Fraiman v. State, Department of Administration, Division of Motor Vehicles

49 P.3d 241, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 86, 2002 WL 1302181
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 2002
DocketS-10026
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 49 P.3d 241 (Fraiman v. State, Department of Administration, Division of Motor Vehicles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fraiman v. State, Department of Administration, Division of Motor Vehicles, 49 P.3d 241, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 86, 2002 WL 1302181 (Ala. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV) administratively suspended Daniel Fraiman's driver's license for refusal to take a chemical breath test following Fraiman's arrest for eluding an officer. Because Fraiman was arrested while in the cabin of a friend, he attempted to raise a defense based on an alleged Fourth Amendment violation. We agree with the hearing officer and the superi- or court that Fraiman did not have standing to raise his Fourth Amendment concerns, and we consequently affirm the decision to suspend his license.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Just after midnight on May 20, 1999, Daniel Fraiman, age cighteen, was driving west on East End Road in Homer. Driving in the other direction, Alaska State Trooper David Tracy noticed that the taillights on Fraiman's red Subaru were out. Trooper Tracy turned on his overhead lights, but Fraiman did not pull over. Trooper Tracy followed Fraiman to the house of Kathy Morton on Shelby Kay Street. Trooper Tracy knocked on the door of the house, and asked Morton if she knew the identity of the driver of the red Subaru. Morton replied that she did not but that it might be a friend of her son; she then went back into the house.

Trooper Tracy called in the license plate on the Subaru and learned that it was registered to Douglas Fraiman, the father of Daniel Fraiman. Upon receiving this information, Trooper Tracy asked Morton if he could come inside her house to look for Douglas Fraiman. Morton refused. When Trooper Tracy then stated his plan to seek a search warrant, Morton allowed him to enter the house. The only other person Trooper Tracy found in the house was a friend of Morton. Because Morton and the friend appeared to have been recently awakened by his visit, Trooper Tracy ruled them out as drivers of the red Subaru. In his search of the house, Trooper Tracy noted that there did not appear to be a place where Morton's son stayed. Trooper Tracy asked Morton about this, and she replied that her son and daughter slept in a cabin in back of the house. Trooper Tracy asked Morton to lead him to the cabin and she agreed.

Morton knocked loudly on the cabin door and announced that a state trooper was looking for the driver of the Subaru parked in the driveway. After a brief delay, Morton's *243 twenty-year-old daughter answered the door and informed Trooper Tracy that her brother and his friend were in the loft, which could be reached via ladder through a trap door. Kathy Morton knocked on the trap door and, after the trap door opened, asked for the driver of the Subaru to come out. When this did not happen, Trooper Tracy climbed into the loft and discovered Daniel Fraiman crouched in a corner. Although Trooper Tracy did not have Kathy Morton's express permission to enter the cabin, she did not object to his entry. '

Trooper Tracy arrested Daniel Fraiman for eluding an officer. 1 After taking him to the squad car, Trooper Tracy noticed that Fraiman had an odor of aleohol on his breath and that his speech was slurred. Trooper Tracy asked Fraiman to perform a variety, of field sobriety tests, including a preliminary breath test, 2 at which point the trooper determined that Fraiman was under the influence and took him to the Homer jail. Once there, Fraiman refused to submit to a chemical breath test, causing Trooper Tracy to revoke his driver's license under Alaska's implied consent law. 3

Fraiman requested and received a review hearing before the Division of Motor Vehicles. The hearing took place on June 29, 1999 before hearing officer Rebecca Janik. Fraiman challenged the license suspension on the grounds that Trooper Tracy lacked probable cause to make an arrest and that the arrest occurred as the result of an illegal warrantless search. Fraiman requested that his refusal to take the chemical breath test be suppressed, but Janik stated that she did not think Trooper Tracy's entry into the cabin was within the scope of the administrative hearing. Janik further stated, though, that even if the issue was within the seope of the hearing, it was her belief that Fraiman was not an "invited guest" in the cabin and thus lacked standing to raise his Fourth Amendment argument. Jgnik also found that Trooper Tracy had reasonable grounds to arrest Fraiman for driving a vehicle while intoxicated.

Fraiman appealed to the superior court, arguing primarily that the hearing officer erred in finding that AS 28.15.166(g) bars motorists from seeking suppression of evidence in administrative hearings. The superior court did not reach this argument, affirming the hearing officer on the ground that Fraiman lacked standing to challenge Trooper Tracy's allegedly illegal entry into the cabin. The superior court further found that Trooper Tracy had probable cause to arrest Fraiman both for eluding an officer and for driving while intoxicated. Fraiman appeals.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

Courts are to review administrative revocations of drivers' licenses for driving while intoxicated under the standards set forth in AS 28.15.166(m), which provides: "The court may reverse the department's determination if the court finds that the department misinterpreted the law, acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner, or made a determination unsupported by the evidence in the record. 4 The present case involves questions of both law and fact.

The standard of review for issues of statutory interpretation is the "substitution of judgment" test, under which we conduct an independent review. 5 This standard of review is applied to agency decisions "where the questions of law presented do not involve *244 agency expertise." 6 Under this standard, "a reviewing court [can] substitute its own judgment for that of the agency's, even if the agency's decision had a reasonable basis in law." 7 In such cases, we exercise independent review of the superior court's decision, "as the superior court [acts] as an intermediate court of appeal." 8 For determinations of fact by an administrative agency, we apply the "substantial evidence" test, under which "the reviewing court determines whether the findings are supported by such evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion." 9

IV. DISCUSSION

Fraiman argues that the hearing officer erroneously interpreted AS 28.15.166(g) to bar his legal challenge to the admissibility of evidence that he maintains was obtained illegally. Fraiman contends that precedent exists for expanding the scope of an administrative license hearing beyond that expressly permitted by AS 28.15.166(g). 10 Fraiman relies on Javed v. State, Department of Public Safety, 11

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Bluebook (online)
49 P.3d 241, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 86, 2002 WL 1302181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fraiman-v-state-department-of-administration-division-of-motor-vehicles-alaska-2002.