Opinion No. Oag 2-88, (1988)

77 Op. Att'y Gen. 4
CourtWisconsin Attorney General Reports
DecidedJanuary 11, 1988
StatusPublished

This text of 77 Op. Att'y Gen. 4 (Opinion No. Oag 2-88, (1988)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. Oag 2-88, (1988), 77 Op. Att'y Gen. 4 (Wis. 1988).

Opinion

PHILIP J. FREEBURG, District Attorney Langlade County

You have requested my opinion on several issues relating to the timeliness of and standards for staying the evidentiary hearing afforded to individuals who have requested the opportunity to litigate the lawfulness of their refusal to submit to chemical testing under the implied consent law. Sec. 343.305, Stats. Paraphrasing your questions, you ask:

1. When should the refusal hearing be held?

2. Can the refusal hearing be stayed until after the trial on the substantive operating while intoxicated ("OWI") charge?

3. If the refusal hearing can be stayed until after the substantive OWI trial, is the issue of self-incrimination a proper ground for such a stay?

4. In order to grant a stay, must an individual meet a standard of an "actual and/or substantial possibility of self-incrimination?"

5. Is it necessary and/or allowable for a prosecutor to replace the privilege of self-incrimination with a grant of immunity in order to hold the refusal hearing prior to the substantive OWI trial?

Your request is apparently prompted by a recent determination by the circuit court in your county to stay a refusal hearing until after the trial for the substantive OWI charge in order to protect an individual's fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination. The argument favoring that determination would appear to be that the holding of a refusal hearing prior to the trial for the substantive *Page 5 OWI charge violates an individual's fifth amendment constitutional right against self-incrimination by forcing him/her either to waive that right or to forfeit his/her due process right to meaningful participation in the refusal hearing.

In my opinion, an individual's fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination need not be compromised by his/her testimony elicited at a refusal hearing. Consequently. a circuit court would not be required to stay a refusal hearing for this reason. To resolve a situation similar to the one which inspired your inquiry, it would therefore not be necessary to answer the remaining four questions. However, because the remaining questions involve matters of a recurring nature important to the prosecutors in the state, I choose to give each consideration in this opinion

Before addressing your particular questions, I find it useful to consider the statutory scheme within which the refusal hearing is but one part, as well as the nature and parameters of the refusal hearing itself.

A refusal hearing is "separate and distinct" from an OWI prosecution. Suspension of Operating Privileges of Bardwell,83 Wis.2d 891, 902, 266 N.W.2d 618, 623 (1978). The former is a "special proceeding," civil in nature, State v. Jakubowski,61 Wis.2d 220, 223-24, 212 N.W.2d 155, 156 n. 2 (1973), while the latter may be either a civil or a criminal proceeding depending on whether the defendant has been previously convicted of OWI within a prescribed period of time. Sec. 346.65 (2), Stats. Although they are not unrelated actions, for both arise out of the same basic occurrence, State v. Brooks, 113 Wis.2d 347, 354,335 N.W.2d 354 (1983), the two proceedings are often prosecuted in two different forums. This is particularly true when the substantive OWI is a first offense brought by a municipality, and the corresponding refusal proceeding, as it must, is prosecuted as a state proceeding in the circuit court by the district attorney. Bardwell 83 Wis.2d at 903; see sec. 343.305 (3)(b), Stats.

The issues to be considered at a refusal hearing are strictly limited to those specifically outlined in subsection 343.305 (3)(b)5, Stats. State v. Nordness, 128 Wis.2d 15, 29,381 N.W.2d 300 (1986). Consequently, the scope of the inquiry is limited to the following: *Page 6

1. Whether the officer had probable cause to believe that the person violated an impaired driving law and lawfully arrested him or her therefore;

2. Whether the officer complied with the statutory duty to inform the person about his or her obligations and rights under the implied consent law;

3. Whether the person refused to submit to testing requested by the officer.

"Reasonableness" of the refusal is not an issue at a refusal hearing. City of Prairie Du Chien v. Evans, 100 Wis.2d 358, 359 n. 2, 302 N.W.2d 61 (Ct.App. 1981).

The narrow view of the issues to be addressed at the refusal hearing also circumscribes the proof required of the prosecution to establish a refusal. First, the quantum of evidence necessary to establish the probable cause element exists when the totality of the circumstances within the arresting officer's knowledge at the time of the arrest would lead a reasonable police officer to believe that an individual probably committed an impaired driving offense. Nordness, 128 Wis.2d at 35. In analyzing the nature of this proof at a refusal hearing, the Wisconsin Supreme Court has utilized traditional notions of evidentiary analysis to establish probable cause:

We view the revocation hearing as a determination merely of an officer's probable cause, not as a forum to weigh the state's and the defendant's evidence. Because the implied consent statute limits the revocation hearing to a determination of probable cause — as opposed to a determination of probable cause to a reasonable certainty — we do not allow the trial court to weigh the evidence between the parties. The trial court, in terms of the probable cause inquiry, simply must ascertain the plausibility of a police officer's account.

Nordness, 128 Wis.2d at 36 (citations omitted). Second, the requirement that the prosecution must prove that the accused was informed of his/her obligations and rights as those are identified in the applied consent law is also typically established through the testimony of the officer that a form "informing the accused" was read to the driver and by the introduction of the actual form into evidence. Third, the prosecution must prove that the driver refused to submit to the test. Ordinarily, the refusal is expressed verbally by *Page 7 the accused, and the prosecutor's burden is discharged by eliciting testimony to that effect from the police officer.1

The preliminary background necessary to render the opinion now stated, I turn to the analysis of your specific questions.

Your first two questions require me to address the same issue — the timeliness of the refusal hearing. Section 343.305 fails to state when the refusal hearing should or must be held.

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