On August 30, 1990, the trial court entered an order suppressing evidence law enforcement officers seized pursuant to a search warrant. On September 13, 1990, the state filed a notice of appeal. The state argues that the affidavit supporting the warrant contained sufficient information to establish probable cause. During the calendaring process, this court raised the issue of whether we should dismiss the state’s appeal for failure to timely file a notice of appeal. See NMSA 1978, § 39-3-3(B) (Repl.Pamp.1991); Rice v. Gonzales,
Relevant Statutes and Rules
This case requires we construe a constitutional provision, a statute and a supreme court rule. Section 39-3-3(B)(2) allows the state ten days within which to file a notice of appeal of a suppression order. SCRA 1986, 12-201(A) (Cum.Supp.1991) allows the state thirty days within which to file a notice of “[a]n appeal permitted by law as of right * * SCRA 1986, 12-202(A). In this case, the state filed its notice of appeal in the district court on the fourteenth day after entry of the suppression order. If the ten-day limitation in Section 39-3-3(B)(2) controls, then the state’s notice of appeal is late. A timely notice of appeal is a “mandatory” requirement. Govich v. North Am. Sys.,
The State’s Argument
To demonstrate the applicability of Rule 12-201(A), the state makes the following arguments: It has a constitutional appeal as of right. See N.M. Const. art. VI, § 2. An appeal of a suppression order is not an appeal of a final order, and is thus interlocutory. Cf. State v. Hernandez,
We have two difficulties with the arguments that the state makes to suggest that it has a constitutional appeal as of right from suppression orders. First, as the state admits, an appeal of a suppression order is fundamentally an interlocutory appeal. It generally occurs at the beginning or middle of litigation. We can foresee in many criminal cases there may be contemplation of further action in the case, such as where the evidence suppressed relates to one of many charges. Cf. Texas Pac. Oil Co. v. A.D. Jones Estate, Inc.,
In Santillanes, the state’s key authority in this case, the district court dismissed an enhancement proceeding with prejudice. The state’s appeal of this disposition was not one that Section 39-3-3(B) expressly included. This court had to determine if the appeal was still viable by determining whether the state had a constitutional right to the appeal. The constitution allows appeals as of right only when “ ‘[t]he state is aggrieved by a disposition contrary to law * * State v. Santillanes,
The state misreads the import of the Santillanes allusion to Section 39-3-3 as being a codification of the constitutional appeal as of right. We stated that Section 39-3-3 “recognizes the State’s constitutional right to appeal, and identifies circumstances permitting ordinary and interlocutory appeals * * State v. Santillanes,
Furthermore, the fact that the prosecutor must certify that a Section 39-3-3(B) appeal is not for delay and is about material evidence is a positive indication that such appeals are not constitutional appeals as of right. See § 39-3-3(B)(2). If the prosecutor cannot make this certification, then there is no statutory right to appeal. The certification is the legislature’s way of assuring the prudence of our consideration of what is essentially an interlocutory appeal. The state does not persuade us that even if the prosecutor cannot make the proper certification there still exists a constitutional right to appeal an interlocutory order for the purposes of delay or about immaterial evidence. This court could exercise its discretion and refuse to consider such an appeal because it would be interlocutory and of isolated gravity. See State v. Aguilar.
Santillanes does not assist the state’s position. Section 39-3-3(B) excepts suppression
The second difficulty we have with the state’s suggested arguments is that we cannot agree with the state’s reading of Rule 12-202. This rule, the state points out, applies to appeals as of right and specifically refers to a certificate that the prosecutor must file with the notice of appeal. See § 39-3-3(B)(2). Because of this reference, the state suggests that the supreme court must have considered suppression order appeals to be appeals of right. Rule 12-202, however, does not limit its applicability to only constitutional appeals as of right. We will not say that the supreme court left such a limitation to attenuated conjecture, but would have expressly limited Rule 12-202 to that which the state argues. Cf. Burroughs v. Board of County Comm’rs of Bernalillo County,
This appeal is not one of constitutional right. Absent a constitutional right, the state must look to a statutory grant of appellate jurisdiction. See § 39-3-3(B). The statutory grant of ten days within which the state must follow mandatory notice of appeal requirements is .within the legislative power. See Ammerman v. Hubbard Broadcasting, Inc.,
The state provides us with no reason to exercise our discretion in favor of hearing the merits of this appeal. Accordingly, we deny to hear this appeal on its merits. Cf. Govich v. North Am. Sys. (exercising discretion to consider merits when appellant failed to follow mandatory requirement of proper record designation); State v. Duran,
For the reasons stated above, the state’s appeal is dismissed.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
