Fyfe v. State

334 P.3d 183, 2014 Alas. App. LEXIS 117, 2014 WL 4258343
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 29, 2014
Docket2425 A-11058
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 334 P.3d 183 (Fyfe v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fyfe v. State, 334 P.3d 183, 2014 Alas. App. LEXIS 117, 2014 WL 4258343 (Ala. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

ALLARD, Judge.

Linden Karl Fyfe was charged with felony driving under the influence based, in part, on a Datamaster test showing that his blood alcohol level was .117 percent. At trial Fyfe raised the defense of necessity, arguing that his driving was justified because his girlfriend's daughter had been rushed to the hospital after an apparent seizure. The jury rejected that defense and convicted Fyfe.

The superior court sentenced Fyfe to 20 months with 16 months suspended. The court also imposed a $20,000 fine-double the mandatory minimum fine for felony driving under the influence-based on the State's allegation that the offense took place in a traffic safety corridor.

Fyfe contends that the $20,000 fine is illegal. He argues that the legislature did not intend to require courts to impose a double fine for felony driving under the influence in a traffic safety corridor. Based on the legislative history of the statute, we agree and therefore vacate Fyfe's $20,000 fine. Because the sentencing judge's remarks make clear that he would have imposed the $10,000 mandatory minimum fine for Fyfe's offense if he believed he had the discretion to do so, we direct the superior court to modify the judgment to reflect this mandatory minimum fine.

*185 Fyfe also argues that his Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him was violated because the court allowed the State to introduce reports verifying the calibration of the Datamaster machine used for his breath test even though Fyfe had no opportunity to cross-examine the author of the reports. Fyfe concedes that the admission of these hearsay reports was authorized under our decision in Abyo v. State, 1 but he argues that Abyo and the cases that follow it should be overruled. We decline to overrule Abyo and find no violation of Fyfe's confrontation rights.

Why we conclude that the legislature did not intend AS 28.90.030(a) to double the range of fines for felony driving under the influence

Under AS 28.90.0830(a), a person is subject to a double fine if the person "violates a provision of [Title 28] or a regulation adopted under the authority of [Title 28] within a ... traffic safety corridor." 2 This provision, on its face, would seem to mandate a double fine for any driving under the influence offense committed in a traffic safety corridor because the offense of driving under the influence is a provision of Title 28. However, the plain meaning of a statute does not necessarily control in Alaska:

In interpreting a statute, we look to the plain meaning of the statute, the legislative purpose, and the intent of the statute. We have declined to mechanically apply the plain meaning rule when interpreting statutes, adopting instead a sliding scale approach: The plainer the statutory language is, the more convincing the evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent must be. We apply this sliding seale approach even if a statute is facially unambiguous 3

In, Johnnie v. State, 4 an unpublished case, we assumed that the double-fine requirement in AS 28.90.080(a) applied to a person con-viected of driving under the influence. But the issue was not actually litigated in that case: Johnnie did not contest that he would be subject to a double fine if his offense occurred in a traffic safety corridor; instead, he contested the trial court's finding that he admitted, as part of his plea agreement, that his offense occurred within a traffic safety corridor. 5 Consequently, the seope of the double-fine requirement in AS 28.90.0830(a) is a question of first impression for this Court.

The 1998 legislature intended the double-Fine requirement to apply to traffic offenses

Alaska Statute 28.90.0830(a) has its origins in a statute enacted in 1999, former AS 28.40.070, which required double fines for "offenses committed within highway work zones." 6 The legislation that created that statute appears to have been first introduced in 1997 as House Bill 87. That bill provided in pertinent part:

Fines for speeding offenses committed within highway work zones doubled. Whenever a person violates a provision of [Title 28] relating to speeding, or a regulation adopted under the authority of [Title 28] relating to speeding, or is convicted of reckless driving under AS 28.35.040 or negligent driving under AS 28.35.045 within a highway work zone, notwithstanding the amount of the fine or the maximum fine set under this title, the fine, or maxi *186 mum fine, is double the amount provided in this title. 7

Thus, as originally conceived, the legislation would have doubled fines only for three specified offenses committed in highway work zones: speeding, negligent driving, and reckless driving. Although House Bill 87 was discussed in committee, it was never enacted into law. 8

In 1998, some of the language from House Bill 87 was incorporated into Senate Bill 304. 9 That legislation, as introduced, contained the same language as the current version of AS 28.90.030(a) (minus the 2006 amendment extending the statute to traffic safety corridors) 10 Thus, instead of enacting the House bill, which was targeted at three specific traffic and motor vehicle offenses, the legislature opted for the seemingly broader language doubling fines "(whenever a person violates a provision of [Title 28] or a regulation under the authority of [Title 28] within a highway work zone. 11

Although this language on its face suggests that the legislature intended the double-fine requirement to apply to all traffic infractions, equipment violations, and motor vehicle criminal offenses enumerated in Title 28 of the Alaska Statutes, Title 13 of the Alaska Administrative Code, and some Title 2 regulations, the legislative history does not support such a broad construction of the statute. Sen. Dave Donley, the sponsor of Senate Bill 304, told the Senate Transportation Committee that the bill was intended to "double fines for moving traffic violations in construction zones." 12 Donley emphasized that the legislation "does not deal with criminal law, only traffic violations." 13 In this context, a state trooper informed the committee that the maximum fine for a traffic infraction (unless otherwise provided by statute) was $300. 14 From this discussion, it appears that the legislature anticipated that the doubled fines that would result from enacting Senate Bill 804 would generally not exceed $600.

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Related

State of Alaska v. Harry Norman Powell
487 P.3d 609 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2021)
State v. Fyfe
370 P.3d 1092 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
334 P.3d 183, 2014 Alas. App. LEXIS 117, 2014 WL 4258343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fyfe-v-state-alaskactapp-2014.