YOUNG v. THE STATE
S07G0613
Supreme Court of Georgia
DECIDED NOVEMBER 21, 2007.
282 Ga. 735 | 653 SE2d 725
DECIDED NOVEMBER 21, 2007.
Delia T. Crouch, for appellant.
Wood, Odom & Edge, Gus L. Wood III, for appellee.
S07G0613. YOUNG v. THE STATE. (653 SE2d 725)
HINES, Justice.
This Court granted certiorari to the Court of Appeals in Young v. State, 282 Ga. App. XXV, Case No. A06A1562 (decided November 27, 2006),1 to consider whether the Court of Appeals correctly held that the defendant waived his right to challenge the lack of a search warrant. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
Homer Young appealed to the Court of Appeals from the trial court‘s denial of his motion to suppress evidence found during a search of his home, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the denial. With respect to the issue on certiorari, on appeal Young contended that the search was illegal because there was no actual search warrant.2 He asserted that the officers conducted the search pursuant to an affidavit and application for a search warrant signed by a magistrate, but that no separate search warrant ever issued. The Court of Appeals held that because Young‘s written motion to suppress did not reasonably put the State on notice about such argument challenging the lack of a warrant, the argument was waived.
At the heart of the matter is
[o]n a motion to suppress, the State is entitled to proper notice of the issue raised or it will be deemed waived. In other words, the suppression motion must be sufficient to put the State on notice as to the type of search [or seizure] involved..., which witness to bring to the hearing on the motion, and the legal issues to be resolved at that hearing.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Id. See also State v. Armstrong, 203 Ga. App. 159, 160 (1) (416 SE2d 537) (1992).
As noted by the Court of Appeals, Young‘s written motion to suppress identified only three legal issues to be addressed at the hearing before the trial court. Young contended that the affidavit in support of the issuance of the search warrant contained insufficient information to establish probable cause; that the information was stale; and that the search warrant was “anticipatory,” that is, the warrant was obtained to intercept a drug delivery to be made in the future. The motion to suppress did not challenge the very existence of a search warrant. In fact, it is quite the contrary. Much of the argument in the motion was premised on the existence of the search warrant, and it expressly mentioned a search warrant several times, even stating that Young was seized and searched by “[o]fficers with a search warrant” and that Young was moving “for an order suppressing all evidence seized from his person and residence under the authority of that search warrant attached hereto as ‘A.’ ” Appended to the motion as “A” was merely the document denoted “Affidavit & Application For A Search Warrant“; there was no copy of an actual warrant included. It was not until the hearing on the motion to suppress that Young‘s counsel raised in argument a question as to the issuance of an actual search warrant.
Yet, Young argues that he adequately and timely addressed the matter because his written motion to suppress was prepared and filed based upon assertions by the State that a search warrant had issued, that it came as a surprise during the suppression hearing that State‘s Exhibit 1, which the State asserted was a search warrant, was only an application for a warrant, and that the issue was brought before the trial court immediately after examination of State‘s Exhibit 1. But, the argument is wholly unavailing.
Certainly, the burden of proving the lawfulness of a search warrant is on the State and that burden never shifts. Graddy v. State, 277 Ga. 765, 767 (3) (596 SE2d 109) (2004). But, it is the defendant‘s decision in the first place whether to seek to suppress allegedly unlawfully-seized evidence by virtue of filing a motion to suppress, and it is then the defendant‘s obligation to state, in that motion, why the search and seizure were unlawful, so as to afford notice of the legal issues which will be before the trial court.
Finally, Young cites Chastain v. State, 158 Ga. App. 654 (281 SE2d 627) (1981), as “[t]he seminal case on the issue of consideration of issues not raised in the original motion to suppress” and urges that the trial court can consider evidence and issues that arise initially during the motion hearing. However, Chastain too involved an altogether different question than that in this case; it addressed and affirmed a trial court‘s authority to reconsider an earlier grant of suppression and to ultimately deny the defendant‘s motion to suppress after the State was permitted to introduce additional evidence at a later hearing. What is more, even if Young was validly surprised at the motion hearing to learn for the first time that no search warrant issued, he did not request a continuance to amend his motion to be in accordance with
The Court of Appeals did not err in finding waiver under the circumstances of this case.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Benham, J., who concurs in judgment only, and Sears, C. J., and Hunstein, P. J., who dissent.
HUNSTEIN, Presiding Justice, dissenting.
This case is wholly controlled by Watts v. State, 274 Ga. 373, 375 (2) (552 SE2d 823) (2001), in which this Court clearly articulated the burden-shifting framework to be applied when a search warrant is challenged:
“Once a motion to suppress has been filed, the burden of proving the lawfulness of the warrant is on the (S)tate and that burden never shifts. (Cits.) The only burden upon the challenger of a search warrant is that of producing evidence to support his challenge, which burden is shifted to him only after the (S)tate has met its initial burden of producing evidence showing the validity of the warrant. (Cit.)” Davis v. State, [266 Ga. 212, 213 (465 SE2d 438) (1996)]. Where a motion to suppress is based on a statutory ground, the State satisfies its initial evidentiary burden ” ‘by production of the warrant and its supporting affidavit, and by showing... that the warrant is not subject to the statutory challenge alleged....‘” Davis v. State, supra at 213. See also State v. Slaughter, [252 Ga. 435, 439 (315 SE2d 865) (1984)]; [Cits.]. Even if the challenge to the warrant is not based upon one of the statutory grounds, the State‘s burden of producing evidence shifts to the defendant only after production of the warrant and its supporting affidavit. State v. Slaughter, supra at 439.
(Emphasis supplied.) Watts, supra at 375.
Attempting to distinguish Watts, supra, the majority notes that the allegations of the defendant‘s motion to suppress in that case were held sufficient to put the State on notice. Op. at 737. The defendant in Watts only alleged that the warrant had unspecified material omissions that undermined its validity, however. Watts, supra at 373. There is no indication that the lack of a warrant was alleged in the motion to suppress, and the warrant was never introduced into evidence. Id. at 375. Because “[t]he warrant and supporting affidavit are necessary to establish the standard against which [the defendant‘s] allegations [a]re required to be balanced,” the Court held that the State‘s failure to meet its initial burden of production rendered the trial court‘s denial of the defendant‘s motion to suppress erroneous. Id. at 376. This holding does not undermine the requirements of
Because the State failed to meet its initial burden of producing the warrant here, the burden of producing evidence in support of the motion to suppress never shifted to Young. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court‘s denial of his motion to suppress.
I am authorized to state that Chief Justice Sears joins in this dissent.
DECIDED NOVEMBER 21, 2007.
William O. Cox, for appellant.
Tom Durden, District Attorney, Mark A. Hendrix, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
