McCormick v. Municipality of Anchorage

999 P.2d 155, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 35, 2000 WL 276038
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMarch 10, 2000
DocketA-6557
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 999 P.2d 155 (McCormick v. Municipality of Anchorage) 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
McCormick v. Municipality of Anchorage, 999 P.2d 155, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 35, 2000 WL 276038 (Ala. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

As Modified on Rehearing

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

John McCormick was involved in a motor vehicle accident. When the police arrived on the scene, an officer asked McCormick to perform field sobriety tests. McCormick agreed to perform a horizontal gaze nystag-mus test, and the results from all six segments of the test indicated that McCormick was under the influence of alcohol. The officer next asked McCormick to perform two other tests: the turn-and-walk test, and the stand-on-one-leg test. McCormick refused to perform these tests. The officer then arrested McCormick for driving under the influence.

At McCormick’s trial, the Municipality introduced evidence that McCormick had refused to perform the latter two field sobriety tests. In this appeal, McCormick contends that the Municipality should not have been allowed to introduce evidence of, or comment on, McCormick’s refusal to perform these two field sobriety tests.

At the police station, McCormick submitted to a breath test. He then exercised his right to obtain an independent blood test at a local hospital. Hospital personnel drew two vials of McCormick’s blood. Soon thereafter, McCormick’s attorney contacted the hospital and directed them to send both vials to a laboratory in Colorado. The Municipality was not notified of this action..

Some months later, thinking that the blood sample was still at the hospital, the Municipality obtained a search warrant for the blood sample, contacted the hospital, and discovered that the blood had been sent away at the defense attorney’s direction. The Municipality then applied to the district court for an order directing the defense attorney to surrender any unused blood to the Municipality for testing. The district court issued this order. A portion of the blood was sent to the Municipality; when tested, this blood yielded a result of .125 percent alcohol. This test result was introduced at McCormick’s trial.

On appeal, McCormick contends that the district court should not have ordered McCormick’s attorney to surrender the remaining blood. McCormick argues that the Alaska Constitution bars a court from ordering a DWI defendant to produce a portion of the blood drawn during an independent test; he contends that any such order impermissi-bly burdens the defendant’s due process right to an independent test. McCormick also contends that, because the blood in question was in the possession of his attorney or his attorney’s agents (the laboratory in Colorado), the district court’s order infringed McCormick’s attorney-client privilege.

In addition, McCormick contends that the district court improperly prohibited him from arguing to the jury that they should distrust the government’s blood-test results because McCormick’s blood sample might have been mishandled or improperly preserved by the Colorado laboratory.

Finally, McCormick challenges one aspect of his sentence: the forfeiture of his vehicle.

*158 For the reasons explained here, we reject all of McCormick’s contentions and we affirm his conviction.

Can the government introduce evidence of, and comment on, a motorist’s refusal to perform field sobriety tests after the motorist is validly stopped on suspicion of driving while intoxicated?

As described above, McCormick refused to perform two of the field sobriety tests requested by the police officer. Before trial, McCormick asked the district court to exclude all evidence of his refusal to perform these two tests and to prohibit the government from commenting on McCormick’s refusal. The district court denied this request.

On appeal, McCormick renews his argument that the Municipality should not have been allowed to mention his refusal to perform the two field sobriety tests. McCormick advances three theories as to why this evidence was inadmissible.

McCormick first argues that the Alaska Legislature did not intend for the government to be able to use evidence of a motorist’s refusal to consent to field sobriety tests. He points out that, in AS 28.35.032(e), the legislature has expressly allowed the government to use evidence of a motorist’s refusal to submit to a breath test. 1 McCormick argues that the lack of any similar statute concerning field sobriety tests means that the legislature did not intend for the government to be able to use evidence of a motorist’s refusal to perform field sobriety tests.

We do not interpret AS 28.35.032(e) as impliedly limiting the government’s ability to introduce evidence of a motorist’s refusal to take field sobriety tests. Rather, this statute was enacted in order to make sure that the government could introduce evidence of a motorist’s refusal to submit to a breath test.

AS 28.35.032(e) was apparently passed in response to the Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in Puller v. Anchorage. 2 In Puller, the supreme court interpreted a former version of AS 28.35.032 that did not expressly state that a motorist’s refusal to take a breath test could be used as evidence against them. The court held that, in the absence of an express provision allowing the government to use evidence of a motorist’s refusal, the court would presume that the legislature intended to bar the government from using this evidence. 3 Two years later, the legislature enacted AS 28.35.032(e). 4

Both Puller and AS 28.35.032(e) are based on the premise that a motorist’s refusal to submit to the statutorily mandated breath test is a peculiar kind of evidence that should be treated differently for policy reasons. The government exerts unusual coercion on motorists to submit to the breath test, so unusual procedural safeguards should be satisfied before the government is allowed to use evidence of a motorist’s refusal to take the test. But this policy is itself atypical. Ordinarily, the government does not need statutory authorization to introduce circumstantial evidence of a person’s intoxication.

Both the Puller court and the legislature (when it enacted AS 28.35.032(e) in response to the Puller decision) treated breath-test refusal as sui generis — as a special type of evidence unto itself. Once the supreme court decided Puller, it is hardly surprising that the legislature perceived the need to enact a special statute to authorize the use of this type of evidence. But the enactment of this statute does not imply that the legislature intended to bar evidence that an arrested motorist declined to cooperate with investigative efforts in some other way.

For this reason, we conclude that AS 28.35.032(e) should not be read as broadly as McCormick suggests. This statute does not prohibit the government from introducing ev *159 idence of a motorist’s refusal to perform field sobriety tests. 5

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Bluebook (online)
999 P.2d 155, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 35, 2000 WL 276038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaskactapp-2000.