Snyder v. State, Department of Public Safety, Division of Motor Vehicles

31 P.3d 770, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 141, 2001 WL 1148949
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 2001
DocketS-9035
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 P.3d 770 (Snyder v. State, Department of Public Safety, Division of Motor Vehicles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. State, Department of Public Safety, Division of Motor Vehicles, 31 P.3d 770, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 141, 2001 WL 1148949 (Ala. 2001).

Opinions

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Dennis Snyder was convicted of driving while intoxicated and refusal to take a breath alcohol test, but in a previous decision we determined that Snyder's due process rights were violated by the police's failure to allow Snyder to obtain an independent blood alcohol test. We reversed and remanded both criminal convictions, instructing the lower court to presume that the results of such a blood test would have been favorable to Snyder. In a separate proceeding arising from the same incident, the Department of Public Safety revoked Snyder's driver's license for refusal to take a breath aleohol test. Snyder now argues that the license revocation should be reversed, claiming in part that the presumption that he would have passed a blood test should have precluded the hearing officer from finding that he refused the breath test. Because the hearing officer's conclu[772]*772sion that Snyder refused a breath test would not have been affected by the presumption that Snyder would have passed a blood test, we affirm the revocation of his license.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

In March 1998 an Alaska State Trooper found Dennis Snyder, apparently intoxicated, trying to extricate his car from a snow berm. Snyder's subsequent failure to complete a breath aleohol test resulted in two legal actions: a criminal case and the revocation of license case now before us. We considered Snyder's appeal of his eriminal convictions for driving while intoxicated (DWI) and refusing to submit to a breath test (refusal) in Snyder v. State (Snyder I) in 1996.1 The following facts are reproduced from that opinion:

On the night of March 20, 1998, Alaska State Trooper Sgt. Charles Lovejoy found Snyder in his car, which had slid into a snow berm at an intersection. According to Lovejoy, Snyder did not appear to have been injured in the mishap and did not complain of pain. Lovejoy suspected that Snyder had been drinking and therefore administered a number of field sobriety tests. He then placed Snyder under arrest for DWI.
Alaska State Trooper Dixie Spencer drove Snyder from the scene of the arrest to the police station. While driving to the station, Snyder requested that Spencer take him to a nearby hospital for a blood test of his alcohol level. Spencer refused this request, believing that an arrestee was required to submit to a breath test before a blood test could be administered.
At the station, Spencer asked Snyder to take a breath test by blowing into the Intoximeter machine. Snyder made four purported attempts to blow into the machine. However, despite Spencer having twice read the implied consent warnings to Snyder, and despite Spencer's repeated instructions to Snyder about how to blow into the machine's tube and how long to sustain his breath, Snyder never provided an adequate breath sample.
After Snyder had thrice blown unsue-cessfully into the tube, Spencer advised him that he could try "one more time." When Snyder again failed to provide an adequate breath sample, Spencer told him, "All right, Dennis, we'll just charge you with refusal." Snyder objected [, claiming that he had followed instructions and blown into the Intoximeter, but that the machine was broken.] He then offered to take the test again: "I'll blow again, ... It's not over, one more time." Spencer had already pressed the print button on the Intoximeter; a further test would have required a five-minute wait. Spencer terminated the session and charged Snyder with DWI and Refusal. A short time later Snyder again requested a blood test; the police again denied his request.2

Snyder now claims that he was unable to provide a breath sample because of chest injuries sustained in colliding with the snow bank. A doctor's affidavit confirms that Snyder's ribs were bruised and that one rib may have sustained a hairline crack in the accident. In the doctor's opinion, it is "very possible that a person such as Dennis Snyder who has suffered a bruised chest and/or cracked one or more ribs may experience such pain [as to be] unable to exhale enough air to complete an Intoximeter test." However, it does not appear that the doctor had any familiarity with the Intoximeter machine. Snyder did not seek medical attention for four days after the breath test, and both police officers who interacted with Snyder testified that he never mentioned a chest injury or pain. A half-hour videotape of the tests shows Snyder conversing and walking around the room, but never complaining of chest pain. In the video, he claims to have blown into the Intoximeter and insists that the machine must be broken.3

[773]*773B. Snyder's Criminal Case

In 1994 Snyder was convicted of DWI and refusal to take a breath aleohol test, and he appealed the convictions to this court,. We reversed both Snyder's DWI and refusal convictions and remanded for further proceedings.4 With regard to Snyder's DWI conviction, we held that the State's failure to honor Snyder's request for an independent blood test violated due process, regardless of whether Snyder refused to take a breath test.5 We observed that "[al typical remedy employed in cases where evidence is obtained in violation of a defendant's rights is the exclusion of that evidence."6 But because there was no evidence to exclude, and because we were not persuaded that outright dismissal of the case was warranted "in light of the fact that the jury convicted Snyder of DWI on the basis of admissible evidence which Snyder had an opportunity to rebut, albeit not with the potentially most exculpatory evidence," 7 we crafted a different remedy. We ordered that, "on remand, the superior court should presume that the independent blood test Snyder sought, if provided, would have been favorable to him." 8

We indicated that our reversal on due process grounds of Snyder's DWI conviction was not directly relevant to Snyder's refusal conviction, stating in a footnote that "[rlefusal of the chemical breath test is a criminal act irrespective of any request for or submission to a blood test." 9 However, we reversed the refusal conviction on other grounds: Snyder was improperly denied a jury instruction on the defense of subsequent consent.10 Because a rational juror could have found that Spyder was sincere in his fifth offer to take the test even if he was not sincere in his first four offers and alleged attempts, we concluded that the superior court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that subsequent consent was a defense to the refusal charge.11

Snyder's criminal case was never considered on remand, because of a Criminal Rule 45 error.

C. Snyder's License Revocation Case

The Department of Public Safety revoked Snyder's license based on his refusal to submit to a breath test; Hearing Officer Kathy Kutchins considered the evidence and affirmed the revocation.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P.3d 770, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 141, 2001 WL 1148949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-state-department-of-public-safety-division-of-motor-vehicles-alaska-2001.