State of Minnesota v. Ronald James Chasingbear

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 4, 2014
DocketA14-301
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Minnesota v. Ronald James Chasingbear (State of Minnesota v. Ronald James Chasingbear) 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. Ronald James Chasingbear, (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2012).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A14-0301

State of Minnesota, Appellant,

vs.

Ronald James Chasingbear, Respondent.

Filed August 4, 2014 Reversed Ross, Judge Concurring specially, Larkin, Judge

Clay County District Court File No. 14-CR-13-3688

Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and

Brian J. Melton, Clay County Attorney, Heidi M. F. Davies, Assistant County Attorney, Moorhead, Minnesota (for appellant)

Brian P. Toay, Wold Johnson, P.C., Fargo, North Dakota (for respondent)

Considered and decided by Ross, Presiding Judge; Larkin, Judge; and Willis,

Judge.

 Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

ROSS, Judge

Ronald Chasingbear refused a breath test requested by a Moorhead police officer

under Minnesota’s implied-consent law after the officer arrested Chasingbear, suspecting

that he had been driving drunk. The state charged Chasingbear with the crime of test

refusal. The district court deemed the test-refusal statute unconstitutional based on

Chasingbear’s Fourth Amendment rights and dismissed the charge. We reverse because

Chasingbear has failed to meet his heavy burden of establishing that the statute is

unconstitutional on any of the theories raised.

FACTS

A little before midnight on Halloween 2013, Fargo police alerted Moorhead police

about an intoxicated domestic-assault suspect headed into Moorhead in a van registered

to Ronald Chasingbear. Moorhead officer Nicholas Wiedenmeyer spotted the van and

stopped it. Chasingbear was the driver. The officer saw that Chasingbear had minor

injuries consistent with the reported assault, and he noticed that Chasingbear smelled

strongly of alcoholic beverages and had slurred speech. Officer Wiedenmeyer

administered field sobriety tests, which Chasingbear failed.

Officer Wiedenmeyer arrested Chasingbear and took him to the Clay County jail.

He read Chasingbear the implied-consent advisory. Chasingbear indicated that he

understood the advisory and asked to speak with an attorney, but he did not attempt to

contact one. Officer Wiedenmeyer asked Chasingbear to perform a breath test, and

Chasingbear refused. The state charged Chasingbear with test refusal under Minnesota

2 Statutes section 169A.20, subdivision 2 (2012), and third-degree driving while impaired

under section 169A.26, subdivision 1 (2012).

Chasingbear moved to dismiss the test-refusal charge, arguing that the test-refusal

statute is unconstitutional because it punishes him for exercising his constitutional right

to refuse to submit to a warrantless search. The parties submitted briefs on the motion,

and the district court held that the statute is unconstitutional under the “unconstitutional

conditions” doctrine and dismissed the test-refusal charge.

The state appeals.

ANALYSIS

Our first question is what is the question? That is, we must determine the

framework of our constitutional review. This case offers three alternatives. First, the

district court deemed the test-refusal statute unconstitutional under the unconstitutional

conditions doctrine as discussed by the state supreme court after being variously applied

by the federal Supreme Court. See State v. Netland, 762 N.W.2d 202, 211–12 (Minn.

2009) (citing Frost v. R.R. Comm’n of Cal., 271 U.S. 583, 592, 46 S. Ct. 605, 606–07

(1926)), abrogated on other grounds by State v. Brooks, 838 N.W.2d 563 (Minn. 2013).

Our review of the record leads us to believe that the district court developed this reason to

deem the statute unconstitutional on its own; Chasingbear had not offered this theory, and

no party apparently suggested it to the district court. Second, although the state’s

appellate brief does not expressly frame its argument in terms of substantive due process,

in the district court it defended the constitutionality of the statute by relying on this

court’s substantive due process analysis as applied in State v. Wiseman, 816 N.W.2d 689,

3 695 (Minn. App. 2012), cert. denied, 133 S. Ct. 1585 (2013), and its argument on appeal

also depends on the Wiseman analysis as revisited in State v. Bernard, 844 N.W.2d 41,

45–46 (Minn. App. 2014), review granted (Minn. May 20, 2014). Third, Chasingbear has

taken a different approach. He does not argue in direct support of the district court’s

unconstitutional conditions theory. Instead, he dismisses Wiseman as overruled law and

castigates Bernard as bad law. Then he elaborates on the position he took in the district

court and asks us to deem the statute unconstitutional under the approach the Supreme

Court took in Camara v. Municipal Court of San Francisco, 387 U.S. 523, 532–33, 87

S. Ct. 1727, 1732–33 (1967), because, Chasingbear argues, “the facts and legal issues are

identical to those set forth in Camara.” These ships pass in the night; neither of the

parties nor the district court ever attempts to explain why any one of these different

frameworks is more or less fitting than the others. So despite the position of the

concurring opinion that we can focus our opinion narrowly, we must address each one.

Starting Point: Statute Is Constitutional

Before we assess the statute’s constitutionality under each alternative framework

before us, we first emphasize two substantial obstacles standing against our affirming the

district court’s decision regardless of which framework we apply. The first is that a

strong presumption of constitutionality accompanies each statute. Under this

presumption, we follow the supreme court’s approach and exercise our authority to

declare a statute unconstitutional only with extreme caution and when absolutely

necessary, after the challenger has demonstrated the statute’s unconstitutionality beyond

any reasonable doubt. Walker v. Zuehlke, 642 N.W.2d 745, 750 (Minn. 2002). The

4 second is that this strong presumption as applied to Chasingbear’s challenge is elevated

by the reasoning of two recent drunk-driving, chemical-testing opinions—one issued by

the United States Supreme Court and one by the state supreme court.

The United States Supreme Court recently restated its support for state penalties

against test refusal, and it did so in Missouri v. McNeely, 133 S. Ct. 1552 (2013), the very

Fourth Amendment case on which the district court and Chasingbear rely as the

cornerstone of their different theories that the statute offends the Fourth Amendment. To

support its decision prohibiting Missouri from warrantlessly drawing blood from a

suspected drunk driver without his consent and without exigent circumstances, the

McNeely Court highlighted several alternatives to warrantless, nonconsensual blood

draws, and it expressly described these alternatives as “legal” (that is, constitutional). 133

S. Ct. at 1566. The Court reminded us that, among other constitutional penalties that

states can rely on to secure chemical-test evidence in drunk-driving cases, a state does not

violate a defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights by urging a criminal jury to infer from a

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