Fowler v. Motor Vehicle Administration

906 A.2d 347, 394 Md. 331, 2006 Md. LEXIS 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 30, 2006
Docket111, September Term, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 906 A.2d 347 (Fowler v. Motor Vehicle Administration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fowler v. Motor Vehicle Administration, 906 A.2d 347, 394 Md. 331, 2006 Md. LEXIS 544 (Md. 2006).

Opinion

HARRELL, J.

We consider here whether, during a driver license suspension hearing conducted under § 16-205.1 of the Transporta *337 tion Article, Maryland Code (1977, 2002 RepLVol.), 1 an administrative law judge (“AL J”), faced with conflicting evidence in the form of an arresting police officer’s written certification in a DR-15 Advice of Rights form and testimony from the arrested driver, may deny the driver’s motion to subpoena the officer where the driver disputes that he was fully advised by the officer of the consequence for refusing to take a chemical breath test. 2

I.

On 12 June 2004, Zachary Shawn Fowler, Petitioner, was stopped by a Howard County police officer for making an unsafe lane change. The arresting officer, noticing a strong odor of alcohol, asked Fowler to perform certain field sobriety tests. Fowler performed poorly on these tests. The officer then asked Fowler to submit to a preliminary breath test (“PBT”). 3 Fowler refused. Based on his performance on the field sobriety tests, the officer arrested Fowler for drunk driving and transported him to the police station.

At the police station, the officer provided Fowler with a DR-15 Advice of Rights form. The use of this form is intended, first, to advise the arrested driver of the consequences of refusing or failing a chemical breath test and, second, to certify that the officer complied with the statute’s advice of rights requirement. 4 The form includes the follow *338 ing language to ensure the driver’s receipt of the required advice of rights:

Read Before Signing:

I, the undersigned driver, acknowledge that I have been read or I have read the above stated Advice of Rights as certified by the police officer. I understand that this requested test is in addition to any preliminary tests that were taken.

Both Fowler and the arresting officer signed the DR-15 Advice of Rights form. The officer completed also a DR-15A form, which contained his sworn statement that he had reasonable grounds to stop Fowler and that Fowler refused a chemical breath test at the station after being fully advised of the applicable sanctions, as provided in the DR-15 Advice of Rights form.

Separate from the criminal charges for drunk driving, Fowler was charged also with refusing to take a chemical alcohol concentration breath test in violation of § 16-205.1. Section 16-205.1 imposes a mandatory license suspension upon an individual, suspected of driving under the influence of alcohol, who either refuses to take a chemical breath test or submits to a test and registers a blood alcohol concentration result in excess of 0.08. 5 In accordance with § 16 — 205.1(f)(1), Fowler *339 requested a hearing before the Motor Vehicle Administration (“MVA”) to contest his license suspension. Fowler filed also a motion requesting a subpoena for the arresting officer, in compliance with the Code of Maryland Regulations (“CO-MAR”) 11.11.03.07, to question the officer in an effort to support his claim that he was not advised fully of the administrative sanctions for refusing to take an alcohol concentration chemical breath test. The subpoena request proffered that the officer would testify “that the officer did not fully advise [Fowler] of the administrative sanctions that shall be imposed for submitting to or refusing a test” and “that legally improper and misleading advice was given.” Fowler deferred a decision on his subpoena request to the ALJ conducting his suspension hearing. See COMAR 11.11.03.07D.

At his hearing before the ALJ, Fowler disputed that he was fully advised of his rights. Specifically, he contended that while the officer advised him that his license would be suspended for 120 days if he refused to take a breath test, the officer did so only at the scene of the arrest, but not at the police station. Moreover, Fowler argued that when he was provided the DR-15 Advice of Rights form at the station the officer informed him that his license was being suspended because Fowler already had refused to take the test, which Fowler believed referred to the PBT. 6 Fowler stated that he *340 was never offered a second test, the chemical breath test, at the station. He believed that by signing the DR-15 form he was merely acknowledging his refusal of the PBT requested by the officer on the street and, therefore, he did not knowingly refuse a chemical breath test at the station. While Fowler conceded that he was given the DR-15 form to read and sign, he stated that he merely “skimmed over it” before signing it. He testified as well that the officer did not read it to him. Fowler asserted that if the arresting officer were subpoenaed, the officer would testify consistently with Fowler’s version. 7

After hearing Fowler’s proffer of what the arresting officer would testify to, the ALJ denied Fowler’s subpoena request. In his oral ruling, the ALJ stated:

First off, I’m going to find that the licensee was fully advised. I conclude primarily from the certification of the officer that he was fully advised and it’s bolstered by the testimony of the licensee wh[o] was told to read it and he skimmed over it. And I don’t see the need to call the officer to cross examine him. There’s no indication the PBT was relied on or not relied on in this case.
* * *
My finding is he was fully advised, and the other finding is I don’t see the need to call the officer to clarify anything....

The ALJ suspended Fowler’s license for 120 days, but modified the sentence to only five days of suspension on the condition that he participate in the Ignition Interlock Program for one year.

*341 Fowler sought judicial review of the ALJ’s decision by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, which affirmed relying upon this Court’s decision in Motor Vehicle Administration v. Karwacki, 340 Md. 271, 666 A.2d 511 (1995). The Circuit Court concluded that the ALJ properly exercised his discretion by resolving the conflicting evidence of Fowler’s testimony and the officer’s certification on the DR-15 Advice of Rights form. Noting that Fowler had an opportunity to read the DR-15 form, the court found there was substantial evidence to support the ALJ’s decision that Fowler was informed of his rights. Specifically, the Circuit Court emphasized that under Karwacki, “[t]he ALJ was under no obligation to believe Petitioner over the officer’s sworn statement.” Thus, because the ALJ found the police officer’s sworn statement credible, the Circuit Court determined that the ALJ properly rejected Fowler’s request to subpoena the arresting officer.

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Bluebook (online)
906 A.2d 347, 394 Md. 331, 2006 Md. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-motor-vehicle-administration-md-2006.