Reynolds II, Jerry Glenn

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 2006
DocketPD-1086-05
StatusPublished

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Reynolds II, Jerry Glenn, (Tex. 2006).

Opinion



IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS



NO. PD-1086-05
JERRY GLENN REYNOLDS, II, Appellant


v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS



ON APPELLANT'S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW

FROM THE SEVENTH
COURT OF APPEALS

LUBBOCK COUNTY

Price, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.

O P I N I O N



The appellant pled guilty to and was convicted of the misdemeanor offense of driving while intoxicated. He was sentenced to 150 days in jail, probated for twelve months, and a fine of $500. On appeal to the Amarillo Court of Appeals, he challenged the trial court's pre-trial ruling that, had the case gone to trial, the State would have been permitted to introduce evidence that the results of a breath test showed him to have a blood-alcohol level double the legal concentration sufficient to support a conviction. The appellant argued that the test results were inadmissible because the State was unable to show that the state trooper who conducted it was familiar with the science and technology that underlie the test. In a published opinion, the court of appeals rejected this argument. (1) We granted the appellant's petition for discretionary review to examine this holding, which he contends is in conflict with this Court's precedents. (2)

PROCEDURAL POSTURE

A full recitation of the facts of the case is unnecessary to our disposition. (3) The appellant filed several pre-trial motions seeking to ascertain whether the State would be permitted to introduce evidence of the breath test results. At a hearing on those motions, it was established that the arresting officer who administered the test, Department of Public Safety (DPS) Trooper Parker, was a certified Intoxilyzer 5000 operator. (4) It was also established that he had little or no understanding of the scientific principles behind the machine. The State was able to produce another witness, however, who was a certified technical supervisor for the Intoxilyzer 5000 and was responsible for overseeing the particular Intoxilyzer 5000 that Trooper Parker operated. She was familiar with the science and technology upon which it is based and had first-hand knowledge that it was maintained and in good working order on the date Trooper Parker used it to test the appellant. The trial court ruled that the breath test results would be admissible at trial. With that understanding, the appellant later entered a guilty plea, subject to an appeal of the trial court's pre-trial ruling.

On direct appeal, the appellant argued that the trial court erred. He relied upon a line of cases from this Court, culminating in Slagle v. State, in which we purportedly held that the operator of an apparatus for testing alcohol concentration via a suspect's breath must be able to demonstrate a working knowledge of the scientific theory behind the particular apparatus before the results of the test will be admissible. (5) The court of appeals rejected this contention, without even citing Slagle. Instead, the court of appeals expressly relied upon the first in the same line of cases, Hill v. State. (6) In Hill, we held that, for the results of a breath test to be admissible, the proponent need only demonstrate that the breath test operator and his apparatus must be "under the supervision of one who has an understanding of the scientific theory of the machine." (7) The appellant now argues that, by the time Slagle was decided, the Court had implicitly overruled Hill, and the court of appeals therefore erred to rely on it. We disagree, and find that the court of appeals' reliance on Hill was appropriate.

ANALYSIS

Hill versus Slagle

In Hill, we articulated "three essentials to the admissibility of evidence as to the results of [chemical breath] tests[.]" (8) The second "essential" was "[p]roof that the operator and the machine were under the periodic supervision of one who has an understanding of the scientific theory of the machine." (9) The appellant makes no argument that the testimony of the supervisor in this case would not have satisfied this essential.

In subsequent cases, the Hill articulation of the second essential was reworded, beginning with French v. State. (10) There, the Court paraphrased the second Hill essential: "the State must show . . . (2) the existence of periodic supervision over the machine and operation by one who understands the scientific theory of the machine[.]" (11) This reworking of the language could reasonably be read to require that the actual "operation" of the test be performed by "one who understands the scientific theory" involved. But that is by no means a necessary interpretation of the French paraphrase, (12) and in the context of the case it is clear that the Court did not intend to change the Hill standard. The Court meant only to reiterate the requirement that both the operator and machine be under the supervision of one who understands the scientific principles involved. There was no intent in French to hold that the operator must necessarily have such knowledge. (13) Unfortunately, the language of the Court's paraphrase injected an ambiguity, and it is this ambiguity that the appellant attempts to exploit in this case.

Our ambiguous paraphrase of Hill's second essential was carried over into a number of later opinions. (14) None of those cases involved an alleged failure of proof as to the scientific knowledge of the operator of the testing apparatus, however, and thus, none supports the proposition that this Court has ever unambiguously held that the operator of an apparatus for testing breath for blood-alcohol concentration must understand the scientific principle and/or technology underlying the particular test. Only Slagle unambiguously phrases the second Hill essential in such a way as to require that the operator have the requisite scientific knowledge. There, in purporting once again to paraphrase both Hill and its ambiguous progeny, we said that "[a] predicate for the admissibility of the results of a breathalyzer examination requires a showing that . . . (2) there has been periodic supervision over the machine and the machine was operated by an individual who understands its scientific theory[.]" (15) But Slagle

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