Everett Frazier v. Nathan Talbert

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 2021
Docket20-0134
StatusSeparate

This text of Everett Frazier v. Nathan Talbert (Everett Frazier v. Nathan Talbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Everett Frazier v. Nathan Talbert, (W. Va. 2021).

Opinion

FILED June 15, 2021 released at 3:00 p.m. EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK No. 20-0134 – Frazier v. Talbert SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA

WOOTON, J., dissenting:

The new point of law stated in the majority opinion is a dangerous exercise

in futility. Despite recognizing that the administrative license revocation procedure has

now been abrogated by statute effective July 1, 2021, the majority nonetheless issues a

startling new point of law mere weeks before that deadline—a point of law that not only

improperly creates judicial restraints on a legislatively prescribed due process right, but

may invite misapplication in future criminal DUI proceedings. Accordingly, I respectfully

dissent.

As acknowledged by the majority, the Office of Administrative Hearings and

the civil administrative license revocation procedure upon arrest or conviction of DUI has

been dismantled in its entirety. See W. Va. Code § 17C-5C-1a (2020) (“Termination of

Office of Administrative Hearings”). Such license revocations are now part of the criminal

penalty upon conviction for the various DUI and related offenses set forth in West Virginia

Code §§ 17C-5-2 (2020) and 17C-5-7 (2020). The administrative procedure for the

handling of DUI and related revocations set forth in West Virginia Code § 17C-5A-2

(2015) ceases to operate on July 1, 2021 and pending administrative DUI revocation cases

are to be dismissed. See W. Va. Code § 17C-5A-2b(2) (2020) (“The provisions of § 17C-

5A-2 of this code have no force or effect beginning on the date when the Office of

Administrative Hearings terminates, pursuant to § 17C-5C-1a of this code.”); W. Va. Code

1 § 17C-5C-1a(c)(1) (2020) (“If any appeal of a revocation or suspension order, described in

§ 17C-5C-3(3) of this code, is pending before the office on or after July 1, 2021, the

underlying revocation or suspension order shall be dismissed.”). 1

Nonetheless, in this the final hour of the DUI administrative license

revocation era, the majority deigns to establish factors which limit the due process right

described in West Virginia Code § 17C-5-9 (2013). This statute provides a critical due

process right to drivers accused of DUI, permitting them to demand and receive a breath

or blood test, thereby enabling them to preserve what may well be the only potentially

exculpatory evidence available to them:

Any person lawfully arrested for driving a motor vehicle in this state while under the influence of alcohol, controlled substances or drugs shall have the right to demand that a sample or specimen of his or her blood or breath to determine the alcohol concentration of his or her blood be taken . . . and that a chemical test thereof be made.

Id. § 17C-5-9, in part (emphasis added). This statute contains no limitation on the scope

of its application and is equally applicable to drivers who find themselves in the throes of

1 Obviously, the time period between issuance of the majority opinion and mandate and the cessation of the Office of Administrative Hearings allows a brief window in which the new point of law may be applied not only in this case but in others similarly pending. However, because I disagree with the notion that this Court may impose conditions upon the statutory due process right articulated in West Virginia Code § 17C-5-9, I dissent because the new point of law is not merely futile, but legally unsound. 2 the soon-defunct administrative process or criminal proceedings; the statute itself is

therefore unaffected by the recent statutory changes.

The majority creates a new point of law containing factors for

“consideration” in determining the seriousness of and “consequences” for violation of this

statute, thereby limiting its efficacy. Importantly, however, the majority’s analysis is

conducted under the auspices of the civil administrative proceeding, which requires a

fundamentally different analysis than that which must ensue when applied in a criminal

proceeding, which is all that will soon remain. 2 This creates the likelihood, if not certainty,

that its ill-advised new factors for consideration upon denial of a driver-demanded blood

test will be misapplied to criminal DUI proceedings without proper analysis of its import

and application in the criminal context.

As I have articulated in prior dissents, this Court has incrementally engaged

in a process designed to strip drivers of any “remaining vestiges of due process” in

administrative license revocation proceedings. See Frazier v. Goodson, No. 20-0236, 2021

WL 1821454, at *4 (W. Va. May 6, 2021) (memorandum decision) (Wooton, J.,

2 The majority implicitly acknowledges the inapplicability of its new point of law to criminal proceedings through repeated references to the fact that the precedent that it effectively overrules (dismissing DUI revocations where a driver-demanded test is denied) is premised on criminal caselaw. It fails, however, to caution against the use of this new point of law in anything other than those remaining administrative revocations that the Office of Administrative Hearings may manage to dispose of in the ensuing couple of weeks prior to July 1, 2021. 3 dissenting); see also Frazier v. Miller, No. 20-0745, 2021 WL 2023586 (W. Va. May 20,

2021) (memorandum decision) (Wooton, J., dissenting). It is my position that these prior

erroneous decisions—permitting DMV to succeed on mere documents without testimony

of a live witness at the revocation hearing 3 and permitting the willful refusal to test officer-

requested blood draws or provide the results of blood evidence testing 4—do not survive

the dismantling of the administrative process. It is further my position that any recurring

issue must be examined anew in a purely criminal context. However, this latest nail in the

coffin of due process, issued with full appreciation of the disassembly of the civil

revocation procedure involved, sends an improper message that the majority’s new

syllabus point may have applicability after July 1, 2021. 5 It is my position that it does not,

See Miller, No. 20-0745, 2021 WL 2023586, at *3-4 (reiterating holding in Frazier 3

v. Fouch, ___ W. Va. ___, 853 S.E.2d 587 (2020) that DMV records alone may be utilized to establish DUI without live testimony of arresting officer).

See Goodson, No. 20-0236, 2021 WL 1821454, at *2-3 (reiterating holding in 4

Frazier v. Bragg, 244 W. Va. 408, 851 S.E.2d 486 (2020) that blood test results need not be provided to driver absent request). 5 The stark distinction between the two proceedings was explained by the Jordan Court:

This result arises by virtue of the difference in issues and levels of proof required between the administrative and criminal proceeding. In the former, the key issues are the reasonable grounds to believe the licensee was driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor and whether he refused the test. A preponderance of evidence is sufficient for proof of these issues at the administrative hearing. In the criminal trial, the key issue is whether he was driving while under the influence (continued . . .) 4 nor should it be used as a springboard for similar handling of violations of West Virginia

Code § 17C-5-9 in criminal proceedings, if and when that issues presents itself to the Court.

The practicability and utility of the majority’s new syllabus point aside, the

entire premise behind judicially created “factors” to gauge the seriousness of an outright

denial of a statutory due process right is fundamentally flawed. For thirty-six years the law

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Everett Frazier v. Nathan Talbert, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everett-frazier-v-nathan-talbert-wva-2021.