Inciarrano v. State
This text of 447 So. 2d 386 (Inciarrano v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Anthony Paul INCIARRANO, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*387 Melvyn Schlesser of Isenberg & Schlesser, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.
Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and Joy B. Shearer, Asst. Atty. Gen., West Palm Beach, for appellee.
HERSEY, Judge.
This appeal presents the issue of the admissibility of an oral communication purportedly intercepted in violation of Chapter 934, Florida Statutes (1981).
Anthony Paul Inciarrano was indicted for having unlawfully, feloniously and with premeditated design caused the death of Earvin Herman Trimble, also known as Michael Anthony Phillips, by shooting him on July 6, 1982.
The existence of a tape recording allegedly containing conversations between Inciarrano and Trimble was disclosed in response to a demand for discovery, whereupon Inciarrano filed a motion to suppress the tape recording as being violative of Chapter 934, Florida Statutes.
At the hearing on the motion to suppress, evidence was adduced that the victim, Trimble, worked as a psychologist and marriage counselor under the pseudonym of Doctor Michael Phillips. His office was located in the Trestle Building in Broward County. At approximately 3:30 to 3:40 p.m. on July 6, 1982, the sounds of muffled gunshots were heard by another tenant in the Trestle Building. Subsequently, Trimble's body was found in his office, the victim of a homicide. There were five bullet holes in the body. The investigating officers discovered a tape recorder in the office which contained the tape subject to the motion to suppress. Appellant testified that the voice on the recording was his. The tape, played for the court, contained a conversation between appellant and the victim concerning a business deal gone sour. The conversation ended abruptly with the sound of five gunshots followed by moaning and sounds like the gushing of blood. Upon cessation of those sounds, footsteps *388 could be heard departing the scene, ending with the closing of a door. Then silence.
It is conceded, and the trial court found, that the issue of admissibility of the tape recording is dispositive of the case. There is no other evidence against appellant. The trial court denied the motion to suppress at a hearing on November 8, 1982.
On April 11, 1983, appellant changed his plea to nolo contendere reserving his right to appeal denial of the motion to suppress. The trial court sentenced appellant to life imprisonment.
The contents of the tape are a mixture of oral communication and identifiable sounds other than oral communication. Nonetheless, it seems probable that suppression of the oral communication would require suppression of the subsequent sounds since they are relevant only to the issue of identification of appellant as the individual creating the sounds of gunfire and identification of the victim as the source of the sounds of a dying man.
Chapter 934 proscribes the interception of wire or oral communications except under certain very limited circumstances. The prohibition is contained in Section 934.03(1)(a), Florida Statutes (1981). The question is whether the statute prohibits the recording by one party to an oral communication of his conversation with another nonconsenting party. The case of State v. Walls, 356 So.2d 294 (Fla. 1978), on its face, requires an affirmative answer to this inquiry. The facts as stated by the court in Walls were:
Without respondents', defendants below, prior consent to the electronic interception, Francis Antel, the alleged victim of extortionary threats, electronically recorded a conversation which occurred in his home on February 19, 1975, between himself and the respondents. The interception was not made by a law enforcement officer or a person acting under the direction of a law enforcement officer. Antel alleged and would testify that the conversation included extortionary threats and would personally testify to the nature of those threats at trial.
356 So.2d at 295.
The court held that each party to a conversation had a legitimate expectation of privacy, so that its interception by another party was appropriately circumscribed by Section 934.03(2)(d), citing Shevin v. Sunbeam Television Corporation, 351 So.2d 723 (Fla. 1977). The basis of the court's holding was that the statute was clear and unambiguous and provided no exception for the facts present in Walls. The court said "[t]his Court cannot substitute its judgment for that of the Legislature and create an exception which would encompass the instant circumstances... . The function of this Court is to interpret the law and is neither to legislate nor determine the wisdom of the policy of the Legislature." Walls, 356 So.2d at 296.
In order to "interpret the law" it is obviously necessary to ascribe a meaning to each word used in the legislation, whether the term be ambiguous or abundantly clear. With all due respect to the supreme court and precedent, we make the following observations with regard to the terms "intercept" and "oral communication."
A reasonable layman familiar with the game of football might well comment that if a pass from the quarterback to the tight end of the team on offense was scored as an interception, the quarterback might be more than a little chagrined. It would be assumed that such a play is more properly scored a reception. On the other hand, if the offensive quarterback throws a pass and it is received by a defensive guard, an interception occurs. Thus, in common parlance, the term interception implies a stopping by someone other than the intended receiver. To ascribe to the legislature an intent to embellish the term with a meaning without precedent in the contemporary language or the statutory law seems strained.
The term intercept is not really defined in Chapter 934. What passes for a definition simply designates the means of interception with no consideration as to the parties *389 involved or their relationship to the communication being intercepted. Therefore, the definition is incomplete. On the other hand, the vagueness of the definition and thus of the statute is overcome if we ascribe to the word the meaning customarily assigned to it. Doing so would, we believe, change the result in those cases where a party to a wire or oral communication records the same without any intervention by a third party. Such an interpretation applied in the present case would obviate any objection to admissibility based upon Chapter 934.
Further, referring back to the Walls case, the question of whether the communication in that case constituted an interception was apparently conceded by the state and therefore not analyzed as an issue requiring determination by the court in order to decide the case. On that basis we suggest that Walls may not absolutely dictate the result in the present case.
Another term used in Chapter 934, operative here, is "oral communication." It is important to note that the statute speaks of communication as an "oral communication uttered by a person exhibiting an expectation that such communication is not subject to interception under circumstances justifying such expectation...." § 934.02(2), Fla. Stat. (1981). The legislature is presumed to know the law in passing statutes and consequently the legislation is to be construed upon the premise that the particular statute in question is to be applied relative to other statutes affecting the same subject matter.
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447 So. 2d 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inciarrano-v-state-fladistctapp-1984.