OPINION
¶ 1 Bеfore trial, appellee Anthony Bejarano filed a motion pursuant to Rule 15.7, Ariz. R.Crim. P., to preclude the state’s witnesses from testifying if the state did not timely comply with its disclosure obligations. The trial court eventually granted that motion as to one key witness, finding the state had failed to arrange a pretrial interview of that witness and that precluding the witness was an appropriate sanction. Following this order, the trial court declined Bejarano’s request to dismiss the case with prejudice but granted the state’s motion to dismiss without prejudice. The state now appeals the order precluding its witness.
¶ 2 This court may not address an issue or provide relief if it lacks jurisdiction to do so and we have an independent duty to ensure that we have jurisdiction before addressing the merits of any claim raised on appeal.
See Ruesga v. Kindred Nursing Ctrs., L.L.C.,
¶3 Our supreme court has squarely addressed the jurisdictional question presented herе. In
State v. Lelevier,
¶ 4 Here, the state appeals the trial court’s ruling on Bejarano’s pretrial motion for sanctions under Rule 15.7. But that motion did not challenge the acquisition of the state’s evidence on constitutional grounds. Therefore, the court’s order precluding the state’s witness from testifying did not constitutе “[a]n order granting a motion to suppress” pursuant to § 13-4032(6), and this court does not have jurisdiction of the state’s appeal on that statutory basis. Further, because the state dismissed the charges against Bejarano before trial commenced, the state cannot appeal the court’s order under any other subsection of this statute.
See Litak v. Scott,
¶ 5 Although we find
Lelevier
controlling, we acknowledge we have not always vigilantly enforced its holding. On several occasions, this court has ruled on appeals by the state from trial court orders that were not appealable under
Lelevier,
without any discussion or citation to case law concerning its jurisdiction to do so.
See State v. Lopez,
¶ 6 In a supplemental brief invited by this court, the state points out that Division One of this court concluded that the state’s right to appeal under former § 13^4032(7), the predecessor to § 13-4032(6), was “not limited to the suppression of illegally-obtained evidence,” and any ruling on a defendant’s motion that “ha[s] the effect of prohibiting the state from using certain evidence” is a motion to suppress within the meaning of the statute. State v.
Rodriguez,
¶ 7 In
Rodriguez II,
the court justified its departure from
Lelevier
by relying primarily
*521
on the Arizona Supreme Court’s unrelated decision in
State v. Rodriguez,
¶ 8 In
Rodriguez II,
the court of appeals also distinguished
Lelevier,
observing that case “only involved an issue of suppressing illegally-obtained evidence and did not necessarily consider other potential appeals by the state.”
Rodriguez II,
¶ 9 Not only do we thus find the holding of
Lelevier
intact but we also believe it represents the most cogent interpretation of the language in § 13-4032(6). Until 1969, the state could not appeal from any adverse evidentiary ruling in a criminal matter unless the defendant had been convicted and had appealed from the judgment.
See
Ariz. Code 1939, § 44-2508(d);
see also
Ariz. Rev. Code 1928, § 5136. The legislature, in effect, limited the state to challenging unfavorable evidentiary rulings on cross-appeal, which is
*522
still the general rule under our current statute.
See
§ 13-4032(3) (state may appeal “[a] ruling on a question of law adverse to the state when the defendant was convicted and appeals from the judgment”). This limitation reflects that criminal appeals by the state have been historically disfavorеd.
See State ex rel. McDougall v. Gerber,
¶ 10 In 1969, however, the legislature amended the predecessor statute of §§ 13-4032 and 13-1712, to enable the state to appeal an order “granting a motion to suppress the use of evidence” regardless of whether a final judgment of conviction had been entered. 1969 Ariz. Sess. Laws, еh. 133, § 11. This significant amendment to the code followed landmark constitutional decisions applying exclusionary rules to the states, making evidence obtained in violation of a defendant’s constitutional rights generally inadmissible at trial.
See e.g. Miranda v. Arizona,
¶ 11 In light of this history and the present form of § 13-4032, it is reasonable to conclude our supreme сourt meant precisely what it wrote in Lelevier when it narrowly defined a “motion to suppress” and specified its jurisdictional implications. Moreover, under the broad interpretation of that term suggested by the state, § 13-4032(6) would authorize an appeal by the state from any court ruling that limited thе state’s presentation of evidence. We find it unlikely our legislature intended to create an exception that would so wholly swallow the historical rule, embodied in Arizona’s statutory structure, otherwise limiting the state to cross-appeals in evidentiary matters.
¶ 12
Lelevier’s
definition of a mоtion to suppress is in accord with contemporary sources as well. Although not defined in our statutes or rules, a “motion to suppress” is defined in
Black’s Law Dictionary
as “[a] request that the court prohibit the introduction of illegally obtained evidence at a criminal trial.”
Id.
at 1034. The “suppression of evidence,” in turn, is “[a] trial judge’s ruling that evidence that a party has offered should be excluded because it was illegally acquired.”
Id.
at 1454. This narrow construction of “suppression” is apparent in Rule 16, Ariz. R.Crim. P., as the court noted in
Lelevier. See
¶ 13 Functionally, of course, an order suppressing evidence has essentially the same effect as an order precluding it or otherwise ruling it inadmissible, and the verb “suppress” admittedly may carry a broader meaning than the court gave it in Lelevier. See Black’s Law Dictionary 1454 (“suppress” means “[t]o put a stop to, put down, or prohibit; to prevent (something) from being seen, heard, known, or discussed”). Yet the statute itself forecloses a broader reading of § 13-4032(6) by distinguishing an order on a “motion to suppress” from other rulings on “question[s] of law adverse to the state,” for which, as previously noted, the state may obtain review solely through cross-appeal. § 13-4032(3).
¶ 14 In sum, the legislature did not intend all rulings limiting the state’s presentation of evidence to be appealable,
ipso facto.
Rather, “[t]he legislature, by statute, has given the State a right to appeal from a pretrial suppression order.”
State v. Million,
¶ 15 We note neither § 13-4032(6) nor
Le-levier
leaves the state without recourse for challenging adverse pretrial evidentiary rulings unrelated to the illegal acquisition of evidence. Rather than dismissing its сase and pursuing the appellate process, the state could have petitioned this court for special action relief.
See Tvedt,
¶ 16 For the foregoing reasons, we dismiss the state’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. See 1969 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 133, § 11 (amending former § 13-1712 to allow appeal of suppression orders); 1977 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 142, § 162 (renumbering § 13-1712 as § 13-4032); 1991 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 229, § 6 (amending statute and renumbering subsection (7) as current subsection (6)).
. The
Rodriguez II
court also cited three cases in which Division One had ruled upon appeals by the state in violation of
Lelevier,
without having addressed and apparently overlooking the jurisdictional issue.
See Rodriguez II,
. In
Rodriguez I,
the court's holding did not depend on the meаning of the phrase "motion to suppress,” and the court did not expressly comment on motions in limine as guidelines for dealing with these motions in the future, much less for determining appellate jurisdiction over appeals by the state. Rather, the court apparently undertook its discussion of motions in limine merely to clarify that such motions are legally cognizable and subject to appellate review, even though they are "not provided for by name in either our criminal or civil rules of procedure.”
Rodriguez I,
. Although we dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction in accordance with
Lelevier,
we also note we would be compelled to dismiss on alternative, independent grounds as well. Assuming
arguendo
that
Rodriguez I
abrogated the law as set forth in
Lelevier, Rodriguez I
would apply, by its terms, only to motions in limine that are "not provided for by name” in the rules of procedure.
. We note and commend the state’s candid concession at oral argument that it had reassessed its position after reviewing the pre-argument draft decision issued by the court and could not effectively dispute the analysis on the jurisdictional question.
. In its supplemental brief and at oral argument, the state urged that if jurisdiction is found lacking under A.R.S. § 13-4032(7), this court should nevertheless exercise its special action jurisdiction to decide the merits of the issue raised. But we do not do so because there is no case pending to which any special action relief would apply, the case having been voluntarily dismissed. Moreover, if the state refiles the charges, the issues presented in this appeal may not arise, essentially rendering them moot.
