Bourgeois v. Murphy

809 P.2d 472, 119 Idaho 611, 1991 Ida. LEXIS 29
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1991
Docket17757
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 809 P.2d 472 (Bourgeois v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bourgeois v. Murphy, 809 P.2d 472, 119 Idaho 611, 1991 Ida. LEXIS 29 (Idaho 1991).

Opinions

BISTLINE, Justice.

I. BACKGROUND

The office of the Attorney General on behalf of the above-named respondents has [612]*612appealed from the appellate decision of the district court of the Second Judicial District of the state of Idaho, Clearwater County, which appellate decision was as follows:

This matter is on appeal from the Magistrate Court which held that the EMIT-st test was a sufficient basis for a disciplinary action in the penitentiary and that the procedures for the chain of custody for handling urine samples is legally adequate. We reverse in part.
Appellant produced evidence that there is a 95% confidence in the accuracy of the EMIT-st urine test. While a 95% accuracy in some samples may be sufficient, here it is not. Of every 100 samples tested for marijuana, there is the possibility that five will erroneously test positive. That means that five of 100 prisoners who are not given a second test may receive disciplinary actions which will effect their parole eligibility or other privileges. Therefore, we hold that when a urine sample tests positive, a second confirming test is required. Disciplinary action, suspension, or denial of privilege may [otherwise] well result based upon an inaccurate test result. The violation and any reference to disciplinary action that resulted from the single EMIT-st test shall be stricken from Appellant’s record.
Appellant also alleges the chain of custody is legally inadequate. A review of the record indicates the State has established legally adequate procedures. Appellant has produced no evidence to support the allegation that the test results were sequel because of an improper chain of custody.

R. 74-75 (emphasis added).1

The State contends that the district court erred in holding that a single positive result to an EMIT-st urinalysis test does not constitute sufficient evidence to uphold the petitioner’s in-house conviction, by departmental hearing officer Elton J. Mendenhall, of being under the influence of intoxicants (use of cannabinoids [marijuana]).

The State’s opening brief serves to advise with reasonable accuracy the genesis of the controversy giving rise to the single issue:

Bourgeois is an inmate in the custody of the Idaho State Board of Correction. At the time of the filing of this action he was being housed at the Idaho Correctional Institute-Orofino (ICI-O).
On or about September 2, 1987, Bourgeois and 9-11 other inmates were taken to the bathroom, strip searched, and ordered to give urine samples. When Bourgeois had [complied with] ... providing the urine sample, he handed the cup to Correctional Officer May, who took his name and institutional number, noted it on the cup and set it on a ledge behind him.
The urine samples collected were then taken to the alcohol treatment unit at State Hospital North for testing.
Bourgeois’ urine sample was tested by use of the EMIT-st drug detection system. Defendants’ Exhibit 4. The EMIT test is an enzyme immunoassay drug detection system____designed to detect the presence, but not the quantity, of various kinds of drugs in the human body.
A result card showing a positive result for the presence of cannabinoids in Bourgeois’ system was returned to the ICI-O. Defendants’ Exhibit 4. Bourgeois was issued a disciplinary offense report (DOR) ... charging him with being under the influence of marijuana. Defendants’ Exhibit 1.
[Following] a disciplinary hearing ... conducted by ... Mendenhall ... Bourgeois was found guilty based upon the positive result of the EMIT test and was sanctioned with thirty (30) days in disciplinary detention____ Defendants’ Exhibit 1.
The disciplinary offense report was reviewed and affirmed by Respondent/Appellant Evans on September 11, 1987.

State’s Brief, 1-3 (citations to record omitted). This was followed by Bourgeois’ ap[613]*613peal to the district court. The district court reversed the magistrate court, solely on one point and one basis. The district court held:

When a urine sample tests positive, a second confirming test is required. Disciplinary action, suspension, or denial of privilege may well result based upon an inaccurate test result.
R. 75. To the State’s presentation of the facts, Bourgeois added the following:
[At the disciplinary hearing proceeding] present were DHO Mendenhall, Respondent and a legal assistant requested by Respondent.
At the conclusion of the aforementioned hearing, DHO Mendenhall found Respondent guilty of the offense charged and sentenced Respondent to thirty (30) days in the detention unit at the Idaho Correctional Institution at Orofino. The facts that DHO Mendenhall relied on for the finding of guilt were, the evidence contained in the body of the report and the attached EMIT ST Result Card.

Respondent’s Brief, 3. Bourgeois, in his brief filed in this Court, contends:

That a single positive result of an EMIT urinalysis test does not constitute sufficient evidence to uphold a prison disciplinary finding of guilt.
The district court erred in holding that the state has established legally adequate procedures as well as a proper chain of custody.

Respondent’s Brief, 4.

The magistrate provided the parties with no explanation for the summary denial. To the contrary, the well-prepared petition of Bourgeois thoroughly stated the grounds upon which an alternative writ should have issued — Bourgeois had been found guilty at a prison disciplinary hearing which left much to be desired. The authorities denied him one witness for certain, and probably two; one witness was staff personnel and would have had to be paid overtime inasmuch as the hearing was scheduled to take place during his nonworking hours. The other witness is referred to in the record as “her,” and apparently was second in command at the department facility. The punishment imposed was loss of liberty, i.e., sentenced to thirty days in detention, and also, so far as is known presently, the loss of his good time credits. Bourgeois’ petition for issuance of the writ also laid before the magistrate court the contention that the prison’s methodology in establishing his guilt was in violation of the federal constitution’s guarantee of due process:

Respondent Mendenhall used a single Emit test result to base his finding that Petitioner was guilty of the offense with which he was charged. Respondents failed to have an additional test performed to prove the conclusiveness of the first test. Emit tests when admitted as a single exhibit have been held to be inconclusive as evidence in both court and prison disciplinary hearings.
Respondents failed to establish the chain of custody of the urine sample in question. Petitioner had no idea of the manner in which the sample was handled, nor the conditions in which the test was performed.
R. 4.

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Bourgeois v. Murphy
809 P.2d 472 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
809 P.2d 472, 119 Idaho 611, 1991 Ida. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bourgeois-v-murphy-idaho-1991.