FIFTH DIVISION
PHIPPS, P. J.,
DILLARD and PETERSON, 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
July 13, 2016
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A16A0605. THE STATE v. MATHIS.
PHIPPS, Presiding Judge.
The state accused Justin Mathis of crimes in connection with circumstances
pertaining to a traffic stop of his vehicle. Mathis filed a motion to suppress all
evidence obtained as a result of the stop, arguing that the stop was illegal. The state
argued that the stop was lawful because Mathis had no light illuminating his license
plate – a violation of OCGA § 40-8-23 (d). The trial court conducted a hearing, then
granted the motion. The state appeals. For reasons that follow, we vacate the
judgment and remand the case for reconsideration.
Pursuant to OCGA § 17-5-30 (b), “the burden of proving that the search and
seizure were lawful shall be on the state.” Accordingly, “[i]t is the [s]tate’s burden to
establish the existence of circumstances constituting an exception to the general
prohibition against warrantless searches and seizures.”1
“When reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, an appellate
court must construe the evidentiary record in the light most favorable to the factual
findings and judgment of the trial court,”2 and “[the trial] court’s findings as to
disputed facts and credibility must be adopted unless clearly erroneous.”3 When facts
“can be ascertained definitively, for instance, from a video recording[,] . . . we give
less deference to the fact findings of the trial court.”4 And we owe no deference to the
trial court’s conclusions of law.5
OCGA § 40-8-23 (d), the provision relied upon by the state, sets forth:
Either a taillight or a separate light shall be so constructed and placed as
to illuminate with a white light the rear registration plate and render it
1
State v. Massa, 273 Ga. App. 596, 597 (615 SE2d 652) (2005), citing OCGA
§ 17-5-30 (b).
2
State v. Allen, 298 Ga. 1, 2 (779 SE2d 248) (2015) (citation and punctuation
omitted).
3
State v. Able, 321 Ga. App. 632 (742 SE2d 149) (2013) (citation and footnote
omitted).
4
Edenfield v. State, 293 Ga. 370, 374 (2), n. 6 (744 SE2d 738) (2013).
5
Able, supra at 632-633.
2
clearly legible from a distance of 50 feet to the rear. Any taillight or
taillights, together with any separate light for illuminating the rear
registration plate, shall be so wired as to be lighted whenever the
headlights or auxiliary driving lights are lighted.
The sole witness at the motion hearing was the officer who had conducted the
stop. On direct examination, he recounted the following. At about 2:30 a.m. on
February 12, 2015, he had just completed a (different) traffic stop when he noticed
Mathis’s vehicle as it passed by because, as the officer testified, “I did not think the
car had a tag on it.” The officer got in his patrol car and followed Mathis’s vehicle,
until it turned into a driveway. The officer drove past the driveway, but pulled into
the parking lot of a nearby gas station, where he waited. Seconds later, the officer saw
Mathis’s vehicle passing by the gas station. At that point, the officer testified, “I
could see from the street lights illuminating his car around the gas station, that there
was actually a tag on there but there was no working tag light at all on the vehicle.”
The prosecutor followed up with:
Q: And then when you looked at him passing the gas station, were you
able to determine whether or not he had a tag light or if the tag light was
working?
3
A: I could tell that there was no working tag light there, that it had burnt
out or doesn’t have one, there was no light illuminating the tag, I knew
that.
Q: So was it legible from a distance of 50 feet?
A: No.
Next, the prosecutor elicited the officer’s testimony that the camera mounted
to the dash of his patrol car (“dash cam”) had activated when he pursued Mathis’s
vehicle and that the dash cam had recorded the traffic stop. That video-recording
(with no sound) was presented to the trial court. Thereafter, the prosecutor asked the
officer questions about the silent depictions, focusing on that portion during which
the officer was pointing to the tag area of Mathis’s vehicle.
Q: Is that where you were showing him that the tag light was at?
A: Yes, ma’am, that was. Saw that I reached above his tag underneath
the trunk lid pointing it out to him so he would know where it is at so he
can fix it.
Q: Do you recall the conversation that y’all had about that?
A: I do.
Q: What was that conversation?
A: I showed him where his tag light was and advised him it was out and
he apologized and said he didn’t know and said that he would fix it
tomorrow.
Q: Okay. So he acknowledged that it was out?
A: Yes, he did.
4
The prosecutor next asked the officer about the surveillance equipment he had
been wearing on his body at the time in question. The officer described “a camera that
I wear on the side of my head with a little strap that holds it on your head. . . [I]t is
activated from a battery pack that we wear . . . There’s a little round button on front
and you just push it two times and it activates, it starts recording.” An audio-video
recording of the pursuit of Mathis’s vehicle and the traffic stop had thereby been
created by that camera (“body cam”), and it was presented to the court.
On cross-examination, defense counsel asked the officer whether, in discussing
with Mathis his tag light, he had “reach[ed] up under there and touch[ed] where the
tag light is?” The officer answered, “I did.” Defense counsel asked, “Was there a bulb
in there?” The officer responded, “I do remember pointing, showing him like up
under here is where the light bulb is supposed to be.” Asked then whether he recalled
feeling an empty socket, the officer answered, “No, I don’t remember an empty
socket.”
Also, with the officer on the stand, defense counsel authenticated a photograph,
which the officer recognized as “a still picture” from the recording made with his
body cam. The still picture, the officer described, depicts “my patrol car . . . following
that car that I initiated the stop on” as they drove in front of the gas station. More
5
specifically, the officer testified that as of the moment captured by the still picture,
Mathis’s vehicle was more than 50 feet ahead of his patrol car. The still picture was
presented to the trial court.
Before resting, defense counsel asked the officer whether there was any other
basis for stopping Mathis’s vehicle: “In other words you didn’t see him fail to
maintain lane or improper turn or anything like that?” The officer answered, “No,
sir.”
On redirect examination, the prosecutor asked the officer two questions to
evince that Mathis’s tag lacked illumination:
Q: Once you got closer to the Defendant’s vehicle, were you still able
to see that there was not a functioning tag light?
A: Yes.
Q: Once you were at the point of 50 feet away, there was no – you
readily confirmed that there was no functioning tag light?
A:Yes.
After both sides presented respective closing argument, the trial judge
expressed his personal opinion about the statutory provision relied upon by the state
before ultimately announcing, “I’ll grant the motion,” and further stating that “[i]n
this case it hasn’t been shown to me that [the tag light] was out because based on the
6
picture that the Defendant entered.” Subsequently, in the “Order on Defendant’s
Motion to Suppress,” the trial court set forth:
Upon consideration of all of the testimony, the exhibits, and any
argument by counsel, it is hereby ordered and adjudged that Defendant’s
Motion to Suppress is GRANTED [w]ith the following findings of fact:
State did not show that the officer had a[n] articulable suspicion that the
Defendant had violated the rules of the road. All evidence suppressed.
1. The state attacks the grant of Mathis’s motion to suppress as contrary to the
evidence, maintaining that “[the officer] conducted the traffic stop because of the
equipment violation, specifically no tag light, which is a violation of state law.”
The state summarizes the case it presented to the trial court as follows. Citing
the officer’s testimony, the state claims it showed:
[The officer] parked his vehicle in the gas station parking lot, and,
seconds later, observed [Mathis] pass the gas station. With the street
lamps illuminating [Mathis’s] vehicle, [the officer] determined that the
vehicle did have a tag; however, it did not have a working tag light. [The
officer] observed no light illuminating the tag and determined either the
vehicle’s tag light was burned out or the vehicle lacked a tag light. [The
officer] confirmed that due to the lack of tag light, the tag was not
7
legible from a distance of fifty feet. . . . After being shown that the tag
light was out, [Mathis] acknowledged that the tag light was out.6
The state characterizes the officer’s testimony as “uncontradicted” and further
“bolstered” by all three exhibits introduced at the hearing. Citing certain portions of
the dash cam and body cam recordings, the state asserts that “it was clear there was
no white light illuminating the tag.” Regarding the still picture introduced by the
defense, the state claims that “[it] does not show that the tag light was working.”
According to the state, “[n]o evidence presented indicates that the tag light was ever
illuminated during the course of the Appellee driving or the traffic stop.”
The trial court was not required to accept the state’s position. “[W]hen a motion
to suppress is heard by the trial judge, that judge sits as the trier of facts.”7
“Credibility 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
6
(Record citations omitted.)
7
Tate v. State, 264 Ga. 53, 54 (1) (440 SE2d 646) (1994), cited in Hughes v.
State, 296 Ga. 744, 746 (1) (770 SE2d 636) (2015).
8
any portion of the testimony.”8 “Factors such as demeanor, contradictory or
inconsistent statements and evidence that an officer had ‘ulterior motives’ can all lead
a finder of fact to disregard testimony by an officer.”9 And as explained above,
deference to the fact-finding prerogative of the trial court requires an appellate court
to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the findings and decision of the
trial court.10
Notably, in the instant case, when the prosecutor reminded the trial judge near
the close of the hearing of the officer’s testimony that Mathis was driving a vehicle
that had no functioning tag light, the trial judge responded that the officer’s
credibility was at issue. While the trial court did not go so far as to explicitly find that
8
Tate, supra at 56 (3), cited in Hughes, supra at 747 (1); see also State v.
Hester, 268 Ga. App. 501, 505 (602 SE2d 271) (2004) (“The trial judge, like the jury,
is the primary guardian of the rights of a citizen. An absolute rule requiring the trial
judge to believe the witnesses called by the state would contradict the American
system of justice.”).
9
Brown v. State, 293 Ga. 787, 804 (3) (b) (2) (750 SE2d 148) (2013), citing
Tate, supra at 56 & n. 5.
10
See Tolbert v. State, 298 Ga. 147, 151 (2) (a) (780 SE2d 298) (2015), citing
Brown, supra at 803 (3) (b) (2), for the principle that “in the context of appellate
review of grant of motion to suppress, . . . deference to the fact-finding prerogative
of the trial court requires an appellate court to view the evidence in the light most
favorable to the findings and decision of the trial court”).
9
the officer lacked credibility, the court ultimately granted the motion – “[u]pon
consideration of all of the testimony, the exhibits, and any argument by counsel.”
Generally,11 our obligation to view the evidentiary record in the light most favorable
to the findings and judgment of the trial court requires us to assume that the trial court
rejected the credibility of the officer to the extent that the officer’s testimony is
inconsistent with the court’s decision.12 Moreover, we have examined the dash cam
11
But see Division 2, infra (considering whether trial judge’s remarks at
suppression hearing demonstrate that trial judge employed inapplicable test).
12
See Hughes, supra (explaining that on review of motions to suppress, we
generally “assume that trial judges have done their job, and . . . presume that the
absence of a finding of a fact that would tend to undermine the conclusion of the trial
court reflects a considered choice to reject the evidence offered to prove that fact”);
Barnett v. State, 204 Ga. App. 491, 492 (1) (420 SE2d 43) (1992) (analyzing that the
trial court, “perforce of its ruling on the suppression motion,” made credibility
determination) (cited in Tate, supra at 57 (3) and n. 6, as an example of the way
reviewing courts “interpret” judicial orders in cases where the trial court, as Tate
ascertained, did not make specific findings); see also State v. Massa, 273 Ga. App.
596, 597 (615 SE2d 652) (2005) (determining that, although the trial court did not
explicitly reject the officer’s testimony, the trial court’s findings of fact and case law
cited “suggest[ed] that the trial court had rejected the officer’s testimony” that
underlay the state’s claim that the officer’s intrusion was authorized); Hester, supra
at 504 (ascertaining that the trial court chose to disbelieve the officer’s testimony,
where the trial court granted the suppression motion, even though the state presented
an officer’s testimony, which, “[i]f believed by the trial court, … would [have been]
more than adequate to justify” the traffic stop); see generally Miller v. State, 288 Ga.
286, 289-290 (2) (702 SE2d 888) (2010) (concluding that, where the “trial court
explicitly questioned the bases presented as the purpose for the stop of [the accused],”
“credibility determinations played a significant part in the trial court’s [suppression]
10
recording, the body cam recording, and the still photograph. Contrary to the officer’s
testimony that Mathis’s vehicle lacked a functioning tag light, all three exhibits
captured Mathis’s license tag being illuminated from a lighting source affixed to his
vehicle directly above the tag. Finally, the state cites the officer’s testimony that when
he showed Mathis where his tag light was located and advised him it was “out,”
Mathis acknowledged that it was “out.” But the relevant portion of the body cam
(audio-video) recording captured this discussion:
Officer: If everything comes back good, I’m gonna give you a warning
on that tag light, alright? It’s gon’ be up around here somewhere, ok?
Mathis: Yea, I didn’t even know that, ah, I mean I’ll get it fixed
tomorrow.
Officer: OK.
The trial judge was not required to find from the evidence that Mathis thereupon
“acknowledged” that he had no functioning tag light.
ruling,” and thus, “[t]his credibility question lies at the very core of the trial court’s
ruling, and it should not be negated by [the appellate court]”). Accord Tolbert, supra
at 152 (2) (b) (“Our obligation to view the evidentiary record in the light most
favorable to the findings and judgment of the trial court requires us to assume that the
trial court in this case rejected the credibility of [the officer] to the extent that [the
officer’s] testimony is inconsistent with its decision.”), citing Hughes, supra.
11
Given the foregoing, the trial court was authorized to conclude that the state
had failed to carry the burden imposed upon it by Mathis’s motion to suppress. The
sole articulated basis for the stop – as confirmed by the officer’s testimony at the
suppression hearing, as well as the state’s brief on appeal – was that, because
Mathis’s vehicle had no light illuminating the tag, the tag was not legible. Having
reviewed the evidence, and accorded due deference to the trial judge’s fact-finding
prerogative,13 we conclude that the trial court was authorized to reject the state’s
claim that it had evinced the underlying premise (the lack of a functioning tag light)
and to thus find that the state did not show that the officer had an articulable
suspicion that Mathis had violated OCGA § 40-8-23 (d).
13
See Tate, supra at 55-56 (2) and n. 5 (noting an issue of credibility
concerning the officer’s testimony was created, where such testimony was considered
in light of other “circumstantial evidence” that was presented at hearing; further
enumerating “demeanor” as a factor that can lead a finder of fact to disregard
testimony by an officer that an accused was violating the law; and concluding that
“[a] rational trier of fact could believe that [the officer’s] testimony was not truthful
and that the officer was claiming that [the accused] broke the law in order to justify
an illegal stop”); Massa, supra; Hester, supra at 506 (affirming the grant of
suppression motion, where the trial judge disbelieved the officer’s testimony that
underlay the state’s claim that the traffic stop was justified; reiterating that “when no
error of law appears on the record, and the trial court’s ruling is based on the
credibility of the oral testimony presented at the hearing, [an appellate court] must .
. . leave the decision to the trial judge as the trier of fact”); Barnett, supra. See also
Miller, supra.
12
2. The state contends that the trial court erred in its “interpretation and
application of OCGA § 40-8-23 (d),” asserting that the trial judge’s personal dislike
of the statutory provision – as revealed through certain of the judge’s remarks –
“cloud[ed]” the ruling. According to the state, a “proper, unbiased interpretation of
the statute would have led the trial court to deny [Mathis’s] motion to suppress.”
The state first cites that after both sides gave respective closing arguments, the
trial judge remarked, “I’ve made no bones about the fact that this is my least favorite
basis for a stop.” But as the transcript shows, the trial judge went on to acknowledge
that “if a Rules of the Road are violated then a pretextual stop is . . . okay
[authorized].” The state also cites that the trial judge remarked that the “tag light is
not a public safety issue in my opinion.” But the transcript shows that immediately
thereafter, the trial judge acknowledged,
Now, that’s not determinative, I know. That just means that I don’t like
the stop because I think it wreaks [sic] of pretextuality to be . . . it is just
my opinion, I don’t think it involves public safety . . . in my opinion, as
a reason for stopping cars in the middle of the night because a tag light
is out. And I – it is my least favorite of all the stops. Now, to the [C]ode
section.
13
Thereupon, the trial judge noted that OCGA § 40-8-23 (d) “says either a taillight or
a second light shall be constructed and placed so as to illuminate [with] white light
the rear registration plate.” The trial judge thus ascertained,
So it says either a taillight or a separate light so it is “or.” So a separate
light is not necessary. You don’t have to have a tag light on a car. If your
taillights are situated so that they – when the white part that stays on on
a taillight, it if illuminates the tag, then a stop can’t be made based on
this code section.
Next, apparently examining evidence adduced at the hearing, the trial judge
determined, “This picture here (indicating) introduced here, shows that the tag light
is visible.”14 Turning back to the statutory language, the trial court noted additionally
that “the code says that so it is clearly legible from a distance of 50 feet to the rear.”
As the state further cites, the trial judge then revealed, “I don’t see where this
becomes an issue, making a stop necessary, stopping a citizen by the police, unless
it is a situation it is completely dark and that he can’t read the tag.” These following
remarks, the state claims, demonstrate that the trial judge went on to grant the motion
under an inapplicable test.
14
(Emphasis supplied.)
14
I think in order for it to appease me, they would need to show that in a
black area with the officer’s headlights out and the Defendant’s lights
on, that the tag was not visible for 50 feet which I don’t think they’ve
shown in this case. I think that’s what they would have to do to appease
me is to construct a situation where wherever this car was pulled over,
if you turned off the officer’s headlights so they weren’t shining on the
car, and the Defendant’s lights were on as they were when he was
driving, if you stood 50 feet back and you still couldn’t see the tag, then
based on this code section it would justify the stop. Other than that, I
just don’t think it is a justification for stopping citizens on the road in
my opinion. I’ll grant the motion.
It was at this point during the hearing when the prosecutor reminded the judge
of the officer’s testimony that he had observed a tag light violation. The judge
responded that “it is an issue, always an issue of credibility as far as his testimony
early on.” Before concluding the hearing, the trial judge revisited,
I have made my opinion clear about [the statutory provision] and I am
going to follow the law but I’m going to be very strict on these cases, as
strict as I can be on these cases because this is one area of the law I just
think – as I said, I think it wreaks [sic] of pretextuality. . . . In this case
it hasn’t been shown to me that [the tag light] was out because based on
the picture that the Defendant entered but at any rate I am . . . granting
the Motion.
15
In the instant case, the trial judge readily conceded his personal dislike for
OCGA § 40-8-23 (d) and disdain for pretextual stops, but also explicitly
acknowledged that where an officer observes a traffic violation, an ensuing stop is
lawful.15 The trial judge repeatedly vowed to follow the law; he reviewed the statutory
provision and examined evidence adduced, noting in particular that the officer’s
credibility was at issue. Although we disagree with the state that the trial court was
required to issue a ruling in its favor,16 we agree that certain of the trial judge’s
remarks indicate that the grant of the motion may have resulted at least in part from
the state’s failure to meet the trial judge’s own preferred test. As this court has held,
[I]t is not the role of a judge to “interpret” constitutional or statutory
provisions through the prism of his or her own personal policy
preferences. A judge is charged with interpreting the law in accordance
with the original and/or plain meaning of the text at issue (and all that
the text fairly implies), as well as with faithfully following the
15
See generally Carnes v. State, 293 Ga. App. 549, 550 (667 SE2d 620) (2008)
(holding that the initial traffic stop was justified by probable cause, where the officer
observed a traffic violation – “regardless of the officer’s subjective intent”); Navicky
v. State, 245 Ga. App. 284, 285 (1) (537 SE2d 740) (2000) (“When an officer sees a
traffic offense occur, a resulting traffic stop does not violate the Fourth Amendment
even if the officer has ulterior motives in initiating the stop.”) (punctuation and
footnote omitted).
16
See Division 1, supra.
16
precedents established by higher courts. And in failing to adhere to these
constraints, [a] trial court clearly err[s].17
Given these circumstances, we vacate the trial court’s order granting the motion to
suppress and remand the case for the trial court to consider whether the state carried
its burden as imposed under Georgia law.18
Judgment vacated and case remanded with direction. Dillard and Peterson,
JJ., concur.
17
Able, supra at 636 (footnotes omitted).
18
See generally id. at 634-636 (vacating grant of motion to suppress evidence
seized when police entered residence, where the only conclusion to be drawn from
the comments made by the judge at the motion hearing – and where the appellate
record was “otherwise silent” – was that the grant was based on the trial judge’s
general dislike for (lawful) procedures employed by the police). Cf. State v. Carden,
281 Ga. App. 886, 890-891 (2) (637 SE2d 493) (2006) (rejecting state’s contention
that the decision resulted from the trial judge’s personal disdain of a statutory
provision, where the state failed to overcome the presumption that the trial judge sifts
the wheat from the chaff, because although trial judge remarked that he “hate[d]”
such statutory provision “to the bottom of [his] shoes,” the trial judge further put on
record his reason for rendering the decision, and that decision was supported by the
evidence); Merka v. State, 201 Ga. App. 471-472 (1) (411 SE2d 357) (1991)
(rejecting defendant’s contention that the trial court erred by allowing “personal
feelings of dislike” for his co-defendant to prejudice its decision, where the trial
judge’s remarks – “[I] would frankly, have a hard time believing anything [that co-
defendant] said, under oath and otherwise” and that “[I] wouldn’t believe anything
[co-defendant] says on a stack of Bibles up here” – indicated only that the trial court
was fulfilling its duty of evaluating the alleged accomplice’s credibility) (punctuation
omitted).
17