Juan M. Luna-Galacia v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 16, 2023
DocketA23A0768
StatusPublished

This text of Juan M. Luna-Galacia v. State (Juan M. Luna-Galacia v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Juan M. Luna-Galacia v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION MERCIER, C. J., DOYLE, P. J. and GOBEIL, J.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

August 16, 2023

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A0768. LUNA-GALACIA v. THE STATE.

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

A jury found Juan Luna-Galacia guilty of driving under the influence of

alcohol and without a valid license. Following the denial of his motion for new trial,

Luna-Galacia appealed to this Court, arguing among other things that the trial court

erred by admitting the results of his State-administered breath test because his consent

to the test was not voluntary. We remanded the case for the trial court to reconsider

its ruling in light of the Supreme Court of Georgia’s decision in Elliott v. State, 305

Ga. 179 (824 SE2d 265) (2019), that a DUI suspect’s refusal to submit to a

State-administered breath test is not admissible against him. See Luna-Galacia v.

State, 349 Ga. App. XXIV (Case No. A18A2040, Mar. 4, 2019) (unpublished)

(“Luna-Galacia I”). The trial court subsequently ruled that Luna-Galacia’s breath test was admissible under the totality of the circumstances, and he appeals again. For

reasons that follow, we affirm.

We begin with the pertinent facts set forth in our prior opinion, which we will

supplement as needed to address the issues in this appeal:

[O]n July 17, 2016, at approximately 2:15 a.m., a police officer pulled over a truck that was failing to maintain its lane. The officer smelled a strong odor of alcohol coming from inside the vehicle, and he observed that the passenger had a beer in his lap. After the officer asked for identification, the driver — Luna-Galacia — gave him a New Mexico drivers license, and the officer asked him to exit the vehicle. Luna-Galacia’s eyes were watery and bloodshot, and the officer smelled alcohol on his breath. Luna-Galacia explained that he was driving his brother home but could not tell the officer the address. Luna-Galacia then offered to let the officer search the vehicle; the officer declined. When asked how many beers he had that night, Luna-Galacia initially stated that he had consumed 3 approximately “30 minutes to 40 minutes ago.” He then changed it to “three to four” before ultimately admitting he had six beers that night. The officer administered field sobriety tests to Luna-Galacia, who exhibited six out of six “clues” indicating impairment on the [horizontal gaze nystagmus, or “HGN”] test, four out of eight clues on the “walk and turn test,” and three out of four clues on the “one-leg stand test.”

Concluding that Luna-Galacia was impaired, the officer placed him under arrest, read him verbatim the statutorily mandated implied

2 consent, and asked if he would submit to a breath test. Luna-Galacia agreed, but asked if his license would be suspended. The officer told him he was not suspending his license, but asked again if Luna-Galacia would consent to the breath test, and he replied “Yes, I understand.” The officer then transported him to jail, where he administered the Intoxilyzer 9000 breath test on Luna-Galacia, which test showed a [blood alcohol concentration, or “BAC”] of 0.169 and 0.153 [in two separate readings five minutes apart].

Luna-Galacia I, slip op. at 2-4 (footnote omitted).

Luna-Galacia was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol with an

unlawful alcohol concentration (“DUI per se”), driving under the influence of alcohol

to the extent it was less safe for him to drive (“DUI less safe”), driving with a

suspended license, and failure to maintain his lane. Before trial, he moved in limine

to exclude the results of his breath test, arguing — as relevant here — that his consent

was invalid because the implied consent notice gave legally inaccurate information

and that the Intoxilyzer 9000 was not proven to be scientifically reliable. The trial

court denied the motion.

The case proceeded to a jury trial, where Luna-Galacia was found guilty of

DUI per se, DUI less safe, and driving without a valid license.1 The trial court merged

1 The jury found him not guilty of failure to maintain lane.

3 the two DUI convictions and sentenced Luna-Galacia to a total of twenty-four

months, to serve ten days in confinement and the remainder on probation. Luna-

Galacia filed a motion for new trial, arguing among other things that he did not

actually consent to the breath test. The trial court denied the motion, ruling that Luna-

Galacia did consent because “there was no evidence that [the officer] used fear,

intimidation, threat of physical punishment, or lengthy detention to obtain consent.”

Luna-Galacia appealed, arguing that the implied consent notice was misleading and

that his consent to the breath test was not voluntary. He also raised three other issues

— that the court should not have permitted the arresting officer to correlate his field

sobriety test results to specific blood alcohol levels, that the jury should have been

charged on the issue of the voluntariness of his breath test, and that the Intoxilyzer

9000 is not sufficiently reliable.

Addressing Luna-Galacia’s argument that “he was coerced into submitting to

a breath test because the language of the implied consent notice stated that a refusal

to submit to testing was admissible against him,” we noted that the trial court had

rejected this argument “without the benefit of the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in

Elliott[.]” Luna-Galacia I, slip op. at 5-6 (1). In particular, we highlighted the

Supreme Court’s acknowledgment in Elliott that its holding “‘may affect a

4 totality-of-the-circumstances inquiry into whether a defendant voluntarily submitted

to a breath test where the State first threatened that, if [he] refused, that would be

evidence against [him] at trial.’” Slip op. at 6 (1), quoting Elliott, 305 Ga. at 223 (IV)

(E). Accordingly, we remanded the case for the trial court to “reconsider its ruling on

Luna-Galacia’s motion for new trial in light of [the Supreme Court’s Elliott

holding].” Luna-Galacia I, slip op. at 6 (1). We did not address Luna-Galacia’s other

enumerations of error. Id. at 6 (2).

Following remand, the trial court entered a second order again denying

Luna-Galacia’s motion for new trial. The court concluded that

[t]here was no evidence presented, nor any other indication, that the possibility that evidence of a refusal could be used against [Luna-Galacia] factored into [his] decision to provide a breath sample. The only evidence before this Court indicates that the encounter between [the officer] and [Luna-Galacia] was cordial and free of intimidation and coercion; that [Luna-Galacia] understood the encounter, the nature of the Implied Consent Warning, and the reason for the request for a breath sample; and that [his] primary concern was the status of his license.

(Footnote omitted.) The court further found that Luna-Galacia “understood the

implied consent advisement and consented to the test, despite having an interpreter

5 assist him at trial.” Luna-Galacia appeals for a second time, challenging this new

ruling and also reiterating the enumerations of error that we declined to address in his

first appeal.

1. Luna-Galacia argues that his consent to the breath test “was not actual and

voluntary” because his English language skills were deficient, the implied consent

notice he was given was legally incorrect and misleading, he did not knowingly and

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