State of Arizona v. Max Valencia Chavez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedSeptember 14, 2004
Docket2 CA-CR 2002-0202
StatusPublished

This text of State of Arizona v. Max Valencia Chavez (State of Arizona v. Max Valencia Chavez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Arizona v. Max Valencia Chavez, (Ark. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS STATE OF ARIZONA DIVISION TWO

THE STATE OF ARIZONA, ) ) 2 CA-CR 2002-0202 Appellee, ) DEPARTMENT A ) v. ) OPINION ) MAX VALENCIA CHAVEZ, ) ) Appellant. ) )

APPEAL FROM THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PIMA COUNTY

Cause No. CR-20000140

Honorable Paul S. Banales, Judge Pro Tempore

AFFIRMED

Terry Goddard, Arizona Attorney General By Randall M. Howe and Michael T. O’Toole Phoenix Attorneys for Appellee

Susan A. Kettlewell, Pima County Public Defender By John F. Palumbo Tucson Attorneys for Appellant

H O W A R D, Presiding Judge.

¶1 A jury found appellant Max Valencia Chavez guilty of four felony counts of

aggravated driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUI) based alternately on his revoked

driver’s license and his two prior DUI convictions. The trial court placed him on five years’ probation and imposed four months’ imprisonment as a condition of his probation.

Chavez appeals, claiming the trial court should have granted his pretrial motion to dismiss

the charges against him or alternatively to suppress evidence, based on what he alleges was

an improper citizen’s arrest under A.R.S. § 13-3884(1). We hold that DUI is an offense

amounting to a breach of the peace, justifying the citizen’s arrest effected in this case, and

we therefore affirm the convictions.

¶2 Motions to dismiss are committed to the sound discretion of the trial court,

and we will not disturb the denial of such a motion absent an abuse of the court’s discretion.

State v. Hansen, 156 Ariz. 291, 294, 751 P.2d 951, 954 (1988). We review a trial court’s

ruling on a motion to suppress evidence using the same standard. State v. Spears, 184 Ariz.

277, 284, 908 P.2d 1062, 1069 (1996). We view the facts and evidence in the light most

favorable to sustaining the trial court’s ruling, but we review questions of law de novo.

State v. Sanchez, 200 Ariz. 163, ¶ 5, 24 P.3d 610, 612 (App. 2001).

¶3 The four charges against Chavez arose from a single incident. On the night

of August 20, 1999, a tribal ranger1 patrolling the San Xavier Indian Reservation observed

Chavez driving erratically on South Mission Road. When Ranger Corella first saw

Chavez’s truck, it was completely stopped in the roadway. Corella pulled to within eight

feet of the truck and sat with his lights on, watching, for approximately two minutes.

1 As we discuss below, Ranger Corella did not have specific legal authority as a ranger to arrest Chavez for DUI. Thus, the legal issue presented is whether the arrest was proper as a citizen’s arrest pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-3884.

2 ¶4 The truck then began to move, and Corella followed it as it proceeded

southbound. He observed Chavez driving slowly, weaving, stopping, starting, and

continuing to veer on and off the shoulder of the road. Concerned for the safety of other

motorists, Corella radioed his dispatcher to send a tribal police officer. When Ranger

Corella finally activated his vehicle’s emergency lights, Chavez stopped his truck briefly

in the roadway, then resumed his erratic driving for another four-tenths of a mile. Eventually

Chavez pulled over and stopped on the shoulder of the road. Soon after, he opened the

passenger door of his truck, got out, and ran into the desert.

¶5 Ignoring Corella’s command to stop, Chavez continued running. As he ran up

an incline, he lost his balance and fell forward into a prickly pear cactus. When Chavez got

up, covered with cactus spines, Corella placed him in handcuffs. Corella did so, he

testified, for his own safety because he did not know why Chavez had tried to run away

from him. He then noted Chavez was slurring his speech and emanating an odor of alcohol.

After an eight- to twelve-minute wait, a tribal police officer arrived and took custody of

Chavez.

¶6 Before trial, Chavez moved to dismiss or, in the alternative, to suppress

evidence obtained following his arrest. He claimed his detention and arrest were illegal

because Ranger Corella, who was not a certified Arizona peace officer, see A.R.S. §§ 41-

1822, 41-1823, lacked authority to detain him. According to Corella, his official duties as

a ranger include patrolling the 77,000-acre San Xavier reservation with responsibility for

protecting wildlife and enforcing both environmental laws and trespassing laws. Rangers

3 are unarmed, uncertified, and not considered to be law enforcement officers. They do,

however, carry handcuffs, pepper spray, flashlights, and batons and drive marked vehicles

equipped with emergency lights.

¶7 In denying Chavez’s pretrial motion to suppress, the trial court ruled that

Corella had had authority “to stop and detain [Chavez’s] vehicle,” not in his official

capacity as a ranger, but as a private citizen. The court held Chavez’s erratic and

dangerous driving constituted a breach of the peace for purposes of § 13-3884, which

provides:

Arrest by private person

A private person may make an arrest:

1. When the person to be arrested has in his presence committed a misdemeanor amounting to a breach of the peace, or a felony.

2. When a felony has been in fact committed and he has reasonable ground to believe that the person to be arrested has committed it. 2

Chavez does not dispute the authority of a tribal ranger to make a citizen’s arrest. 3 See

State v. Goldberg, 112 Ariz. 202, 204, 540 P.2d 674, 676 (1975) (federal agents with

2 In fact, the offenses Chavez committed in Corella’s presence were felonies, by virtue either of Chavez’s previous DUI convictions or his driver’s license having been revoked. Presumably because Corella did not know that when he decided to stop Chavez, the parties have focused their arguments on whether a misdemeanor DUI offense, see A.R.S. § 28-1381(A), (C), can constitute a breach of the peace under § 13-3884(1). 3 Nor does he dispute Corella’s legal authority as a ranger to stop Chavez’s vehicle “to check on [his] welfare.”

4 limited arrest authority “still have the power to make arrests for violations of state laws as

private citizens”). Rather, he argues that his DUI offense was not a breach of the peace for

purposes of § 13-3884(1) because a breach of the peace is substantially synonymous with

disorderly conduct as defined by A.R.S. § 13-2904(A), which, he contends, does not

encompass DUI.

¶8 Although this is apparently a case of first impression in Arizona, other

jurisdictions have held, and legal treatises recognize, that dangerous or reckless driving,

including DUI, amounts to a breach of the peace allowing a private citizen to stop, detain,

or arrest the driver. See, e.g., 11 C.J.S. Breach of the Peace § 5 (1995) (“[T]he operation

of a motor vehicle while intoxicated is an activity which threatens the public security and

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