Guerre-Chaley v. State

88 P.3d 539, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 76, 2004 WL 759003
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 9, 2004
DocketA-8473
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 P.3d 539 (Guerre-Chaley 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
Guerre-Chaley v. State, 88 P.3d 539, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 76, 2004 WL 759003 (Ala. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Ute Guerre-Chaley 1 was arrested for driving while intoxicated. 2 During her encounter with the police, Guerre-Chaley submitted to a “preliminary breath test” — ie., a breath test on a portable testing device carried by the police officer. According to this preliminary breath test, Guerre-Chaley’s blood alcohol content was 0.079 percent. (The legal limit is 0.080 percent; see AS 28.35.030(a)(2).)

Later, at the police station, a breath test conducted using a DataMaster showed that Guerre-Chaley’s blood alcohol content was 0.091 percent. Guerre-Chaley then requested an independent blood test; this blood test yielded a blood alcohol level of 0.095 percent.

At Guerre-Chaley’s trial, the defense attorney wished to present the testimony of an expert witness who had concluded that, even though Guerre-Chaley’s blood alcohol level exceeded the legal limit of 0.080 percent when her breath was tested on the DataMas-ter at the police station and when her blood was tested a little later, her blood alcohol level had been less than 0.080 percent at the time she was driving. But a problem arose because the expert witness proposed to base this opinion on the results of the preliminary breath test.

The State argued that the results of the preliminary breath test device did not meet the standard for admissibility of scientific evidence under the Daubertr-Coon test (the test used in the courts of Alaska). 3 For this reason, the State asked the trial judge to exclude all evidence of the preliminary breath test result (thus effectively prohibiting the defense expert from relying on it).

The trial judge, District Court Judge Raymond M. Funk, agreed that the preliminary breath test result constituted scientific evidence for purposes of the Dcmbertr-Coon rule. The judge further ruled that the defense expert witness could not testify about, or rely on, the result of Guerre-Chaley’s preliminary breath test unless the defense first established that the preliminary breath test device produced results that met the Dauberb-Coon test for admissibility.

After Judge Funk made this ruling, the defense attorney declined a hearing on this issue and offered no other support for the scientific validity of preliminary breath test results. Accordingly, Judge Funk refused to allow the defense expert witness to rely on the result of the preliminary breath test.

(Despite this ruling, the expert witness, Dr. Lawrence K. Duffy, did testify for the defense. Based on the result of Guerre-Chaley’s DataMaster breath test (0.091 percent) and the result of her later blood test (0.095 percent), Dr. Duffy concluded that Guerre-Chaley’s blood alcohol level was rising throughout her encounter with the police, and that her blood alcohol level had been slightly below the legal limit when she was first stopped.)

On appeal, Guerre-Chaley argues that Judge Funk should have allowed her defense expert witness to testify about, and to rely on, the result of the preliminary breath test even though Guerre-Chaley failed to prove that this result was scientifically valid under the Dauberb-Coon standard. Guerre-Chaley bases her argument on Alaska Evidence Rule 703, which reads:

Basis of Opinion Testimony by Experts.
The facts or data ... upon which an expert [witness] bases an opinion or inference may be [either] perceived by or made *542 known to the expert at or before the hearing. [These] [f]acts or data need not be admissible in evidence, but [they] must be of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in [that] particular field in forming opinions or [drawing] inferences upon [that] subject.

Guerre-Chaley asserts that this rule exempts the proponent of expert testimony from the restrictions on scientific evidence established in Daubert and Coon.

It is true that Evidence Rule 703 déclares that the data underlying an expert witness’s opinion need not be independently admissible, so long as it is the type of data that experts in that field reasonably rely on for that purpose. But in practice, Rule 703 normally means that the proponent of expert testimony need not show that the underlying data could independently survive a hearsay objection or an objection based on the expert witness’s lack of first-hand knowledge. See the fifth and sixth paragraphs of the Commentary to Alaska Evidence Rule 703.

Guerre-Chaley’s contention — that Rule 703 exempts the underlying data from the Daubertr-Coon rule governing the admissibility of scientific evidence — is an extension of the rule that we doubt was ever contemplated by its drafters. Moreover, Guerre-Chaley is advocating a seemingly paradoxical application of Rule 703: one that would allow expert witnesses to testify about, and base their opinions on, data that has no demonstrable scientific validity. 4

Federal authority rejects this suggested interpretation of Rule 703. Four years ago, Congress amended Federal Evidence Rule 702 to clarify and emphasize the trial courts’ gate-keeping role with regard to scientific evidence under the Daubert test. Federal Evidence Rule 702 now reads:

If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1) the [witness’s] testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied [those] principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.

The Advisory Committee’s “Note” to this amended version of Rule 702 addresses the relationship between the Daubert test embodied in Rule 702 and the relaxed standard for the admission of evidence under Rule 703:

There has been some confusion over the relationship between Rules 702 and 703. The [present] amendment makes clear that the sufficiency of the basis of an expert’s [opinion] is to be decided under Rule 702 [■i.e., under the Daubert test]. Rule 702 sets forth the overarching requirement of reliability, and an analysis of the sufficiency of the expert’s basis [for their opinion] cannot be divorced from the ultimate reliability of [that] opinion.... When an expert relies on inadmissible information, Rule 703 requires the trial [judge] to determine whether that information is of a type reasonably relied on by other experts in the field. If so, the expert can rely on [that] information in reaching an opinion. However, the question [of] whether the expert is relying on a sufficient basis of information — whether admissible information or not — [to be permitted to offer an opinion] is governed by the requirements of Rule 702.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P.3d 539, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 76, 2004 WL 759003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guerre-chaley-v-state-alaskactapp-2004.