State of Minnesota v. Michelle MacDonald Shimota

875 N.W.2d 363, 2016 Minn. App. LEXIS 13, 2016 WL 596071
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 16, 2016
DocketA14-1981
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 875 N.W.2d 363 (State of Minnesota v. Michelle MacDonald Shimota) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Minnesota v. Michelle MacDonald Shimota, 875 N.W.2d 363, 2016 Minn. App. LEXIS 13, 2016 WL 596071 (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

ROSS, Judge.

Appellant Michelle MacDonald Shimota grabbed her steering wheel,, her gear shift knob, and a police officer’s wrist to prevent police from removing her from her car when she refused to be taken into custody on suspicion of drunk driving. After the officers pulled her loose and took her to the police station, Shimota would not submit to a breath test, demanding to be taken before a judge. Shimota challenges her convictions of obstructing legal process and chemical-test refusal, arguing that police violated her statutory right to be taken immediately before a judge after her arrest, that the district court violated her alleged Sixth' Amendment right to create a video recording of the trial, that the district court improperly.instructed the jury on the crime of test refusal, and that the evidence does not prové obstruction. Because an arrestee’s statutory right to be taken immediately before a judge after her arrest is not a mechanism for suspected *365 drunk drivers to circumvent an officer s statutory duty to promptly administer a chemical test; - because the Sixth Amendment does not grant a defendant the.right to videotape her trial; because the district court acted within its discretion in fashioning the jury instructions;. and because the evidence supports the verdict, we.affirm Shimota’s convictions.,,.

FACTS

Late one night in April 2013, Rosemount police officer Alex Eckstein followed a car that he clocked at.eight miles per hour over the speed limit. Officer Eckstein noticed the car swerve within its lane and saw its left tires contact the yellow center-line. He initiated a traffic stop.

When the officer spoke with the car’s only occupant, Michelle MacDonald Shimo-ta, he noticed that she had. watery eyes and smelled slightly of. the odor of an alcoholic beverage. Officer Eckstein asked Shimota to step out of the car to perform field sobriety tests, but Shimota refused. He asked her several- more times, and she continued to refuse, so he called Sergeant Bryan Burkhalter to assist. When Sergeant Burkhalter arrived, he also smelled the odor of an alcoholic beverage coming from .Shimota’s vehicle and asked her several times to exit the car. Both officers .told Shimota she was under arrest. Shimota still refused to exit the car, and eventually the officers tried to forcibly remove her. Shimota resisted the officers’ effort by grabbing the shift knob, the steering wheel, and Sergeant Burkhal-ter’s wrist.

The officers finally pried Shimota free and took her to-the police station, where Officer Eckstein read her the implied-consent advisory and asked her to-submit to a breath test. He then gave her time to call a lawyer. Shimota spent 34 minutes making calls and then asked the officer to take her in front of a .judge to perform the breath, test. The officer refused, but he repeated his request-that she take the test. Shimota refused, and the state.-charged her with .test refusal, driving under the influence, and obstructing legal process.

Before her trial Shimota moved the district court tó' allow her ’to bring video recording equipment into the courtroom, asserting that she had a Sixth Amendment right to record the trial. The district court denied the motion. Both parties agreed that the model jury instruction for test refusal was confusing bn the element of' probable cause. The district court issued a different instruction, to which Shi-mota objected. The jury found Shimota guilty of test refusal and obstructing legal process but not guilty of driving under the influence. Shimota appeals.

ISSUES

I. Did Minnesota Statutes section 169.91, subdivision 1, require the arresting police officer to present the appellant to a judge before he completed all administrative. duties attendant to the impaired-driving arrest, including administering the implied-consent testing required by section 169A.51?

II. Did the appellant .have, a Sixth Arnendment right to create a video recording of her trial?

III. Did the district court abuse its discretion when it instructed the jury on test refusal? . , >

IV. Did the state present sufficient evidence for the jury to find the appellant guilty of obstructing legal process?

'ANALYSIS

» — <

Shimota argues first that police violated her right to be taken immediately to a *366 judge before submitting to a breath test, based on her interpretation of Minnesota Statutes section 169.91, subdivision 1. On that foundation, she seems to argue that the officer’s violation required the district court to suppress the test-refusal evidence, to acquit her of the test-refusal charge as a matter of law, to hold that her test refusal was reasonable and therefore not illegal, or at least to allow her to argue.to the jury that she refused the test reasonably. We can address all of the arguments by assessing. her premise that police violated her statutory right to be taken immediately to a judge before submitting to a breath test.

' We interpret a statute primarily on its plain language in an effort to discern and effectuate 'the legislature’s' intent. Minn. Stat. § 645.16 (2012); MinmStat. § 645.08(1) (2012). In relevant part, the statute Shimota relies on provides as follows:

When any person is arrested for any violation of any law or ordinance relating to the operation or registration of vehicles ... the arrested person shall be taken into custody and immediately taken before a judge within the county in which the offense charged is alleged to have been committed and who has jurisdiction over the offenses and is nearest or most accessible with reference to the place where the arrest is made, in any of the following cases:
(1) when a person arrested demands an immediate- appearance before a judge;
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(4) when the person is arrested upon a charge of driving or operating or being in actual physical control of any motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs.

MinmStat. § 169.91, subd. 1 (emphasis added).. Police ‘arrested Shimota on suspicion of driving “while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs,” which constitutes a violation of a law “relating to the operation ... of vehicles.” She is therefore correct that her arrest is subject to the statute.

The word “immediately” is the center of Shimota’s argument, as she insists that the officer violated the statute by failing to immediately take her before a judge on her demand. The statute does not define “immediately.” Shimota rightly urges a plain-meaning definition and application of that term. Our plain-language approach to statutory interpretation requires us to construe words and phrases by their common usage, MinmStat. § 645.08(1), and in doing so we must not disregard “the letter of the law” in-a pretextual quest for “the spirit” of the law, MinmStat. § 645.16. But we do not determine a word’s common-usage meaning detached from its context. Rather, we consider “the words of a law in their application to an existing situation.” MinmStat. § 645.16 (emphasis added).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
875 N.W.2d 363, 2016 Minn. App. LEXIS 13, 2016 WL 596071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-minnesota-v-michelle-macdonald-shimota-minnctapp-2016.