Roberto Menezes stands accused in the Superior Court of Cobb County of possession of cocaine, OCGA § § 16-13-26 1 D; 16-13-30 a. Menezes moved to exclude evidence seized as a result of a search of the car in which he had been a passenger. After concluding that the State failed to meet its burden of proof regarding the driver’s consent to search the vehicle, the trial court granted the motion. The State appeals pursuant to OCGA § 5-7-1 a 4. For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court’s ruling. Because the trial court sits as the trier of fact when ruling on a motion to suppress or a motion in limine, its findings based upon conflicting evidence are analogous to a jury verdict and should not be disturbed by a reviewing court if there is any evidence to support them. When we review a trial court’s decision on such motions to exclude evidence, we construe the evidence most favorably to uphold the findings and judgment, and we adopt the trial court’s findings on disputed facts and credibility unless they are clearly erroneous. When the evidence is uncontroverted and no question of witness credibility is presented, the trial court’s application of the law to undisputed facts is subject to de novo appellate review. With mixed questions of fact and law, the appellate court accepts the trial court’s findings on disputed facts and witness credibility unless clearly erroneous, but independently applies the legal principles to the facts. Citations and punctuation omitted. State v. Tousley , 271 Ga. App. 874 611 SE2d 139 2005. Viewed in the light most favorable to the trial court’s findings, the record shows the following facts. At approximately 1:30 a.m. on July 20, 2005, an officer observed Criseldo Andrade make an illegal u-turn and cross a double yellow pedestrian safety zone, and the officer stopped the car. Andrade stopped, not on the right side of the road, but in the center turn lane in the middle of the four-lane road. Menezes and Joao DaSilva were passengers in Andrade’s car; Menezes sat in the right passenger-side front seat, and DaSilva sat in the right rear seat. Because the car had three occupants, the arresting officer called for backup. The arresting officer asked Andrade to step away from the vehicle and conducted his conversation with him at the rear of Andrade’s car. Andrade gave conflicting answers to the officer’s questions about where he had been and where he was going.
Meanwhile, the backup officer saw Menezes and DaSilva talk to each other and then saw DaSilva reach down toward the car’s rear floorboard, leading the officer to think DaSilva might be reaching for a weapon. The arresting officer then asked Andrade for his consent to search the vehicle, and Andrade verbally consented to the search. The arresting officer asked Menezes and DaSilva to get out of the car and patted them for weapons. Before beginning to search the car, the officers saw suspected filtering material for a drug pipe copper pad shavings on the front floorboard, on both the driver’s side and the passenger’s side. The officers searched the car and found a suspected metal push rod for a drug pipe between the front center console and the right front seat where Menezes had been sitting. The officers also found a small piece of solid cocaine either on the back seat or on the rear floorboard, as well as a glass cylinder for a suspected drug pipe stuffed in the right rear seat cushions, both near where DaSilva had been sitting. Menezes and DaSilva both denied owning the contraband. The arresting officer arrested Menezes and DaSilva for possession of cocaine, and then issued a traffic citation to Andrade and allowed him to leave. The entire traffic stop lasted 20 to 25 minutes, with about 10 to 15 minutes elapsing after Andrade consented to the search.