City of Salina v. Dahl

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMay 6, 2022
Docket124122
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Salina v. Dahl (City of Salina v. Dahl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Salina v. Dahl, (kanctapp 2022).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 124,122

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

CITY OF SALINA, Appellee,

v.

SANDRA FAY DAHL, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Saline District Court; PATRICK H. THOMPSON, judge. Opinion filed May 6, 2022. Affirmed.

Allie J. Burris, of Blackwell & Struble, LLC, of Salina, for appellant.

Jeffrey A. Norris, of Clark, Mize & Linville, Chartered, of Salina, for appellee.

Before GARDNER, P.J., HILL and ISHERWOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM: Sandra Fay Dahl appeals her conviction of driving under the influence in violation of a city ordinance, challenging the sufficiency of the City of Salina's evidence at trial. Because a rational fact-finder could conclude from the evidence that Dahl operated a vehicle while under the influence of drugs to a degree which rendered her incapable of driving safely, we affirm the jury's verdict.

1 Factual and Procedural Background

At around 1 a.m. one morning in June 2020, Dahl drove to a Kwik Shop to buy milk. While pulling into a parking spot, Dahl hit the side of the building. She then entered the building, told the worker she had hit the building, bought her milk, and returned to her vehicle to go home.

Someone reported Dahl to the Salina Police Department, describing Dahl's vehicle as an orange Pontiac and explaining that Dahl might be impaired. Dispatch sent Officer Mallory Wiggins to investigate. On her way to the Kwik Shop, Wiggins saw Dahl's vehicle and followed it. As Wiggins caught up to Dahl, Dahl swerved toward a parked car. So Wiggins activated the emergency lights on her patrol vehicle and initiated a traffic stop. Dahl pulled over but proceeded into an intersection before coming to a full stop.

After approaching Dahl, Wiggins asked Dahl to turn off her car and provide her driver's license and proof of insurance. Dahl struggled to comply with Wiggins' request to turn off her vehicle, first turning her blinker on and then turning the radio down. Dahl searched through the documents in her car and initially provided her driver's license and registration, but eventually provided proof of insurance too. Wiggins noted that Dahl's movements appeared slow. She also noticed that Dahl's speech was slurred and thus asked Dahl to remove her face covering, presumably worn to protect against the spread of COVID-19, so she could hear Dahl better. But even after Dahl removed her face mask, Wiggins had trouble understanding Dahl because of her continued slurring.

Soon after she began speaking with Wiggins, Dahl admitted she had struck something at the Kwik Shop. She later complied with Wiggins' request to exit the vehicle to perform tests to investigate possible impairment. Officer Erik Bloom, who had also responded to the stop, then took over the investigation.

2 Bloom conducted a standardized field sobriety test. He asked Dahl to complete a walk and turn test using a line drawn on the ground with chalk. Dahl told the officers she had trouble seeing the line because she had a cataract, but she completed the test anyway. Bloom determined that while completing this test, Dahl exhibited all eight indications of intoxication that the test could show.

After more testing, Bloom also determined Dahl could not accurately complete a one-leg standing test and could not accurately count backward from 50 to 40. Dahl blamed her cataract and the lights on the police vehicles for her inability to complete some of the tasks, including the one-leg standing test.

A third officer, Rachel Larson, eventually joined Bloom and conducted more roadside testing. When Larson asked Dahl whether she was taking any medications, Dahl answered that she took a prescription medication for high blood pressure in the mornings and Ambien and Klonopin at night. Dahl described the dosage of each medication but "flip flop[ped] the two medication dosage units several times." Dahl denied having taken any prescription medications before driving that night, saying she had taken only her blood pressure medication the morning before. She told Bloom she had taken a thyroid medication and a vitamin the morning before, but then later stated she had taken her blood pressure medication and a vitamin.

Larson asked Dahl to complete another balance test. Dahl's results showed to Larson that Dahl was under the influence of a depressant drug. Larson also noticed that Dahl's eyes were red and bloodshot and her speech was "extremely slurred."

While the other officers finished the roadside tests, Wiggins investigated the possibility that Dahl had hit a parked car. The parked car had a broken mirror and marks of orange paint. Wiggins knocked on the door of the house the car was parked in front of.

3 The primary driver of the car, Tony Wood, answered the door, looked at the damage, and told Wiggins the damage had not been there roughly an hour earlier.

After the officers completed their investigations, Bloom arrested Dahl. Bloom then got a search warrant and drove Dahl to a health center to have her blood drawn for testing. Phlebotomist Tambera Currier drew Dahl's blood, and toxicologist Kayla Horst, tested it. According to Horst, Dahl tested positive for Zolpidem, Clonazepam, and 7- Aminoclonazepam.

Municipal Court Proceedings

The City charged Dahl with violating Salina City Code § 38-1, Standard Traffic Ordinance for Kansas Cities (STO) § 30(a)(4) (48th ed. 2021), for driving under the influence of any drug or drugs that rendered her incapable of driving safely. Dahl's case was tried to a judge in municipal court. The municipal court found Dahl guilty, so she appealed to the district court.

District Court Proceedings

The district court granted Dahl's request for a jury trial. At trial, Dahl testified on her own behalf. The City presented testimony from the three officers (Wiggins, Larson, and Bloom), the professionals who drew and tested Dahl's blood (Currier and Horst), and Wood. The City also admitted Horst's toxicology reports, and the officers' dashcam and body camera footage of the stop, roadside testing, and arrest.

The City also elicited testimony describing the blood-draw procedures and test results. Currier described the procedure she used in collecting Dahl's blood and testified that nothing unusual occurred during the blood draw. Currier also explained that she did not restrain Dahl or forcibly collect any blood samples.

4 Horst explained that 7-Aminoclonazepam is a metabolite of Clonazepam. Horst described the three drugs that Dahl tested positive for as central nervous system depressants that slow body reactions. Horst categorized Clonazepam and 7- Aminoclonazepam as benzodiazepines and Zolpidem as a "sedative hypnotic." Horst explained that these medications are generally prescribed as sleep aids. She also testified that Clonazepam stays in a person's system for around 19 to 60 hours but could be detected for up to a week; Zolpidem lasts between 1.5 to 4.5 hours.

Dahl admitted to the jury that she ran into the Kwik Shop with her car and that she was prescribed Zolpidem and Clonazepam as sleep medications. She also testified that she regularly takes each before going to bed and acknowledged that the medications warned not to drive after taking them. Dahl, however, denied taking any sleep medications before driving on the night she was arrested and maintained she was not under the influence of any drugs or alcohol that evening. Dahl instead suggested that the officers mistook her age (70) and physical limitations as insobriety.

After the City closed its evidence, Dahl moved for a judgment of acquittal but the district court denied her request.

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City of Salina v. Dahl, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-salina-v-dahl-kanctapp-2022.