Nevers v. State, Department of Administration, Division of Motor Vehicles

123 P.3d 958, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 149, 2005 WL 2812747
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 2005
DocketS-11399
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 123 P.3d 958 (Nevers v. State, Department of Administration, Division of Motor Vehicles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nevers v. State, Department of Administration, Division of Motor Vehicles, 123 P.3d 958, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 149, 2005 WL 2812747 (Ala. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

After an Alaska state trooper stopped a car for a broken headlight on the Parks Highway, the driver fled the scene on foot. The police eventually tracked him to a Wasil-la residence. Officers entered the home without a warrant and arrested the driver for driving while intoxicated. The driver refused to submit to a chemical breath test, and the Division of Motor Vehicles revoked his license for three years. The driver appeals, challenging' the warrantless entry and search of his home as violations of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and article I, sections 14 and 22 of the Alaska Constitution, and arguing that evidence obtained against him as a result of the search must be suppressed pursuant to the exclusionary rule. The hearing officer ruled that, the exclusionary rule does not apply to license revocation proceedings. The superior court affirmed. Because we hold that the exclusionary rule does not apply to driver’s license revocation proceedings, we affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

At about 7:20 p.m. on March 2, 2002, Alaska State Trooper Nathan Bucknall observed a red Subaru with a broken headlight. Trooper Bucknall attempted to stop the vehicle, giving chase for a quarter mile as the vehicle swerved across both lanes of traffic. The Subaru then pulled over onto the shoulder and drove for another one-to two-hundred feet, at which point the driver stopped *960 the car and fled on foot. The Subaru was registered to David Nevers.

Trooper Bucknall found two male passengers inside the vehicle, Jon Fleming and Robert Kull. The car smelled of alcohol and was littered with beer cans and bottles. Both passengers smelled of alcohol, had bloodshot and watery eyes, and swayed when talking to the officer. Upon questioning, Fleming stated that he did not know the driver, and Kull explained that they had been picked up while hitchhiking home. Fleming appears to have been less than truthful about not knowing the driver. David A. Nevers, who the police later identified as the driver, was renting a room in Fleming’s house.

Trooper Bucknall took Fleming into custody based on an existing warrant for his arrest, while Trooper Doug Cook, who had arrived on the scene within two to three minutes of the stop, tracked the driver by following his footprints in the snow. While following these tracks Trooper Cook found a three-day non-resident fishing license issued to David A. Nevers lying in the snow. After following the footprints for one hour and fifteen minutes, Trooper Cook reached the front parking lot of a bar. The bartender said that a person matching the description of the driver of the Subaru had come into the bar and called for a cab, saying that his ear had broken down a few miles away. The individual had a gash across his nose and told the bartender that he was from New Hampshire. Trooper Cook conveyed this information to Trooper Bucknall.

After arresting Fleming on the existing warrant, Trooper Bucknall drove to the Was-illa address where the cab company had dropped off the suspect. At the address, Trooper Bucknall observed tracks matching those of the driver of the red Subaru leading to an open back door which led into an attached garage. Bucknall learned from a passerby that the house belonged to Jon Fleming. Trooper Bucknall, joined by Was-illa police officers, knocked on the garage door and, when nobody answered, he entered the garage and then knocked on the house door inside the garage. Receiving no response, Trooper Bucknall and the Wasilla police officers entered the residence and conducted a room-to-room search.

The officers found an individual asleep on the couch in the front room of the house. Trooper Bucknall recognized the person as the driver of the red Subaru. The individual presented a New Hampshire driver’s license that identified him as David A. Nevers. The officers also found fresh vomit in the bathroom and observed that Nevers’s boots were wet.

Trooper Bucknall questioned Nevers, who denied that he had been driving that night but also said that his car had not been stolen. Nevers said he had been drinking at home and had placed the empty beer cans with the garbage at the front of the house. However, Trooper Bucknall reported that he found only one empty alcohol container, an old beer can, on the front porch, and that the garbage bags were old, undisturbed and covered with snow.

Trooper Bucknall gave Nevers a field sobriety test at roughly 9:40 p.m. Nevers had trouble standing and understanding instructions. Nevers passed the alphabet test but failed to complete the numbers test, and submitted to a portable breath test at 9:48 p.m., roughly two hours and eighteen minutes after the initial stop. The portable test disclosed a breath alcohol concentration of 0.158%. Bucknall then arrested Nevers for driving, while intoxicated (DWI), 1 and the officers had to use pepper-spray on Nevers because he became belligerent and combative, threatening to kill the officers. Bucknall took Nevers to the Alaska State Troopers’ Palmer Post for a Datamaster breath alcohol concentration test, but Nevers refused to give an adequate breath sample 2 at 10:37 p.m., which was only forty-three minutes from expiration of the four-hour limit provided by AS 28.35.030(a)(2). Bucknall then charged Nevers with refusal to provide a breath sample and read him a Notice and Order of Revocation.

*961 B. Proceedings

The Division of Motor Vehicles administratively revoked Nevers’s license to drive. Nevers sought administrative review of the department’s action under AS 28.15.166. Nevers appeared before hearing officer Rebecca Janik and argued that the evidence seized at the house, namely his breath sample, should be excluded because “[t]he police entered [Nevers’s] home without consent, without a warrant, there were no exigent circumstances, and interdicted him nearly two hours after they suspected he was the person that fled the vehicle by the side of the road.” Nevers argued that because warrant-less entry into a home is per se unreasonable, the search was improper absent either exigent circumstances or some other exception to the warrant requirement. Nevers maintained that because exigent circumstances did not exist and no other exception applied, the evidence must be suppressed.

Relying on AS 28.15.166(g), the hearing officer ruled that the administrative hearing was limited to two principal issues: whether the arresting officer had probable cause to believe that Nevers was driving and whether Nevers refused a breath test. The hearing officer ruled that constitutional issues could not be raised in an administrative hearing. Because the hearing officer found that the trooper had reasonable grounds to conclude that Nevers operated a motor vehicle while under the influence, and that he refused the breath test, she found that the division’s decision to suspend Nevers’s license should be affirmed. Despite her ruling that constitutional issues cannot be raised at an administrative hearing, the hearing officer nevertheless made alternative findings regarding Nevers’s constitutional claims.

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Bluebook (online)
123 P.3d 958, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 149, 2005 WL 2812747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nevers-v-state-department-of-administration-division-of-motor-vehicles-alaska-2005.