McClintock, Bradley Ray

         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                     OF TEXAS
                                    NO. PD-1641-15



                     BRADLEY RAY McCLINTOCK, Appellant

                                            v.

                               THE STATE OF TEXAS



           ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
                 FROM THE FIRST COURT OF APPEALS
                           HARRIS COUNTY

       Y EARY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which K ELLER, P.J., and
K EASLER, H ERVEY, R ICHARDSON, K EEL and W ALKER, JJ., joined. A LCALA, J., filed a
dissenting opinion. N EWELL, J., did not participate.

                                     OPINION

      This case involves the proper construction of Article 38.23(b) of the Texas Code of

Criminal Procedure, the statutory good-faith exception to our statutory exclusionary rule.

T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art. 38.23(b). We have reviewed this case once before on

discretionary review. McClintock v. State, 444 S.W.3d 15 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014). At that

time, we remanded it to the court of appeals to allow that court to address, in the first
                                                                              McClintock — 2

instance, whether the United States Supreme Court’s recent interpretation of the court-made

good-faith exception to the federal exclusionary rule in Davis v. United States, 564 U.S. 229

(2011), should have any application in the construction of our own statutory good-faith

exception to our statutory exclusionary rule. We observed that a remand was “the proper

disposition” of our first discretionary review because the answer was “not remotely clear cut”

and “our resolution of the issue . . . would benefit from a carefully wrought decision from the

court of appeals.” 444 S.W.3d at 20-21. The court of appeals has now issued its opinion.

McClintock v. State, 480 S.W.3d 734 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2015). The State again

petitioned this court for discretionary review, which we granted.

                                      BACKGROUND

       We gave a detailed recital of the facts in our first opinion in this case. McClintock, 444

S.W.3d at 16-17. We need not repeat them to that level of specificity here. Suffice it to say

that Appellant lived in an upstairs residence above a business. Access to his residence could

be gained through a stairway at the back of the building. Police took a drug-sniffing dog to

Appellant’s door at the top of that stairway, where the dog alerted to the presence of drugs.

This fact was included in a warrant affidavit upon which a warrant to search the residence

issued. Charged with possession of a felony amount of marijuana, Appellant filed a motion

to suppress the contraband, contending that it had been obtained under a search warrant that

was not supported by probable cause. He claimed that the affidavit in support of the search

warrant contained illegally obtained information, and that, redacting that information from
                                                                                   McClintock — 3

the warrant affidavit, the remaining information failed to supply probable cause. Specifically,

he argued that the police had conducted an illegal search at the door to his apartment using

a drug-sniffing dog, and then incorporated that ill-gotten information into the search warrant

affidavit. The trial court denied the motion, expressly holding that the police dog had not

invaded the curtilage of Appellant’s home at the time it alerted to the presence of contraband,

and that the use of a drug dog therefore did not constitute a search for Fourth Amendment

purposes. Appellant then pled guilty to a reduced charge, preserving his right to appeal the

adverse ruling on his motion to suppress.

       While the case was pending on appeal, the United States Supreme Court decided

Florida v. Jardines, 133 S.Ct. 1409 (2013). On the strength of that opinion, the court of

appeals reversed Appellant’s conviction, holding that the canine drug sniff had in fact

constituted an unconstitutional search of the curtilage of Appellant’s residence,1 and that,

excluding the dog’s contraband alert from the search warrant affidavit, there was no probable

cause to support the warrant. McClintock v. State, 405 S.W.3d 277 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st

Dist.] 2013). The State filed a petition for discretionary review. For the first time, the State

argued that, even accepting that the dog sniff was illegal under Jardines, the court of appeals

erred to hold that the trial court should have excluded the product of the search warrant.


       1
          On similar facts, this Court recently held the same. See State v. Rendon, 477 S.W.3d 805,
811 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015) (“Applying the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Jardines to the facts of
this case, we conclude that, by bringing a drug-detection dog directly up to appellee’s front door for
the purpose of conducting a canine-narcotics sniff, the officers physically intruded upon the curtilage
of appellee’s home in a manner that exceeded the scope of any express or implied license, and any
evidence obtained as a result of that trespass was obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment.”).
                                                                                    McClintock — 4

Invoking the Supreme Court’s opinion in Davis, the State argued that, because the police

relied upon then-binding legal precedent holding that the dog sniff did not constitute a search

for Fourth Amendment purposes, they committed no malfeasance and should not have to

suffer the exclusion of evidence under either the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule or the

statutory exclusionary rule embodied in Article 38.23(a) of the Texas Code of Criminal

Procedure.2 We remanded the cause to the court of appeals to address this contention in the

first instance. McClintock v. State, 444 S.W.3d 15, 20-21 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014).

       On remand, the justices in the court of appeals disputed the proper scope of Article

38.23(b)’s good-faith exception to our statutory exclusionary rule.3 The majority held that the

language of the exception plainly limits its application to “evidence obtained” by virtue of


       2
           Subsection (a) of Article 38.23 reads:

              (a) No evidence obtained by an officer or other person in violation of any
       provisions of the Constitution or laws of the State of Texas, or of the Constitution or
       laws of the United States of America, shall be admitted in evidence against the
       accused on the trial of any criminal case.

               In any case where the legal evidence raises an issue hereunder, the jury shall
       be instructed that if it believes, or has a reasonable doubt, that the evidence was
       obtained in violation of the provisions of this Article, then and in such event, the jury
       shall disregard any such evidence so obtained.

TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 38.23(a).
       3
           Subsection (b) of Article 38.23 reads:

               (b) It is an exception to the provisions of Subsection (a) of this Article that
       the evidence was obtained by a law enforcement officer acting in objective good faith
       reliance upon a warrant issue by a neutral magistrate based on probable cause.

TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 38.23(b).
                                                                              McClintock — 5

“reliance upon” a “warrant” that is “based on probable cause.” McClintock, 480 S.W.3d at

742-44. It observed that the warrant upon which police relied in this case was not supported

by probable cause because the affidavit undergirding the warrant contained information that

itself was tainted by an illegality. Id. On its face, the majority explained, Article 38.23(b)

does not apply to excuse this underlying illegality, and so, the illegally obtained information

may not be included in the probable cause calculation. Id. The majority went on to say that,

excluding that illegally obtained information from the warrant affidavit, insufficient

“probable cause” remained to support the warrant. Id. Therefore, the majority concluded, the

good-faith exception embodied in Subsection (b) did not apply, exclusion of the contraband

was appropriate under Subsection (a), and the trial court erred in failing to suppress the

evidence. Id.

       The dissenting justice disagreed. Id. at 744-54 (Keyes, J., dissenting). She believed

it would be just as faithful to the language of the statutory exception to hold that, so long as

the illegal conduct that infected the acquisition of the information that went into the warrant

affidavit was itself undertaken in good faith, then the evidence was “obtained . . . in good

faith reliance upon a warrant . . . based on probable cause[,]” and evidence obtained pursuant

to the warrant need not be excluded. Id. That is to say, so long as the police had a good-faith

basis to believe, under binding legal precedent at the time, that they had lawfully obtained

the information included in the warrant affidavit, then the exclusionary provisions of Article

38.23(a) should not apply. Id. Such an interpretation, Justice Keyes believed, would bring the
                                                                              McClintock — 6

statutory exception in line with the Supreme Court’s gloss on the federal exclusionary rule

announced in Davis. Id.

       We granted the State’s second petition for discretionary review in order to resolve this

dispute and clarify the reach of Article 38.23(b). Boiled down, the question is this: How

should Article 38.23(b) apply, if at all, when the warrant affidavit supplies probable cause

but that probable cause appears to be tainted by a prior illegality?

                                         ANALYSIS

                                  Statutory Construction

       Prior to the advent of Article 38.23, this Court had recognized no state exclusionary

remedy in Texas. Welchek v. State, 93 Tex. Crim. 271, 247 S.W. 524 (1922). We still have

not fashioned a judicial exclusionary rule. The scope of the current state exclusionary rule

is, therefore, purely a function of our construction of the statute. While Article 38.23 to some

extent “mirrors” the federal exclusionary rule, Miles v. State, 241 S.W.3d 28, 32 (Tex. Crim.

App. 2007), they are not identical, and we are not free to graft additions or alterations to the

statute at our pleasure, in the name of policy, that are plainly inconsistent with the text. The

proper scope of Article 38.23(a)’s exclusionary rule is a question of statutory construction.

State v. Daugherty, 931 S.W.2d 268, 270 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996); Wehrenberg v. State, 416

S.W.3d 458, 468-70 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). The proper scope of any exception to the

exclusionary rule, such as Article 38.23(b)’s good-faith exception, is likewise a question of

statutory construction. See Baker v. State, 956 S.W.2d 19, 23 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997)
                                                                            McClintock — 7

(“[W]hether a recognized exception to a federal exclusionary rule also applies to Article

38.23 depends upon whether the exception is consistent with the language of Article

38.23.”).

       The Supreme Court’s decision in Davis dealt with the good-faith exception to the

federal, court-made exclusionary rule. The question in Davis was whether to apply the

federal exclusionary rule “when police conduct a search in compliance with binding

precedent that is later overruled.” 564 U.S. at 232. The Supreme Court concluded that

“[e]vidence obtained during a search conducted in reasonable reliance on binding precedent

is not subject to the exclusionary rule.” Id. at 241. Nothing about Davis’s holding with

respect to the federal exclusionary rule necessarily dictates how Article 38.23(b) should be

construed. Whether Article 38.23(b)’s good-faith exception should apply to the facts of the

instant case is purely a question of legislative intent. Consequently, we must decide whether,

when the Legislature provided that the good-faith exception should apply only to excuse the

illegal acquisition of evidence when the evidence was obtained in reliance upon a warrant

“based upon probable cause[,]” it intended that any information contributing to that probable

cause that was itself obtained by police misconduct should be discounted from the probable

cause assessment.

       When we construe Article 38.23, as with any statute, “[i]n divining legislative intent,

we look first to the language of the statute[,]” and “[w]hen the meaning is plain, we look no

further.” Daugherty, 931 S.W.2d at 270. It is plain enough from the language of Article
                                                                                 McClintock — 8

38.23(b) that, before its good-faith exception to Subsection (a)’s exclusionary rule may apply,

there must be (1) objective good-faith reliance upon (2) a warrant (3) issued by a neutral

magistrate that is (4) based upon probable cause. With respect to the fourth requirement, we

long ago declared that “[t]he plain wording of Art[icle] 38.23(b) requires an initial

determination of probable cause.” Curry v. State, 808 S.W.2d 481, 482 (Tex. Crim. App.

1991) (citing Gordon v. State, 801 S.W.2d 899, 912-13 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990)); see also

George E. Dix & John M. Schmolesky, 40 T EXAS P RACTICE: C RIMINAL P RACTICE AND

P ROCEDURE § 7.67, at 395 (3d ed. 2011) (“If probable cause is found to be lacking, Article

38.23—although not federal constitutional considerations—requires that the evidence be

excluded regardless of whether the officer relying on the warrant believed that it had been

issued on facts sufficient for probable cause.”).4

       Far less plain from the face of the statute is what the legislative intent may have been

with respect to what may permissibly go into the assessment of “probable cause.” 5 Did the

Legislature mean to incorporate nothing more than the common-place definition of that term,

namely, that “under the totality of circumstances presented to the magistrate, there is at least

a ‘fair probability’ or ‘substantial chance’ that contraband or evidence of a crime will be


       4
         Moreover, it seems plain enough that Article 38.23(b) does not provide a good faith
exception for an illegal warrantless search or seizure perpetrated by the police, or for any illegal
search or seizure perpetrated by an “other person” for purposes of Article 38.23(a).
       5
         See Yazdchi v. State, 428 S.W.3d 831, 847 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014) (Price, J., concurring)
(“The extent to which statutory language may be plain on its face or ambiguous is sometimes a
function of the question that is brought to bear. A given statutory provision will sometimes clearly
answer one question but remain hopelessly insoluble with respect to another.”).
                                                                                  McClintock — 9

found at the specified location”? Flores v. State, 319 S.W.3d 697, 702 (Tex. Crim. App.

2010) (citing Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213 (1983)). There is no question that the totality of

circumstances presented to the magistrate in this case, including the results of the canine drug

sniff, supplied ample probable cause. Alternatively, did the Legislature’s understanding of

“probable cause” embrace—as the majority in the court of appeals in this case tacitly

assumed—the Fourth Amendment’s “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine to the effect that

illegally obtained information must ordinarily be disregarded in determining whether a

warrant affidavit has supplied sufficient information to satisfy this common-place definition

of probable cause?6 In deciding whether a warrant is “based on probable cause” for purposes

of implementing Article 38.23(b), is it necessary for a court that is reviewing the magistrate’s

determination categorically to strike any information in the warrant affidavit that was itself

illegally obtained? Does it matter whether the prior illegality was itself subject to a claim that

the officer acted in good faith? The federal courts have disagreed about the proper resolution




       6
          We have said that, as a principle of Fourth Amendment law, “[a] search warrant may not
be procured lawfully by the use of illegally obtained information.” State v. Cuong Phu Le, 463
S.W.3d 872, 877 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015) (citing Brown v. State, 605 S.W.2d 572, 577 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1980), overruled on other grounds by Hedicke v. State, 779 S.W.2d 837 (Tex. Crim. App.
1989)). This is nothing more than a particular application of the well-known “fruit-of-the-poisonous-
tree” doctrine. Wayne R. LaFave, 6 SEARCH AND SEIZURE : A TREATISE ON THE FOURTH
AMENDMENT § 11.4(f) (5th ed. 2012); George E. Dix & John M. Schmolesky, 40 TEXAS PRACTICE :
CRIMINAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 9:2 (3d ed. 2011). It is not altogether clear from the face of
the statute, however, that the Legislature necessarily meant to incorporate this Fourth Amendment
principle into its definition of “probable cause” in the context of Article 38.23(b), as the court of
appeals apparently believed. See McClintock, 480 S.W.3d at 742 (“The warrant [affidavit] in this
case did not contain sufficient lawfully acquired information to clearly establish probable cause
without the dog-sniff evidence.”).
                                                                                McClintock — 10

of this issue as a matter of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.7 Article 38.23(b) does not

expressly address, much less plainly resolve, this complicated question.

       How do we fill the statutory gap? Our approach in the past, at least when confronting

the language of Article 38.23(a), has been to assume that the Legislature intended to

incorporate any exception to the federal exclusionary rule from the Fourth Amendment case

law that we have found to be “consistent with” the statutory language, even if not expressly

spelled out there. Baker, 956 S.W.2d at 23. Thus, we have declared the Fourth Amendment

doctrines of “attenuation of taint” and “independent source” to apply under Article 38.23(a),

because we found them to be consistent with the notion that evidence that fits within either

of these doctrines was not “obtained” illegally, as the statute requires as a predicate to

exclusion. Johnson v. State, 871 S.W.2d 744, 750-51 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994); Wehrenberg,

416 S.W.3d at 473. By contrast, we found the doctrine of inevitable discovery not to be

consistent with the statutory language of Article 38.23(a), because that doctrine assumes that

evidence has been “obtained” illegally, and would admit it anyway. Daugherty, 931 S.W.2d

at 271. In examining the scope of Article 38.23(b)’s good-faith exception to Article

38.23(a)’s exclusionary rule, therefore, we should similarly inquire whether such principles



       7
         For a discussion of the conflicting federal case law with respect to whether to extend the
good-faith exception to cases involving an illegal predicate search, see Andrew Z. Lipson, Note: The
Good Faith Exception as Applied to Illegal Predicate Searches: A Free Pass to Institutional
Ignorance, 60 HASTINGS L.J. 1147, 1156-66 (May 2009), and Alyson M. Cox, Note: Does It Stay,
or Does It Go?: Application of the Good-Faith Exception When the Warrant Relied Upon Is Fruit
of the Poisonous Tree, 72 WASH . & LEE L. REV . 1505, 1515-33 (Summer 2015). Those cases will
be discussed in the text and in footnotes, post.
                                                                               McClintock — 11

as have been recognized in the case law construing the scope of the “good-faith” exception

to the federal exclusionary rule are accommodated by the statutory language.

                     The Good Faith Doctrine and Fruit of the Poisonous Tree

          The United States Supreme Court has already provided clear guidance when it comes

to exclusionary-rule issues such as attenuation of taint,8 independent source,9 and inevitable

discovery.10 It is a relatively straightforward task for this Court to decide whether Article

38.23 can accommodate those doctrines as definitively articulated by the Supreme Court. But

the Supreme Court has yet to address the question of how the fruit-of-the-poisonous-tree

doctrine should interact with the good-faith exception established by United States v. Leon,

468 U.S. 897 (1984).11 The lower federal courts are not entirely of one mind on this question,

and it is a challenge to discern exactly what the state of the law is under the federal

exclusionary rule.

          The Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits have taken a hard line. They seem to have

held that Leon’s good-faith exception should not apply at all to permit the admissibility of



          8
              Brown v. Illinois, 422 U.S. 590 (1975).
          9
               Segura v. United States, 468 U.S. 796 (1984); Murray v. United States, 487 U.S. 533
(1988).
          10
               Nix v. Williams, 467 U.S. 431 (1984).
          11
          See Janine L. Hockberg, Note: Dining in Good Faith on Poisonous Fruit?, 15 WIDENER
L. REV . 301, 302 (2009) (“One of the unsettled areas left by [United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897
(1984),] involved how the good-faith exception was meant to interact with the poisonous fruit
doctrine where police received a warrant based upon evidence found in an inadvertently illegal
search or seizure.”).
                                                                                   McClintock — 12

evidence obtained pursuant to a search warrant if the information proffered to the magistrate

to supply probable cause was itself obtained, and hence tainted, by some prior illegality.12 On

the other hand, the Second Circuit has ventured to the opposite extreme as the Ninth, Tenth,

and Eleventh Circuits, seeming to hold that a prior illegality will always be excused so long

as a neutral magistrate ultimately determines there is probable cause.13 These cases were


       12
           United States v. Vasey, 834 F.2d 782, 789 (9th Cir. 1987) (“We therefore conclude that a
magistrate’s consideration does not protect from exclusion evidence seized during a search under
a warrant if that warrant was based on evidence seized in an unconstitutional search. Accordingly,
the good faith exception should not and will not be applied to the facts of this case.”); United States
v. Scales, 903 F.2d 765, 767-68 (10th Cir. 1990) (refusing to apply Leon’s good-faith exception to
justify search of luggage with a warrant when the warrant was predicated on an illegal seizure of that
luggage to conduct a dog sniff); United States v. McGough, 412 F.3d 1232, 1239-40 (11th Cir. 2005)
(concluding that Leon’s good-faith exception “is not applicable” when the search warrant was itself
tainted with information in the warrant affidavit that was obtained by virtue of a prior illegality).
Several states have taken a similar hard-line approach. See State v. Carter, 69 Ohio St.3d 57, 68, 630
N.E.2d 355, 364 (1994) (“The good-faith exception does not apply where a search warrant is issued
on the basis of evidence obtained as a result of an illegal search.”); People v. Machupa, 7 Cal.4th
614, 29 Cal.Rptr.2d 775, 872 P.2d 114 (1994) (same); State v. DeWitt, 184 Ariz. 464, 469-70, 910
P.2d 9, 14-15 (1996) (rejecting good-faith exception based upon a search warrant where information
supplying probable cause for the warrant was itself unconstitutionally obtained); State v. Reno, 260
Kan. 117, 129, 918 P.2d 1235, 1243 (1996) (the Leon good-faith exception does not apply because
“[t]he admissibility of the evidence depends not on the good faith of the seizing officers but, rather,
on the source of the information used to obtain the search warrant”).
       13
            In a case strikingly similar to this one, police took a drug-sniffing dog onto the curtilage
of the defendant’s apartment. United States v. Thomas, 757 F.2d 1359, 1366 (2d Cir. 1985). The
Second Circuit held that the dog sniff constituted an unconstitutional search. Id. at 1367. It further
concluded that, absent the dog’s positive alert for drugs, the warrant affidavit was insufficient to
supply probable cause. Id. at 1368. The court turned next to the applicability of the Leon good-faith
exception. It held that the magistrate’s approval of the warrant was sufficient to render any evidence
deriving from the ultimate search of the apartment, though tainted by a warrant that, absent the dog-
sniff information, lacked probable cause, nevertheless not subject to the exclusionary rule. Id. The
court observed: “There is nothing more the officer could or should have done under these
circumstances to be sure his search [of the apartment] would be legal. The magistrate, whose duty
it is to interpret the law, determined that the canine sniff could form the basis for probable cause; it
was reasonable for the officer to rely on this determination.” Id. See also United States v. Carmona,
858 F.2d 66, 68 (2d Cir. 1988) (illegally intrusive “security sweep” uncovered information that went
                                                                                McClintock — 13

decided relatively early, however, and it remains to be seen whether these circuits will

eventually moderate their views in light of the attitude other circuits have since taken that

seem to have carved out various middle grounds.

       In a progression of opinions, the Eighth Circuit has held that the good-faith exception

may apply to allow admissibility of evidence deriving from a search warrant that was tainted

by a prior illegality—but only if the prior illegality was itself the product of a good-faith

mistake on the part of the police, such that the deterrent purpose of the Fourth Amendment

exclusionary rule would not efficaciously be served.14 The First Circuit has held similarly,




into a warrant affidavit, but the officers who executed the warrant nonetheless acted in good-faith
reliance on the magistrate’s finding of probable cause, notwithstanding the prior illegality).
       14
          In United States v. White, 890 F.2d 1413, 1419 (8th Cir. 1989), DEA agents at the Saint
Louis airport illegally detained the defendant’s luggage in order to have a drug dog sniff his bags.
Nevertheless, the question whether the officers had reasonable suspicion to seize the luggage was
deemed “close enough to the line of validity” that the magistrate’s approval of a warrant predicated
on the dog sniff rendered the police conduct in relying on the warrant “objectively reasonable” for
Leon purposes, notwithstanding the prior illegality. Id. To the same effect is the Eighth Circuit’s
opinion in United States v. Kiser, 948 F.2d 418, 422 (8th Cir. 1991). And again, in United States v.
Fletcher, 91 F.3d 48, 52 (8th Cir. 1996), under similar circumstances, the Eighth Circuit once again
applied the good-faith exception. Though the court found a lack of reasonable suspicion to seize the
defendant’s bag for a dog sniff, it nevertheless concluded:

       Considering all circumstances, we agree with the district court that the officers had
       an objectively reasonable belief that they possessed a reasonable suspicion as would
       support the valid detention of Fletcher’s bag as well as an objectively reasonable
       belief that the warrant issued was valid. * * * The purpose of the exclusionary rule,
       deterrence of police misconduct, will not be served by its application to this case.

Id.
                                                                                   McClintock — 14

also noting that the circumstances of the prior illegality were set forth in the warrant affidavit

so that the magistrate could judge the legality of the prior warrantless search.15

        More recently, the Sixth and Fifth Circuits have weighed in. The Sixth Circuit for the

first time explicitly framed the issue as one of how to “reconcile the ‘good faith’ exception

established in Leon . . . with the ‘fruit of the poisonous tree’ doctrine[.]” United States v.

McClain, 444 F.3d 556, 564 (6th Cir. 2005). In McClain, police conducted an illegal

protective sweep of a residence, unduly believing that a possible burglary was in progress.

A different officer subsequently sought a search warrant for the house, suspecting a

marijuana growing enterprise based on information obtained during the illegal sweep. Id. at

560. The Sixth Circuit affirmed the district court’s judgment that the initial entry and search

were illegal. Id. at 564. It turned next to the question of whether that taint should render the

second officer’s reliance on the magistrate’s issuance of the warrant to be beyond the scope

of the good-faith exception. Id. It concluded that “this is one of the unique cases in which the

Leon good-faith exception should apply despite an earlier Fourth Amendment violation.” Id.

at 565. Like the Eighth Circuit in White, the Sixth Circuit found that “the facts surrounding

the initial Fourth Amendment violation were ‘close enough to the line of validity to make the



        15
         The prior illegality in United States v. Diehl, 276 F.3d 32, 41 (1st Cir. 2002), was an illegal
entry onto the curtilage of a rural property in order to observe circumstances suggesting that
marijuana was being cultivated. In declaring the prior illegality insufficient to defeat application of
the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule, the court observed that snow on the ground had
contributed to the officer’s failure to note the hallmarks of curtilage, and that the circumstances
under which he had entered the property were “faithfully set forth” in the warrant affidavit. Id. at 43.
The court held that “the remedy of exclusion in this instance is inappropriate.” Id.
                                                                            McClintock — 15

officer’s belief in the validity of the warrant objectively reasonable.” Id. at 566 (quoting

White, 890 F.2d at 1419). Three other facts also contributed to the court’s conclusion. First,

there was no indication that the officers were consciously violating the Fourth Amendment

when they conducted the illegal sweep of the house, since there had been at least some basis

in fact to suggest a burglary might be afoot. Id. Second and third, and “[m]ore importantly,

the officers who sought and executed the search warrants were not the same officers who

performed the initial warrantless search, and [the] warrant affidavit fully disclosed to a

neutral and detached magistrate the circumstances surrounding initial warrantless search.”

Id. All of these circumstances combined to convince the Sixth Circuit that “the Leon

exception bars application of the exclusionary rule in this case.” Id.

       After canvassing the preceding case law, and drawing heavily on McCain, the Fifth

Circuit recently distilled the interplay between the Leon good-faith doctrine and the fruit-of-

the-poisonous-tree doctrine in this way:

              We adopt the following reasoning . . . as our understanding of the
       interaction of the doctrine of fruit of the poisonous tree with Leon’s good faith
       exception, as each appl[ies] to evidence obtained as the result of the execution
       of a search warrant. Two separate requirements must be met for evidence to
       be admissible: (1) the prior law enforcement conduct that uncovered evidence
       used in the affidavit for the warrant must be ‘close enough to the line of
       validity’ that an objectively reasonable officer preparing the affidavit or
       executing the warrant would believe that the information supporting the
       warranted was not tainted by unconstitutional conduct, and (2) the resulting
       search warrant must have been sought and executed by a law enforcement
       officer in good faith as prescribed by Leon.
                                                                                 McClintock — 16

United States v. Massi, 761 F.3d 512, 528 (5th Cir. 2014).16 The court ultimately concluded:

       The good faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies here where the search
       warrant, though ultimately obtained as a result of an illegal detention in
       violation of the Fourth Amendment, was obtained and executed by a law
       enforcement officer in good faith and under an objectively reasonable belief
       that it was valid and relied upon appropriately obtained evidence.

Id. at 532 (emphasis added).

       Two years later, after the court of appeals issued its opinion in this case, the Fifth

Circuit reiterated the holding in Massi, applying it to facts strikingly similar to those in this

case to uphold the admissibility of evidence under the good-faith exception. In United States

v. Holley, 831 F.3d 322, 326-27 (5th Cir. 2016), police used a drug-sniffing dog to detect the

odor of illegal drugs at the garage door of two residences, and when the dog alerted, they

obtained warrants to search those residences based upon the alert. Id. at 324. The defendant

argued that the warrants were tainted under Jardines, and that the Leon good-faith exception

therefore could not apply. Id. at 326. The Fifth Circuit found this argument to be foreclosed

by Massi, and held that the question of whether a drug-dog sniff at the garage door was an


       16
          The Fifth Circuit rejected McCain’s suggestion that the officer executing the warrant
necessarily ought to be different than the officer who committed the prior illegality. Massi, 761 F.3d
at 528. The Fifth Circuit observed, and we agree, that

       [w]hat is important is that the officer presenting the information to a magistrate be
       objectively reasonable in concluding that the information being used to support the
       warrant was not tainted. It is not awareness of the existence of the conduct that later
       is found to be improper that is important, but awareness at the time of presenting the
       affidavit that the conduct violated constitutional rights that would affect the
       application of the good faith exception.

Id.
                                                                            McClintock — 17

unconstitutional invasion of the curtilage was “close enough to the line of validity” to support

the conclusion that the police had acted in objective good faith in relying on the canine alerts

to supply probable cause for the warrants. Id. at 326-27. We regard the Fifth Circuit’s

pronouncement in Massi to be an acceptable synthesis of the federal case law with respect

to the appropriate interplay between the fruit-of-the-poisonous-tree doctrine and the good-

faith exception to the federal exclusionary rule. The question for us in this case, then, is

whether the language of Article 38.23(b) will accommodate it. We hold that it does.

                                       Article 38.23(b)

       Article 38.23(a)’s exclusionary rule does not apply when the challenged “evidence

was obtained by a law enforcement officer acting in objective good faith reliance upon a

warrant issued by a neutral magistrate based on probable cause.” T EX. C ODE C RIM. P ROC. art.

38.23(b). An officer who has included information in a search warrant affidavit that he

knows—or should know—to be illegally obtained cannot be said, we think, to have acted in

good-faith reliance upon any warrant that may issue that depends for its probable cause upon

that tainted information. Thus, the language of the statutory exception is broad enough to

embrace the fruit-of-the-poisonous-tree doctrine. It is also broad enough, we conclude, to

accommodate a corollary: An officer who reasonably believes that the information he

submitted in a probable cause affidavit was legally obtained has no reason to believe the

resulting warrant was tainted. In executing the warrant, that officer “act[s] in objective good

faith reliance upon” the warrant, as long as the warrant is facially valid. Thus understood, the
                                                                            McClintock — 18

language of Article 38.23(b) is “consistent with” application of good-faith principles to

excuse a prior illegality, and thus render an officer’s reliance on a neutral magistrate’s

assessment of probable cause objectively reasonable. Baker, 956 S.W.2d at 23.

       Accordingly, we hold that the good-faith exception of Article 38.23(b) will apply

when “the prior law enforcement conduct that uncovered evidence used in the affidavit for

the warrant [was] ‘close enough to the line of validity’ that an objectively reasonable officer

preparing the affidavit or executing the warrant would believe that the information

supporting the warrant was not tainted by unconstitutional conduct[.]” Massi, 761 F.3d at

528. We turn now to the question of whether the officers in this case operated sufficiently

close to the line of validity in conducting the drug sniff that they “act[ed] in objective good

faith reliance” on the magistrate’s probable cause determination in issuing the warrant.

                                  The Canine Drug Sniff

       Consistent with Jardines, the dog sniff that was conducted without a warrant in this

case unquestionably violated the Fourth Amendment. To the extent that Jardines adopted a

new constitutional rule, that new rule would apply retroactively to any case pending on direct

appeal at the time of its decision, as this case was. Griffith v. Kentucky, 479 U.S. 314, 328

(1987). Since Jardines, this Court has held that it constitutes a Fourth Amendment violation

to conduct a warrantless drug sniff at the front door of an apartment in a multi-dwelling

complex because it constitutes an invasion of the curtilage of the home. State v. Rendon, 477

S.W.3d 805, 811 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015). Because we ordinarily follow federal rules of
                                                                                    McClintock — 19

retroactivity, e.g., Ex parte De Los Reyes, 392 S.W.3d 675, 679 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013), we

should likewise apply the holding in Rendon to this case, consistently with Griffith.

        In short, there can be little question at this juncture that the drug sniff in this case,

occurring at the door of Appellant’s single-dwelling upstairs apartment, was perpetrated

through an unconstitutional invasion of the curtilage of his home.17 To the extent that the

drug dog’s positive alert for drugs was incorporated into the search warrant in this case, the

warrant affidavit was unquestionably tainted with a prior illegality. Moreover, we have

already held that, absent the information gained from the illegal drug-dog sniff, the warrant

affidavit failed to establish probable cause. McClintock, 444 S.W.3d at 19-20.

        With that information included, however, the warrant affidavit amply supports a

determination by a neutral magistrate that there was probable cause to search the apartment

for contraband. So the question under Article 38.23(b), as we have construed it, becomes:

Did the officers have an objective good-faith basis to believe that their use of a drug dog

would not adversely affect the validity of the warrant? The answer depends upon how “close

to the line of validity” their use of the trained drug dog was. In the instant case, we think it

was close enough to declare that the officers acted in good-faith reliance on the warrant.

        It is true that there was no binding precedent prior to Jardines that held that a canine

drug sniff conducted on the curtilage of a home was constitutional. Thus, Jardines did not




        17
          In this respect, the trial court erred to conclude that the canine drug sniff did not constitute
a search for Fourth Amendment purposes.
                                                                                McClintock — 20

overrule anything, as was the situation in Davis.18 Nevertheless, even after Jardines was

decided, binding precedent continues to hold that—at least in the abstract—the use of a

trained canine to detect the presence or absence of illicit narcotics does not constitute a

“search” for Fourth Amendment purposes. Illinois v. Caballes, 543 U.S. 405 (2005). This is

because drug dogs detect only illegal substances, and citizens lack any reasonable

expectation of privacy in possessing illegal substances. Id. at 409. Only when the drug-sniff

is conducted in the course of a warrantless invasion of the curtilage of a home does it

constitute an unconstitutional search for Fourth Amendment purposes. But the Supreme

Court did not make this distinction crystal clear until Jardines itself. And the distinction

remains a subtle one. Indeed, even after Jardines was decided, the question of what exactly

constitutes curtilage in an apartment setting, as opposed to a stand-alone house, remained a

close and contentious issue for this Court in deciding Rendon.19

       At the time the officers in this case used the trained canine to sniff for drugs at the

door of Appellant’s apartment, the constitutionality of that conduct remained “close enough

to the line of validity” for us to conclude that an objectively reasonable officer preparing a


       18
          In Davis, officers had conducted a search of an automobile pursuant to the arrest of the
driver, even though he had been removed from the car and secured in the back of a squad car—as
they were unequivocally authorized at the time to do under New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454 (1981).
While Davis was pending on appeal, the Supreme Court overruled itself, in Arizona v. Gant, 556
U.S. 332 (2009). Jardines did not likewise overrule any prior Supreme Court precedent that had
expressly permitted canine drug sniffs from the standpoint of the curtilage of a home.
       19
         See Rendon, 477 S.W.3d at 813-23 (Yeary, J., dissenting, joined by Keller, P.J., and
Keasler and Hervey, JJ.) (arguing that what constitutes curtilage of a house, as in Jardines, versus
an apartment or other multi-dwelling residence, is a different issue).
                                                                                  McClintock — 21

warrant affidavit would have believed that the information supporting the warrant application

was not tainted by unconstitutional conduct. Because the language of Article 38.23(b)

accommodates the Massi good-faith standard, we hold that the officer’s subsequent search

of the apartment was executed “in objective good faith reliance” on the warrant. The fruit of

that search is therefore excepted from Article 38.23(a)’s exclusionary rule. Ultimately, the

trial court did not err to overrule Appellant’s motion to suppress.20

                                         CONCLUSION

       The judgment of the court of appeals is reversed and the judgment of the trial court

is affirmed.




FILED:         March 22, 2017
PUBLISH




       20
            An appellate court should uphold the trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress so long
as its ruling is correct on any legal theory applicable to the case. Furr v. State, 499 S.W.3d 872, 877
(Tex. Crim. App. 2016). Though the trial court erred to hold that the dog sniff in this case did not
constitute a search for Fourth Amendment purposes, it could have ruled that the warrant supplied
probable cause and that the police acted in objective good faith in relying on the neutral magistrate’s
finding of probable cause. The use of the drug dog at Appellant’s front door, although illegal, was
sufficiently “close to the line of validity” as to render that reliance reasonable.