Kirschwing v. Farrar

166 P.2d 154, 114 Colo. 421, 1946 Colo. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 28, 1946
DocketNo. 15,661.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 P.2d 154 (Kirschwing v. Farrar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirschwing v. Farrar, 166 P.2d 154, 114 Colo. 421, 1946 Colo. LEXIS 204 (Colo. 1946).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Jackson

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant in error, Farrar-, employed as a police officer of Denver for approximately eighteen years, was dismissed by Robert J. Kirschwing, manager of safety and excise of the City and County of Denver, for having been under the influence of intoxicating liquor while on duty March 2, 1944. On his petition for review and appeal from the findings of the manager of safety, the Civil Service Commission of the city and county sustained the dismissal. Farrar thereupon instituted this action in the Denver district court, and after a trial to the court, an order was entered reinstating Farrar on the ground “that there was a failure in the proof * * * to sustain the charges made against plaintiff.” The manager of safety comes here on writ of error, asking for supersedeas and also that the case be determined on the supersedeas application. We have elected so to dispose of it.

The evidence shows that Farrar, a patrolman first class in the Denver police department, was found by [423]*423other police officers on or about midnight March 2, 1944, in full uniform, at a time when he was on duty, at the corner of 17th and Larimer streets, Denver, in an unconscious condition. He was lying face downward; had a large bruise on one cheek; there was a skin abrasion on his chin, and the pupils of his eyes were widely dilated. His superior officer, Captain Raedel, was summoned, and, under his direction, Farrar was picked up and taken to the police station and later to the Denver General Hospital where- a blood alcohol test was made, also pursuant to Captain Raedel’s direction. The result of this test disclosed “Alcohol 3.9 mg. per cc of Blood,” which, according to the evidence, is considered sufficient in most humans to induce a high state of intoxication. The police officers who had either discovered Farrar in an unconscious condition or had participated in taking him to the police station, and subsequently to the hospital, testified on the hearing before the manager of safety that they did not believe he had an “alcoholic breath.” Captain Raedel’s testimony was, “I found an odor of some foreign substance, wasn’t liquor.” Dot Malone, head nurse, emergency room, Denver General Hospital, testified, “There was an odor, but I couldn’t tell what it was.” Dr. Crum, who withdrew the blood for the alcohol test, testified that he did not notice any odor of alcohol on Farrar’s breath, but believed he was drunk.

Farrar’s defense was that at about the midnight that ushered in March 2, 1944, he was suffering from an epileptic seizure of the grand mal type; that he had become unconscious once before just after going off duty the morning of December 16, 1943. There was evidence to show that he had been ordered not to drive a car, and that other police officers always took the driver’s seat when they started out with him in police cars.

The trial court’s reversal of the police commissioner and the Denver Civil Service Commission was founded on its belief that their respective actions were based on [424]*424the blood alcohol test; that the proof of that test was inaccurate; that it was open to the faults which were held to exist in Cobianchi v. People, 111 Colo. 298, 141 P. (2d) 688. It therefore relied on the testimony that there was “no liquor” on Farrar’s breath, either at the time he was picked up at 17th and Larimer streets or at the time the blood was alleged to have been taken from him at the Denver General Hospital, and held that the manager abused his discretion and “that there was a failure in the proof offered.”

. Kirschwing and the commission specify that the trial court erred: (a) In holding that Kirschwing and the commission acted arbitrarily and capriciously in discharging Farrar; (b) in holding that the charges against Farrar were not substantially supported by the evidence and there was a failure of proof to sustain the charges against Farrar; (c) in ordering the restoration of plaintiff to the status of patrolman first grade in the classified service of the City and County of Denver.

The blood alcohol test has been upheld in two recent cases. State v. Cram (Ore.), 160 P. (2d) 283 (June 19, 1945), was a criminal case in which the defendant unsuccessfully urged a constitutional objection to the use of the blood alcohol test. Simultaneously, in Hanlon v. Woodhouse, 113 Colo. 504, 160 P. (2d) 998, we had before us a civil action for damages as a result of an automobile collision in which evidence was introduced of a test for alcohol in the blood of defendant, who had been taken to a hospital and, while still unconscious, blood was withdrawn from his veins “to be tested for blood alcohol” at the request of a public officer who had been summoned to the scene of the accident. Both the physician in charge and the laboratory technician testified that the analysis showed sufficient blood alcohol to cause a state of drunkenness in the average person. Objection made at the trial to the admission of the evidence was overruled by the trial judge, and we sustained that ruling. There the objec[425]*425tion was on the ground that the confidential relation between physician’ and patient had been violated.

In 127 A. L. R. 1513, and 159 A. L. R. 209, appear interesting annotations on “admissibility and weight of evidence based on scientific test for intoxication or presence of alcohol in system.”

In the instant case the objection to the blood alcohol test is made on the ground that it was subject to the same objection as the test for pregnancy which was before us in Cobianchi v. People, supra. In that case the doctor could not state of his own knowledge that the urine used in the test was that of the deceased. In the instant case we have the testimony of the doctor who actually withdrew from Farrar’s veins the blood that was used in the test. In the Cobianchi test some of the deceased’s urine was injected into the veins of a female rabbit, and the doctor in charge testified that, from the inspection of the rabbit’s ovaries twenty-four hours later, the result of the test was positive; but on cross-examination, it appeared that none of the witnesses could state positively from his or her knowledge that the rabbit used for the test was (1) a virgin, (2), if so, that it had not been in proximity to a male rabbit, (3) that it was within the required age limits, and (4) of the proper weight. It was admitted that all four conditions had to exist to make the test complete. Furthermore, it was brought out that, although the rabbit used fulfilled all four requirements, the test even then was not absolute proof of pregnancy because a gonadial tumor would cause the same reaction as pregnancy and there was no testimony that deceased did not have such a tumor. In addition to all of the foregoing, the physician, who had been called in after the alleged abortion and had curetted deceased, testified that he found no placental tissue which he would expect to find after an abortion. We accordingly held that the fact of pregnancy, which was a prerequisite to a conviction of murder from abortion, had not been established.

[426]*426In the instant case, in addition to the testimony of the doctor who withdrew the blood, there is thé testimony of his assistant who held the test tube into which Farrar’s blood was poured and who then made a record on the hospital’s printed form on which she filled in the date, time of withdrawal, name, and who requested the examination, the doctor’s name who drew the blood, and the laboratory technician’s name.

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Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 154, 114 Colo. 421, 1946 Colo. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirschwing-v-farrar-colo-1946.