Best v. Municipality of Anchorage

749 P.2d 375, 1988 Alas. App. LEXIS 7, 1988 WL 6128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 29, 1988
DocketNo. A-1801
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 749 P.2d 375 (Best v. Municipality of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Best v. Municipality of Anchorage, 749 P.2d 375, 1988 Alas. App. LEXIS 7, 1988 WL 6128 (Ala. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

SINGLETON, Judge.

Paul H. Best and the other appellants were arrested for driving while intoxicated (DWI), AMC 9.28.020. They all consented to a chemical test of their breath to measure its alcohol content. An Intoximeter 3000 breath-testing machine yielded results indicative of intoxication in each case. The breath samples in each case were captured in a magnesium perchlorate tube (MPT), in an effort to comply with our decision in Anchorage v. Serrano, 649 P.2d 256 (Alaska App.1982) (prosecuting authorities must provide accused drunk drivers with means of verifying chemical tests of their breath).

Best and the others sought to suppress their intoximeter test results, arguing that the MPT collection and retention procedure did not comply with Serrano. They reasoned that the MPT system resulted in contaminated samples which could not be accurately retested. They relied on a favorable ruling by District Court Judge Elaine M. Andrews in another case, Anchorage v. Ramiro Hernandez, et al., 3ANM 83-4629 Cr. Judge Andrews denied Best and the others relief because they had not demonstrated that each of their own samples was contaminated, and they appealed, Best v. Anchorage, 712 P.2d 892 (Alaska App.1985). We concluded that the Best case should be remanded to Judge Andrews for further findings of fact and conclusions of law. 712 P.2d at 898. We issued similar orders in the other cases. On remand, Judge Andrews issued a written decision denying relief. That decision is set out in full in the appendix to this decision. On appeal, Best and the other appellants challenge Judge Andrews’ ruling. We affirm.

The purpose of the retained breath sample is to provide a person charged with driving while intoxicated with a means of independently verifying1 the accuracy of the results of the chemical test of the driver’s breath. Briggs v. State, Dept. of Public Safety, 732 P.2d 1078, 1080 (Alaska 1987); Champion v. Department of Public Safety, 721 P.2d 131, 132 (Alaska 1986). The supreme court has referred to such an independent verification as akin to cross-examining the prosecutor’s breath-testing instrument. Champion, 721 P.2d at 132, quoting Lauderdale v. State, 548 P.2d 376, 381 (Alaska 1976). If it is to serve this purpose, the retained breath sample must itself be capable of testing. If the result of the independent test is more favorable than the prosecutor’s test, the defendant can then argue that the prosecutor’s test was inaccurate. In order to serve this purpose, the result of the retest must be admissible in evidence as part of the defendant’s casein-chief.2

In Hernandez, Judge Andrews was apparently concerned that if the state mishandles the taking of the retained breath sample, or thereafter mishandles the retained sample resulting in its contamination, a retest of the sample will not accurately disclose the subject’s contemporaneous blood-alcohol concentration and thereby expose earlier equipment malfunction or operator error in connection with the Intox-imeter tests. Perhaps more important, the trial court reasoned that even if a retest [377]*377suggests that the prosecutor’s evidence is inaccurate, it will not be admissible in evidence for this purpose because the prosecutor will successfully object on foundational grounds, i.e., because the breath sample was contaminated.3

According to the trial court, if a favorable test is never admissible in evidence, then the defendant has not been furnished with a means of independently verifying the prosecutor’s scientific evidence and the defendant has established a Serrano violation. In our earlier decision in this case, we recognized that the trial court in Hernandez might have found retests of retained breath samples potentially inadmissible on two alternate bases in support of a conclusion that the MPT system failed to provide a defendant his or her Serrano rights. First, the MPT theory could be invalid so that a valid breath sample would never be available for independent testing or, second, the theory could be sound but its implementation flawed so that independent testing in individual cases would be impossible. Best, 712 P.2d at 897. On remand, Judge Andrews concluded that the scientific theory underlying the MPT system was sound and that testable breath samples could be produced which would accurately reflect the subject’s contemporaneous blood-alcohol concentration but that the state and the municipality had been negligent in implementing it, apparently resulting in the contamination of up to fifty percent of the retained breath samples. Judge Andrews was of the view that a test of the MPT would accurately differentiate contaminated from uncontaminated samples. This would appear to be true at least to the extent that all of the procedural irregularities previously identified in the litigated cases resulted in substantially lower blood-alcohol readings than the In-toximeter results. Begley, 711 P.2d at 542-43.4 Where a retest suggested that a given sample was contaminated, Judge Andrews was prepared to hold that the defendant had been deprived of his or her Serrano rights and would, therefore, suppress the prosecutor’s scientific evidence. Where there was no retest, Judge Andrews denied such motions to suppress. Best and his co-appellants failed to obtain a retest; consequently, their motions were denied.

At the outset, we agree that Serrano was intended to provide a suspected intoxicated driver with a means of verifying the state’s chemical test. Necessarily, the results of the retest used for verification should, if favorable, be admissible in evidence. We agree with Judge Andrews, [378]*378however, that the record in this case and by extension the records in the other cases raising similar issues, do not establish that the MPT system produced evidence which, if favorable to a defendant, would never be admissible. We therefore affirm Judge Andrews’ conclusion that these defendants failed to prove a Serrano violation. We agree with Judge Andrews that on this record a defendant would have to establish that his or her retained breath sample was contaminated through state or municipal negligence in order to prevail. As Judge Andrews noted, such a showing could have been made by a retest of the sample in question.5 None of the defendants in this case made a timely effort to prove that his or her individual breath sample was contaminated, and we therefore affirm the decision of the trial court.

I.

Best6 makes a series of related arguments. Essentially, he argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress. His motion was based on an alleged due process violation caused by the Municipality’s failure to make a reasonable effort to preserve his breath sample.

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Related

Gundersen v. Municipality of Anchorage
762 P.2d 104 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 1988)
Selig v. State
750 P.2d 834 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
749 P.2d 375, 1988 Alas. App. LEXIS 7, 1988 WL 6128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/best-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaskactapp-1988.