Burg v. Municipal Court

673 P.2d 732, 35 Cal. 3d 257, 198 Cal. Rptr. 145, 1983 Cal. LEXIS 269
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1983
DocketS.F. 24622
StatusPublished
Cited by193 cases

This text of 673 P.2d 732 (Burg v. Municipal Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burg v. Municipal Court, 673 P.2d 732, 35 Cal. 3d 257, 198 Cal. Rptr. 145, 1983 Cal. LEXIS 269 (Cal. 1983).

Opinion

Opinion

MOSK, J.

Richard Joseph Burg, hereafter defendant, appeals from a judgment denying his petition for a writ of prohibition. He contends that *261 Vehicle Code section 23152, subdivision (b), 1 fails to give constitutionally adequate notice of the conduct it prohibits, and that the municipal court erred in overruling his demurrer to that eifect. We conclude that section 23152, subdivision (b), is constitutional, and therefore affirm the judgment.

Defendant was arrested at 2:25 in the morning of March 27, 1982, for violation of section 23152, subdivision (a) (driving while under the influence of alcohol). A chemical test administered 50 minutes later revealed a blood-alcohol content of 0.23 percent. He was charged with violating section 23152, subdivision (b), i.e., driving a vehicle while having 0.10 percent or more, by weight, of alcohol in one’s body. The complaint also alleged a prior conviction of former section 23102, subdivision (a) (driving while under the influence of alcohol).

Defendant demurred on the ground that section 23152, subdivision (b), gives constitutionally inadequate notice of the conduct proscribed. The municipal court overruled his demurrer, and defendant sought a writ of prohibition in the superior court. The petition was denied on the merits, and this appeal followed. 2

I. Background

A. The Problem

Eighty years ago an editorialist complained, “Inebriates and moderate drinkers are the most incapable of all persons to drive motor wagons. The general palsy and diminished power of control of both the reason and the senses are certain to invite disaster in every attempt to guide such wagons.” (26 Q.J. Inebriety (1904) 308, 309.) In the ensuing decades motor vehicles have become faster, heavier, and ubiquitous, with proportionately tragic consequences to the victims of drinking drivers. Nearly half of the traffic deaths in California between 1976-1980 involved drinking drivers. (Cal. Highway Patrol, 1980 Ann. Rep., Fatal & Injury Motor Vehicle Traffic Accidents, p. 2, tables la, lb, and p. 58, tables 6a, 6b.) Nearly one-quarter of all traffic accidents resulting in injury involved the use of alcohol. (Id., at p. 3, tables lc, 1d, and p. 58, tables 6a, 6b.) Traffic deaths in the United States exceed 50,000 annually, and approximately one-half of those fatalities are alcohol-related. (U.S. Dept. Transp., 1977 Highway Safety Act Rep., Appen. A-9, table A-l; cf. Jones & Joscelyn, Alcohol and Highway *262 Safety 1978: A Review of the State of Knowledge (U.S. Dept. of Transp. 1978) pp. 11-26.)

The drunk driver cuts a wide swath of death, pain, grief, and untold physical and emotional injury across the roads of California and the nation. The monstrous proportions of the problem have often been lamented in graphic terms by this court and the United States Supreme Court. (See Taylor v. Superior Court (1979) 24 Cal.3d 890, 898-899 [157 Cal.Rptr. 693, 598 P.2d 854]) [quoting U.S. Dept. Health, Ed. & Welf., 3d Special Rep. U.S. Cong, on Alcohol and Health (1978)]; South Dakota v. Neville (1983) 459 U.S. 553, 558 [74 L.Ed.2d 748, 755, 103 S.Ct. 916, 920] [describing the “tragic frequency” of the “carnage caused by drunk drivers”]; Mackey v. Montrym (1979) 443 U.S. 1, 17-18 [61 L.Ed.2d 321, 334, 99 S.Ct. 2612].) As observed in Breithaupt v. Abram (1957) 352 U.S. 432 [1 L.Ed.2d 448, 77 S.Ct. 408], “[t]he increasing slaughter on our highways, most of which should be avoidable, now reaches the astounding figures only heard of on the battlefield.” (Id.., at p. 439 [1 L.Ed.2d at p. 453].) Indeed, in the years 1976 to 1980 there were many more injuries to California residents in alcohol-related traffic accidents than were suffered by the entire Union Army during the Civil War, and more were killed than in the bloodiest year of the Vietnam War. (Compare Cal. Highway Patrol, 1980 Ann. Rep., Fatal & Injury Motor Vehicle Traffic Accidents, p. 2, tables la, lb, lc, Id, and p. 58, tables 6a, 6b, with Statistical Abstract of U.S. (103d ed. 1982) p. 361, tables 598, 599.) Given this setting, our observation that “[d]runken drivers are extremely dangerous people” (Taylor v. Superior Court, supra, 24 Cal.3d 890, 899) seems almost to understate the horrific risk posed by those who drink and drive.

B. The Legislative Response

Recognizing the effect of alcohol on drivers, state legislatures early in the century attempted to regulate such conduct. Because “both popular and legal views of the problem centered on the grossly intoxicated driver” (Ross, Deterring the Drinking Driver (1982) p. 2), the laws also reflected that conception. Thus, California’s first statute on the topic read simply, “No intoxicated person shall operate or drive a motor vehicle or other vehicle upon any public highway within this state.” (Italics added.) (Stats. 1913, eh. 326, § 17, p. 646.)

A more satisfactory means of defining the problem of drinking and driving emerged in the middle decades of this century, with the development of scientific measurement of blood-alcohol levels. (Ross, Deterring the Drinking Driver (1982) p. 2; Cameron, The Impact of Drinking-Driving Countermeasures: A Review and Evaluation 1979 Contemp. Drug Prob. 495, *263 497-498.) Research on alcohol’s effect on both motor skills and judgment revealed that impairment occurred at alcohol concentrations as low as 0.05 percent (Hurst, Estimating the Effectiveness of Blood Alcohol Limits (1970) 1 Behav. Research Highway Safety 87), considerably below the point at which typical clinical symptoms of intoxication appear in most persons. (Ross, Deterring the Drinking Driver (1982) p. 2; Jones & Joscelyn, Alcohol and Highway Safety 1978, op. cit. supra, at pp. 35-50.) Thus, in 1969, after a number of intervening amendments that attempted to refine definitions and specified penalties, California’s “driving under the influence” statute (former § 23102) was fortified by the addition of former section 23126, which created a presumption of being under the influence if a driver had 0.10 percent or more by weight of alcohol in his blood. (Stats. 1969, ch. 231, § 1, p. 565.) By 1972, 47 states had similar statutes. (Murray & Aitken, The Constitutionality of California’s Under-the-Influence-of-Alcohol Presumption (1972) 45 So.Cal.L.Rev. 955, 958, fn. 8.)

Even these laws, which considerably assisted the prosecution of “driving under the influence” cases, proved inadequate in many respects.

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Bluebook (online)
673 P.2d 732, 35 Cal. 3d 257, 198 Cal. Rptr. 145, 1983 Cal. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burg-v-municipal-court-cal-1983.