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State v. Holladay, No. E2004-02858-CCA-R3-CD (TN 2/8/2006)
Appeal from the Criminal Court for Anderson County; No. A4CR0044; James B. Scott, Jr., Judge.
Case Dismissed.
Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Jennifer L. Bledsoe, Assistant Attorney General; James N. Ramsey, District Attorney General; and Jan Hicks, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellant, State of Tennessee.
J. Thomas Marshall, Jr., District Public Defender, for the appellee, Shannon A. Holladay.
OPINION
An Anderson County grand jury indicted the defendant, Shannon A. Holladay, for one count of vehicular homicide by intoxication, a Class B felony, and one count of vehicular homicide by recklessness, a Class C felony. Before trial, the defendant filed a motion to suppress the evidence obtained from the air bag sensor module in the defendant's car, which the Anderson County Criminal Court granted. The state appeals, contending that the trial court erred in granting the defendant's motion to suppress. We dismiss this case for lack of jurisdiction.
This case relates to the defendant's involvement in a fatal car accident. The defendant alleged in her motion to suppress that Tennessee Highway Patrol officers obtained a reading from her air bag sensor module during a warrantless search of her car and that no exception to the general warrant requirement existed to justify the search. The trial court granted the defendant's motion, and the state appealed pursuant to Rule 3 of the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure.
Tennessee Highway Patrol Trooper Bill Fox was the only witness to testify at the suppression hearing. Trooper Fox testified that he was a crash reconstructionist for the Critical Incident Response Team of the Tennessee Highway Patrol. He said Trooper Crumpley contacted him the day after the accident to run a test on the air bag sensor module in the defendant's car. He said Trooper Crumpley told him that the car had crossed the centerline and hit a Ford pick-up truck head on but revealed nothing else about the accident. Trooper Fox said he had been trained to use the crash data retrieval system but acknowledged this was the first accident investigation in which he had used the equipment.
Trooper Fox testified he met Trooper Crumpley at Lowe's Towing in Clinton, Tennessee. Trooper Fox said the air bag sensor module in the defendant's car was located underneath the carpet under the passenger's seat. He said he made a one or two inch cut in the carpet to gain access to the module. He said he took a reading from the module that loaded the pre-crash data onto his laptop computer. He testified that the pre-crash data was only for the five seconds before the air bag deployed and that it consisted of speed, engine speed, throttle, braking, seatbelts, and the number of times the ignition was turned on and off.
Trooper Fox testified that he did not run this test on the Ford pick-up truck because at the time, the highway patrol only had the equipment to read the air bag sensor modules in General Motors cars. He said that he had been certified to take readings off the modules since February 5, 2003. He said he responded to approximately sixty fatal crashes in 2003, after he was certified, and this was the only accident where he used the crash data retrieval system. Trooper Fox said he neither obtained a search warrant nor considered obtaining one.
After argument by counsel, the trial court asked counsel to submit memorandum of law and took the motion under advisement. The trial court granted the defendant's motion, stating
The parties have stipulated that the automobile in question is subject to a reasonable expectation of privacy even in a damaged or unmoveable condition. Therefore, the burden shifts to the state to prove the evidence obtained by law enforcement (Highway Patrol) was obtained lawfully and within the protected realms of reasonable governmental activities. This burden by the state is uniquely embraced in the gadgetry of the automobile industry and the computerized mechanism measuring the performance of the history of the operation of the vehicle that may incriminate the driver.
The Court cannot find that the proof supports any common exceptions to the requirements of issuing a search warrant. A search warrant was not used in this case, and the Court finds there are no reasonable exceptions to a warrant requirement. Therefore, the Court suppresses the evidence obtained by the tapping of the internal record contained in the computer module.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the evidence addressed in the Motion to Suppress is suppressed for reasons given.
On appeal, the state contends that the trial court erred in granting the defendant's motion to suppress. It claims that the defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the equipment or safety features of the defendant's vehicle. The state asserts that the defendant's car was an instrument of the crime in which the defendant could have no expectation of privacy. The defendant asserts that she had an expectation of privacy in her car and that the state stipulated she had such a privacy interest at the suppression hearing. The defendant also asserts that the search does not fit any of the exceptions to the general warrant requirement.
We believe we first must address whether this court has jurisdiction over the state's appeal from the trial court's suppression order pursuant to Rule 3(c) of the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure. The state's notice of appeal states:
Rule 3(c) provides only the following circumstances in which the state may appeal as of right in criminal actions:
In criminal actions an appeal as of right by the state lies only from an order or judgment entered by a trial court from which an appeal lies to the Supreme Court or Court of Criminal Appeals: (1) the substantive effect of which results in dismissing an indictment, information, or complaint; (2) setting aside a verdict of guilty and entering a judgment of acquittal; (3) arresting judgment; (4) granting or refusing to revoke probation; or (5) remanding a child to the juvenile court. The state may also appeal as of right from a final judgment in a habeas corpus, extradition, or post-conviction proceeding.
T.R.A.P. 3(c) (emphasis added). Rule 3(c) does not require an order of dismissal as a prerequisite to the state's appeal. State v. Stephen Udzinski, Jr., No. 01C01-9212-CC-00380, Dickson County, slip op. at 2 (Tenn. Crim. App. Nov. 18, 1993). For example, if a trial court's order has the substantive effect of dismissing the indictment, then an appeal pursuant to Rule 3(c) is proper. State v. Phillips, 30 S.W.3d 372, 373 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000); State v. Collins, 35 S.W.3d 582, 584 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000). However, when the trial court's suppression of evidence does not automatically result in dismissal of the case, "the record should contain unambiguous information as to how the court's ruling affects the case." Udzinski, slip op. at 2; see also Phillips, 30 S.W.3d at 374 n.2 ().
The appellant bears the burden of providing an adequate record in order to allow meaningful review on appeal. State v. Ballard, 855 S.W.2d 557, 560-61 (Tenn. 1993). In this regard, we do not believe the statement in the notice of appeal constitutes evidence of the fact asserted. We also note that although the state stated in its notice of appeal that the trial court's order suppressed "all the State's evidence in this case," it actually suppressed only "the evidence obtained by the tapping of the internal record contained in the computer module." The record reflects that the defendant was indicted on alternative counts of vehicular homicide by intoxication and by recklessness. To convict a defendant of vehicular homicide by intoxication, the state must prove that the defendant drove or was in physical control of a motor vehicle on a public road or in an area frequented by the public while under the influence of an intoxicant or while the alcohol concentration in the defendant's blood was 08% or more. See T.C.A. §§ 39-13-213, 55-10-401(a). Because the air bag sensor module would not show the defendant was under the influence of an intoxicant or had a blood alcohol concentration of .08% or higher, the first count of the indictment charging vehicular homicide by intoxication had to have been based on evidence in addition to the air bag sensor module. The state's assertion in its notice of appeal is not supported by the record.
Regarding the vehicular homicide by recklessness count, the trial court's order does not preclude the state from introducing evidence from the accident investigation or calling a reconstruction expert to give his or her opinion on the cause of the accident. We note that experts give opinion testimony about the very evidence suppressed in this case without relying on the data retrieved from air bag sensor modules. See State v. Farner, 66 S.W.3d 188, 206-08 (Tenn. 2001) (); see also State v. Charles...
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