Luth v. Motor Vehicles Division

741 P.2d 897, 87 Or. App. 137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 2, 1987
DocketE85-1716; CA A37684
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 741 P.2d 897 (Luth v. Motor Vehicles Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luth v. Motor Vehicles Division, 741 P.2d 897, 87 Or. App. 137 (Or. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinions

[139]*139RICHARDSON, P. J.

Petitioner’s driver’s license was suspended, because he did not submit to a breath test pursuant to former ORS 482.541 (now ORS 813.410). He requested a hearing, and the Motor Vehicles Division upheld the suspension. The Circuit Court, on review of the hearings officer’s decision under former ORS 482.541(6), reversed the suspension. MVD appeals.

The judgment provides, in material part:

“1. The petitioner was not allowed an opportunity to candidly and confidentially communicate with his attorney before deciding whether or not to take the breath test due to the fact the police officer stood right next to him and was able to hear petitioner’s telephone conversation with his attorney.”

On the basis of that finding, the court concluded that petitioner did not refuse to take the breath test.

The facts are not disputed. A police officer arrested petitioner for driving under the influence of intoxicants. He stopped petitioner at 1:39 a.m., arrested him at 1:43 a.m. and took him to the police station, where they arrived about 1:55 a.m. Petitioner immediately asked to make a call to his attorney. The officer had not, at that time, requested that he take a breath test. Petitioner reached his attorney by telephone at approximately 2 a.m. Petitioner asked the officer if he was listening and the officer replied that he could hear what petitioner was saying. Petitioner’s attorney testified that he determined from petitioner that the officer could overhear petitioner’s side of the conversation and that he could not get all of the information that he needed in order to advise petitioner properly. He then talked to the officer and told him that he would come to the station in about “15 minutes or so.” The telephone call was completed at about 2:03 a.m. The officer said to the attorney on the telephone that he supposed that the attorney did not want him to question petitioner or do any tests. The attorney responded that that was correct.

At 2:28 a.m. the officer requested that petitioner take the breath test. Petitioner declined, saying, “I am not refusing the test. I am awaiting my attorney.” The attorney arrived at the station at 2:33 and talked to petitioner for a few minutes. The officer said, “If you’re trying to figure out whether or not [140]*140he should take the test, he’s already refused.” The officer had recorded the refusal as happening at 2:28 a.m.

The officer testified that, from his experience involving this particular attorney, the attorney would want to talk to his client for a period of time in private, and then the officer would have to begin a new 15-minute period of observation required for proper operation of the breath test equipment. Neither petitioner nor his attorney requested a breath test at any time. The attorney posted bail for petitioner, and both of them left the police station.

The arguments of both parties focus on an arrested person’s right to make a telephone call in State v. Newton, 291 Or 788, 636 P2d 393 (1981), as applied to a breath test refusal in Moore v. Motor Vehicles Division, 293 Or 715, 652 P2d 794 (1982). MVD argues that petitioner did in fact make a telephone call that satisfied the liberty delineated in Newton and Moore as the freedom to communicate and not to be held incommunicado. Petitioner, MVD contends, is not entitled to a Fifth or Sixth Amendment right to consult with counsel and receive advice before responding to a request that he take the breath test. Petitioner argues that his specific response to the officer’s request was not a refusal; rather, it was a request to await his attorney’s arrival. He also argues that he was entitled to a reasonable opportunity under Newton to communicate with his lawyer and that the failure of the officer to accord him that “right” means that his nonsubmission is not a refusal.

In Newton, the court delineated the liberty interest that an arrested person has as the freedom to make a telephone call, subject only to any lawful government restriction intended to serve public safety, such as the time, place and manner of the call. The court made it clear that the liberty interest that it identified under the Fourteenth Amendment is not a safeguard of the rights to counsel or professional advice under the Fifth or Sixth Amendments; consequently, the focus of the liberty interest is not on the content of the communication but on the fact of whether it is permitted. In other words, if the communication is not adequate — i.e., advice sought and received — there is no significance vis-a-vis the decision whether to submit to a breath test. The court concluded that it would be appropriate to suppress the breath test [141]*141taken by an arrested driver if the police had denied that person the opportunity to make a telephone call without lawful reason. However, the court did not order suppression, because the denial of a phone call had nothing to do with taking or refusing to take the test or its validity, and there was no evidence that suppression was needed to reform police practices of denying arrested persons a telephone call.

In Moore v. MVD, supra, the court addressed the liberty interest identified in State v. Newton, supra, as it relates to the refusal to submit to a breath test. The court said:

“A request to call a lawyer (or a relative or friend) is not in itself a refusal. It cannot be seized upon as a decisive event which ends the transaction between officer and arrestee as would non-submission or express non-refusal. On the other hand, an insistence on speaking to counsel under circumstances where to do so would significantly delay the testing would be non-submission constituting a refusal. * * *
“We hold that if an arrested person, upon being given the advice required by ORS 487.805(2)(a) and (b), does not submit promptly to the request, his non-submission is a refusal. We further hold that if the person requests to speak with an attorney, the request itself is not a refusal and the person must be afforded reasonable opportunity to do so unless or until it would interfere with effective administration of the test. For example, a person might be given opportunity to call during the 15-minute observation period without affecting the validity of the test. If a person requests to communicate and is afforded a reasonable opportunity to do so, consistent with the temporal requirements of the testing process, and the person does not submit to the test, that is a refusal.
“If an arrested person asks to speak to counsel, an unjustified failure to afford reasonable opportunity to do so would be a deprival of the person’s liberty, see Newton. In that situation, the person’s non-submission (i.e., refusal) would have resulted from a legally unauthorized procedure.” 293 Or at 723-24.

It is clear that the purpose of suppressing a breath test result or reversing a license suspension is not to enforce a Fifth or Sixth Amendment right to counsel.

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City of Roseburg v. Dykstra
854 P.2d 985 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1993)
Hoefling v. Motor Vehicles Division
799 P.2d 176 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1990)
Gildroy v. Motor Vehicles Division
786 P.2d 757 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1990)
Morgan v. Motor Vehicles Division
743 P.2d 774 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1987)
Luth v. Motor Vehicles Division
741 P.2d 897 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
741 P.2d 897, 87 Or. App. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luth-v-motor-vehicles-division-orctapp-1987.