State v. Kenneth Taylor ( 2022 )


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  •              THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
    In The Supreme Court
    The State, Petitioner,
    v.
    Kenneth Taylor, Respondent.
    Appellate Case No. 2020-001184
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Appeal from Spartanburg County
    J. Mark Hayes II, Circuit Court Judge
    Opinion No. 28085
    Heard September 21, 2021 – Filed February 23, 2022
    AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED
    Attorney General Alan McCrory Wilson and Senior
    Assistant Deputy Attorney General William M. Blitch Jr.,
    both of Columbia; and Solicitor Barry Joe Barnette, of
    Spartanburg, for Petitioner.
    Kenneth Taylor, of Inman, pro se.
    Jason Scott Luck, of Bennettsville, for Amicus Curiae
    South Carolina Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
    JUSTICE JAMES: Kenneth Taylor was charged with driving under the influence
    (DUI). The magistrate court dismissed the charge, finding the State failed to comply
    with subsection 56-5-2953(A)'s requirement that the DUI incident site video
    recording "show" the defendant being advised of his Miranda1 rights. The circuit
    court and court of appeals affirmed. State v. Taylor, Op. No. 2020-UP-215 (S.C. Ct.
    App. filed July 15, 2020). We granted the State's petition for a writ of certiorari. In
    this opinion, we address two issues: (1) the meaning of the word "show" as it is used
    in subsection 56-5-2953(A) and (2) whether per se dismissal of a DUI charge is the
    proper remedy for a video's failure to "show" a DUI defendant being advised of his
    Miranda rights at the incident site.2
    Background
    At approximately 4:35 a.m. on June 11, 2015, Lance Corporal R.B. Thornton
    of the South Carolina Highway Patrol received a call from Spartanburg County
    Sheriff's Deputy Tony Woodward. Deputy Woodward requested assistance for a
    potentially impaired driver who had pulled his vehicle to the side of the road.
    Corporal Thornton promptly responded by activating his blue lights, which triggered
    his patrol car's exterior camera to begin recording.
    When he arrived on scene, Corporal Thornton approached Taylor's vehicle.
    Corporal Thornton detected the smell of alcohol, saw an open container of beer in
    the vehicle, and noticed Taylor's speech was slurred. Taylor admitted he had been
    drinking alcohol, so Corporal Thornton asked Taylor to recite the alphabet from E
    to X. Taylor skipped from R to X—omitting S, T, U, V, and W. When Corporal
    Thornton asked Taylor about the omitted letters, Taylor stated the letters came after
    X. Taylor was unable to provide basic personal information and stated he was
    "shook up." Corporal Thornton arrested Taylor for DUI and placed Taylor in his
    patrol car.
    After a brief conversation with Deputy Woodward, Corporal Thornton sat in
    the driver's seat of the patrol car and began advising Taylor of his Miranda rights.
    Corporal Thornton did not activate his in-car camera. As a result, both Corporal
    1
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    2
    Taylor has not participated in these proceedings since the circuit court's ruling, and
    his counsel was relieved by the court of appeals. The South Carolina Association of
    Criminal Defense Lawyers (SCACDL) filed an amicus brief with this Court, and we
    granted SCACDL's request to present oral argument. We refer to SCACDL's
    arguments as those of Taylor.
    Thornton and Taylor can be heard, but neither of them can be seen. When Corporal
    Thornton asked Taylor if he understood the Miranda warnings, Taylor—still off
    camera—responded, "Yes, sir." The camera was adjusted to show both men and the
    car's interior only after Corporal Thornton began driving Taylor to the police station.
    The case proceeded to trial before a Spartanburg County magistrate. Citing
    subsection 56-5-2953(A), Taylor moved to dismiss the DUI charge because the
    video recording did not "show" him being advised of his Miranda rights. The
    language from subsection 56-5-2953(A) to which Taylor referred provides that a
    person who violates a DUI statute "must have his conduct at the incident
    site . . . video recorded." The statute further provides that the video recording
    "must . . . show the person being advised of his Miranda rights." § 56-5-
    2953(A)(1)(a)(iii) (emphasis added).
    The magistrate granted the motion, stating, "simple logic indicates that to
    'show' something at least always includes a visual element," and "[i]n our society[,]
    it is clear the word 'show' means 'something visible.'" The magistrate concluded per
    se dismissal was proper pursuant to City of Rock Hill v. Suchenski, 
    374 S.C. 12
    , 
    646 S.E.2d 879
     (2007), because the recording did not fully comply with subsection (A)
    and the State did not argue any subsection (B) 3 exceptions applied.
    The circuit court affirmed the magistrate court, the court of appeals affirmed
    the circuit court, and we granted the State's petition for a writ of certiorari to review
    the court of appeals' decision. As we will explain, the magistrate court correctly
    interpreted the meaning of the word "show" as used in subsection 56-5-2953(A);
    however, we hold that from this point forward, failure to show a DUI defendant
    being advised of his Miranda rights does not mandate per se dismissal.
    Discussion
    I.
    The State argues subsection 56-5-2953(A) does not require a defendant to "be
    'seen' during the reading of Miranda [because] the statutory interpretation most
    consistent with the legislative intent would only require the State to 'make apparent'
    3
    Subsection (B) provides in part: "Failure by the arresting officer to produce the
    video recording required by this section is not alone a ground for dismissal of any
    charge made pursuant to Section 56-5-2930 . . . if [an exception applies]." 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 56-5-2953
    (B) (2018). The State acknowledges no exceptions apply.
    or 'demonstrate' he was read his Miranda rights." The State therefore contends that
    even if a defendant is not seen on the video recording while being advised of his
    Miranda rights, the recording still "shows" the advisement of Miranda if the
    defendant and arresting officer can be heard. Taylor argues the word "show" in
    subsection 56-5-2953(A) includes both visual and audible components under State
    v. Kinard, 
    427 S.C. 367
    , 
    831 S.E.2d 138
     (Ct. App. 2019), cert. dismissed as
    improvidently granted, 
    429 S.C. 614
    , 
    840 S.E.2d 924
     (2020), and State v. Sawyer,
    
    409 S.C. 475
    , 
    763 S.E.2d 183
     (2014). We agree with Taylor.
    A question of statutory interpretation is a question of law, which is subject to
    de novo review and which we are free to decide without deference to the courts
    below. State v. Alexander, 
    424 S.C. 270
    , 274-75, 
    818 S.E.2d 455
    , 457 (2018); State
    v. Whitner, 
    399 S.C. 547
    , 552, 
    732 S.E.2d 861
    , 863 (2012). Where a statute's
    language is plain, unambiguous, and conveys a clear and definite meaning, the rules
    of statutory interpretation are not needed, and the Court has no right to impose
    another meaning. Gay v. Ariail, 
    381 S.C. 341
    , 345, 
    673 S.E.2d 418
    , 420 (2009).
    However, if a statute is ambiguous, the Court must construe its terms. Lester v. S.C.
    Workers' Comp. Comm'n, 
    334 S.C. 557
    , 561, 
    514 S.E.2d 751
    , 752 (1999).
    The primary rule of statutory construction is "to ascertain and effectuate the
    intent of the legislature." State v. Pittman, 
    373 S.C. 527
    , 561, 
    647 S.E.2d 144
    , 161
    (2007). A statute's language must be construed in light of its intended purpose, and
    "[w]henever possible, legislative intent should be found in the plain language of the
    statute itself." State v. Gaines, 
    380 S.C. 23
    , 33, 
    667 S.E.2d 728
    , 733 (2008). "The
    Court should give words 'their plain and ordinary meaning without resort to subtle
    or forced construction to limit or expand the statute's operation.'" State v. Sweat,
    
    386 S.C. 339
    , 350, 
    688 S.E.2d 569
    , 575 (2010) (quoting Sloan v. S.C. Bd. of Physical
    Therapy Exam'rs, 
    370 S.C. 452
    , 469, 
    636 S.E.2d 598
    , 607 (2006)). A statute's
    language should be "read in a sense which harmonizes with its subject matter and
    accords with its general purpose." 
    Id.
     "[A] court should not focus on any single
    section or provision but should consider the language of the statute as a whole."
    Mid-State Auto Auction of Lexington, Inc. v. Altman, 
    324 S.C. 65
    , 69, 
    476 S.E.2d 690
    , 692 (1996). The Court must reject a statutory interpretation if it leads to an
    absurd result that could not possibly have been intended by the legislature or that
    defeats plain legislative intent. Sweat, 
    386 S.C. at 351
    , 
    688 S.E.2d at 575
    .
    Subsection 56-5-2953(A)'s introductory language plainly states that a person
    who violates a DUI statute "must have his conduct at the incident site . . . video
    recorded." Most importantly, this subsection provides that the video recording
    "must . . . show the person being advised of his Miranda rights." § 56-5-
    2953(A)(1)(a)(iii) (emphasis added). Again, the State argues this language requires
    the video to simply "demonstrate" or "make apparent" that Miranda warnings are
    administered to the defendant. We disagree. This interpretation of the word "show"
    ignores the 2009 amendment to subsection 56-5-2953(A), which changed the
    relevant language from the video recording "must include the reading of Miranda
    rights" to the video recording must "show the person being advised of his Miranda
    rights." (emphases added). The General Assembly could have retained the prior
    language or used other terms, but it intentionally amended the statute to add a visual
    requirement. See Davenport v. City of Rock Hill, 
    315 S.C. 114
    , 117, 
    432 S.E.2d 451
    ,
    453 (1993) ("It is never to be supposed that a single word was inserted in the law of
    this state without the intention of thereby conveying some meaning."); Nexsen v.
    Ward, 
    96 S.C. 313
    , 321, 
    80 S.E. 599
    , 601 (1914) ("[E]very word, clause, and
    sentence must be given some meaning, force, and effect, if it can be done by any
    reasonable construction."). The General Assembly chose to amend the statute as it
    did, and we cannot engage in forced construction of the words the General Assembly
    chose to employ.
    The State's interpretation also cuts against one of the primary purposes of the
    DUI video recording statute: seeing the defendant and officer on camera reduces
    "swearing contests" in DUI trials, captures their interactions, and ensures the use of
    fair procedures to protect the defendant's rights. State v. Henkel, 
    413 S.C. 9
    , 14-15,
    
    774 S.E.2d 458
    , 461-62 (2015); State v. Taylor, 
    411 S.C. 294
    , 306, 
    768 S.E.2d 71
    ,
    77 (Ct. App. 2014); State v. Elwell, 
    396 S.C. 330
    , 336, 
    721 S.E.2d 451
    , 454 (Ct.
    App. 2011). A video recording that visually confirms what is audible leaves little
    room for doubt as to the procedures used by, and the defendant's interactions with,
    the arresting officer. Again, by amending subsection 56-5-2953(A) in 2009, the
    General Assembly chose to change the word "include" to "show." That we cannot
    ignore. We hold that in order for a DUI recording to "show" a defendant being
    advised of his Miranda rights, the defendant and arresting officer must be visually
    seen and audibly heard.
    II.
    Before the magistrate court and the circuit court, the State argued that even if
    the administering of Miranda warnings must be seen on camera, per se dismissal of
    the DUI charge is not the appropriate remedy when that requirement is not met.
    Neither court ruled on that issue; consequently, the issue of per se dismissal was not
    preserved for further appellate review, and the State did not ask the court of appeals
    or this Court to rule on the issue. However, we take this opportunity to clarify that
    moving forward, when a DUI suspect is not Mirandized in accordance with the
    statute, statements made by the suspect during custodial interrogation are to be
    considered given under the cloud of a Miranda violation. However, just as is proper
    when there is a Miranda violation in any other kind of case, suppression of tainted
    evidence—not per se dismissal of the DUI charge—is the proper remedy. 4 We
    believe this approach is consistent with the evolution of our case law.
    In Suchenski, an officer's recording device unexpectedly ran out of tape at a
    DUI incident site. 
    374 S.C. at 14
    , 
    646 S.E.2d at 879
    . As a result, although two field
    sobriety tests and the Miranda advisement were recorded, a third field sobriety test
    and the defendant's arrest were not recorded. Looking to the prior version of
    subsection 56-5-2953, we concluded the statute "provides for dismissal of charges
    when the statute is inexcusably violated." Id. at 16, 
    646 S.E.2d at 881
    . Suchenski
    has since been applied by this Court and the court of appeals to hold that under the
    pre-2009 version of the statute, unless an exception applies under subsection 56-5-
    2953(B), failure to fully comply with subsection (A) mandates dismissal of a DUI
    charge. Town of Mt. Pleasant v. Roberts, 
    393 S.C. 332
    , 347-49, 
    713 S.E.2d 278
    ,
    285-87 (2011); State v. Johnson, 
    396 S.C. 182
    , 191-92, 
    720 S.E.2d 516
    , 521-22 (Ct.
    App. 2011).
    In 2014, we considered a prior version of subsection 56-5-2953(A) that
    required DUI test site recordings to include Miranda warnings. Sawyer, 409 S.C. at
    477, 763 S.E.2d at 184. In Sawyer, the DUI defendant was arrested and taken to the
    local jail for a breath test. Because of an audio failure in the testing room, although
    the officer appeared to be reading the defendant his Miranda and implied consent
    rights, neither the officer nor the defendant could be heard during the exchange. The
    trial court denied the defendant's motion to dismiss the charge but granted the
    defendant's motion to suppress the video recording and all evidence that he was
    offered or took a breath test, including its results. The State appealed the suppression
    order, the court of appeals affirmed, and this Court granted the State's petition for a
    writ of certiorari. Relying on Suchenski, we upheld the trial court's suppression order
    in a 3-2 decision, observing: "While defects in evidence do not generally affect
    admissibility . . . the Court has interpreted the statute to require strict compliance
    with Section (A) as a prerequisite for admissibility, unless an exception in Section
    (B) applies." Id. at 481, 763 S.E.2d at 186. (emphasis added). We ruled only upon
    4
    The video requirement may still be excused altogether if the provisions of
    subsection 56-5-2953(B) apply. The suppression of tainted evidence does not apply
    to circumstances falling within the parameters of subsection (B).
    the issue of whether the trial court's suppression order should be upheld; the issue of
    per se dismissal of the DUI charge was not before us.5
    Finally, in State v. Gordon, an officer subjected the defendant to a horizontal
    gaze nystagmus (HGN) test at the DUI incident site. 
    414 S.C. 94
    , 96-97, 
    777 S.E.2d 376
    , 377 (2015). The incident site was dark and the lighting was poor, so the officer
    relocated the defendant toward the headlights of his patrol car and shined a flashlight
    on the defendant's face. Because HGN tests focus on eye movement, we concluded
    "common sense dictates that the head must be visible on the video." 
    Id. at 99
    , 777
    S.E.2d at 378. Further, because the defendant's face was indisputably shown on the
    video, subsection 56-5-2953(A)'s "requirement that the head be visible on the video
    [was] met and the statutory requirement that the administration of the HGN field
    sobriety test be video recorded [was] satisfied." Id. at 100, 777 S.E.2d at 379. Most
    pertinent to the case at bar, we acknowledged that even if the recording was "of such
    poor quality that its admission [was] more prejudicial than probative, the remedy
    would not be to dismiss the DUI charge." Id. Rather, we held "the remedy would
    be to redact the field sobriety test from the video and exclude testimony about the
    test." Id. We further held that notwithstanding suppression of the HGN test video
    and testimony, there was "still sufficient evidence to present this case to a jury for
    resolution." Id.
    Again, subsection 56-5-2953(A) plainly requires that Miranda warnings be
    depicted visibly and audibly on the video recording. However, following the logic
    we employed in Gordon, when the statutory Miranda requirement is not satisfied,
    suppression of "tainted" evidence—not per se dismissal of the DUI charge—is the
    proper remedy. Miranda is a constitutional construct that mandates suppression of
    evidence in certain circumstances, not per se dismissal of the underlying charge. Of
    course, the suppression of evidence that springs from a Miranda violation sometimes
    results in dismissal of the underlying charge, but per se dismissal is not the rule. Our
    approach does violence neither to the General Assembly's intent in amending
    subsection 56-5-2953(A) nor to the body of law that is Miranda.
    5
    In dicta, the Sawyer majority mentioned that "[t]he only arguable error of law was
    the circuit court's failure to dismiss the charges once it determined that the State did
    not produce a videotape meeting the requirements of [subsection 56-5-2953(A)] and
    that it did not meet any of the exceptions in (B). Respondent, however, did not
    appeal the circuit court's denial of his request that the charges be dismissed." Id. at
    482 n.6, 763 S.E.2d at 186 n.6 (citations omitted).
    An illustration shows the absurdity of per se dismissal when Miranda
    warnings are not shown on the video. Assume that in a setting similar to the one in
    which Taylor found himself, the video recording did not visually depict the
    administering of Miranda rights to a DUI defendant, and assume the defendant did
    not utter a written or verbal word to law enforcement from the beginning of the
    encounter through the end of the DUI trial. It would be absurd to require per se
    dismissal of the DUI charge simply because Miranda warnings were not visually
    depicted on camera.
    "The purpose of the Miranda warnings is to apprise the defendant of [his]
    constitutional privilege to not incriminate [himself] while in the custody of law
    enforcement." State v. Evans, 
    354 S.C. 579
    , 583, 
    582 S.E.2d 407
    , 409 (2003). The
    United States Supreme Court has clearly prescribed the evidentiary remedy when
    Miranda warnings are not administered and custodial interrogation elicits statements
    from a defendant. Miranda, 
    384 U.S. at 444
     ("[T]he prosecution may not use
    statements, whether exculpatory or inculpatory, stemming from custodial
    interrogation of the defendant unless it demonstrates the use of procedural
    safeguards effective to secure the privilege against self-incrimination."). Therefore,
    in ordinary circumstances, the proper remedy for a Miranda violation depends upon
    whether custodial interrogation occurred and, if it did, whether the defendant uttered
    any statement(s) elicited by the interrogation.
    Law enforcement's failure to give—or to properly give—Miranda warnings
    in any given criminal case does not always result in the suppression of a defendant's
    statements or any other evidence. The factual lead-up to a suppression hearing—in
    both DUI and non-DUI cases—has many variations, and we cannot possibly address
    them all in one opinion. Our trial courts are well-equipped to handle shifts in factual
    scenarios, including those in DUI cases in which Miranda warnings are not shown
    on video.
    Conclusion
    We affirm the court of appeals' holding that subsection 56-5-2953(A) requires
    a video recording to visually depict a defendant being advised of his Miranda rights
    at the incident site. Because the question of whether per se dismissal of Taylor's
    DUI charge was appropriate is not before us, we affirm the dismissal. However, we
    hold that from this point forward, suppression of tainted evidence flowing from the
    failure to administer Miranda warnings in accordance with subsection 56-5-
    2953(A)—not per se dismissal of the DUI charge—is the proper remedy.
    AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
    BEATTY, C.J., KITTREDGE, HEARN and FEW, JJ., concur.