Darrah v. State, No. 644-12-19 Wncv (Tomasi, J., July 22, 2020).
[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]
VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT
SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Docket No. 644-12-19 Wncv
│ Andrew Darrah, │ Appellant, │ │ v. │ │ State of Vermont, Agency of │ Transportation, │ Appellee. │ │
Opinion and Order on Appeal
Appellant Andrew Darrah seeks Rule 74 review of a decision of a Vermont
Agency of Transportation (“VTrans” or “the State”) hearing examiner affirming the
Department of Motor Vehicles’ (“DMV’s”) re-imposition of the lifetime revocation of
Mr. Darrah’s driver’s license pursuant to 23 V.S.A. § 1209a(b) (the “TAP”). The
hearing officer determined that Mr. Darrah had not remained totally abstinent from
the consumption of alcohol and had driven with alcohol in his system. On appeal,
Mr. Darrah argues that he was not required under the program to be totally
abstinent but was barred from driving under the influence of alcohol, that the
hearing officer relied on inadmissible evidence, and that the admissible evidence
does not support the finding of a violation. The Court makes the following
determinations. Facts
The facts surrounding Mr. Darrah’s entry in the TAP are not in serious
dispute. Mr. Darrah’s license was revoked for life in April 2000 following multiple
convictions for driving under the influence. In 2003, he applied for the
reinstatement of his license pursuant to the TAP. 23 V.S.A. § 1209a. Following an
investigation and an evidentiary hearing, a VTrans hearing examiner found and
concluded that Mr. Darrah met the statutory qualifications and was entitled to
reinstatement under the TAP. See August 29, 2003 VTrans Ruling. The hearing
examiner concluded his ruling by stating: “Moreover, Petitioner was advised that
the revocation will be put back into effect in the event any further investigation
reveals a return to the consumption of alcohol or drugs.” Id.
Mr. Darrah did not appeal or otherwise challenge the final provision of the
ruling.
In March 2019, the DMV notified Mr. Darrah that it was revoking his license
based on an investigation that showed he had violated the terms of the TAP. Mr.
Darrah requested an administrative hearing. At the hearing, the hearing officer
accepted documentary evidence and testimony from a DMV investigator. The
investigator testified concerning his review of the Vermont law enforcement
database. Those records showed that Mr. Darrah had two encounters with the
Vermont State Police that involved alcohol. In March 2015, a trooper drove Mr.
Darrah home from a bar because he was intoxicated. In May 2015, a trooper
stopped Mr. Darrah as he was driving a motorcycle. A preliminary breath test
2 showed that he had a blood alcohol level of .073. The officer issued a civil violation
to Mr. Darrah for violating a condition on his license that required that he not
operate with any alcohol in his system.
The investigator also spoke with Mr. Darrah about the incidents. He denied
drinking and driving in both incidents. His response regarding the first event
indicated that he remembered it. His response concerning the second event was
that he admitted that he had consumed “a couple of beers” that day.
The hearing officer – interestingly, the same hearing officer that had imposed
Mr. Darrah’s reinstatement conditions in 2003 -- determined that Mr. Darrah had
violated both the condition that he not consume any alcohol and a condition that he
not drive with a blood alcohol content of over .02 percent.
Mr. Darrah timely appealed that decision to this Court. 23 V.S.A. § 105(b).
Standard of Review
The Vermont Supreme Court has described the applicable standard of review
as follows: “Courts presume that the actions of administrative agencies are correct,
valid and reasonable, absent a clear and convincing showing to the contrary. . . .
[J]udicial review of agency findings is ordinarily limited to whether, on the record
developed before the agency, there is any reasonable basis for the finding.” State
Dep’t of Taxes v. Tri-State Ind. Laundries, 138 Vt. 292, 294 (1980). “[C]ourts
‘employ a deferential standard of review’ of an agency’s interpretation and
application of its own regulations.” In re Soon Kwon, 2011 VT 26, ¶ 6, 189 Vt. 598,
599 (quoting Conservation Law Found. v. Burke, 162 Vt. 115, 121 (1993)). Review of
3 the agency’s conclusions of law, however, is de novo. In re Soon Kwon, 2011 VT 26,
¶ 7.
Analysis
Though the issue was disputed at the VTrans hearing, for purposes of
resolving the present dispute, the State is willing to agree that the 2003 version of
the TAP law applies to Mr. Darrah’s revocation. As it existed in 2003, Section
1209a(b) of the TAP provided:
(b) Abstinence. Notwithstanding any other provision of this subchapter, a person whose license has been suspended for three years or more under this subchapter may apply to the driver rehabilitation school director and to the commissioner for reinstatement of his or her driving privilege. In the case of a suspension for three years, the person shall have completed two years of total abstinence from consumption of alcohol or drugs, or both. In the case of a suspension for life, the person shall have completed three years of total abstinence from consumption of alcohol or drugs, or both. In both cases, the beginning date for the period of abstinence shall be no sooner than the effective date of the suspension from which the person is requesting reinstatement and shall not include any period during which the person is serving a sentence of incarceration to include furlough. If the commissioner, or a medical review board convened by the commissioner, is satisfied by a preponderance of the evidence that the applicant has abstained for the required number of years immediately preceding the application and hearing, has successfully completed a therapy program as required under this section and the person appreciates that he or she cannot drink any amount of alcohol and drive safely, the person’s license shall be reinstated immediately upon such conditions as the commissioner may impose. If after notice and hearing the commissioner later finds that the person was operating, attempting to operate or in actual physical control of a vehicle while the person's alcohol concentration was 0.02 or more following reinstatement under this subsection, the person's operating license or privilege to operate shall be immediately suspended for the period of
4 the original suspension.1 A person shall be eligible for reinstatement under this section only once following a suspension for life.
The parties do, however, disagree as to the meaning of this provision.
Mr. Darrah reads the law as limiting the grounds for revocation to a
circumstance where he was found to have been driving with a blood-alcohol
content of over .02 percent. The State counters that the TAP also allowed the
Commissioner of DMV to set other “conditions” on reinstatement and that
Mr. Darrah’s reinstatement contained an additional demand of total
abstinence. The Court agrees with the State.
I. Mr. Darrah’s Reinstatement Was Conditioned On His Not Consuming Alcohol
In the Court’s view, resolution of this case is guided by the determinations
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Darrah v. State, No. 644-12-19 Wncv (Tomasi, J., July 22, 2020).
[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]
VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT
SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Docket No. 644-12-19 Wncv
│ Andrew Darrah, │ Appellant, │ │ v. │ │ State of Vermont, Agency of │ Transportation, │ Appellee. │ │
Opinion and Order on Appeal
Appellant Andrew Darrah seeks Rule 74 review of a decision of a Vermont
Agency of Transportation (“VTrans” or “the State”) hearing examiner affirming the
Department of Motor Vehicles’ (“DMV’s”) re-imposition of the lifetime revocation of
Mr. Darrah’s driver’s license pursuant to 23 V.S.A. § 1209a(b) (the “TAP”). The
hearing officer determined that Mr. Darrah had not remained totally abstinent from
the consumption of alcohol and had driven with alcohol in his system. On appeal,
Mr. Darrah argues that he was not required under the program to be totally
abstinent but was barred from driving under the influence of alcohol, that the
hearing officer relied on inadmissible evidence, and that the admissible evidence
does not support the finding of a violation. The Court makes the following
determinations. Facts
The facts surrounding Mr. Darrah’s entry in the TAP are not in serious
dispute. Mr. Darrah’s license was revoked for life in April 2000 following multiple
convictions for driving under the influence. In 2003, he applied for the
reinstatement of his license pursuant to the TAP. 23 V.S.A. § 1209a. Following an
investigation and an evidentiary hearing, a VTrans hearing examiner found and
concluded that Mr. Darrah met the statutory qualifications and was entitled to
reinstatement under the TAP. See August 29, 2003 VTrans Ruling. The hearing
examiner concluded his ruling by stating: “Moreover, Petitioner was advised that
the revocation will be put back into effect in the event any further investigation
reveals a return to the consumption of alcohol or drugs.” Id.
Mr. Darrah did not appeal or otherwise challenge the final provision of the
ruling.
In March 2019, the DMV notified Mr. Darrah that it was revoking his license
based on an investigation that showed he had violated the terms of the TAP. Mr.
Darrah requested an administrative hearing. At the hearing, the hearing officer
accepted documentary evidence and testimony from a DMV investigator. The
investigator testified concerning his review of the Vermont law enforcement
database. Those records showed that Mr. Darrah had two encounters with the
Vermont State Police that involved alcohol. In March 2015, a trooper drove Mr.
Darrah home from a bar because he was intoxicated. In May 2015, a trooper
stopped Mr. Darrah as he was driving a motorcycle. A preliminary breath test
2 showed that he had a blood alcohol level of .073. The officer issued a civil violation
to Mr. Darrah for violating a condition on his license that required that he not
operate with any alcohol in his system.
The investigator also spoke with Mr. Darrah about the incidents. He denied
drinking and driving in both incidents. His response regarding the first event
indicated that he remembered it. His response concerning the second event was
that he admitted that he had consumed “a couple of beers” that day.
The hearing officer – interestingly, the same hearing officer that had imposed
Mr. Darrah’s reinstatement conditions in 2003 -- determined that Mr. Darrah had
violated both the condition that he not consume any alcohol and a condition that he
not drive with a blood alcohol content of over .02 percent.
Mr. Darrah timely appealed that decision to this Court. 23 V.S.A. § 105(b).
Standard of Review
The Vermont Supreme Court has described the applicable standard of review
as follows: “Courts presume that the actions of administrative agencies are correct,
valid and reasonable, absent a clear and convincing showing to the contrary. . . .
[J]udicial review of agency findings is ordinarily limited to whether, on the record
developed before the agency, there is any reasonable basis for the finding.” State
Dep’t of Taxes v. Tri-State Ind. Laundries, 138 Vt. 292, 294 (1980). “[C]ourts
‘employ a deferential standard of review’ of an agency’s interpretation and
application of its own regulations.” In re Soon Kwon, 2011 VT 26, ¶ 6, 189 Vt. 598,
599 (quoting Conservation Law Found. v. Burke, 162 Vt. 115, 121 (1993)). Review of
3 the agency’s conclusions of law, however, is de novo. In re Soon Kwon, 2011 VT 26,
¶ 7.
Analysis
Though the issue was disputed at the VTrans hearing, for purposes of
resolving the present dispute, the State is willing to agree that the 2003 version of
the TAP law applies to Mr. Darrah’s revocation. As it existed in 2003, Section
1209a(b) of the TAP provided:
(b) Abstinence. Notwithstanding any other provision of this subchapter, a person whose license has been suspended for three years or more under this subchapter may apply to the driver rehabilitation school director and to the commissioner for reinstatement of his or her driving privilege. In the case of a suspension for three years, the person shall have completed two years of total abstinence from consumption of alcohol or drugs, or both. In the case of a suspension for life, the person shall have completed three years of total abstinence from consumption of alcohol or drugs, or both. In both cases, the beginning date for the period of abstinence shall be no sooner than the effective date of the suspension from which the person is requesting reinstatement and shall not include any period during which the person is serving a sentence of incarceration to include furlough. If the commissioner, or a medical review board convened by the commissioner, is satisfied by a preponderance of the evidence that the applicant has abstained for the required number of years immediately preceding the application and hearing, has successfully completed a therapy program as required under this section and the person appreciates that he or she cannot drink any amount of alcohol and drive safely, the person’s license shall be reinstated immediately upon such conditions as the commissioner may impose. If after notice and hearing the commissioner later finds that the person was operating, attempting to operate or in actual physical control of a vehicle while the person's alcohol concentration was 0.02 or more following reinstatement under this subsection, the person's operating license or privilege to operate shall be immediately suspended for the period of
4 the original suspension.1 A person shall be eligible for reinstatement under this section only once following a suspension for life.
The parties do, however, disagree as to the meaning of this provision.
Mr. Darrah reads the law as limiting the grounds for revocation to a
circumstance where he was found to have been driving with a blood-alcohol
content of over .02 percent. The State counters that the TAP also allowed the
Commissioner of DMV to set other “conditions” on reinstatement and that
Mr. Darrah’s reinstatement contained an additional demand of total
abstinence. The Court agrees with the State.
I. Mr. Darrah’s Reinstatement Was Conditioned On His Not Consuming Alcohol
In the Court’s view, resolution of this case is guided by the determinations
made in State v. Prevost, No. 179-4-19 Wncv, December 26, 2019. (A copy of that
Opinion and Order is attached to this ruling and its rationale incorporated by
reference herein. The Supreme Court’s recent 3-Justice affirmance of that ruling is
also appended.) In that decision, the Court determined that the statute in effect at
1 The hearing officer and the parties agree that the excerpted language was the law in effect at the time of Mr. Darrah’s reinstatement in 2003. The Court’s examination of the legislative record, however, indicates that the above wording was not added until May 2004 and became effective that July 1. Prior to that, the text of the law stated: “If after notice and hearing the commissioner later finds that the person was operating, attempting to operate or in actual physical control of a vehicle while there was any amount of alcohol in the blood following reinstatement under this subsection, the person’s operating license or privilege to operate shall be immediately suspended for the period of the original suspension.” (Emphasis added.) The Court’s determinations would be the same under either version of Section 1209a(b). Given that conclusion, it is unnecessary for the Court to resolve the confusion. 5 the time Mr. Prevost entered the TAP (in relevant part, the same law at issue here)
stated that a participant would be suspended again if they were found to have
driven with blood alcohol level of .02 percent or more. The statute also provided,
however, that the Commissioner could impose additional conditions on
reinstatement. The law stated that reinstatement under the TAP would be “upon
such conditions as the commissioner may impose.” 23 V.S.A. § 1209a(b) (2005)
(emphasis added). In Mr. Prevost’s case, the Commissioner imposed a “condition”
that his “revocation will be put back in into effect in the event any further
investigation reveals a return to the consumption of alcohol or drugs.”
In Prevost, the Court determined that Mr. Prevost could not collaterally
challenge that latter condition during a later revocation proceeding. Instead, if Mr.
Prevost had believed that condition was improper, his remedy was to seek
reconsideration of the ruling or appeal it when it was issued. He did neither. As a
result, that condition was res judicata. The same reasoning applies here.
Though not using the word “condition,” Mr. Darrah’s reinstatement contains
a nearly identical provision plainly stating that he was advised by the hearing
officer orally and in the written decision “that the revocation will be put back into
effect in the event any further investigation reveals a return to the consumption of
alcohol or drugs.” For all the reasons set out in Prevost, the Court concludes that, in
2003, the TAP allowed the Commissioner to set additional reinstatement conditions,
that the Commissioner imposed a no-alcohol condition on Mr. Darrah’s
6 reinstatement, and that he may not challenge that aspect of the reinstatement
decision at this juncture.
II. The Evidence Supports the DMV Determination
Mr. Darrah next argues that the hearing officer inappropriately relied on
hearsay evidence and that there was insufficient admissible evidence of a violation.
First, the Court agrees with the State that the Vermont Rules of Evidence do not
apply to this type of DMV hearing. 3 V.S.A. § 816(b); see In re Smith, 169 Vt. 162,
173 (1989). As a result, Mr. Darrah’s rule-based objections do not provide a basis
for overturning the decision below.
Second, even if the Rules of Evidence applied strictly, the TAP violation in
this instance can be established solely through proof of the consumption of alcohol.
Mr. Darrah admitted during his discussions with the investigator that he had
consumed alcohol on, at least, one of the two occasions involving the VSP Trooper.
These party admissions would be sufficient to sustain the determination made
below. Vt. R. Evid. 801(d)(2).
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the hearing examiner is affirmed.
Dated this __ day of July, 2020, at Montpelier, Vermont.
___________________ Timothy B. Tomasi Superior Court Judge