STATE of Florida, Petitioner,
v.
Paul A. WELKER, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*1018 Rоbert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen. and John M. Koenig, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, for petitioner.
Leo A. Thomas of Levin, Warfield, Middlebrooks, Mabie, Thomas, Mayes & Mitchell, P.A., Pensacola, for respondent.
GRIMES, Justice.
We have for review Welker v. State,
Welker was charged with trafficking in cocaine after he sold thirty-five grams of cocaine to аn undercover deputy sheriff. At trial, Welker contended that he had been entrapped by a confidential informant, Joe Baggett, acting in concert with the sheriff's department. The state introduced a tape recording of two telephone conversations between Baggett and Welker. A deputy sheriff testified that Baggett had consented to the tаping. Baggett did not testify.
The jury found Welker guilty of possession, sale, or delivery of cocaine with intent to distribute. Departing from the guidelines recommendation of any nonstate prisоn sanction, the trial court sentenced Welker to four years imprisonment followed by two years probation.
On appeal, Welker asserted that it was error to admit the tаpe recordings into evidence because Baggett himself never testified that he consented to the taping of the conversation as required by this Court's decision in Tollett v. State,
HAS THE REQUIREMENT, ENUNCIATED IN TOLLETT V. STATE,272 So.2d 490 (FLA. 1973), THAT CONSENT TO THE TAPING OF A CONVERSATION MUST BE ESTABLISHED BY THE TESTIMONY OF THE PERSON WHO CONSENTED, BEEN SUPERSEDED BY THE 1982 AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE I, § 12, OF THE FLORIDA CONSTITUTION AND UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT DECISIONS CONSTRUING THE FOURTH AMENDMENT TO THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION?
*1019 MAY THE AMOUNT OF DRUGS POSSESSED BY THE DEFENDANT BE USED AS A REASON FOR DEPARTURE FROM THE SENTENCING GUIDELINES IN A PROSECUTION FOR UNLAWFUL POSSESSION OF DRUGS, AND IF SO, UNDER WHAT CRITERIA OR CONDITIONS?
In order to respond to the first question, it is necessary to review Tollett which involved essentially the same facts as those in the instant case. The defendant was convicted after the jury heard a tape-recorded conversation between him and a confidеntial informant, who was working in concert with the police. A police officer testified that the informant had given his consent to the recording, but the informant did not testify. The court recognized that if the recording had been done with the informant's consent there could be no violation of article I, section 12, the search and seizure provision of the Floridа Constitution. However, in a sharply divided opinion, the court rejected the admissibility of the wiretap because the informant did not testify that he had consented to the recording. Thе court said:
[W]here there is no warrant or no testimony of a participant to the communication that he consented to its interception, the hearsay testimony of the police officer only making the wiretap that he was given consent to make it by an alleged participant to the communication does not obviate the requirеments of Section 12, Article I.
This decision has been questioned since article I, section 12 was amended in 1982 to require it to be construed in conformity to the fourth amendment to the Unitеd States Constitution as interpreted by decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States.[1] If a decision of that Court would make the evidence in this case admissible, then we are bоund to follow it. Bernie v. State,
The only United States Supreme Court case that speaks to this issue is United States v. White,
There remains the question of whether we should follow Justice White's plurality opiniоn, which has become the rule in federal courts. United States v. Diaz,
We find that reasoning persuasive. Moreover, we note that the holding in Tollett cannot be sustained upon evidentiary principles. In analyzing that portion of Tollett which characterized the *1020 deputy sheriff's testimony as hearsay, the district court of appeal correctly observed:
The [supreme] [c]ourt apparently overlooked the doctrine that the giving of consent is a verbal act, and therefore testimony that someone has given consent is not hearsay. See, Breedlove v. State,413 So.2d 1 , 6 (Fla.), cert. denied459 U.S. 882 ,103 S.Ct. 184 ,74 L.Ed.2d 149 (1982); Lombardi v. Flaming Fountain, Inc.,327 So.2d 39 (Fla. 2d DCA 1976); McCormick on Evidence, 732-33 (E. Cleary 3rd ed. 1984).
Welker,
For purposes of obtaining evidence of a criminal act, section 934.03(2)(c) authorizes a law enforcement officer to intercept a communication electronically when one of the parties to the communication has given prior consent. There is nothing in сhapter 934 pertaining to security of communications which suggests that the consent must be proven only by the testimony of the consenting party. Tollett is also inconsistent with the rule that third-party consent to search need not be proved by the testimony of the consenting person. United States v. Matlock,
One could legitimately argue that any warrantless intercept should be held unconstitutional regardless of consent. Yet, Florida courts have consistently held that electronic interceptions of communications are admissible if made with the consent of onе of the parties to the communication. Powe v. State,
During these times when police officers are unjustly castigated by so many misguided citizens, I think it extremely inappropriate to say that the testimony of an officer relating to consent cannot even be considered by a jury unless corroborated by an informer. This has not been the law in the past and the people certainly did not intend this result when the Constitutiоn was adopted in 1968.
We have concluded to recede from Tollett. Proof of consent for purposes of electronic intercept shall be governed by traditional rules of evidence. As applied to the instant case, the deputy's testimony that Baggett consented to the intercept sufficed to permit the introduction of the tape recordings. Indeed, there could be little doubt that the informant consented to the recordings because the calls were made from the sheriff's office.
We answered the second question in the negative in Atwaters v. State,
That portion of the opinion below which holds that the tape recordings were inadmissible without the testimony of the informant is quashed. We approve the opinion in all other respects. We remand and direct that the defendant be resentenced within the recommendation of the guidelines.
It is so ordered.
EHRLICH, C.J., and OVERTON, McDONALD and SHAW, JJ., concur.
BARKETT, J., dissents with an opinion, in which KOGAN, J., concurs.
BARKETT, Justice, dissenting.
I respectfully dissеnt. Under the Court's power to establish rules of evidence applicable to judicial proceedings in Florida Courts,[*] the Tollett rule was fashioned after extensive analysis of competing policies. It represented the conclusion of the *1021 Court that the testimony of the consenting party was necessary both to assure the authenticity of the consent as well as to protect the privacy rights of citizens generally.
The Court determined that permitting the state to introduce wiretap evidence based upon consent without аuthentication by the alleged participating informant would "eliminate[] an accused's opportunity to cross-examine the alleged informant ... further[] the invasion of privacy by the police, [and] encourage[] wiretapping, entrapment and manufactured evidence." Tollett,
I note additionally that since the rule was formulated, the citizens of Florida approved article I, section 23 of the Florida Constitution, thereby opting for more protection frоm governmental intrusion. See Winfield v. Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering,
KOGAN, J., concurs.
NOTES
Notes
[1] "[T]he questionable viability of Tollett in regard to its interpretation of the search and seizure provisions of the Florida Constitution was terminated by the recent constitutional amendment." Palmer v. State,
[2] See Welker v. State,
[*] See art. V, § 2(a), Fla. Const.; In re Florida Evidence Code,
