The defendant, Carlton Lockhart, appeals his conviction for possession of more than one ounce of marijuana — a violation of the Georgia Controlled Substances Act.
On June 17,1982, Officer Don Woodyard, of the Troup County Sheriffs Department applied for a search warrant to search the premises of the defendant Lockhart. In his affidavit, Woodyard stated that a “reliable informant” who had in the past given him information which led to the arrest and conviction of other persons, told him that on June 14, 1982, he had bought untaxpaid whiskey from Lockhart in his home. While the informant was there “he saw *556 marijuana sold by Carlton Lockhart to other people ...” Woodyard applied for and received a search warrant to search defendant’s house for “untaxed Paid [sic] whiskey.”
The police attempted to gain entrance to the Lockhart residence by asking to purchase whiskey. They were refused entrance by Mrs. Lockhart. Woodyard then divided his vice squad into two groups and he and Lieutenant Hunt knocked on the front door until Mrs. Lockhart answered and they served the search warrant on her. The defendant was in the bedroom. He and Mrs. Lockhart were taken to the living room while the search took place. Lt. Hunt had with him his “narcotics detector dog.” Woodyard informed Mrs. Lockhart “that we was [sic] there to search her premises for un-taxpaid whiskey.” Hunt testified he was “in charge of the narcotics dog... My job is to take the dog in and do a room search of the premises with the narcotics detector dog.” Both the “narcotics dog” and Hunt had received special training in narcotics detection. Lt. Hunt has “also been to a school and [has] a state and federal narcotics license.” He gave the “narcotics dog” the command to “search.” The dog alerted on the commode in the bathroom and 31 bags of marijuana were found in a “ziplock” bag in the water reservoir. Another officer found one small bag of marijuana in the defendant’s bedroom in a chest of drawers. The defendant was advised of his Miranda rights and asked if the marijuana was his. He shook his head. His wife was asked if it was hers. She also denied that it was hers. The officer then told them that both were under arrest. Lockhart then stated that the marijuana belonged to him. The officers did not find any untaxpaid whiskey. Defendant’s motion to suppress was denied and he brings this appeal. Held:
The defendant enumerates as error the use of the dog in the execution of the search warrant. We agree that the use of the dog was not authorized and reverse.
The “reliable informant” advised Officer Woodyard of Lockhart’s sale of untaxpaid whiskey and marijuana, but Woodyard sought a search warrant only to search for “untaxed Paid [sic] whiskey.” He did not ask for permission to search for marijuana, nor was the warrant’s subject authorization broad enough to cover a search for marijuana. The magistrate was neither advised in writing nor orally that the police desired to search for marijuana. Also, the officers testified that they did not ask for or secure permission to use a “narcotics dog.” The officer in control of the dog qualified the dog only as an expert in a search for narcotics and he gave the dog the command to “search” — presumably for the marijuana the informant stated he had seen.
We find fault with the procedure followed by the police for three
*557
reasons: (1) Our State and Federal Constitutions require that a search warrant shall “particularly describ[e] the . . . things to be seized,” (Art. I, § I, Par. 10, Ga. Const. (1976) (Code Ann. § 2-110); Fourth Amendment, U. S. Const.), (2) A search in execution of a warrant may not exceed in scope the particular article or things to be seized (Terry v. Ohio,
(1) “The requirement that warrants shall particularly describe the things to be seized makes general searches under them impossible and prevents the seizure of one thing under a warrant describing another. As to what may be taken, nothing is left to the discretion of the officer executing the warrant.” Marron v. United States,
(2) “[A] search which is reasonable at its inception may violate the Fourth Amendment by virtue of its intolerable intensity and scope... The scope of the search must be ‘strictly tied to and justified by’ the circumstances which rendered its initiation permissible . . . [E]vidence may not be introduced if it was discovered by means of a seizure and search which were not reasonably related in scope to the justification for their initiation.” Terry v. Ohio,
A lawful search is limited to that which is described in the warrant.
Jones v. State,
(3) The State argues that the marijuana “found during a lawful search, although not set out in the search warrant, may be seized if the officer is searching an area that may reasonably be searched for the items listed in the search warrant.” “There must be a bona fide search for the item sought to be found, but if, in the course of an authorized search, another contraband is found on the party or premises searched, the officer is authorized to seize it, for the search, though not productive of that which was sought, was legal.”
Reynolds v. State,
This court has discussed the inadvertency requirement of Coolidge in
State v. Scott,
(4) Although defendant objects to the use of “the narcotics dog” per se, this objection is not well founded. The exclusionary rule cannot be invoked to exclude the product of a legitimate police investigative technique. Terry v. Ohio,
Judgment reversed.
