Smith v. State

83 P.3d 12, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 3, 2004 WL 42593
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 9, 2004
DocketA-8510
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 83 P.3d 12 (Smith v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. State, 83 P.3d 12, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 3, 2004 WL 42593 (Ala. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

Byron S. Smith appeals his conviction and sentence for felony driving while intoxicated (DWI). 1 Smith contends that he was subjected to an illegal investigative stop, and that all evidence flowing from that stop should have been suppressed. For the reasons explained here, we hold that the investigative stop was justified by the facts known to the police.

Smith also contends that his sentence is flawed because the superior court, relying on Smith’s prior felony DWI conviction from Arkansas, ruled that Smith was a second felony offender for presumptive sentencing purposes. Smith contends that the Arkansas definition of felony DWI is significantly different from the Aaska definition of felony DWI, and that therefore his Akansas conviction should not have been counted as a prior felony. For the reasons explained here, we agree with Smith that his Akansas felony conviction should not have been treated as a prior felony for presumptive sentencing purposes, and that Smith therefore should have been sentenced as a first felony offender.

The investigative stop was supported by reasonable suspicion to believe that Smith ^vas driving while intoxicated

At 8:18 p.m. on April 30th, 2002, the Ket-chikan Police Department received a telephone call reporting that “there was an intoxicated man getting into a white Toyota Tercel, Akansas license 599 GHN, on Mission Street near the Five and Dime store.” Officer Bryan Perez received this report, and he saw the Toyota parked at the side of the road as he turned onto Mission Street. A Officer Perez approached, the Toyota pulled away from the curb. Officer Perez then pulled over the Toyota.

Officer Perez approached the vehicle and made contact with Smith. Ater talking to Smith, Officer Perez determined that Smith was intoxicated. He arrested him for driving while intoxicated and transported him to the Ketchikan Police Department, where Smith submitted to a breath test. The breath test produced a reading of .225 percent breath alcohol concentration.

Smith had four prior convictions in Akan-sas for driving while intoxicated. Three of these prior convictions were misdemeanors, and one was a felony. Based on these prior convictions, the State indicted Smith for felony DWI.

Smith filed a motion to suppress all of the evidence that the police obtained during and after the investigative stop of his car. He claimed that the anonymous phone call to the police station did not provide reasonable suspicion to allow Officer Perez to stop his car. The superior court denied Smith’s motion. Smith renews his argument on appeal.

Smith’s ease is controlled by Effen-beck v. State. 2 In Effenbeck, a police dispatcher received a call from an anonymous informant who stated that “a brown Ford, Aaska license number B JL-777, stopped and bought fuel at a Union 76 station, then head *14 ed north on the Kenai Spur Highway, and that the driver was intoxicated.” 3 The dispatcher relayed this information to a Kenai police officer. 4 This officer eventually located the car in the parking lot of a bar. 5 When the car pulled back onto the highway, the officer immediately stopped it. 6 The traffic stop occurred twenty-two minutes after the dispatcher had relayed the information to the officer. 7

This court held that the traffic stop was supported by reasonable suspicion. 8 We concluded that it was reasonable to infer from the telephone report that a citizen informant had personally seen Effenbeck at a gas station and had concluded that Effenbeck was intoxicated. 9 We noted that the informant accurately described the car, and that the police located the car shortly thereafter. 10 We observed that “[wjhile a statement that a driver was intoxicated is in part conclusory, it is the kind of shorthand statement of fact that lay witnesses have always been permitted to testify to in court.” 11

Smith’s case is similar to Effenbeck. According to the telephone report received by the Ketchikan police, the informant saw an intoxicated man getting into a white Toyota. From the detail of the informant’s description of the vehicle and its current location, it was reasonable for the police to infer that the informant had a good view of Smith and was reporting something that he actually and recently saw. The report was certainly not stale. Officer Perez immediately spotted the Toyota, so he was able to corroborate the location of the Toyota. As we noted in Ef-fenbeck, a situation where the police receive a credible report that someone is driving while intoxicated requires immediate police action to prevent dangerous conduct and presents an exigent circumstance. The information that Officer Perez received was sufficiently credible to justify his stop of Smith’s car. We accordingly uphold Judge Thompson’s decision denying Smith’s motion to suppress.

Smith’s prior Arkansas conviction for felony driving while intoxicated should not have been treated as a prior felony for presumptive sentencing purposes

Smith had four prior DWI convictions from Arkansas; one of these convictions was entered in December 1993, two more were entered in January 1997, and the fourth was entered in December 1997. Smith concedes that, because of these prior DWI convictions from Arkansas, his current Alaska DWI offense was properly treated as a felony under AS 28.35.030(n). That is, Smith concedes that Arkansas’s definition of DWI is similar to Alaska’s, so that Arkansas DWI convictions constitute “prior convictions” under the definition contained in AS 28.35.030(r)(4). Because of this Smith further concedes that he had been convicted of DWI at least two times on or after January 1,1996, and within the ten years preceding his current Alaska DWI offense — the predicate for a charge of felony DWI under AS 28.35.030(n).

In Alaska, felony DWI is a class C felony. 12 A “second felony offender” — that is, a defendant who has one prior felony conviction 13 — is subject to a 2-year presumptive term. 14 The question in this case is whether Smith should have been treated as a second felony offender.

Smith’s fourth Arkansas DWI conviction was a felony under Arkansas law. Because of this, the Ketchikan superior court ruled that Smith was a second felony offender, and that Smith therefore faced a 2-year presumptive term.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 P.3d 12, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 3, 2004 WL 42593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-alaskactapp-2004.