of a defendant's refusal to speak or act.
By the end of the nineteenth century, American jurisdictions generally experienced a shift in the admissibility of defendants' refusal to incriminate themselves. The practice of magistrates questioning the accused before trial, with suspects' silence being used against them at trial, continued in America into the 1800s. See Mitchell,
**214See Alschuler, 94 Mich. L. Rev. at 2631. But by the end of the nineteenth century every state but Georgia had given defendants the ability to testify under oath. See Ferguson,
Georgia in at least one sense was an outlier, prohibiting defendants from testifying under oath in their own defense at trial until 1962. See Ga. L. 1962, p. 133, 135, § 2. In the meantime, defendants could make only an unsworn "statement" on their own behalf. See 1873 Code § 4637 (as amended by Ga. L. 1874, p. 22, 22-23, § I) ("In all criminal trials in this State, the prisoner shall have the right to make, to the Court and Jury, such statement in the case as he or she may deem proper, in his or her defense, said statement not to be under oath, and to have such force only as the jury may think right to give it: Provided , the prisoner shall not be compelled to answer any questions on cross-examination, should he or she think proper to decline to answer such questions.").
Nonetheless, decisions of this Court prior to the adoption of the 1877 Provision, consistent with those of other jurisdictions at the time, indicate that it was impermissible to draw adverse inferences from a defendant's failure to make such a statement. In 1874, this Court overturned a criminal conviction when the jury was charged that it might consider the defendant's refusal to make a statement at trial. See Bird,
Consistent with that approach, other cases decided prior to the adoption of the 1877 Provision afforded protection to civil parties or third-party witnesses faced with questions the answers to which **216might implicate them criminally. See Pinkard v. State,
We also decided similar cases shortly after the adoption of the 1877 Provision. We said early on that the 1877 Provision meant a witness did not have to answer questions that might subject the witness to criminal prosecution, or even ones that merely "tend[ed] to degrade" the witness. See Gravett v. State,
The State argues that, to the extent the Georgia constitutional provision incorporates the Bird and Loewenherz lines of cases, such incorporation would retain a common-law limitation to refusals to testify in formal *292court proceedings. But those cases are not so limited. Harrison involved a refusal to answer questions in a deposition, not a formal court proceeding.
Similarly helpful is a line of cases, beginning just twelve years after the adoption of the 1877 Provision, in which this Court deemed improper negative prosecutorial comment on the defendant's failure to make a statement at trial. Robinson v. State,
**218Jordan v. State,
D. No subsequent developments clearly altered the meaning of the 1877 Provision.
Of course, the 1877 Provision does not apply today; Paragraph XVI of the 1983 Constitution does. As explained in Division II, a constitutional provision - like Paragraph XVI - that is retained from a previous constitution without material change is strongly presumed to retain the original public meaning that provision had at the time it was first adopted. Thus, we presume that Paragraph XVI as it is found in the 1983 Constitution carries the same meaning as that of the 1877 Provision. Although not ironclad, this presumption is strong. As also explained in Division II, a constitutional clause that is readopted into a new constitution and that has received a consistent and definitive construction is presumed to carry the same meaning as that consistent construction. But *293unlike the question at issue in Olevik, this second presumption does not arise regarding refusals. Although there is ample case law from which we conclude that Paragraph XVI precludes admission of a defendant's refusal to speak or act and the drawing of adverse inferences therefrom, much of that case law relates to the common law informing the original public meaning of the 1877 Provision; few of the cases were actual interpretations of the 1877 Provision of the sort necessary to support the presumption arising from a consistent and definitive construction.
In 1964, well before Georgia readopted the provision against compelled self-incrimination as part of the 1976 and 1983 Constitutions, we held that the provision precluded a conviction based on a defendant's failure to do an incriminating act - in that case, his refusal to drive his truck onto scales. See Aldrich,
The State relies heavily on a line of cases - since overruled at least as a matter of federal law - that allowed a jury to hear about and be charged on a defendant's silence in the face of statements made in his presence that implicated him in criminal activity, essentially as an exception to the hearsay rule. Dating back to the nineteenth century, Georgia evidence law provided that silence when the circumstances require an answer, denial, or other conduct may amount to an admission. See Code of 1860 § 3713; see also Cobb v. State,
At one point we rejected, albeit with little analysis, a self-incrimination challenge to the tacit admission rule. Emmett v. State,
In at least one instance prior to the Miranda decision in 1965, however, we questioned *294whether the tacit admission rule was always compatible with the right against compelled self-incrimination. See Johnson v. State,
We did not do away with the tacit admission rule altogether. See Emmett v. State,
The State argues that the United States Supreme Court in South Dakota v. Neville,
E. Because Elliott had the right to refuse to submit to a breath test under Paragraph XVI, admission of evidence of her refusal violates that state constitutional right against compelled self-incrimination.
The State posits a number of additional arguments as to why evidence of Elliott's refusal to submit to a breath test should be admissible in its criminal prosecution of her. For one, the State contends that DUI cases are "extraordinary" in that suspects are deemed to have waived their right to refuse a breath test in exchange **222for the privilege of driving on the roads of this state. But we have clearly held that the fact that an officer reads a suspect the implied consent notice and otherwise complies with implied consent procedures does not mean that the suspect gives actual and voluntary consent to a particular test for Fourth Amendment purposes. See Williams v. State,
The State also contends that, under a strict scrutiny framework, it may use evidence of Elliott's refusal because in encroaching on any fundamental right against self-incrimination, the State is acting on a compelling interest in effectively prosecuting drunk drivers in a way that is narrowly tailored to serve that interest. But this argument would allow similar exceptions for all serious crimes; surely the State's interest in prosecuting murderers is at least as strong as its interest in prosecuting drunk drivers. The State has failed to identify any case in which we have applied strict scrutiny to Paragraph XVI or any other constitutional rule of criminal procedure. Strict scrutiny is a concept generally invoked when statutes are challenged under the First Amendment or on equal protection or substantive due process grounds. See generally Richard H. Fallon, Jr., Strict Judicial Scrutiny ,
The State also argues that a holding that Paragraph XVI prohibits admission of a defendant's refusal to submit to a breath test would contravene Olevik's holding that the implied consent warning is not per se coercive, as well as our subsequent decisions in Fazio v. State,
The State's remaining arguments, citing state statutes, general principles of state criminal law, and policy concerns, fail to appreciate the constitutional nature of the right at issue. We acknowledge that the State has a considerable interest in prosecuting DUI offenses (and thereby deterring others), and that our decision today may make that task more difficult.
This Court cannot change the Georgia Constitution, even if we believe there may be good policy reasons for doing so; only the General Assembly and the people of Georgia may do that. And this Court cannot rewrite statutes. This decision may well have implications for the continuing validity of the implied consent notice as applied to breath tests, but revising that notice is a power reserved to the General Assembly. Having considered the text of Paragraph XVI and the context in which it was enacted, as well as all of the arguments made by the parties and the amici, we conclude that Paragraph XVI precludes admission of evidence that a suspect refused to consent to a breath test.
**224We reverse the trial court's denial of Elliott's motion to suppress.
Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur, except Warren and Ellington, JJ., disqualified.
The efforts of both parties to this case were augmented by various amici curiae. We appreciate the helpful briefing.
The language of the implied consent notice for drivers aged 21 years or older (like Elliott) is as follows:
Georgia law requires you to submit to state administered chemical tests of your blood, breath, urine, or other bodily substances for the purpose of determining if you are under the influence of alcohol or drugs. If you refuse this testing, your Georgia driver's license or privilege to drive on the highways of this state will be suspended for a minimum period of one year. Your refusal to submit to the required testing may be offered into evidence against you at trial. If you submit to testing and the results indicate an alcohol concentration of 0.08 grams or more, your Georgia driver's license or privilege to drive on the highways of this state may be suspended for a minimum period of one year. After first submitting to the required state tests, you are entitled to additional chemical tests of your blood, breath, urine, or other bodily substances at your own expense and from qualified personnel of your own choosing. Will you submit to the state administered chemical tests of your (designate which tests) under the implied consent law?
OCGA § 40-5-67.1 (b) (2).
This number does not include the 1776 Rules and Regulations of the Colony of Georgia, the first governing document during the revolutionary period (although adopted three months before the signing of the Declaration of Independence). The first proper constitution was adopted a year later in 1777. See Walter McElreath, A Treatise on the Constitution of Georgia 67 (Atlanta: Harrison Co., 1912); see also Reheis v. Baxley Creosoting & Osmose Wood Preserving Co.,
Since the people are the ultimate "makers" of the Georgia Constitution, this requires a focus on the public meaning, not the subjective intent of the drafters. See Olevik,
Bloomfield has since been criticized as misstating the original meaning of the 1877 provision. See Baptiste,
The presumption arising from a consistent and definitive construction, however, like most legal presumptions, may be rebutted. As we explain later, this presumption is not rebutted as we applied it in Olevik, and no such construction exists as to the refusal issue. Accordingly, this is not a case that calls us to articulate precisely when such a presumption may be rebutted.
Georgia was not one of those colonies. Levy, supra, at 376.
The witness privilege protected a witness from being compelled by court process to make disclosures that might incriminate him or subject him to civil liability or moral disgrace. The confession rule excluded the admission of pretrial confessions extracted under oath or by force, threat, or promise. The rule disqualifying parties prevented criminal defendants from testifying under oath at all. And the rule disqualifying witnesses for interest disqualified witnesses based on financial interest in the outcome of the case. See Witt, 77 Tex. L. Rev. at 834.
The federal constitution guarantees that no person "shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself." U. S. Const. amend. V.
Even prior to the adoption of the 1877 Provision, Georgia provided by statute that no one "charged" in a criminal proceeding shall be "compellable to give evidence for or against himself or herself." See Code of 1867 § 3798 (2). Similar language is found in our current Code. See OCGA § 24-5-506 (a). We have construed a prior iteration of the statute as applying "only to those who have been charged with an offense i.e., accused in a returned or proposed charging document at the time they are called to testify." State v. Lampl,
In the same section, the 1867 Code also included a subsection that was not limited to those who were "charged," providing, "No person shall be compellable to answer any question tending to criminate himself or herself." Code of 1867 § 3798 (3). Although the 1877 constitutional provision in some respects tracked this statutory provision, it differed in a key respect, in that it prohibited compelled incriminating "testimony," which is broader than the statutory reference to being compelled "to answer any question." The statutory provision later was amended to mirror the constitutional language, see Code of 1895 § 1011 (3), and was carried forward into a subsequent code, see Code of 1933 § 417. Presumably given that it was superfluous of the constitutional provision, it did not survive the adoption of the Code of 1981.
In Olevik, we said that Day did not explain its "broad interpretation" of the self-incrimination provision, noting that the plain meaning of the word "testimony," as that term was defined around the time the provision was first adopted in 1877, would not have covered affirmative acts. Olevik,
Marshall left open the question whether the right could protect a person from answering questions where he legally could not face charges (due to the alleged expiration of the statute of limitations in that case).
See Andresen,
Compare State v. Garrett,
One scholar has posited that limiting protection became the majority view largely as a "practical consideration" due to an ever-increasing reliance on physical evidence as a form of proof. See generally Geyh, 36 Cath. U. L. Rev. at 623-628.
In Drake v. State,
In Herndon, we acknowledged that we had rejected prior requests to overrule Calhoun. See Herndon,
The holding of Ingram was recently applied in Anglin v. State,
Whether we would reach the same outcome in Presnell today is not before us.
In March 2018, the State, apparently for purposes of this appeal, interviewed two of the many people instrumental in creating the 1983 Constitution and reported that they opined that the 1983 Constitution was meant to be "new" and was to "stand" or "be looked at" on its own terms. As we discussed in Olevik, this sort of subjective legislative intent has little relevance, especially for a constitution ratified by the voters. Olevik, 302 Ga. at 237-238 (2) (c) (i),
Because we conclude that Olevik was correctly decided, it is unnecessary to consider whether we should retain that decision under the doctrine of stare decisis. See Kimble v. Marvel Entm't, LLC, --- U.S. ----,
At the time of the 1877 Constitution, the term "compel" similarly was defined as "[t]o drive or urge irresistibly " or "[t]o take by force ." Noah Webster, A Dictionary of the English Language 80 (1878) (emphases added).
Perhaps more consistently with English common law, it also was fairly clear in American courts by the latter half of the nineteenth century that no adverse inferences could be drawn from the silence of a witness who was not a criminal defendant. See Greenleaf on Evidence, at § 451 (11th ed. 1863) ("If the witness declines answering, no inference of the truth of the fact is permitted to be drawn from that circumstance."); see also People v. Mannausau,
A similar rule applied to pretrial questioning by magistrates. A 1860 statute provided that the magistrate "shall always permit the defendant to make his own statement of the transaction (not under oath), if he desires to do so" and that "[w]henever such statement is made, it shall be the duty of the Court to reduce it to writing, and return it with the other papers to the Superior Court, in the event of a commitment." 1860 Code § 4614. But the statute did not specify whether an accused's refusal to answer questions could be admitted at trial.
This statutory provision, with slight alteration, can now be found in OCGA § 24-5-506 (b), which provides: "The failure of an accused to testify shall create no presumption against the accused, and no comment shall be made because of such failure."
Citing Simpson v. Simpson,
Where the defendant did make a statement at trial, the prosecution was permitted to note for the jury that the defendant's statement had failed to deny some material fact established by the state's evidence. See, e.g., Howard v. State,
A later case distinguishing Aldrich in finding no violation of the constitutional right in a conviction under a new version of the statute whereby a driver's refusal to drive his vehicle onto scales could result in a loss of license is not at odds with that understanding, given that the conviction at issue in that case was not based on the defendant's refusal to comply with a direction to drive onto the scales, but on the evidence obtained when he voluntarily complied. See Dennis,
Miranda, of course, is a construction of the Fifth Amendment not the Georgia Constitution. And it's not obvious that Howard overruled Emmett's holding as to the Georgia Constitution. Although Howard quoted the Georgia Constitution, the only articulated bases in Howard for overruling Emmett were decisions by the United States Supreme Court regarding the meaning of the United States Constitution. See Howard,
Although as we discussed in Olevik, this Paragraph XVI analysis is limited to breath tests. See Olevik,
To the extent Elliott also raises arguments under OCGA § 24-5-506 and her constitutional right to due process, we need not address them given our resolution of her argument under Paragraph XVI.
Concurrence Opinion
I join the Court's opinion in full, but write to clarify certain implications of the Court's decision today and our earlier decision in Olevik v. State,
First, it is important to identify the provisions of the implied consent law that are not affected. As acknowledged both in the Court's opinion today and in Olevik, the scope of these decisions is limited to chemical tests of a driver's breath; they do not apply to tests of a driver's blood. Also unaffected is the core component of the implied consent enforcement scheme: the administrative license suspension provided by OCGA § 40-5-67.1 (c) and (d). Additionally, the holding that a driver's refusal to take a breath test may not be used in a criminal proceeding does not forbid its use in an administrative proceeding concerning suspension of a driver's license, and that core function of the implied consent law remains in force, notwithstanding the Court's opinions today and in Olevik.
That being said, these decisions affect significant portions of the implied consent law. The statements in the implied consent notices set forth in OCGA § 40-5-67.1 (b) - that Georgia law "requires" the driver to submit to breath testing; that the "refusal to submit ... may be offered into evidence" against the driver at trial; and that the driver's license "may be suspended" (as opposed to "shall") if the driver submits and the results indicate an alcohol concentration above a prohibited level - are likely to become problematic in future cases as a result of Olevik or the *297Court's decision today.
It is also worth noting that the General Assembly and the people could reconsider Paragraph XVI itself. The Court's opinions here and in Olevik discuss at length Paragraph XVI's application to incriminating acts of a defendant. This understanding of Paragraph XVI has become something of an outlier in state and federal constitutional interpretations of self-incrimination, but, as this Court observed in Olevik and demonstrates more fully today, it has a long history stretching back over more than a century of case law and through several Georgia constitutions. And, of course, the amendment of a constitutional provision, particularly one of such long standing that has generated a substantial body of case law, should not be undertaken lightly. Moreover, the potential effects of such an amendment upon other areas of law should also be borne in mind. However, because the Court's decision today is rooted in a constitutional provision that was adopted by the legislature and the people, if the General Assembly and the people of Georgia see fit to take our self-incrimination law in a different direction, a clear understanding of the scope and impact of our decision here today may aid in informing their decision.
I am authorized to state that Justice Blackwell and Justice Bethel join in this concurrence.
In Olevik, we rejected the appellant's facial challenges to the implied consent notice as well as his particular as-applied challenge. But in doing so, we noted that he had pointed out "deficiencies in the implied consent notice," and further observed, "The General Assembly may wish to amend the implied consent notice statute; if it does, among the changes it may consider would be a clearer explication of the right to refuse testing, and a more accurate articulation of the likelihood of license suspension." 302 Ga. at 250 and n.14,
