Pursuant to SCRA 1986, 12-502 (Repl.Pamp.1992), the State appeals the Court of Appeals’ opinion in State v. Ware,
I.
On May 29, 1990, police officers responded to a call of dоmestic violence at Defendant’s address. The officers found Betty Ann Martinez (“Martinez”), Defendant’s girlfriend, bleeding from a wound on the back of her head. The officers also found the Defendant at the scene, with blood on his body and clothing. During the course of investigating the scene, the officers found a rock that had blood on it. The officers did not attempt to collect the rock itself, or samples from the rock, such as blood, other bodily fluids, cloth, fibers, or hair. Instead, a police detective photographed the rock where it was found. Following further investigation, the officers arrested Defendant at the scene.
A hearing before a grand jury was held on June 7, 1990. At the hearing, Martinez testified that someone other than Defendant chased her into the landlord’s yard and pounded on her head with a rock. 1 Martinez testified that she could not identify her assailant and had no idea why someone would attack her. On June 8, 1990, the grand jury indicted Defendant on three counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. See NMSA 1978, § 30-3-5(A) & (C) (Repl.Pamp. 1984).
On May 15, 1991, Defendаnt filed a Motion to Dismiss, claiming that the State’s negligence in failing to preserve the rock violated his due process rights under the state and federal constitutions. The Defendant sought dismissal of the charges against him or suppression of any photographs or testimony pertaining to the rock. A hearing on the motion was held on May 16, 1991. At the hearing, Defendant argued that State v. Lovato,
The State argued that Defendant had failed to show prejudice resulting from the failure to collect the rock. The State maintained that the police investigating the crime scene had simply made a judgment call and decided to photograph the rock rаther than to take the rock into evidence. The State asserted that witnesses would verify the connection of the rock to the crime charged. Finally, the State contended that it had breached no duty to the Defendant by failing
The trial court granted Defendant’s motion and filed an Order of Prohibition on June 19, 1991. The court found that Defendant had been prejudiced by not being able to conduct tests of blood, bodily fluids, cloth, fibers, or hair from the rock, and by being denied the opportunity “to challenge the nexus of the rock to the incident.” The court found that the State’s failure to preserve physical evidence had violated Defendant’s due process rights “as guaranteed by Article II, Section 18 of the New Mexico Constitution [and] by the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution.” The court prohibited the State from introducing photographs of the rock and ruled that none of the State’s witnesses could testify about the rock.
The State appealed the trial court’s order to the Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s decision in an opinion filed on June 29, 1993. The Court of Appeals applied the three-part test articulated in Lovato and State v. Chouinard,
II.
On appeal, we address whether the Court of Appeals erred when it affirmed the trial court’s order suppressing all evidence and testimony pertaining to the rock that Defendant allegedly used to assault Martinez. Defendant maintains that the State “breached its duty to preserve physical evidence which it had collected” when police photographed the rock, rather than collecting it for evidence. Defendant contends that the Court of Appeals was correct in upholding the trial court’s suppression of all evidence regarding the rock under the test set forth by Lovato and Chouinard. This test determines whether deprivation of evidence violates a criminal defendant’s right to due process and requires suppression of the evidence if: “[ (1) ] The State either breached some duty or intentionally deprived the defendant of evidence; [ (2) ] [t]he improperly ‘suppressed’ evidence [was] material; and [ (3) ] [t]he suppression of [the] evidence prejudiced the defendant.” Chouinard,
The State argues that in this case, the police did not lose, destroy or fail to preserve physical evidence. The State contends that the police failed to collect evidence at the crime scene and that investigating officers do not have a duty to collect every piece of evidence at the scene. Consequently, the State maintains that the three-part test pronounced in Lovato and Chouinard dоes not apply in this case. Instead, the State asserts that the applicable standard is a test set forth by the United States Supreme Court in California v. Trombetta,
In affirming the trial court, the Court of Appeals concluded that the State has a “ ‘duty to preserve, where reasonably practical, relevant evidence obtained in the investigation of a crime.’” Ware,
A.
We hold that the three-part test in Lovato and Chouinard does not apply to determine the admissibility of evidence in cases where the State fails to gather physical evidence during the investigation of a crime scene. As the State points out, our courts
We also reject the State’s assertion that Youngblood and Trombetta apply to the facts of the case at bar. The State argues that Trombetta requires thе collection and preservation of “constitutionally material” evidence.
3
We reject the argument that Trombetta and Youngblood are applicable for the same reason we reject application of the test in Lovato and Chouinard. Both Trombetta and Youngblood are cases where evidence was seized by the State and subsequently destroyed, rather than eases where the State never gathered the evidence in the first place. See Trombetta,
B.
The law recognizes three general circumstances that give rise to a claim that the State violated a criminal defendant’s right to due process by failing to “provide evidence to the defense which is within, or potentially within, [the State’s] purview.” State v. Steffes,
A second circumstance arises when the State destroys, loses, or fails to preserve evidence that has previously been collected during the investigation of a crime. Steffes,
Finally, the third circumstance arises when the State fails to collect evidence from the crime scene in the first place. Usually, the failure to gather evidence is not the same as the failurе to preserve evidence, and that the State generally has no duty to collect particular evidence at the crime scene. See Steffes,
The distinction between the failure to preserve evidence gathered and the State’s failure to collect evidence during the investigation of a crime scene was recognized by this Court in State v. Rose,
This Court affirmed the defendant’s conviction and noted that there is a fundamental distinction between the failure to preserve material evidence after it has been seized, and the failure to gather evidence in the first instance when police officers are investigating a crime scene:
[The defendant] relies on [various state and federal] cases---- Each of the cited cases involved actual suppression, concealment or nondisclosure by the prosecutor of evidence or testimony, and [do] not in any sense relate to the claim made here, i.e., negligence on the part of the investigating officers. In [Trimble v. State,75 N.M. 183 ,402 P.2d 162 (1965)], we discussed prejudice to the defendant in a criminal case because of the negligent failure of the рrosecution to preserve evidence which it had seized, but this is afar cry from what occurred here. In this case it is the manner of investigation that is challenged— not the seizing and subsequent negligent loss or destruction of exculpatory evidence.
Id. (Emphasis added).
After recognizing this distinction, this Court suggested a somewhat deferential standard to be applied when reviewing police investigatory procedures and the failure to gather certain evidence:
Stripped of all but the bare essentials, it appears that [the dеfendant] seeks to have this court “second guess” the actions of the investigating officers. No doubt in this, as in many other investigations, officers later wish they had made a more complete, detailed investigation. In this instance, the offense having occurred some forty miles out in the country, the investigation may have fallen short of “textbook” procedures, but we are not prepared to say on the facts of this case that the investigation requires a reversal.
Id. at 278-79,
[w]hile officers have a duty to preserve potentially exculpatory evidence actually gathered during a criminal investigation, the due process clause has never required officers to undertake a state-of-the-art investigation of all reported crimes. Officers investigаting a crime need not “track down every conceivable investigative lead and seize every scintilla of evidence regardless of its apparent importance or lack of importance at the time, or run the risk of denying a defendant due process or his discovery rights.”
March,
Bradley, a case factually similar to the instant case, illustrates the application of the generаl rule that investigating officers are not required to gather physical evidence at the crime scene. In Bradley, the police were investigating the scene where a woman had been badly beaten in her home by a man who had broken into the home.
At trial, the defendant moved to dismiss the case for failure of the police to collect and preserve bloodstained articles at the scene. Id. at 487. In the alternative, the defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that any blood at the scene was not his. Id. The trial court concluded that the officers “had a duty to collect bloodstained articles and had negligently failed to do so.” Id. The court decided that it would instruct the jury to presume that the bloodstains were not the defendant’s. Id. The State appealed this ruling.
On appeal, the California Court of Appeals noted that the bloodstains may or may not have been material, id., at 489, that the prosecution’s case did not rely on bloodstain evidence, but on eyewitness testimony, id. at 490, and that “the failure to collect bloodstains was at worst an oversight,” id. at 491. The Court concluded that the law did not “place a burden upon the police to engage in foresight and collect everything that might prove useful to the defense” merely because the police had secured the crime scene. Id. at 489-90. Accordingly, the Court held that the officers investigating the case “had no due process duty to collect bloodstained articles found at the scene of the crime to preserve them for defendant’s use.” Id. at 490.
C.
While we recognize the rule that police officers generally have no duty to collect all potential evidence from a crime scene, we conclude that this rule is not absolute. We do not condone shoddy and inadequate police investigation procedures at the expense of a criminal defendant’s right to a fair trial. In some eases, the State’s failure to gather evidence may amount to suppression of material evidence. See Bradley, at 491 (noting that police “might have a duty at some point to seize an item of evidence”); People v. Vigil,
Generally, the courts have either expressly or impliedly considered two factors when faced with an argument that the State’s failure to collect evidence deprived a defendant of his due process rights. The first factor is whether the evidence is relevant, material, or important to the defense, as opposed to extraneous or duplicative of other evidence. Nicholson,
Based upon these factors, we adopt a two-part test for deciding whether to sanction the State when police fail to gather evidence from the crime scene. First, as a threshold matter the evidence that the State failed to gather from the crime scene must be material to the defendant’s defense. Sanctions are not appropriate for failure to gather evidence immaterial to the defendant’s defense. The determination of evidence materiality is a question of law for the court. Evidence is material only “ ‘if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been [available] to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.’ ” State v. Fero,
If the evidence is material to the defendant’s defense, then the conduct of the investigating officers is considered. If the trial court determines that the failure to collect the evidence was done in bad faith, in an attempt to prejudice the defendant’s case, then the trial court may order the evidence suppressed. If it is determined that the officers were grossly negligent in failing to gather the evidence — for example, by acting directly cоntrary to standard police investigatory procedure — then the trial court may instruct the jury that it can infer that the material evidence not gathered from the crime scene would be unfavorable to the State. See McGill,
In the instant case, we conclude that the rock allegedly used to batter Martinez is material to Defendant’s defense. Although it is a close call, we believe that there is a reasonable probability that the unavailability of the rock could affect the outcome of the ease. However, much like the ease in Bradley, the record before us indicates that the decision to photograph the rock, rather than collect it as physical evidence, was a judgment call and certainly not anything more than mere inadvertence or ordinary negligence on the part of the police. Thus, we hold that suppression of the evidence of the rock was inappropriate and that the trial court abused its discretion by suppressing this evidence.
In conclusion, we hold that the Court of Appeals erred by applying the test outlined in Lovato and Chouinard, and by affirming the trial court order suppressing any evidence of the rock. We reverse the order of the trial court and remand this ease for trial. During the trial on remand, Defendant can argue the shortcomings of the police investigation against the standard of reasonable doubt.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The State claimed that Martinez told the officers at the scene that Defendant had beaten her on the head with a rock. Martinez testified at the grand jury hearing that she did not recall talking to the police because she blacked out after being hit.
. See, e.g., Scoggins v. State,
. Trombetta defines "constitutionally material” evidence as evidence that possesses "an exculpatory value that was apparent before [it] was destroyed [or lost],” and that could not be replaced by comparable evidence collected by other reasonably available means.
