This is an interlpcutory appeal from the trial court’s denial of the state’s motion to compel defendant to produce handwriting exemplars. We affirm.
1. In considering whether the state may compel an individual to produce handwriting exemplars, the following constitutional and statutory law is relevant. Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XIII of the Constitution of 1976 (Code Ann. § 2-113) states: "No person shall be compelled to give testimony tending in any manner to criminate himself.” Code Ann. § 38-416 provides: "No person, who shall be charged in any criminal proceeding with the commission of any indictable offense or any offense punishable on summary conviction, shall be compellable to give evidence for or against himself.”
In
Creamer v. State,
Thus, even though one’s handwriting may be identifying physical indicia, forcing a defendant to produce such handwriting is not sanctioned by our *57 Constitution. To compel a handwriting exemplar is to compel the defendant to do an act, not to submit to an act.
2. The fact that the United States Supreme Court has held that handwriting exemplars can be compelled (which compulsion does not violate the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination) (see Gilbert v. California,
"Georgia has long granted more protection to its citizens than has the United States and . . . while the States cannot grant less protection they can grant more.” Creamer, supra, p. 515.
"While the language in the United States Constitution has long been construed to be limited to 'testimony,’ the Georgia Constitution has been construed to limit the State from forcing the individual to present evidence, oral or real.” Id., p. 516. It is clear that the "evidence” contemplated in the Code is not limited to that which is deemed testimonial. An accused cannot be compelled to produce evidence, oral or real, regardless of whether or not it is "testimonial.” To force the defendant, then, to produce samples of his handwriting — potentially incriminating evidence which may be used as evidence in the defendant’s prosecution — would violate constitutional sanctions against self-incrimination.
3. Neither
Bradford v. State,
In Bradford, this court held that a person could be compelled by the state to give a voice exemplar, that the mere use of the defendant’s voice as an identifying physical characteristic did not involve or abridge rights of the defendant under the Fifth Amendment. Id., p. 459. Since Bradford does not involve a claim that rights afforded under Georgia law and the Georgia Constitution were abridged, Bradford is not dispositive of the issue before us.
The issue presented in
Reeves
was the scope of Fourth Amendment protection in regard to one’s handwriting. In holding that the defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy in his handwriting so as to invoke Fourth Amendment protection, the court did not address the
*58
issue presented here, i.e., the issue of compulsory
production
of one’s handwriting. Cf.
Hyde v. State,
Since we have determinéd that to compel handwriting exemplars of the defendant would compel him to produce criminating evidence in violation of rights afforded under Georgia law, the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
