Price v. Reed

725 P.2d 1254
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 24, 1986
Docket62195
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 725 P.2d 1254 (Price v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Reed, 725 P.2d 1254 (Okla. 1986).

Opinion

OPALA, Justice.

Under challenge here is the constitutionality of the implied consent law, 47 O.S. Supp.1982 § 754. 1 The questions presented are whether § 754, insofar as it appears to authorize a determination to be made— in a postacquittal driver’s license revocation hearing — that the arresting officer had reasonable grounds to believe the accused, while under the influence of alcohol, was in actual, physical control of a vehicle [1] violates the constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy by subjecting the licensee to a retrial of a criminal offense or to multiple punishments for its commission and [2] constitutes an impermissible encroachment either by the executive or the legislative branches upon powers that are constitutionally ascribed to the judiciary. We answer both questions in the negative.

Edward Price [Price] was arrested and charged with being in actual, physical control of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. He voluntarily submitted to a breath test. Its results showed that he had a blood-alcohol content of 0.18. Price then received notice his driver’s license would be suspended for ninety days. After Price had been acquitted of the charge in municipal court, the Commissioner of the Department of Public Safety [Department] revoked his driver’s license for a period of three months. Following an administrative hearing held at Price's request the revocation order was sustained.

Price appealed from the Department’s order to the district court. At a de novo trial, no controversy was tendered as to any of the four issues defined in 47 O.S. Supp.1982 § 754(5)(a). 2 Although the trial court found that Price had been in actual, physical control of a vehicle while his blood-alcohol content was over 0.10, it set aside the Department’s revocation order, declaring § 754 unconstitutional insofar as it may affect a person who was in actual, physical control of a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, because it violates Art. 2, § 21, Okl. Const. 3 and Art. 4, § 1, *1257 Okl. Const. 4 For the reasons to be stated, we reverse the trial court’s reinstatement of Price’s driver’s license.

I

A DRIVER’S LICENSE REVOCATION WHICH RESTS ON THE SAME FACTS AS AN EARLIER CRIMINAL CHARGE DOES NOT VIOLATE THE CONSTITUTIONAL GUARANTEE AGAINST DOUBLE JEOPARDY

Price argues that because his driver’s license revocation hearing before the Department followed his acquittal in municipal court on criminal charges arising from the same incident, he was impermissibly placed twice in jeopardy. We disagree.

Oklahoma’s prohibition against double jeopardy, Art. 2, § 21, Okl. Const., provides that'no one, “... after having been once acquitted by a jury, [shall] be again put in jeopardy of life or liberty for that of which he has been acquitted. Nor shall any person be twice put in jeopardy of life or liberty for the same offense.” The federal counterpart — the Fifth Amendment, U.S. Const. 5 — is applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. 6

Federal and state jurisprudence both recognize that three separate guarantees make up the double jeopardy clause. The provision affords protection from [1] a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal, [2] a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction and [3] multiple punishments for the same offense. 7

While the primary goal of barring retrial on a criminal charge after acquittal is to prevent the State from mounting successive prosecutions to wear down the defendant, 8 an acquittal is never a bar to a *1258 civil action that arises out of the same facts as those which formed the basis of the criminal offense. 9 No acquittal proves that the defendant is innocent; it merely reflects that there was a reasonable doubt in the jury’s mind as to his guilt. Moreover, an acquittal does not rule out the possibility that the government could show, by a preponderance of the evidence 10 adduced in a civil contest, that the acquitted criminal defendant, while under the influence of alcohol, was in actual, physical control of a motor vehicle. 11 The difference in the relative burdens of proof in criminal and civil actions makes the bar of collateral estoppel (issue preclusion) inapplicable. 12

In short, the double jeopardy clause does not raise an automatic barrier to the imposition of both a criminal and a civil sanction for the same act or omission. 13 Double jeopardy would be invoca-ble here only if [1] the driver’s license revocation sanction were intended and did qualify as “punishment” so that the proceeding to revoke was essentially a criminal retrial 14 or [2] the sanction were so *1259 punitive either in purpose or in effect as to transform what may have been intended as a civil remedy into a criminal penalty.

In Robertson v. State ex rel. Lester 15 we held that a driver’s license revocation hearing under the implied consent law then in force was an administrative proceeding, civil/regulatory in nature and distinct from any criminal charge. Later-enacted amendments to § 754 have not altered the essential character of that hearing. 16 Furthermore, a criminal trial exacts a personal pénalty from a convicted defendant in the form of a fine or incarceration, while a postacquittal proceeding to assess one’s continued eligibility for a driver’s license (as a result of noncompliance with the implied consent law) addresses a person’s continued fitness to hold a license. 17

Price relies on Johnson v. State 18 — a case decided entirely in the context of the criminal process — and seeks to apply its language to the regulatory proceeding here by (a) equating the revocation hearing to a criminal trial and (b) characterizing the temporary revocation of his license as a “penalty” because his employment makes travel necessary.

Having earlier rejected the theory that a revocation hearing is the equivalent of a criminal trial, we likewise recede from the notion that a temporary revocation of one’s driver’s license is a form of criminal punishment which implicates the fundamental law’s protection against double jeopardy.

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Bluebook (online)
725 P.2d 1254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-reed-okla-1986.