State v. Mobley
State v. Mobley
Opinion of the Court
The State appeals the order granting Tomesia Mobley’s motion to suppress certain drugs obtained from her purse. The unsworn motion alleged the drugs were obtained through a warrantless search and without consent.
A hearing on the motion was initially set for September 13, 2011, and the State moved to continue the hearing when the arresting officer did not appear. Mobley was also not present for this hearing. At the hearing rescheduled for October 17, the arresting officer once again failed to appear. This time, however, Mobley was present. Her counsel noted her presence and stated, “I would put on the record, too, this is a warrantless search. So the burden would be on the State.” At no time did the defense seek to present any testimony to meet its initial burden of establishing a Fourth Amendment violation.
At the October 19 hearing, neither Mob-ley nor the arresting officer appeared. Defense counsel argued, “My client was here on Monday. The — the [c]ourt recognized on the record that we could establish standing. She was sitting back there. And once we’ve established standing, there’s no warrant, the burden shifts to the State.” Satisfied that standing was not at issue and that a warrantless search occurred, the trial court granted the motion to suppress based on the State’s failure to present rebuttal evidence.
On appeal, the State argues Mobley did not satisfy her initial burden of showing a warrantless search occurred.
While the record is unclear, it appears the trial court, sua sponte, took judicial notice of the absence of a search warrant in the court file.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
.On appeal, the parties also raised the matter of standing. Mobley argues the State did not dispute standing below, presumably referring to the prosecutor’s comment, "Your honor, Ms. Mobley was here, which is sufficient to— to have standing.” This argument, however, takes the prosecutor’s comment out of context. The prosecutor followed that comment with, "However, again, there was nothing put into [ejvidence at this point, so the — so the burden simply was not shifted.” We find the prosecutor’s comments did not constitute a stipulation to Mobley’s standing because what the prosecutor indicated was the fact that the defense offered no testimony or evidence to support its position. The trial court’s reliance upon cases in which standing was not in issue was misplaced.
. At the October 19 hearing, Mobley’s counsel represented that she had earlier requested the court take judicial notice of the absence of a search warrant within the court file. A review of the transcript of the October 17 hearing reflects this was not accurate. While Mobley’s counsel noted the search was war-rantless, no request to take judicial notice was made. The trial court seemed to adopt this error when delivering its ruling, incorrectly noting that the defense asked the court to take judicial notice of the court file. While common experience tells us in the instant case the deputy did not possess a search warrant, as a general proposition, the absence of a warrant within a court file does not equate to the absence of a warrant for a search.
. There is some authority for the trial court’s belief that the absence of a search warrant in
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.