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

43 P.3d 157, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2002 WL 398825
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 2002
DocketS-9565
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 43 P.3d 157 (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, 43 P.3d 157, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2002 WL 398825 (Ala. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

After an administrative hearing, the Division of Motor Vehicles revoked Dennis Snyder's driver's license on the ground that Snyder had driven with a blood alcohol level exceeding the legal limit. Snyder appealed to the superior court, which remanded for reconsideration because the division's hearing officer had misapplied the applicable burden of proof. On remand, a different hearing officer reviewed the record and reaffirmed the original ruling; but the new officer reached this decision by finding that Snyder had not been truthful in certain portions of his testimony that the original hearing officer had found to be truthful The superior court affirmed the second ruling. We reverse, concluding that due process precluded the new hearing officer from revising the original officer's assessment of testimonial credibility without giving Snyder advance notice of the case's reassignment and an opportunity to re-present live testimony.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In March 1996 Alaska State Trooper Jacob D. Baergen responded to a report of a car blocking traffic at an intersection near North Pole. Upon arrival, Trooper Baergen saw Dennis Snyder standing in the intersection; his car was stuck in the snowbank at the side of the roadway. Snyder said that he had driven the car into the snowbank to avoid hitting another car, but his description of the incident did not comport with the car's resting position. Trooper Baergen noted that Snyder had a strong odor of alcohol about him, his eyes were watery and bloodshot, his speech was slurred, and his balance unsteady. The accident appeared to have happened shortly before the trooper's arrival, and Snyder said nothing to indicate that he 'had left the scene afterwards.

Based on these observations, Trooper Baergen asked Snyder to perform "a standard set of field sobriety tests, all of which he failed." The trooper then performed a preliminary breath test and arrested Snyder for DWI after obtaining a result of .155. When a subsequent Intoximeter 8000 test yielded a result of .147, Snyder was charged with DWI and issued a notice of administrative license revocation.

Snyder contested the administrative revocation. At a hearing before DMV Hearing Officer Joy Gifford, Snyder denied consuming any alcohol before the accident. He testified that the accident actually occurred more than two hours before Trooper Baer-gen's arrival. According to Snyder, the accident seene was about a mile or a mile and a half from his house. Snyder did not have a telephone but he used the phone of a next-door neighbor, Michael Scott. Snyder thus decided to walk to Seott's house from the accident seene in order to summon help. He claimed that, after arriving at Seott's and calling a friend in Fairbanks for help, he accepted Scott's invitation to have some beer; over the next hour or hour and a half, he visited with Seott and drank three to five beers. Snyder testified that he then walked back to the accident scene, arriving just before Trooper Baergen. Scott also testified at the revocation hearing and essentially confirmed Snyder's version of events.

At the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, Snyder's counsel argued that Snyder's *159 blood alcohol level at the time of the accident did not exceed the legal limit because the tests that Trooper Baergen conducted reflected alcohol consumed after the accident. In addressing this argument, Hearing Officer Gifford expressly found that the testimony concerning Snyder's post-accident consumption was credible, noting that the only conflict appeared to be when and how much post-accident drinking actually occurred. 1 Referring to "common knowledge" and to what "a reasonable person would not believe," however, the hearing officer reasoned that the alcohol Snyder consumed after the accident could not fully account for the results of his subsequent breath test. 2 On this basis, the hearing officer specifically found that Snyder's denial of pre-accident drinking was not credible. 3 Given her belief that some consumption must have occurred before the accident and her uncertainty concerning how much drinking occurred and when it occurred, the hearing officer went on to conclude that Snyder had failed to prove that his blood-alcohol level fell below the legal limit at the time of the accident. 4

After Snyder appealed this decision to the superior court, the state conceded that Hearing Officer Gifford had erroneously placed the burden of proof on Snyder to prove that his blood-aleohol fell below the legal limit. The superior court remanded the case to the division for reconsideration under the correct burden. The court's remand order instructed the hearing officer to decide the issue on the existing record:

[The Hearing Officer employed the wrong burden of proof by requiring Dennis Snyder to prove his blood-alcohol level was below .10 percent at the time he had the accident in this case. Accordingly, the case should be remanded for the Hearing Officer to make the sole determination of whether Dennis Snyder's blood-aleohol level was .10 percent or greater at the time he had the accident in this case. This determination shall be made on the existing record with the State bearing the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence whether Dennis Snyder's blood-alcohol level was .10 percent or greater at the time he had the accident[.]

On remand to the DMV, Snyder's case was reassigned to a new hearing officer, Kathy Kutchins, evidently because Hearing Officer Gifford had retired while the case was pending in the superior court. Nothing in the appellate record indicates that the parties received advance notice of the reassignment. Apparently, Hearing Officer Kutchins simply reviewed the record of the original hearing, came to a decision, and scheduled a telephonic proceeding to deliver her ruling. At the *160 proceeding, Hearing Officer Kutchins affirmed the original revocation order but based her decision on a new factual theory: emphasizing Snyder's prior DWI record, the new hearing officer expressly found that Snyder's claim of post-accident alcohol consumption was not believable:

Regarding Mr. Snyder's claim that he consumed alcohol after he went in the ditch, I don't find that testimony credible. Mr. Snyder has four pr-three prior DWI convictions. I believe that, if he went in the ditch and he had nothing to drink before he went into the ditch as he claims, he would not go home and drink beer and, then, come back to the accident seene after he had consumed aleohol knowing the penalties for driving while intoxicated. I don't believe a person would do that with the knowledge that Mr. Snyder has. He also did not tell Trooper Baergen that he consumed any alcohol. And he says he was going to but he just got mixed up or confused but I-I don't believe that. I don't find him to be credible.

Despite Snyder's counsel's repeated attempts to argue the issue, Hearing Officer Kutchins refused to reconsider this credibility ruling and declined to explain her basis for rejecting the corroborating testimony of Seott.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 P.3d 157, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2002 WL 398825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-state-department-of-public-safety-division-of-motor-vehicles-alaska-2002.