POWE v. THE STATE
44262
Supreme Court of Georgia
NOVEMBER 4, 1987
257 Ga. 563 | 361 SE2d 811
Until this Court or some court stands up and says that law enforcement officers must abide by the law in enforcing the law, such instances, as we have here, will be the rule not the exception. This Court must not allow law enforcement to sink to the level of the law violators. This I am sure we will not do. The officer in this case certainly cannot plead “good faith” on the basis that he took the warrant at face value, because he was the one who made the misrepresentation under oath to obtain the warrant. When trickery and deception become partners with law enforcement, our system of justice is doomed. This is more than a Fourth Amendment case, this is a matter of either condoning or slapping down deception in law enforcement. If we let this case get by, the word will pass like wildfire. The game plan will then become, no holds barred, anything goes in law enforcement.
I think the argument that the magistrate had no reason to suspect that the officer was telling him an untruth to obtain the warrant somehow makes it alright, is ridiculous. Are we now extending the “good faith” rule to magistrates when they are told an untruth so as to “cure” the officer‘s untruthful statement? I pray not.
ORDERED NOVEMBER 4, 1987.
BELL, Justice.
This opinion concerns the proper interpretation of
The facts are as follows: Eddie L. Powe received a ticket for making an improper lane change, following a traffic stop on April 29, 1986, on Interstate 75 in Bibb County. Police officers found marijuana and a pistol in his car and, on May 7, Powe was indicted for the felony offense of trafficking in marijuana.1 On May 6 or 7, Powe‘s attorney talked with an assistant state court solicitor about acceptance of a guilty plea from Powe on the improper lane change charge, asking the assistant solicitor to dispose of the case quickly because Powe lived out of town and could not make bail. Powe‘s attorney did not mention the pending felony case and the solicitor‘s office was otherwise unaware of the felony charge. The solicitor‘s office agreed to place the lane change offense on the May 8 plea calendar.
On May 8 Powe appeared without counsel in Bibb County State Court to enter his guilty plea. When the court asked Powe if he had other charges outstanding against him, he said he had a case pending in Bibb County Superior Court but did not state that the pending case was the marijuana trafficking charge. Neither the judge nor the assistant solicitor asked Powe whether the state court and superior court cases were related. The court accepted Powe‘s plea and orally sentenced him to pay court costs. The assistant state court solicitor who handled the guilty plea learned from a newspaper article the next morning about Powe‘s indictment on the related felony charge, and, as a result, moved to nolle pros the improper lane change offense. The state court judge withdrew Powe‘s guilty plea, which had never been formally entered, and transferred Powe‘s case to superior court. The judge also granted the motion to nolle pros the improper lane change offense. Powe then filed his plea in bar in superior court, the denial of which was affirmed by the Court of Appeals.
After reviewing this case we find that the “proper prosecuting officer” was the assistant state court solicitor who actually handled the taking of Powe‘s guilty plea on the improper lane change offense. We conclude, further, that as to him there has been no showing of actual knowledge of the felony case pending against Powe. Although the better practice would have been for the assistant solicitor to have explored the nature of the pending superior court case once Powe had mentioned it, the solicitor was not required to do so under the rule we establish today in Baker. Moreover, nothing in Powe‘s answer to the trial court‘s question provided, in and of itself, any indication that
As we observe in Baker, supra, 257 Ga. at 568, “the adoption of this rule does not impose an unfair or inequitable burden on the defendant, since he can invoke the procedural protection of
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that, because the assistant state solicitor who handled the guilty plea did not have actual knowledge of the felony case, there was no violation of
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except, Smith, J., who dissents.
SMITH, Justice, dissenting.
Both of these cases involve
Case number 44262. When appellant Powe was tried for the traffic violation, he was asked by the court if he had other cases pending against him and he said “Yes, one in superior court.” Neither the judge nor solicitor asked him anything about the nature of the case pending in superior court and proceeded to try and sentence him for the misdemeanor. When the state court judge learned of the related felony pending in superior court, he “withdrew” the plea and nolle prossed the traffic case. When the felony came on for trial, appellant Powe pled double jeopardy.
This Court in Coleman v. State, 256 Ga. 77, 78 (343 SE2d 695) (1986), held announcement of the sentence “ends any absolute statutory right to withdraw a guilty plea.” This certainly would be applicable to the pronouncement of a sentence by the Court. It is final and cannot be set aside except in unusual circumstances which are not present here. See Perkins v. State, 143 Ga. App. 124 (237 SE2d 658) (1977).
Case number 44543. Appellant Baker entered a guilty plea to a traffic violation on July 2, 1985. He was indicted October 15, 1985, on an habitual violator charge. Appellant Baker moved to dismiss based upon
The holding in both cases is that
The opinion states that the defendant can invoke the procedural protection of
In appellant Powe‘s case, he notified the court there was another case. Neither the court nor the solicitor bothered to inquire further. The majority would require that the defendant describe the crime by letter and verse.
In appellant Baker‘s case, the majority stated that since he did not establish that the prosecutor had knowledge of the felony offense that arose from the same conduct, the double jeopardy plea could not prevail.
The ludicrous part of this is the state had already destroyed all of the records dealing with the prosecutor‘s knowledge, thereby forestalling appellant Baker from proving anything.
The majority opinion puts forth two inescapable conclusions: (1)
This result is not what was intended by the legislature when it enacted the statute. It was never intended that the defendant should do the work for the prosecuting attorney. This is the end result of the majority opinion.
DECIDED NOVEMBER 5, 1987.
Daniel, Batcheller & Hunt, J. Robert Daniel, for appellant.
Donald F. Samuel, amicus curiae.
Willis B. Sparks III, District Attorney, Vernon R. Beinke, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
Spencer Lawton, Jr., District Attorney, amicus curiae.
