This is an appeal asking that we overrule
State v. Guzman,
I.
Factual Background
Randy Koivu (Defendant) was charged with the crime of possession of methamphetamine in Boundary County. He was found guilty of that crime, and on January 6, 2004, the district court sentenced him to five years in the custody of the Idaho Board of Correction, with three years fixed and two years indeterminate. The court suspended that sentence and placed Defendant on probation for four year’s. The terms of probation included that Defendant pay a fine of $500.00, court costs of $88.50, public defender reimbursement of $300.00, and restitution of $100.00. Defendant later violated the terms of his probation, and on November 1, 2005, the court entered an order revoking his probation and committing him to the custody of the Idaho Board of Correction. Defendant was released from prison on July 2, 2009.
On October 1, 2009, a deputy court clerk in Boundary County filed an affidavit in the Boundary County case stating that Defendant had failed to pay a fine and court costs in the sum of $1,028.50. On December 1, 2009, the same deputy clerk filed another affidavit stating that Defendant had failed to comply with a court order requiring him to pay a fine and costs totaling $588.50 by July 6, 2006. On December 8, 2009, the district court issued a warrant of attachment in the Boundary County case to have Defendant seized and brought before the court to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt for his “failure to comply with that certain order of the Court, a copy of which is attached hereto.” No copy of any order was attached to the warrant of attachment, but bail was set in the amount of $588.50, and the warrant further stated that the contempt would be purged and the defendant released upon Defendant posting cash in the amount of $588.50. Neither any law enforcement officer nor the prosecuting attorney had any involvement in generating the affidavits or issuing the warrant of attachment.
On March 5, 2010, two sheriff deputies in neighboring Bonner County lawfully stopped a ear for speeding. Defendant was the driver of the car. In running a background check of Defendant, the officers were informed that there was a warrant for his arrest out of Boundary County. Reasonably relying upon the validity of the warrant, the deputies arrested Defendant and transported him to the Bonner County jail. Defendant was arrested only because of the warrant; he could not have been arrested for speeding. While searching Defendant at the jail, a baggie of methamphetamine was discovered near his feet.
On March 5, 2010, Defendant was charged in Bonner County with possession of methamphetamine. Defendant waived his right to a preliminary hearing, and on March 17, 2010, the prosecuting attorney filed an information charging Defendant with that crime. The prosecutor also alleged in the information that Defendant was a persistent violator, having had two prior felony convictions.
On April 8, 2010, the prosecuting attorney in Boundary County moved to dismiss the warrant of attachment pursuant to which Defendant had been arrested. On May 4, 2010, the district court entered an order dismissing it on the ground that “the Court lacked jurisdiction to issue the warrant on December 8, 2009.” The lack of jurisdiction was apparently based upon the fact that the district court had not sentenced Defendant to a fine of $500.00 and court costs of $88.50, but had only ordered him to pay such sums as a condition of probation. Upon the revocation of his probation, Defendant was no longer required to pay them. As a result, the district court in the Bonner County case issued an order suppressing the methamphetamine. The State then timely appealed.
II.
Do We Have Jurisdiction to Hear This Appeal?
“[SJubject matter jurisdiction is an issue that this Court may raise
sua sponte
at any time.”
Johnson v. Blaine County,
The court minutes in the Bonner County ease reflect that at Defendant’s arraignment his counsel stated she would file a motion to suppress if the district court in the Boundary County case granted the prosecutor’s motion to dismiss the warrant of attachment. After the court did so, defense counsel in the Bonner County case filed a brief in support of a motion to suppress in which she argued that under
State v. Guzman,
III.
Has the State Shown that State v. Guzman Should Be Overruled?
Article I, section 17, of the Idaho Constitution provides, “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated; and no warrant shall issue without probable cause shown by affidavit, particularly describing the place to be searched and the person or thing to be seized.” The Idaho Constitution does not specify the remedy for a violation of this provision, nor does the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. 1
In
Weeks v. United States,
If letters and private documents can thus be seized and held and used in evidence against a citizen accused of an offense, the protection of the 4th Amendment, declaring his right to be secure against such searches and seizures, is of no value, and, so far as those thus placed are concerned, might as well be stricken from the Constitution. The efforts of the courts and their officials to bring the guilty to punishment,praiseworthy as they are, are not to be aided by the sacrifice of those great principles established be years of endeavor and suffering which have resulted in their embodiment in the fundamental law of the land.
Id.
at 393,
Three and one-half decades later, the Court decided that the Fourth Amendment should apply to the States, and it used the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as the vehicle for doing so.
Wolf v. People of the State of
Colorado,
Twelve years later, the Court decided that the exclusionary rule should apply to the States. In
Mapp v. Ohio,
The Court’s view of the exclusionary rule later changed again. In
Stone v. Powell,
In
United States v. Leon,
The Court has since expanded the good-faith exception to include a search conducted in reasonable reliance upon a subsequently invalidated statute because legislators, like judges, are not the focus of the rule,
Illinois v. Krull,
The Idaho Supreme Court first addressed the admission into evidence of unlawfully obtained evidence in
State v. Anderson,
Four years later in
State v. Myers,
However, the portion of Justice Budge’s opinion stating that unlawfully seized evidence was admissible did not gain a majority. In a concurrence joined by Justices Dunn and Lee, Justice McCarthy wrote, “I do not concur in that part of the opinion which approves the doctrine of
People v. Mayen,
Five years later in
State v. Arregui
In its decision, the Court made it clear that the evidence unlawfully obtained should be excluded simply because it was obtained in violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights. The Court stated:
Law and court made rules of expediency must not be placed above the Constitution. If violation of constitutional rights or law is to be condoned, excused, palliated, overlooked, or if a violation cannot be proved except by a violation, is it not possible to weigh the various provisions of our Constitution, and fix them in relative importance, above those of any law?....
A continued disregard of the rights guaranteed under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, and the principles thereof incorporated in state Constitutions, heads us directly to revolution against their usurpation, if history tells us correctly that violation of the rights sought to be protected thereby was one of the chief moving reasons for the Revolution. If, one by one, the rights guaranteed by the federal Constitution, can and must, for expediency’s sake, be violated, abolished, stricken from that immortal document, and from state Constitutions, we will find ourselves governed by expediency, not laws or Constitutions, and the revolution will have come.
I can see no such expediency or necessity for the enfoi’cement of any law as to justify violation of constitutional rights to accomplish it. The shock to the sensibilities of the average citizen when his government violates a constitutional right of another is far more evil in its effect than the escape of any criminal through the courts’ observance of those rights.
Id. at 57-58,
In
State v. Rauch,
If letters and private documents can thus be seized and held and used in evidence against a citizen accused of an offense, the protection of the Fourth Amendment, declaring his right to be secureagainst such searches and seizures, is of no value, and, so far as those thus placed are concerned, might as well be stricken from the Constitution. The efforts of the courts and their officials to bring the guilty to punishment, praiseworthy as they are, are not to be aided by the sacrifice of those great principles established by year’s of endeavor and suffering which have resulted in their embodiment in the fundamental law of the land.
Id.
(quoting
Weeks v. United States,
The Rauch Court also quoted from Justice Morgan’s dissent in Anderson as follows:
In order that the total disregard, disclosed by this record, of these constitutional safeguards, may be effectual, the court must become a party to it by receiving the results as proof. I decline to do so, and hold that evidence procured by an illegal and unreasonable search, the purpose of which was to discover and seize it, is inadmissible if timely and proper objection be made to its introduction, because it was procured by an invasion of the rights guaranteed to all persons within this state by section 17, art. 1, of the Constitution, and to admit it, against a defendant in a criminal case over such an objection, would be a violation, by the court, of section 13 thereof.
These sections are guardians of American liberty and justice which come to us from the same source and with like sacrifice as did those, equally but not more greatly prized, whereby we are guaranteed religious liberty, trial by jury, the right to bear arms, to peaceably assemble, free speech, liberty of the press, and many other constitutional safeguards, which, because they have been faithfully upheld by the courts, have accomplished more than has any other agency to make this government one which the peoples of the earth may profitably copy.
Id.
at 593,
In
State v. Prestwick,
The Court had adopted the review-denied rale in
Nash v. Overholser,
The State now asks us to revisit the
Leon
good-faith exception and overrule
Guzman.
We would also have to overrule
Arre-gui
and
Rauch
to the extent that they held that there were reasons supporting the exclusionary rule other than deterring unconstitutional searches and seizures that the law enforcement officers did not reasonably believe were lawful. We will ordinarily not overrule one of our prior opinions unless it is shown to have been manifestly wrong,
Scott v. Gossett,
The State also asserts that “[a] review of the authority relied upon by the
Guzman
plurality does not support its analysis or results.” It argues that “those cases clearly show that Idaho’s exclusionary rule is eo-extensive with the exclusionary rule as adopted and applied by the United States Supreme Court.” To support that argument, the State writes: “For example, the Court first relied upon
State v. Arregui,
The exclusionary rule is a judicially created remedy for searches and seizures that violate the Constitution. As shown
The State contends that “[t]he second flaw of Guzman is its contention that the Leon good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule is inimical to the values of exclusion unrelated to police deterrence.” The State then argues why the Leon Court was right and the Guzman plurality was wrong. It also asserts that application of the exclusionary rule here would not deter police misconduct because the officers involved simply did what they were required to do — execute an arrest warrant.
This Court’s rejection of the
Leon
good-faith exception in
Guzman
was supported by an independent exclusionary rule announced eighty-five years ago in
Arregui.
In
Arre-gui,
there was no claim of law enforcement misconduct. The officers relied upon the validity of a search warrant that was later held to be invalid due to the lack of a showing of probable cause in the affidavit upon which the warrant was issued. Likewise, in
State v. Oropeza,
IV.
Conclusion
We affirm the order of the district court excluding the methamphetamine.
Notes
. The Fourth Amendment provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
. The court of appeals had concluded that the warrant failed the two-part test required by
Aguilar v. Texas,
