State v. Brewer ( 2010 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    June 1997 Session       FILED
    October 2, 1997
    STATE OF TENNESSEE,                  )               Cecil Crowson, Jr.
    )               Appellate C ourt Clerk
    Appellee,                 )     No. 03C01-9701-CC-00018
    )
    vs.                                  )     Bradley County
    )
    BUDDY HUGH BREWER and                )     Hon. Mayo L. Mashburn, Judge
    TAMMY BREWER,                        )
    )     (Certified Question--Search and
    Appellants.               )      Seizure)
    FOR THE APPELLANTS:                        FOR THE APPELLEE:
    KENNETH L. MILLER                          JOHN KNOX WALKUP
    Attorney for Appellants                    Attorney General and Reporter
    30 Second Street
    P.O. Box 191                               SANDY R. COPOUS
    Cleveland, Tennessee 37364                 Assistant Attorney General
    450 James Robertson Parkway
    Nashville, TN 37243-0493
    JERRY N. ESTES
    District Attorney General
    CARL PETTY
    Asst. District Attorney General
    P.O. Box 1351
    Cleveland, TN 37364-1351
    OPINION FILED: ___________
    REVERSED, VACATED and REMANDED
    CURWOOD WITT
    JUDGE
    OPINION
    The defendants, Buddy Hugh Brewer1 and his wife, Tammy Brewer,
    appeal certified questions of law from the Bradley County Criminal Court pursuant
    to Rule 37(b) (2) (I) of the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure.2 In cases which
    have been consolidated for hearing on appeal, the defendants challenge the
    issuance and execution of a warrant to search their home, and Tammy Brewer also
    challenges the legality of an arrest and a search of her person incidental to that
    arrest. Subject to the reservation of these dispositive certified questions, Buddy
    Brewer pleaded guilty to and received convictions for the following offenses: (1)
    simple possession of Schedule II controlled substances, $750.00 fine, eleven
    months, twenty-nine days in the county jail, to be served on probation; (2)
    possession of marijuana for sale, Class E felony, Range I, $2,000.00 fine, one year
    sentence to be served in split confinement of 90 days incarceration and the
    remainder of the sentence to be served on probation.         Subject to the same
    reservation, Tammy Brewer pleaded guilty to simple possession of marijuana and
    received a fine of $250.00 and a sentence of eleven months, twenty-nine days, to
    be served on probation.
    As identified in the trial court’s “Order Certifying Reserved Question
    on Appeal,” the dispositive questions of law brought to this court are summarized
    as follows:
    (1) Whether probable cause existed for the issuance of the search
    warrant for the defendants’ home;
    (2) Whether the search warrant was overly broad and illegal;
    1
    Although some documents in the record refer to this defendant as
    “Buddy Brewer” it is the policy of this court to use the name as it appears on the
    indictment. On the indictment, this defendant is identified as “Buddy Hugh
    Brewer.”
    2
    The appellants’ procedure in certifying the question of law satisfies
    the requirements established by our supreme court in State v. Preston, 
    759 S.W.2d 647
    , 650 (Tenn. 1988), and the state has not asserted any
    noncompliance.
    2
    (3) Whether the search warrant was illegally executed; and
    (4) Whether the search of the person of Tammy Brewer was unlawful.
    After a thorough review of this case, we hold that, even though the defendants have
    failed to show that the search warrant was improperly issued, the search must be
    invalidated because of the faulty execution of the warrant. Because the basis of the
    arrest of Tammy Brewer and the resulting search of her person was the discovery
    of contraband made by the officers executing the warrant, the search of Tammy
    Brewer is likewise invalid. As a result, the order of the trial court overruling the
    motion to suppress is reversed, and the judgments of conviction based upon the
    guilty pleas are vacated and set aside.
    On October 9, 1995, an affiant identified as “Det. Roxanne Blackwell”
    executed an affidavit for a search warrant before a Bradley County General
    Sessions Court Judge. In the affidavit, she alleged that Buddy Brewer possessed
    controlled substances described as methamphetamine, which controlled substances
    were located in “_________ County, Tennessee” at a house to which travel
    directions were provided. The affidavit further states that a confidential informant
    went to the described location and “saw the drugs stored at that location,” that this
    informant “has given officers of this department information in the past that has led
    to arrest and convictions,” and that the informant saw “the drugs at this location
    within the last three (3) days.” On the same date, the General Sessions Court
    Judge, the magistrate to whom the affiant applied for a search warrant, issued a
    warrant commanding the officers to proceed to the described location “in Bradley
    County, Tennessee” to search for “an off-white powder believed to be
    methamphetamine/cocaine.”
    Testimony at the suppression hearing revealed that “Det. Roxanne
    Blackwell” was an officer with the Bradley County Sheriff’s Department. She testified
    that she procured the warrant and that she and a second officer carried out the
    search of the defendants’ home where some contraband was found.                  The
    3
    defendants were not at home when the search was carried out, but they arrived
    before the officers departed. Det. Blackwell testified that when the defendants
    drove up to the house, she arrested Tammy Brewer for the possession of the
    contraband found in the house and discovered marijuana on her person in a search
    incidental to the arrest. Det. Blackwell further testified that, upon issuance of the
    search warrant to her, she kept all three copies, “[t]he judge’s, ours, and the
    defendants’.” She testified that the usual procedure was for the executing officer
    to take all three copies of the warrants and, after execution, to take them to the
    office in order to add the listing of evidence seized. She testified this was done in
    this case, that no copy of the warrant was given to either of the Brewers prior to the
    post-search paperwork, and that she did not know when or from whom the Brewers
    received a copy of the warrant. Tammy Brewer testified that she received the copy
    when her personal effects were returned to her upon her release from jail, and that,
    prior to her showing this copy to Buddy Brewer, he had not been presented with a
    copy of the warrant.
    The trial court overruled the defendants’ motions to suppress the
    evidence seized from the defendants’ house and from the person of Tammy
    Brewer.
    On appellate review, a trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress will
    be upheld unless the evidence preponderates against the lower court’s findings.
    State v. Odom, 
    928 S.W.2d 18
    , 23 (Tenn. 1996).
    A search warrant is “an order in writing in the name of the state,
    signed by a magistrate, directed to the sheriff, any constable, or any peace officer
    of the county, commanding him to search for personal property, and bring it before
    the magistrate.” 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-6-101
     (1990).
    Rule 41(c) of the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure provides in
    4
    pertinent part:
    The magistrate shall prepare an original and two exact copies of the
    search warrant, one of which shall be kept by the magistrate as a part
    of his or her official records, and one of which shall be left with the
    person or persons on whom the search warrant is served. The
    magistrate shall endorse upon the search warrant the hour, date, and
    name of the officer to whom the warrant was delivered for execution;
    and the exact copy of the search warrant and the endorsement
    thereon shall be admissible evidence. Failure of the magistrate to
    make said original and two copies of the search warrant or failure to
    endorse thereon the date and time of issuance and the name of the
    officer to whom issued, or the failure of the serving officer where
    possible to leave a copy with the person or persons on whom the
    search warrant is being served, shall make any search conducted
    under said warrant an illegal search and any seizure thereunder an
    illegal seizure.
    Tenn. R. Crim. P. 41(c).
    On a constitutional level, the Fourth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution forbids unreasonable searches and seizures and the issuance of
    warrants except upon probable cause, “supported by oath or affirmation, and
    particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be
    seized.”   U.S. Const. amend. IV.       The Tennessee Constitution also forbids
    unreasonable searches and seizures, and departing from the language of the
    federal provision, it proscribes “general warrants, whereby an officer may be
    commanded to search suspected places, without evidence of the fact committed,
    or to seize any person or persons not named, whose offences are not particularly
    described and supported by evidence ....” Tenn. Const. art. I, § 7. Of course, the
    federal provision is applicable to state action. Mapp v. Ohio, 
    364 U.S. 643
    , 
    81 S.Ct. 1684
    , 
    6 L.Ed.2d 1081
     (1961).
    I. Probable Cause and the Issuance and Content of the Search Warrant.
    The defendants have attacked the sufficiency of the affidavit
    supporting the search warrant on the grounds that it does not affirm the veracity of
    5
    the confidential informant as required by State v. Jacumin, 
    778 S.W.2d 430
     (Tenn.
    1989). Furthermore, they allege the affidavit failed to establish probable cause
    when some portions of the affidavit referred simply to “drugs,” as opposed to illicit
    drugs, and when the affiant failed to identify the county in Tennessee in which the
    suspected property is located. They also allege the language of the warrant is
    overly broad in describing the physical area to be searched and the items to be
    seized. Specifically, they contend there was no basis for the warrant authorizing the
    search of “all outbuildings and vehicles,” nor was the magistrate authorized to
    command a search for “an off-white powder believed to be cocaine.” These issues
    require a reference to and an examination of the affidavit and search warrant.
    A facsimile of an affidavit and a search warrant appears in the
    technical record that was prepared and certified by the trial court clerk. Also, a
    facsimile of these items was appended to the defendant’s brief, and the brief
    identified the facsimile as a copy of the affidavit and warrant now under attack.
    While appending a copy of the affidavit and warrant to the brief is helpful to this
    court if they were otherwise properly set forth in the record, we find that the affidavit
    and search warrant at issue were not properly before the court. They were not
    offered into evidence at the suppression hearing, and no copies of the affidavit and
    warrant that appear in the technical record have been certified or authenticated by
    the trial judge.
    The same situation was presented to this court in State v. Cooper, 
    736 S.W.2d 125
     (Tenn. Crim. App. 1987). In Cooper, the search warrant that had been
    attacked in a motion to suppress appeared in the technical record but not as an
    exhibit in the transcript of the evidence. We held in Cooper that we were precluded
    from considering the issue and made the following observation:
    Before an exhibit may be considered by the court, it must have been
    (a) received into evidence, (b) marked by the trial judge, clerk or court
    reporter as having been received into evidence as an exhibit, (c)
    authenticated by the trial judge, and (d) included in the transcript of
    the evidence transmitted to this court.
    6
    Cooper, 
    736 S.W.2d at 131
    . In the case now before us, the trial court has not
    authenticated any copy of an affidavit and warrant as a copy of the affidavit and
    warrant under attack. The “technical record” is certified by the trial court clerk, but
    it is not authenticated by the trial judge. Compare Tenn. R. App. P. 24(a)(1)
    (certification by trial court clerk of all papers filed in trial court, with exceptions) with
    Tenn. R. App. P. 24(f) (approval of transcripts and exhibits by trial judge). In this
    situation, the affidavit and warrant are not in evidence, and “[w]e must conclusively
    presume the ruling of the trial court was correct,” at least as to those issues which
    cannot be resolved without reviewing the affidavit and warrant. Cooper, 
    736 S.W.2d at 131
    . See Chico v. State, 
    217 Tenn. 19
    , 25-26, 394 S.W .2d 648, 651 (1965); Fine
    v. State, 
    183 Tenn. 117
    , 119, 191 S.W .2d 173, 174 (1945).
    II. The Execution of the Warrant.
    Because the dispositive issue concerning the execution of the warrant
    does not require a review of the contents of the affidavit or the warrant, we examine
    the issue of execution even though there is no copy of the warrant in evidence. The
    fact that the warrant exists is in evidence via testimony adduced at the suppression
    hearing.
    We hold that the failure of the magistrate to retain a copy of the search
    warrant deprives the warrant of any efficacy. As pointed out above, Rule 41
    requires the magistrate to “prepare an original and two exact copies of the search
    warrant, one of which shall be kept by the magistrate as a part of his or her official
    records....” Tenn. R. Crim. P. 41(c). It is undisputed that the executing officer took
    the original and both copies with her after the warrant was issued.3
    3
    It is not clear if the officer also took the affidavit with her without
    leaving a copy with the magistrate. Under Tennessee law, the affidavit is a
    document separate from the warrant. State v. Oliver Lowe, No. 01C01-9601-
    CC-00010 (Tenn. Crim. App., Nashville, Sept. 19, 1996), perm. app. denied
    (Tenn. 1997).
    7
    This court previously has reviewed anomalies concerning the issuing
    magistrate’s retention of a copy of the search warrant. See State v. Gambrel, 
    783 S.W.2d 191
     (Tenn. Crim. App. 1989); State v. Henry, 
    680 S.W.2d 476
     (Tenn. Crim.
    App. 1984). In Gambrel, the magistrate retained a physical copy of the warrant, but
    due to the weakness of the carbon impression, the wording that was written into the
    blanks in the form’s printed language on the magistrate’s copy was “barely legible.”
    This court observed in Gambrel that the “purpose of having the magistrate retain a
    copy ... is to insure the purity of the search process.” 
    783 S.W.2d at 192
    . We
    pointed out that the rule protects against any post-issuance alteration of the original
    warrant and “gives the judge control to insure that the warrant is executed and
    returned to the magistrate in a timely manner ....” 
    Id.
     However, we noted in
    Gambrel that the written portion of the warrant was merely dim, not absent, and we
    held that the copy left with the magistrate was an “exact copy” that complied with
    Rule 41(c). 
    Id.
    In Henry, the search warrant copy that had been retained by the
    magistrate was misplaced and could not be produced at the suppression hearing.
    This court affirmed the trial court’s determination the search was valid despite the
    absence of the magistrate’s copy. We pointed out that the magistrate initially
    retained a copy of the warrant. “Only sometime later did the magistrate’s copy
    become lost.” 
    680 S.W.2d at 478
    . In Henry, the record disclosed no “changes or
    deletions” or “improprieties” with the warrant, and moreover, the defendant failed to
    show that he was prejudiced in any manner by the loss of the once-existing copy.
    
    Id.
    The case before us, however, is distinguishable from Gambrel and
    Henry in two important respects. The first distinction in the defendants’ cases
    concerns a separate anomaly in the warrant’s execution. Rule 41(c), in addition to
    requiring that the magistrate retain a copy, requires also that the other copy “shall
    be left with the person or persons on whom the search warrant is served.”
    8
    Furthermore, the rule provides as follows:
    [F]ailure of the serving officer where possible to leave a copy with the
    person or persons on whom the search warrant is being served, shall
    make any search conducted under said search warrant an illegal
    search and any seizure thereunder an illegal seizure.
    Tenn. R. Crim. P. 41(c). The officers delivered no copies to either of the defendants
    when they arrived at their residence after the completion of the search. The
    testimony reflects that the officer prepared the inventory of the seized items before
    attempting to deliver a copy of the warrant to the defendants. Tammy Brewer
    received a copy on the following day upon her release from custody, and she
    testified that Buddy Brewer received no copy of the warrant. We need not
    determine, and we decline to determine, whether the delay of a post-search service
    of the copy on the defendants, who were absent prior to and during the search, was
    by itself a departure from the requirement of Rule 41(c) that a copy be left with the
    defendants. However, the overnight delay in providing a copy of the warrant to the
    defendants exacerbates the error made when no copy was retained by the
    magistrate. From the time the warrant was issued until after the search was
    completed, law enforcement officers retained absolute control over the original and
    all existing copies of the warrant. In this context, there is the opportunity to repair
    errors or deficiencies which may have only become apparent during or after the
    search.   In this situation, “the purity of the search process” is substantially
    compromised.
    The second distinction between this case and the Gambrel and Henry
    situations is perhaps more important. In both Gambrel and Henry the issuing
    magistrates initially retained copies of the warrants in compliance with Rule 41(c).
    On the other hand, the magistrate never retained a copy after issuance, and the
    executing officer went into the field in possession and control of the original and all
    existing copies of the warrant. This practice, standing alone, impermissibly militates
    against the purity of the search process.
    We make this observation about the method of execution used in this
    9
    case because of the damage to the integrity of the search warrant process caused
    by the possibility, if not the appearance, of official misconduct. We stress that no
    one has accused the executing officer of tampering with the warrant, and we do not
    imply that any such conduct occurred in this case. Moreover, Rule 41(c) places the
    duty upon the magistrate to prepare and keep an exact copy of the warrant “as a
    part of his or her official records,” and it is not the officer’s duty to see that this
    magisterial act is performed.       Nevertheless, when this basic, common sense
    requirement of the rule is not followed, there is damage to the process, ipso facto
    and ab initio.
    It remains for us to determine the result of this departure from Rule
    41(c). The defendants request that the fruits of the searches be suppressed, but
    in Henry this court noted that, with respect to the magistrate not retaining a copy of
    the issued warrant, Rule 41(c) contains “no internal exclusionary clause requiring
    the search to be invalidated where the magistrate fails to maintain his retained copy
    in his possession throughout the case.” Henry, 
    680 S.W.2d at 478
    . This dictum
    refers to the final sentence of Rule 41(c) which sets forth the “mandatory” language
    that makes a search and/or seizure “illegal” when the magistrate fails “to make [an]
    original and two copies of the search warrant,” fails to endorse thereon the “date
    and time of issuance and the name of the officer to whom issued,” or when the
    officer fails “where possible to leave a copy with the person or persons on whom the
    search warrant is being served ....” See Tenn. R. Crim. App. 41(c). Failure of the
    magistrate to retain a copy is not one of the situations in which the rule dictates
    invalidation of the search.
    On the other hand, one of the express mandatory directives of the rule
    is that the magistrate make an original and two copies of the warrant. The rule is
    clear that the purpose of one of these copies is that it remain in the possession of
    the magistrate “as a part of his or her official records.” Thus, the object of the
    making of a magistrate’s copy is that the magistrate have and keep the copy after
    10
    issuance of the warrant.     For this reason, we conclude that the magistrate’s
    retention of a copy of the search warrant is implicit in the mandatory provisions of
    Rule 41(c), the provisions under which a failure to comply “shall make any search
    conducted ... an illegal search and any seizure thereunder an illegal seizure.”4
    Tenn. R. Crim. P. 41(c). The appellate courts of this state have previously held that
    a violation of these provisions leads to suppression of the illegally seized evidence.
    Johnson v. State, 
    208 Tenn. 620
    , 
    348 S.W.2d 295
     (Tenn. 1961); Talley v. State,
    
    208 Tenn. 275
    , 
    345 S.W.2d 867
     (Tenn. 1961); State v. Steele, 
    894 S.W.2d 318
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994); State v. Grapel Simpson, et al, No. 02C01-9508-CC-
    00240 (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, Sept. 30, 1996); State v. Jerry Neal Lindsey, No.
    3 (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, Nov. 20, 1985).
    4
    In arriving at this conclusion, we are mindful of the predecessor
    provision of Rule 41(c). This provision was set forth in Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 40-518 (Supp. 1974) (repealed 1979). The final sentence in
    the statute was different from the final sentence appearing in Rule 41(c). In the
    statute, the sentence read: “Failure to comply with this section shall make any
    search conducted under said warrant an illegal search and seizure” (emphasis
    added). This section included the requirement that the magistrate keep a copy
    of the warrant “as a part of his official records.” 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-518
    (Supp. 1974) (repealed 1979). (The rules of Criminal Procedure were approved
    by the General Assembly pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 16-3-
    404. They became effective on July 13, 1978, after being approved by the
    Governor on April 14, 1978.)
    We are also mindful that the deletion of the requirement that the
    magistrate retain a copy of the warrant from the mandatory language when the
    legislature adopted the Rules in 1978 and then repealed Code Section 40-518 in
    1979 could be construed as a deliberate act of redaction. One applicable rule of
    statutory construction is that “the mention of one subject in a statute means the
    exclusion of other subjects that are not mentioned.” State v. Harkins, 
    811 S.W. 2d 1
    , 3 (Tenn. 1986). Furthermore, courts could construe statutes “so that no
    part will be inoperative, superfluous, void, or insignificant ... and further to give
    effect to every word, phrase, clause and sentence of the act in order to carry out
    the legislative intent.” Tidwell v. Collins, 
    522 S.W.2d 674
    , 767-77 (Tenn. 1975).
    We do not presume that the legislature “intended to place superfluous terms in
    the statute; and all language in a statute is presumed to have some meaning.”
    State v. Vestal, 
    611 S.W.2d 819
    , 821 (Tenn. 1981). Also, a statute should be
    construed “so that its component parts are consistent and reasonable.” Marsh v.
    Henderson, 
    221 Tenn. 42
    , 48, 424 S.W .2d 193, 196 (Tenn. 1968).
    Applying these aids to the construction of Rule 41(c), the
    mandatory language must include implicitly the requirement of leaving a warrant
    copy with the magistrate. Otherwise, the requirement of making the magistrate’s
    copy is superfluous. We construe the terms of Rule 41(c) together, and in order
    to give reasonable effect and meaning to every word, we must conclude that the
    requirement of making a copy for the magistrate entails leaving that copy with
    the magistrate.
    11
    Consequently, we hold that the search of the Brewer residence was
    invalid, and the fruits of that search should have been suppressed. Because the
    probable cause that was used to justify the arrest of Tammy Brewer is based upon
    the discoveries made pursuant to the search warrant, the arrest is unjustified, and
    therefore, the warrantless search of her person incidental to that arrest is itself
    invalid. The fruits of that search also should have been suppressed. It is unclear
    from the record whether Buddy Brewer’s marijuana conviction is based upon
    contraband that was discovered in the residence or whether it is based upon a
    search of his person, but it is apparent in the record that his arrest and any
    subsequent search of his person resulted from the discoveries made in the
    residence. Therefore, the same rationale as applies to Tammy Brewer proscribes
    the use of evidence obtained through any search of Buddy Brewer’s person.
    Therefore, the action of the trial court in overruling the defendants’
    motion to suppress is reversed, and the pleas of guilt are vacated and set aside.
    The cases are remanded, and in view of our treatment of the dispositive issues, the
    cases shall be dismissed.
    __________________________
    CURWOOD WITT, JUDGE
    CONCUR:
    ________________________
    JOHN H. PEAY, JUDGE
    ________________________
    JOSEPH M. TIPTON, JUDGE
    12