Sales v. State

723 N.E.2d 416, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 86, 2000 WL 136156
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 2000
Docket08S02-0001-CR-29
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 723 N.E.2d 416 (Sales v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sales v. State, 723 N.E.2d 416, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 86, 2000 WL 136156 (Ind. 2000).

Opinion

ON PETITION TO TRANSFER

BOEHM, Justice.

This case deals with the interpretation of a 1997 amendment to Indiana Code § 9-30-5-l(a) which criminalized operating a vehicle “with atdeast ten-hundredths percent (0.10%) of alcohol by Weight in grams in: ... two hundred ten (210) liters of the person’s breath.” We hold that prosecutions under this section, which has since been amended to eliminate any ambiguity, may proceed upon proof of operating a vehicle with .10 grams of alcohol in 210 liters of the person’s breath.

*418 Factual and Procedural Background

On January 10, 1998, Mark Sales was stopped by police for failing to yield the right-of-way. He was later administered a breath test that showed “.14 grams of alcohol per 210 liters of breath.” Sales was charged with a violation of section (2) of Indiana Code 9-30-5, “Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated.” The State later added Count II, operating a vehicle with .10 percent of alcohol in blood in violation of section 1(a)(1), and Count III, operating a vehicle with .10 percent alcohol in breath in violation of section 1(a)(2). Sales moved to suppress the results of the breath test, and the trial court denied the motion. At the same time, the trial court sua sponte dismissed Count III in a ten-page order in which it reasoned that a conviction under section 1(a)(2) required a level of alcohol intake that was so great that it was physically and medically impossible. The Court of Appeals did not find the statute to demand a lethal dose of alcohol but affirmed the dismissal of Count III on the ground that Sales’ breathalyzer result produced only a .06 reading as it understood the calculation under the statute. See Sales v. State, 714 N.E.2d 1121, 1128 (Ind.Ct.App.1999). We granted transfer on January 18, 2000.

The Competing Interpretations of the Statute

Indiana’s first statute criminalizing the operation of a motor vehicle while intoxicated was enacted in 1939. See Acts 1939, c. 48, s. 52(b). Not until 1978 did the legislature attempt to provide a means of measuring intoxication. See Pub.L. No. 2-1978, § 927, 1978 Ind. Acts 208. That law provided that a .10% blood-alcohol content was prima facie evidence of intoxication. In 1983, operating a vehicle with that level was criminalized. See Pub.L. No. 143-1983, § 1, 1983 Ind. Acts 989. The 1983 statute provided: “A person who operates a vehicle with ten-hundredths percent (.10%), or more, by weight of alcohol in his blood commits a Class C misdemeanor.” This language remained essentially the same until it was amended in 1997 to read as follows:

A person who operates a vehicle with at least ten-hundredths percent (0.10%) of alcohol by weight in grams in:
(1) one hundred (100) milliliters of the person’s blood; or
(2) two hundred ten (210) liters of the person’s breath; commits a Class C misdemeanor.

Pub.L. No. 33-1997, § 7, 1997 Ind. Acts 1357 (codified as amended at Ind.Code § 9-30-5-1(a) (1998)).

The assumption underlying this provision is, as the Court of Appeals observed, that the weight of alcohol in one unit of volume (milliliters are typically used) of a person’s blood is equivalent to the weight of alcohol present in 2100 units of the same person’s breath. See Sales v. State, 714 N.E.2d 1121, 1124 n. 5 (Ind.Ct.App.1999). Before the 1997 amendment introduced breath alcohol content as a per se violation, law enforcement officials nonetheless used a machine that measured alcohol in breath, not in blood. The trial court’s order quotes the following language from a Department of Toxicology 1 memorandum explaining the proposed 1997 amendment: “The proposed change amends the current blood alcohol concentration standard (percent of alcohol, by weight in grams) to include grams of alcohol per 210 liters of breath as well as grams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood.” As the trial court observed, the intent of the 1997 amendment was to adopt the 2100:1 standard and to make clear that breath content itself was a basis for prosecution, as a majority of states had already done.

The trial court concluded that the language of the statute did not do the job and dismissed Count III, operating a vehicle *419 “with at least ten hundredths percent (.10%) of alcohol by weight in his breath.” This result was produced by the trial court’s detailed calculations which concluded that in order to violate the statute the fluid in a person’s veins would have to be 210% alcohol. It is obviously impossible to reach an alcohol content above 100%, and the process would produce death long before that level is reached.

The Court of Appeals also found the statute to be clear on its face but to demand a different calculation. It concluded:

As written, to be convicted under the breath-alcohol provision a person must have .10% by weight of alcohol in grams in 210 liters of his breath. To express the weight of alcohol as a percentage of 210 liters of breath, we would divide the weight of alcohol by 210, then multiply by 100 to obtain a “percentage.”

Id at 1128. Application of this formula to Sales’ Intoxilyzer 5000 reading of “.14 grams of alcohol per 210 liters of breath” yields .0667%, 2 which is less than the .10% necessary for a conviction under the statute.

We believe both the trial court’s and the Court of Appeals’ calculations reflect heroic but ultimately failed efforts to make sense of an inherently ambiguous provision. The statutory language at face value asks for a calculation of the “percent” of a number of grams (a unit of weight) found in a number of liters (a unit of volume). It is, of course, sensible to speak of the number of grams of alcohol found in a given volume of blood or breath. It is not meaningful to speak of a number of grams as a “percent” of a number of liters, at least as “percent” would be understood by one accustomed to dealing with numbers. The two- are not qualitatively the same thing and neither is a portion of the other’s whole. To be sure, the relationship between any two numbers, may be stated as-a ratio (or one as a percent of the other). But when different units, of measure are attached to the two numbers, the arithmetic relationship of the numbers can become nonsensical if “percent” means what it means in ordinary usage. In simple terms, one apple is not any “percent” of two oranges as the term is commonly understood.

This is not the end of the story, however. The term “percent” is used in some circles to refer to a measure of weight in relation to volume, and not to its commonly understood mathematical meaning. We are told this derives from the usage of the term by laboratory technicians as a shorthand method of referring to the strength of a solution of a liquid or solid dissolved in a liquid.

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Bluebook (online)
723 N.E.2d 416, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 86, 2000 WL 136156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sales-v-state-ind-2000.