Watts v. the State , 334 Ga. App. 770 ( 2015 )


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  •                                SECOND DIVISION
    ANDREWS, P. J.,
    MILLER and BRANCH, JJ.
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    November 20, 2015
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A15A0796. WATTS v. THE STATE.
    BRANCH, Judge.
    Following a bench trial at which he stipulated to both the facts and the
    sufficiency of the evidence, Monquezias Watts was convicted of a single count each
    of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, possession of a firearm during the
    commission of a felony, and theft by receiving. The trial court sentenced Watts to
    eight years, but probated the sentence. After Watts failed to comply with conditions
    of his probation, the trial court revoked his probation and remanded him to custody.
    Following the revocation of his probation, Watts sought and was denied an appeal
    bond. Watts now appeals his conviction, the revocation of his probation, and the
    denial of his appeal bond. With respect to his conviction, Watts claims that the trial
    court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence discovered by police after they
    illegally detained Watts following a traffic stop. As to the revocation of his probation,
    Watts argues that the trial court erred when it held that his notice of appeal did not act
    as a supersedeas, preventing the enforcement of his probationary conditions. Finally,
    Watts contends that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion for an
    appellate bond.
    For reasons explained more fully below, we find that the trial court erred in
    concluding that the free-air sniff which resulted in the seizure of drugs and
    contraband did not violate the Fourth Amendment because it occurred during a de
    minimis extension of the traffic stop. Accordingly, the court erred in denying Watts’s
    motion to suppress. We therefore vacate both the order denying the motion to
    suppress and the judgment of conviction and remand the case for further proceedings.
    We further find that Watts’s second and third claims of errors are based on orders that
    were entered after Watts filed his notice of appeal from the judgment of conviction.
    Given this fact, and given that Watts never filed a notice of appeal as to the orders
    revoking his probation and denying his appellate bond, we lack jurisdiction to address
    Watts’s second and third claims of error.
    At a hearing on a motion to suppress, the trial judge sits as the trier of
    fact. On appeal from the grant or denial of such a motion, therefore, this
    2
    Court must construe the evidence most favorably to uphold the findings
    and judgment of the trial court, and that court’s findings as to disputed
    facts and credibility must be adopted unless clearly erroneous. However,
    we owe no deference to the trial court’s conclusions of law and are
    instead free to apply anew the legal principles to the facts.
    Bodiford v. State, 
    328 Ga. App. 258
    , 258 (761 SE2d 818) (2014) (citations and
    punctuation omitted). See also Jones v. State, 
    291 Ga. 35
    , 36-37 (1) (727 SE2d 456)
    (2012) (where “the evidence at a suppression hearing is uncontroverted and the
    credibility of witnesses is not in question, we conduct a de novo review of the trial
    court’s application of the law to the undisputed facts”).
    The relevant facts in this case are undisputed. At approximately 1:30 a.m. on
    June 16, 2012, Sergeant Wayne Franco of the Woodstock Police Department initiated
    a traffic stop of a vehicle driven by Tremayne Gay and in which Watts, Chasmine
    Johnson, and Alma Rico were passengers. Two video recordings of this stop and the
    subsequent police investigation, including the police search of Gay’s truck, were
    introduced into evidence and shown at the motion to suppress hearing.
    Franco initiated the stop after observing that the license plate on Gay’s truck
    was covered by a piece of tinted plastic, in violation of OCGA § 40-2-11. Franco
    testified that he became suspicious of the individuals in the truck because Gay
    3
    continued to drive the truck for approximately two blocks before pulling to the side
    of the road. After viewing the video recorded by his patrol-car camera, however,
    Franco acknowledged that Gay had pulled over at the first opportunity he had to do
    so, without having to make a left hand turn across traffic. Additionally, the video
    recording of the stop shows that Gay pulled to the side of the road and came to a stop
    approximately 33 seconds after Franco activated the blue lights on his patrol car.
    When Franco approached Gay’s truck, both Gay and Watts, who was the front-
    seat passenger, were smoking cigars that appeared to be freshly-lit. Franco explained
    that, in his experience, people in possession of drugs will often “chain smoke” either
    cigarettes or cigars to mask the odor of any contraband. Franco further testified that
    Gay appeared to have what he described as “a little cotton mouth” and the eyes of
    both men appeared bloodshot. Based on these observations, Franco believed there
    was a possibility that both men were “under the influence of marijuana.” Franco
    acknowledged, however, that he saw no signs that Gay’s driving was impaired or that
    Watts was impaired by either drugs or alcohol. Additionally, no investigation was
    conducted into whether Gay was under the influence of any controlled substance.
    While some investigation may have been made into whether Watts was impaired, the
    State provided no evidence at either the motion to suppress hearing or at trial showing
    4
    that Watts was under the influence of either alcohol or drugs at the time of the traffic
    stop. And as discussed below, the video of the traffic stop shows that police were
    prepared to allow Watts to drive Gay’s car from the scene.
    Immediately after making contact with Gay, Franco explained to him the reason
    for the stop and asked both Gay and Watts to provide Franco with their driver’s
    licenses. The men did so, and Franco returned to his patrol car and relayed the license
    information to dispatch. Less than one minute later, dispatch reported that Gay’s
    license had been revoked, that Watts’s license was valid, and that neither man had
    any outstanding warrants. After receiving this information, Franco remained in his
    patrol car for approximately two and one-half minutes, awaiting the arrival of a
    second officer, Eric Maddox. Approximately one minute after Maddox’s arrival and
    approximately seven and one-half minutes after the traffic stop began, police arrested
    Gay for driving without a license and also charged him with a misdemeanor tag
    violation. Following his arrest, police questioned Gay about his passengers and where
    they lived, as well as about the contents of Gay’s car. During this process, Maddox
    and/or Franco twice asked Gay whether he would consent for Watts to drive Gay’s
    truck from the scene; each time the officers asked this question, they informed Gay
    5
    that Watt’s license had returned as valid. Both times he was asked, Gay responded
    that Watts had his permission to drive the truck from the scene.
    After completing the arrest process for Gay, which included questioning him,
    inventorying his pockets, handcuffing him, and placing him in the back of Maddox’s
    patrol car for transport, Franco returned to the truck and its three remaining
    passengers. Rather than returning Watts’s license to him and informing him he had
    permission to drive the truck, however, Franco asked Watts to exit the vehicle. Watts
    complied with this request, exited the vehicle with his hands in front of him, and
    consented to a search of his person. Franco then asked Watts to accompany him, and
    the two men stood next to a patrol car while Franco questioned Watts about his
    relationship to Gay, how well Watts knew the female passengers, what activities the
    group had engaged in that night, and the contents of the truck. According to Franco,
    Watts appeared nervous and when questioned, Watts told the officer that Gay was a
    friend of the family. Gay, however, told the officer that Watts was his stepson.1
    Following his interview of Watts, Franco instructed Watts to remain next to the
    patrol car, and he returned to the truck and told the women they needed to exit the
    1
    The evidence at the motion to suppress hearing showed that Gay was, in fact,
    the then-boyfriend of Watts’s mother, but the couple was not married.
    6
    vehicle because the police needed to search it for alcohol.2 Franco also instructed the
    women to leave their personal belongings in the truck and asked for and received
    permission to search those belongings.3
    After having the women exit the vehicle, and approximately 14 minutes into
    the traffic stop and between six and seven minutes after Gay’s arrest, Franco asked
    the women for identification. When both women replied they had no identification
    with them, Maddox asked each woman for the correct spelling of her name and her
    date of birth. Each of the women provided that information, with Johnson explaining
    that she had a South Carolina driver’s license and Rico stating that she lived in South
    Carolina. Franco provided this information to dispatch and asked the dispatcher to run
    a check in both Georgia and South Carolina. Approximately ten seconds later,
    dispatch responded that Johnson had a valid South Carolina driver’s license and that
    2
    It is unclear on what basis the police planned to justify their search of the
    vehicle for alcohol. Alcohol is not an illegal substance and Gay, the owner and driver
    of the vehicle, was over the age of 21, as was Watts, the person to whom the vehicle
    was to be released. Additionally, there was no evidence that the officers believed that
    any of the passengers were under the influence of alcohol or that the officers detected
    the odor of alcohol coming from the vehicle, thereby indicating that an open container
    might be present. Nor was there any evidence that officers saw an open container of
    alcohol in the vehicle.
    3
    Both women had a purse with them and Rico also had what she described as
    a “travel bag.”
    7
    she had no outstanding warrants, but that there was “no return” on Rico. In other
    words, the check indicated that Rico, who was 18 years-old at the time, had no
    driver’s license, no state-issued identification, no criminal record, and no outstanding
    warrants. Police then proceeded to question Rico about her lack of identification.
    During questioning, Rico stated that she had either a passport or a visa in her purse.
    Rico again consented to the search of her purse and told police in which area of the
    bag her travel documents could be found. When police found these documents, the
    name and date of birth thereon matched the information provided earlier by Rico, and
    which showed that Rico had no outstanding warrants. At that point, police were
    satisfied that they knew Rico’s identity and legal status.
    While Franco was running the identity checks of Johnson and Rico, Maddox
    read Gay his Miranda rights and then asked Gay for permission to search his truck.
    Gay refused consent, and Maddox relayed this information to Franco. Franco then
    requested a K-9 unit to come to the scene just before he began his search of Rico’s
    bag for her identification documents. Approximately two minutes after police had
    finished ascertaining the identity and legal status of all of the truck’s passengers, the
    K-9 unit arrived on the scene. Approximately two minutes later, and 14 to 15 minutes
    after the conclusion of Gay’s arrest and the police determination that Watts could
    8
    drive Gay’s car from the scene, the dog’s handler had the dog perform a free-air sniff
    around Gay’s truck. The dog alerted on the truck, and when police allowed him into
    the vehicle, the dog alerted on a black backpack. Police removed the backpack from
    the truck, searched it, and found it contained some amount of marijuana4, a package
    of plastic sandwich bags, scales of the kind used to weigh drugs, and a nine-
    millimeter handgun. When police ran a computer check on the gun’s serial number,
    they discovered the gun had been reported stolen from a residence in Gwinnett
    County.
    Prior to trial, Watts moved to suppress the evidence seized from Gay’s truck
    on the grounds that the discovery of that evidence had resulted from an illegally
    prolonged traffic stop. Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied that
    motion without explanation. The trial court certified its order for immediate review,
    and this Court granted Watts’s application for an interlocutory appeal. We
    subsequently dismissed that appeal as improvidently granted and remanded the case
    back to the trial court. On remand, the case proceeded to a bench trial, after which
    Watts was convicted.
    4
    The State offered no evidence, either at the motion to suppress hearing or at
    trial, to show the amount of marijuana found in the backpack.
    9
    Watts filed his notice of appeal from the judgment of conviction on March 21,
    2014. On September 11, 2014, the State filed a petition to revoke Watts’s probation.
    The trial court granted that motion and issued a warrant for Watts’s arrest. After his
    arrest, Watts filed a motion to dismiss the probation warrant, arguing that the notice
    of appeal of his conviction served as a supersedeas and therefore stayed execution of
    his sentence. Thus, Watts reasoned that he was not subject to the terms of his
    probated sentence during the pendency of his appeal. The trial court held a hearing
    on Watts’s petition and thereafter denied the same in an order entered on October 16,
    2014. Watts then filed a motion for an appeal bond. Following a hearing on that
    motion, the trial court denied bond in an order entered on December 11, 2014. Watts
    did not file a notice of appeal from either the order denying his motion to dismiss the
    probation warrant or the order denying his motion for an appeal bond.
    1. We first address whether the trial court erred in denying Watts’s motion to
    suppress. On a motion to suppress, the State bears the burden of proving that the
    search at issue did not violate the Fourth Amendment. Dominguez v. State, 
    310 Ga. App. 370
    , 372 (714 SE2d 25) (2011). To carry its burden in this case, the State was
    required to show that it was legal to detain Watts at the scene until the drug dog
    indicated the presence of drugs. 
    Id.
     Specifically, the State needed to prove that the
    10
    police officers did not extend the stop of Gay’s truck “beyond the conclusion of the
    investigation that warranted the detention in the first place,” i.e., that the officers did
    not prolong the stop after concluding their investigation of Gay’s tag violation.
    Rodriguez v. State, 
    295 Ga. 362
    , 369 (2) (b) (761 SE2d 19) (2014) (citation omitted).
    Alternatively, the State could meet its burden by showing that the investigating
    officers had “a particularized reason to suspect that [Watts was] engaged in some
    other criminal activity.” Dominguez, 310 Ga. App. at 372.
    (a) Watts contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress
    on the grounds that the free-air sniff of Gay’s truck involved only a brief extension
    of the traffic stop. We agree.
    At the hearing below, the State argued, and the trial court found, that the traffic
    stop was not complete until the police had ascertained the identity of and run a
    warrant check on each of Gay’s passengers. The State argued that such an identity
    and warrant check was justified by officer safety concerns. We assume for purposes
    11
    of   this   appeal     that    the    State’s    argument       is   correct. 5   See
    5
    We note that in denying the motion to suppress, the trial court found that
    because Gay’s truck was being released to Watts and the two female passengers,
    police did not act unreasonably in determining the identity of all those persons to
    whom they were releasing the vehicle. In doing so, the court expressly rejected the
    State’s argument that the identity and warrant checks were justified by officer safety
    concerns. Specifically, the court made a credibility determination and found that
    despite Franco’s testimony as to his safety concerns, the evidence failed to show that
    such concerns justified Franco’s insistence on prolonging the traffic stop for the sole
    purpose of determining the identity of the two female passengers. The record shows
    that Franco testified that at the time he ran the warrant search on the female
    passengers, neither had done anything illegal and he had no basis for believing that
    either was engaged in illegal activity. At the time the traffic stop otherwise would
    have concluded (following Gay’s arrest and the determination that Watts had a valid
    license and was authorized to drive the car from the scene), police had asked for and
    received permission to search Watts’s person and, as reflected by the videos of the
    traffic stop, all three passengers had readily complied with all instructions given by
    both of the officers at the scene.
    It may be that in light of the Georgia Supreme Court’s recent decision in State
    v. Allen, ___ Ga. ___ (2) (c) (Case No. S14G1765, decided Nov. 2, 2015), the trial
    court erred in making a factual finding as to whether officer safety concerns existed
    and prompted the officer’s insistence on confirming the identity of the two female
    passengers. See Allen, ___ Ga. at ___ (2) (d) (indicating that as a matter of law,
    officer safety concerns always justify an identity and warrant check of all passengers
    in an automobile that is the subject of a traffic stop, noting “[a]n officer in today’s
    reality has an objective, reasonable basis to fear for his or her life every time a
    motorist is stopped”) (citation and punctuation omitted). Given that the circumstances
    of this case do not require us to decide that question, however, we decline to do so.
    Instead, in accordance with Allen, we have assumed that officer safety concerns were
    present and that the traffic stop was not complete until police had ascertained the
    identity and warrant status of all passengers. In making this assumption, however, we
    note that the traffic stop at issue, including the identity and warrant check of all
    passengers, was indisputably complete before the dog sniff occurred. Thus, this case
    does not require us to determine whether the officer’s delay in checking the identity
    and legal status of the female passengers until all other tasks related to the stop
    12
    State v. Allen, ___ Ga. ___ (2) (c) (Case No. S14G1765, decided Nov. 2, 2015)
    (“identification checks of both drivers and passengers are generally permitted as an
    officer safety measure during a traffic stop”); Rodriguez, 295 Ga. at 372-373 (2) (b)
    (as a general rule, a check of the passengers’ identity at the outset of a traffic stop is
    justified as in the interests of officer safety).
    As the State conceded at the motion to suppress hearing, the undisputed
    evidence in this case shows that the traffic stop was complete, at the latest, at the time
    police were satisfied they knew Rico’s identity and legal status. See Faulkner v. State,
    (including the arrest of Gay, the search of Watts, and the determination that Watts had
    both a valid license and Gay’s permission to drive his truck from the scene) illegally
    prolonged the stop. See Rodriguez v. United States, ___ U. S. ___ (II) (135 SCt 1609,
    1615-1616, 191 LEd2d 492) (2015) (recognizing that traffic stops are “fraught with
    dangers to officers” and that “the government’s officer safety interest stems from the
    mission of the stop itself,” but further stating that “safety precautions taken in order
    to facilitate” an “[o]n-scene investigation into other crimes” do not fall within the
    “mission of the traffic stop” and explaining that the Fourth Amendment requires “that
    an officer always has to be reasonably diligent. . . . [and] diligence [is] gauged . . .
    by noting what the officer actually did and how he did it[.] If an officer can complete
    traffic-based inquiries expeditiously, then that is the amount of time reasonably
    required to complete the stop’s mission. As we . . . reiterate today, a traffic stop
    prolonged beyond that point is unlawful.”) (Emphasis supplied; punctuation omitted.)
    Nor does this case require us to consider whether Allen forbids Georgia courts from
    making such a determination. See Allen, ___ Ga. at ___ (2) (d) (“The sequence of the
    officer’s actions during a traffic stop is not determinative; instead, the primary
    question is whether the activity at issue was related to the mission of the stop. . . . If
    . . . the task is a component of the traffic-stop mission, it may be done at any point
    during the stop. It does not matter if a mission-related activity takes place as soon as
    the stop begins or, as is the case here, after other mission-related activities have been
    completed.”)
    13
    
    256 Ga. App. 129
    , 130 (567 SE2d 754) (2002) (as a matter of law, a traffic stop is
    complete “once the tasks related to the investigation of the traffic violation . . . have
    been accomplished”). Thus, the record is undisputed that the traffic stop had
    concluded approximately four minutes before police conducted the free-air sniff. The
    trial court acknowledged that fact, but nevertheless concluded that the continued
    detention of Watts and the female passengers did not violate the Fourth Amendment.
    The court based this conclusion on the law holding that a brief or de minimis
    extension of a traffic stop does not violate the Fourth Amendment. See Rodriguez,
    295 Ga. at 371 (holding that the length by which the police prolonged the detention
    “is relevant to [the] inquiry” of whether the detention violated the Fourth
    Amendment), citing United States v. Digiovanni, 650 F3d 498, 509 (II) (4th Cir.
    2011) (“where a delay can be characterized as de minimis under the totality of the
    circumstances, it will not be recognized as a Fourth Amendment violation”) (citations
    omitted); Young v. State, 
    310 Ga. App. 270
    , 273 (712 SE2d 652) (2011) (“[i]n the
    end, the question is ‘whether [the detention] was appreciably prolonged,” considering
    “the detention as a whole,’ and keeping in mind that ‘the touchstone of our inquiry
    [under the Fourth Amendment] is reasonableness’”), quoting United States v. De La
    Cruz, 703 F3d 1193, 1203 (I) (A) (10th Cir. 2013).
    14
    The United States Supreme Court, however, recently rejected the concept that
    the Fourth Amendment allows any kind of extension of a traffic stop beyond the
    investigation of the traffic violation that warranted the stop, even if that extension
    could be considered minimal. Rodriguez, 135 SCt at 1615-1616.6 In that case, the
    drug dog had arrived within five minutes after the police had completed all tasks
    related to the traffic stop and the dog alerted on the car one to two minutes later. Id.
    at 1613. Following his indictment on possession with intent to distribute
    methamphetamine, Rodriguez moved to suppress the drugs found in his car arguing
    that the free-air sniff around the vehicle resulted from an illegally prolonged traffic
    stop. The trial court denied Rodriguez’s motion, relying on precedent holding that
    “‘dog sniffs that occur within a short time following the completion of a traffic stop
    are not constitutionally prohibited if they constitute only de minimis intrusions.’” Id.
    at 1613-1614. Applying that law, the trial court concluded that “the ‘7 to 10 minutes’
    added to the stop by the dog sniff ‘was not of constitutional significance.’” Id. at
    1614. The Eighth Circuit affirmed this ruling, finding that the delay at issue
    “constituted an acceptable ‘de minimis intrusion on Rodriguez’s personal liberty’”
    6
    We note that the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in
    Rodriguez well after the trial court in this case had ruled on the motion to suppress.
    15
    and therefore did not violate the Fourth Amendment. The United States Supreme
    Court reversed, noting that “a dog sniff . . . is not an ordinary incident of a traffic stop
    . . . [and] is not fairly characterized as part of the officer’s traffic mission.” Id. at
    1615. The Court therefore concluded that the Fourth Amendment does not “tolerate[]
    a dog sniff conducted after completion of a traffic stop,” even if the time by which the
    stop was extended was minimal. Id. at 1616.
    Applying Rodriguez to the current case, we find that the four-minute extension
    of the traffic stop at issue for the purpose of allowing the drug dog to perform a free-
    air sniff around Gay’s car violated Watts’s Fourth Amendment rights. Id. See also
    Allen, ___ Ga. at ___ (2) (a) (“prolonging a traffic stop in order to conduct an open-
    air dog sniff renders the seizure unlawful, even if that process adds very little time to
    the stop”). The trial court erred in holding otherwise.
    (b) The State argues that we should nevertheless affirm the trial court’s denial
    of Watt’s motion to suppress, relying on the rule that a police officer may detain the
    subjects of a traffic stop “after the investigation of the traffic violation is complete .
    . . if the officer has a reasonable, articulable suspicion that the driver was engaged in
    16
    other illegal activity.” Bodiford7, 328 Ga. App. at 267 (2) (citation and punctuation
    omitted). The State bears the burden of proving facts that establish a basis for
    continued detention, McSwain v. State, 
    240 Ga. App. 60
    , 61 (522 SE2d 553) (1999),
    and whether the State has met this burden is a question of law. Rosas v. State, 
    276 Ga. App. 513
    , 516 (1) (b) (624 SE2d 142) (“[w]hether a given set of facts rises to the
    level of reasonable suspicion is a legal question”) (footnote omitted). As explained
    below, however, in the absence of certain factual and credibility determinations by
    the trial court, we are unable to address that legal question on this appeal.
    In its appellate brief, the State relies on five observations testified to by Franco
    to support its claim that the police had a reasonable suspicion that the occupants of
    Gay’s car were engaged in illegal activity: the length of time it took Gay to pull over
    after Franco activated his blue lights; Watts and Gay gave somewhat conflicting
    statements about their relationship to one another; Gay had “cotton mouth” and both
    7
    The State did not advance this argument in the trial court, but instead argued
    only that the four-minute extension of the traffic stop for the purpose of allowing a
    dog sniff around Gay’s car did not violate Watts’s Fourth Amendment rights. On
    appeal, however, the State argues that the trial court should be affirmed under the
    “right for any reason” rule, because the officers had a reasonable, articulable
    suspicion of drug activity. See State v. Thackston, 
    289 Ga. 412
    , 417 (3) (716 SE2d
    517) (2011) (an appellee need not anticipate “every conceivable argument in support
    of the trial court’s decision” in order to obtain the benefit of the right-for-any-reason
    rule).
    17
    Gay and Watts had bloodshot eyes; Gay and Watts were smoking cigars; and Watts
    appeared nervous. We find as a matter of law that one of these facts – the allegedly
    conflicting statements made by Watts and Gay – provide no basis for suspecting
    illegal activity, even if viewed in conjunction with the remaining four facts.
    As this Court has explained previously, differing statements as to the nature of
    the relationship between the passengers does not provide police with a basis for
    suspecting drug activity where those statements offer no “meaningful
    inconsistencies.” Migliore v. State, 
    240 Ga. App. 783
    , 786 (525 SE2d 166) (1999)
    (fact that car’s driver described female passenger as his girlfriend while the female
    passenger described the driver as a friend was not a meaningful inconsistency and
    was therefore insufficient to give rise to a suspicion of illegal activity). See also
    Weems v. State, 
    318 Ga. App. 749
    , 751 (734 SE2d 749) (2012) (fact that driver and
    her male passenger gave conflicting stories as to who had picked up whom earlier in
    the day did not provide a basis for suspecting criminal activity). Here, Gay described
    himself as Watts’s stepfather while Watts described Gay as his mother’s boyfriend.
    Particularly given that “it is not uncommon for individuals to have different
    perceptions of the nature of [a romantic] relationship,” the alleged inconsistency at
    18
    issue did not provide police with a basis for suspecting Gay and Watts possessed
    drugs. Migliore, 240 Ga. App. at 786.
    The question becomes, therefore, whether the four remaining facts relied upon
    by the State, when viewed together, provided police with a reasonable, articulable
    suspicion that Gay’s car contained contraband.8 See Dominguez, 310 Ga. App. at 374
    (“[t]o show that an officer had reasonable grounds upon which to temporarily detain
    an individual for the purpose of conducting an investigation, the State is required to
    prove that the officer then was aware of ‘specific and articulable facts which, taken
    together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant the
    detention’”), quoting Lindsey v. State, 
    287 Ga. App. 412
    , 414 (651 SE2d 531) (2007).
    This question, in turn, depends on whether and to what extent the trial court credits
    Franco’s testimony. We are unable to address this question on appeal because the trial
    court did not make any findings – either in its written order or on the record at the
    8
    Based on the current record, we have serious reservations about whether
    Gay’s alleged delay in pulling over can, as a matter of law, support a suspicion of
    illegal activity. As noted above, the video of the traffic stop shows that Gay pulled
    over at the first opportunity he had to do so without making a left turn across traffic,
    a fact that Franco acknowledged on cross-examination. The video further shows that
    Gay’s vehicle, which had been traveling at approximately 35 miles per hour, came to
    a complete stop on the side of the road approximately 33 seconds after Franco
    initiated the stop. Nevertheless, because this question may ultimately involve a
    credibility determination, we leave it for the trial court to address on remand.
    19
    motion to suppress hearing – as to whether the State had proven the existence of a
    reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity sufficient to support the
    extension of the traffic stop.9 See Hughes v. State, 
    296 Ga. 744
    , 747 (1) (770 SE2d
    636) (2015) (noting that on a motion to suppress, “‘[c]redibility of witnesses and the
    weight to be given their testimony is a decision-making power that lies solely with
    the trier of fact. The trier of fact is not obligated to believe a witness even if the
    testimony is uncontradicted and may accept or reject any portion of the testimony.’”),
    quoting Tate v. State, 
    263 Ga. 53
    , 56 (3) (440 SE2d 646) (1994). We therefore vacate
    both the order denying the motion to suppress and the judgment of conviction and
    remand this case to the trial court. See Williams v. State, 
    296 Ga. 817
     (771 SE2d 373)
    (2015). We leave it for the trial court on remand to determine what credit and weight
    to give Franco’s testimony and to determine whether that testimony, when viewed in
    conjunction with the video recordings of the traffic stop, supported an extension of
    the traffic stop for the purpose of conducting a drug investigation.
    2. Watts also seeks to challenge both the trial court’s order denying his motion
    to dismiss the probation warrant and the order denying his request for an appeal bond.
    9
    The trial court’s failure to make such findings is understandable, given the
    State’s failure to advance this argument below as a basis for denying the motion to
    suppress.
    20
    Each of these orders, however, was entered after Watts filed his notice of appeal from
    his conviction. Accordingly, those orders cannot be enumerated as error on this
    appeal. See Pirkle v. Quiktrip Corp., 
    325 Ga. App. 597
    , 598 (1) (a) (754 SE2d 387)
    (2014) (a party may not enumerate as error an order entered “after the filing of the
    notice of appeal”); Paine v. Nations, 
    301 Ga. App. 97
    , 101 (3) (686 SE2d 876) (2009)
    (this Court may not consider on appeal orders of the trial court that were entered
    following the filing of the notice of appeal).
    For the reasons set forth above, we vacate both the trial court’s order denying
    Watts’s motion to suppress and the judgment of conviction and remand the case for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion. See Williams v. State, 
    296 Ga. 817
    ,
    820 (771 SE2d 373) (2015) (vacating and remanding decision on motion to suppress
    for trial court to determine an additional issue, not previously addressed); State v.
    Able, 
    321 Ga. App. 632
    , 636 (742 SE2d 149) (2013) (same). See also Rodriguez, 135
    S. Ct. at 1617.
    Judgment vacated and case remanded. Andrews, P. J., and Miller, J., concur.
    21
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A15A0796

Citation Numbers: 334 Ga. App. 770, 780 S.E.2d 431

Judges: Branch, Andrews, Miller

Filed Date: 11/23/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/8/2024