Owens v. Motor Vehicles Division

875 P.2d 463, 319 Or. 259, 1994 Ore. LEXIS 57
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1994
DocketCC CC91-25; CA A71116; SC S40687
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 875 P.2d 463 (Owens v. Motor Vehicles Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owens v. Motor Vehicles Division, 875 P.2d 463, 319 Or. 259, 1994 Ore. LEXIS 57 (Or. 1994).

Opinion

*261 UNIS, J.

This case involves the scope of a Motor Vehicles Division (MVD) license suspension hearing under ORS 813.410(5). 1 Specifically, the issue presented in this case is whether the accuracy of the result of a chemical breath test administered to determine the blood alcohol content of a driver, who has been arrested for driving a commercial motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicants (DUII), may be challenged (impeached) if the person who administers the testis qualified to administer the test under ORS 813.160 and if the methods, procedures, and equipment used in the test comply with the requirements of ORS 813.160. We hold that it may not.

The facts in this case are not in dispute. Maurice Owens was arrested and charged with driving a commercial motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicants. After being taken to the Wasco County jail, Owens was informed of his rights concerning a chemical test of his breath to determine the alcohol content of his blood and the consequences of refusing to take the test. See ORS 813.100, ORS 813.130 (providing procedures). Owens agreed to take the test. The test was administered by a properly qualified person. The methods, procedures, and equipment (Intoxilyzer) used in the test complied with all applicable statutory requirements and administrative rules. The digital display readout on the Intoxilyzer breath testing machine showed a numeric result of a blood alcohol content in Owens’ blood of 0.04 percent by weight.

Owens timely requested an MVD hearing to avert automatic suspension of his commercial driver’s license. 2 At *262 the hearing, Owens called Bigelow, a microbiologist, as an expert witness. Bigelow’s background included training in the calibration and use of Intoxilyzer breath testing machines. Bigelow testified, without objection, that the light emitting mode readout on the Intoxilyzer displays three digits. Owens’ lawyer then asked Bigelow, “What would the potential for error be then in a circumstance when the particular machine was reading .01 high?” 3 The hearings officer refused to allow Bigelow to answer that question because he did not believe that the answer would be relevant to any issue that was within the scope of a license suspension hearing as set forth in ORS 813.410(5), the text of which is set out infra.

Owens’ lawyer then made an offer of proof by stating on the record what he expected Bigelow would have testified if permitted to answer. 4 According to Owens’ lawyer, Bigelow would testify that (1) “since the Oregon Administrative Rules provide for a maximum of a .010 for certification and a minimal [sic] of .020, * * * without usingthe third digit on the Intoxilyzer, * * * you present the possibility of a 90 percent error when * * * usingthe piece of equipment,” and (2) “the error factor, in a .01 for a test to a .04 seems [excessive] given the fact that it represents 25 percent of the entire amount necessary for the suspension. And he would have explained from a scientific standpoint, probably, that 25 percent is too large a margin of error to be acceptable for scientific purposes.”

At the conclusion of the hearing, the hearings officer issued an order suspending Owens’ driver’s license for one year pursuant to ORS 813.410(2). Owens sought review in *263 the circuit court under ORS 813.410(7). The circuit court vacated the MVD order, holding that it was invalid. The circuit court reasoned that evidence regarding the accuracy of the Intoxilyzer had been improperly excluded and that, because the result of Owens’ breath test had been borderline of the legal blood level of alcohol and the machine used on Owens had registered inaccuracies in the previous year, the Intoxilyzer test did not disclose “that [Owens] had a .04 [percent] blood alcohol.”

On review, the Court of Appeals, sitting in banc, affirmed the circuit court’s judgment and remanded the case to MVD with instructions to allow Owens to introduce evidence about the accuracy and precision of the Intoxilyzer. Owens v. MVD, 122 Or App 108, 857 P2d 144 (1993). The majority opinion held:

“[N]othing in ORS 813.160 suggests that the legislature intended a breath testing machine to create an irrebuttable presumption by displaying a particular result on its digital readout. A driver who faces a license suspension is entitled to try to prove that that result does not reflect the true facts.” Id. at 113.

Judge Leeson, in a dissenting opinion joined by three other members of the Court of Appeals, disagreed. She would have held that evidence impeaching the accuracy of a breath test is not relevant to whether the breath test “disclosed [an unlawful] level of alcohol in the person’s blood” if the person administering the test was qualified to administer the test under ORS 813.160 and if the methods, procedures, and equipment used in the test complied with the requirements of ORS 813.160. Id. at 113-16 (Leeson, J., dissenting). Because there is no dispute in this case that the test was administered by a properly qualified person and that the methods, procedures, and equipment used in the breath test administered to Owens complied with the requirements of ORS 813.160, Judge Leeson would have held that “[t]he only evidence relevant to what the breath test disclosed is the test result itself.” Id. at 115.

We allowed MVD’s petition for review and now reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the circuit court. We affirm MVD’s order of suspension.

*264 The scope of an MVD license suspension hearing is defined in ORS 813.410(5), which provides:

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Bluebook (online)
875 P.2d 463, 319 Or. 259, 1994 Ore. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-motor-vehicles-division-or-1994.