Anderson v. Taylor

2006 UT 79, 149 P.3d 352, 566 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 213, 2006 WL 3488851
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 2006
Docket20050262
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 2006 UT 79 (Anderson v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Taylor, 2006 UT 79, 149 P.3d 352, 566 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 213, 2006 WL 3488851 (Utah 2006).

Opinion

OPINION AMENDED

PARRISH, Justice:

T1 Petitioner Brian R. Anderson challenges the practice of the Fourth Judicial District Court as it relates to the issuance of search warrants. Following a search of his residence conducted pursuant to a warrant issued in the Fourth District, Anderson unsuccessfully attempted to obtain from the court copies of the documents supporting the warrant. After learning that the court routinely fails to retain copies of the search warrants it issues and the affidavits used in obtaining them, Anderson filed a petition for extraordinary writ, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against judges and court personnel in the Fourth District. Specifically, Anderson requests a declaration that the practice in the Fourth District violates the federal and state constitutions and applicable statutes. Anderson also seeks an injunction requiring that the Fourth District retain a copy of all search warrants issued and their supporting documentation. Because we agree that the practice in the Fourth District violates Utah law, we exercise our supervisory power over the courts of this state to require that they retain copies of all search warrants issued and all documents supporting the request for such warrants.

BACKGROUND

12 The Fourth District Court does not routinely retain copies of either the search warrants issued in the district or the material submitted in support of search warrant applications. Rather, after issuing a warrant, the issuing magistrate returns both the warrant and the supporting material to the law enforcement officer seeking the warrant. After the warrant is executed, the officer delivers the original warrant, the supporting material, the return, and the inventory of items seized in the search to the magistrate, who then reviews it and either files it with the court or returns it to law enforcement with a request that law enforcement file it with the court.

13 On Friday, October 8, 2004, a magistrate in the Fourth District Court issued a search warrant based on an affidavit written and signed by Detective Troy Beebe, a police officer with the Provo City Police Department. Later that evening, police officers executed the warrant and searched Anderson's residence.

14 Four days later, on October 12, 2004, Anderson went to the district court clerk's office and requested a copy of the affidavit used to obtain the search warrant for his residence. The clerk's office informed Anderson that neither the original nor a copy of the affidavit had been filed with the court and that it had no record of the warrant. On October 21, 2004, an officer returned the warrant and the supporting affidavit to the magistrate, but the magistrate did not file the documents with the Fourth District Court clerk's office at that time.

*355 {5 On October 24, 2004, Anderson filed in the Fourth District Court a civil rights complaint against judges and court personnel in that district. The case was subsequently transferred to the Second District Court, where the defendants moved to dismiss. Also pending in the Second District Court was a case involving similar claims against judges and court personnel in the Third District Court. The defendants in that case had also filed a motion to dismiss.

T6 While the motions to dismiss were pending in the district court cases, Anderson filed a petition for an extraordinary writ directly with this court. 1 Anderson argues that the practice of issuing a warrant without retaining copies of the warrant or the material supporting the request for the warrant violates the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, article I, sections 7 and 14 of the Utah Constitution, and Utah Code sections 77-23-2083 and 77-23-204. Anderson has requested that this court issue a declaratory judgment enjoining this practice and declaring it to be a violation of his constitutional rights. He argues that the Fourth District Court should be required to retain copies of all the search warrants it issues, as well as the supporting material associated with those warrants. Anderson has also requested that we certify a class of similarly situated plaintiffs and award him his attorney fees.

T7 Approximately ten days after Anderson filed his petition for extraordinary writ, the Fourth District Court located and filed with the clerk's office the search warrant documents at issue. We have jurisdiction over Anderson's petition for extraordinary writ pursuant to Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 65B(d).

ANALYSIS

18 Anderson's petition raises two issues. First, he alleges that the Fourth District Court violated the federal and state constitutions and Utah statutory law when it failed to retain, at the time of issuance, a copy of the search warrant issued by the court and the original affidavits on which the warrant was based. Second, he alleges that a similar violation occurred when the Fourth District Court failed to make available to him the search warrant and supporting affidavits after the warrant had been executed.

119 The Fourth District Court asserts that we need not reach the merits of Anderson's petition because he lacks standing to challenge its practices. The Fourth District argues that Anderson's claims became moot when the search warrant and other related documents were filed with the court. -It reasons that this translates into a lack of standing because the fact that Anderson was previously subject to a search does not give rise to the suggestion that the Fourth District's policies present him with any future threat.

Y10 We are unpersuaded by the Fourth District's challenge to Anderson's standing. Although Anderson's petition may be technically moot, it falls within a recognized exception to the mootness doctrine. We outlined this exception in Wickham v. Fisher:

The principles that determine the justicia-bility of the instant case are the well-established rules which permit a court to litigate an issue which, although technically moot as to a particular litigant at the time of appeal, is of wide concern, affects the public interest, is likely to recur in a similar manner, and, because of the brief time any one person is affected, would otherwise likely escape judicial review. The law provides no exemption from judicial seruti-ny of unlawful acts which are likely to be repeated because they do not fall within the usual principles of standing and justici-ability.

629 P.2d 896, 899-900 (Utah 1981) (citations omitted).

T11 Anderson's claims qualify for review under this well-recognized exception to the mootness doctrine. Anderson's challenge to the practice of the Fourth District Court is a quintessential example of a claim that, while *356 technically moot, deserves review. The claims Anderson raises are present every time a search warrant is issued by the Fourth District Court. Yet it is. difficult to conceive of any such claim that will not become technically moot before it wends its way through the adjudicative process. Indeed, once a challenge is initiated, law enforcement will have every incentive to immediately file the documentation supporting the search, thereby mooting the particular claim.

T12 In addition, this issue is one that affects the public interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 UT 79, 149 P.3d 352, 566 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 213, 2006 WL 3488851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-taylor-utah-2006.