NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-2286-21
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ROCIO SANCHEZ-ROJAS,
Defendant-Respondent. _________________________
Argued July 19, 2022 – Decided August 19, 2022
Before Judges Sabatino and Susswein.
On appeal from an interlocutory order of the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Monmouth County, Municipal Appeal No. 21-017.
Monica do Outeiro, Special Deputy Attorney General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for appellant (Lori Linskey, Acting Monmouth County Prosecutor, attorney; Monica do Outeiro, of counsel and on the brief).
David J. Foley, III, argued the cause for respondent.
PER CURIAM After the municipal court granted defendant Rocio Sanchez-Rojas's
application to exclude the Alcotest results from her DWI (driving while
intoxicated) case for lack of foundational support, and the State did not move
for leave to appeal that evidentiary ruling, the trial proceeded to its completion.
Based upon the arresting police officer's testimony of his observations of
defendant's insobriety, the judge found defendant guilty of violating N.J.S.A.
39:4-50. The judge entered a final judgment of conviction, and sentenced
defendant to various sanctions.
Defendant appealed her observation-based DWI conviction to the Law
Division. The State did not attempt to cross-appeal the municipal judge's
evidentiary ruling.
On appeal, the Law Division agreed with the municipal court that the State
had proven defendant's guilt of DWI beyond a reasonable doubt, based on the
officer's credible observation evidence. However, the Law Division remanded
the case, sua sponte, to the municipal court for reconsideration. It did so because
it independently found the municipal court had erred in excluding the Alcotest
results from the evidence at trial, thereby relieving defendant of possibly more
stringent sanctions for committing a "per se" DWI violation, which can be
proven by blood alcohol test results alone. See N.J.S.A. 39:4-50(a)(1)(ii).
A-2286-21 2 Defendant moved for reconsideration of the remand order, which the Law
Division denied.
Joined by defendant, the State moved for leave to appeal the Law
Division's remand order, arguing the order is contrary to case law principles
constraining appellate jurisdiction of criminal and quasi-criminal convictions.
We granted leave to appeal and considered the parties' joint arguments.
Having done so, we vacate the remand order because: (1) the State did not
appeal the municipal court's suppression of the Alcotest evidence; and (2) a
remand exposing a defendant-appellant in the Law Division, post-judgment, to
potentially greater sanctions based on evidence that had been excluded at trial
from the prosecution's case is contrary to the principles set forth in State v.
DeBonis, 58 N.J. 182, 188 (1971), and other case law.
We affirm defendant's conviction of the observation-based DWI offense.
We further remand this matter to the Law Division to complete its de novo
review of defendant's sentence.
I.
We confine our brief discussion of the facts and procedural history to the
record developed by the parties and the evidence admitted at the municipal court
trial.
A-2286-21 3 The municipal trial began on February 16, 2021. Officer John Lynch of
Avon-by-the-Sea (Avon) Police Department testified first on behalf of the
prosecution. Officer Lynch testified that on Saturday, February 29, 2020, at
approximately 2:45 a.m., he was driving on patrol when defendant's car passed
him traveling at "an excessive rate of speed." According to Officer Lynch,
defendant "was going very above the speed limit" of thirty miles an hour. He
pulled defendant over after she had crossed the bridge from Avon into Belmar.
According to Officer Lynch, as he approached defendant's car on foot, he
"could smell an overwhelming smell of alcohol coming from the vehicle ." He
asked defendant, whom he identified in court, for her license, registration, and
proof of insurance. Officer Lynch noticed that defendant seemed "very
confused," and "[h]er eyes were watery and her eyelids definitely were
drooping." She was "slow in her movements when trying to gather her
documents[.]"
Officer Lynch testified that he believed that defendant understood English
sufficiently to understand and follow his instructions. She was able to give him
her name and date of birth and provide proof of insurance and registration .
However, she was not able to find her driver's license.
A-2286-21 4 Based on his training and observations, Officer Lynch believed that
defendant "was highly intoxicated." He asked her where she had been and where
she was headed; she responded that she was coming from a bar in Asbury Park
that was open until 2:00 a.m., and she was headed home to Belmar. Officer
Lynch also asked defendant if she had anything to drink that night and she
admitted she had consumed two alcoholic beverages.
Officer Lynch removed the keys from defendant's car and had her perform
three field sobriety tests: (1) reciting the alphabet; (2) a "six-inches leg raise;"
and (3) "nine heel-to-toe steps." Before conducting those tests, Officer Lynch
made sure his mobile video recorder (MVR) in his patrol vehicle was activated .
Defendant attempted the alphabet test twice. According to Officer Lynch,
defendant only got as far as the letter "G" on her first attempt and as far as "H"
on her second attempt; however, she sang the alphabet on both attempts even
though she had been instructed not to do so.
Officer Lynch further observed that defendant "seemed very confused in
a state of intoxication" and said he could "still smell the odor of alcohol coming
off her person." He then had her attempt the six-inch leg-raise test. Officer
Lynch provided her the instructions, and defendant stated she understood.
According to Officer Lynch, defendant did not follow his instructions, swayed
A-2286-21 5 back and forth, and lost her balance. Defendant tried again but was unable to
complete the test successfully.
Officer Lynch moved on to the final field test, the heel-to-toe exercise.
He explained to defendant to take nine heel-to-toe steps in a straight line and on
the ninth step, turn around and take nine heel-to-toe steps back the other way.
Officer Lynch then partially demonstrated the test, taking six heel-to-toe steps,
but he made it clear to defendant she was required to take nine heel-to-toe steps.
Defendant took seven steps in one direction, none of which were heel-to-toe,
and turned around. She then took eight steps back, none of which were heel-to-
toe. During the test, defendant had her arms out for balance.
As a result of his interactions with defendant and her inability to
successfully complete the field sobriety tests he administered, Officer Lynch
concluded that defendant was intoxicated, placed her under arrest, and read her
her Miranda1 rights. Officer Lynch then transported defendant to the Neptune
Township Police Department building because Avon did not do its own booking
and did not have its own Alcotest machine. Officer Lynch said that during the
drive to the Neptune station, his police vehicle had an overwhelming smell of
1 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). A-2286-21 6 alcohol, "which was not in [his] car prior to putting [defendant] inside that
vehicle."
Upon arriving at the Neptune station, Officer Lynch allowed defendant to
use the bathroom. He then observed defendant for twenty-four minutes, four
minutes longer than the required twenty-minute observation period. This was
completed at 4:00 a.m. During the observation period, Officer Lynch read
defendant her Miranda rights again and also read her the State's general standard
statement for blood alcohol breath tests.
At the conclusion of the observation period, Officer Lynch escorted
defendant into the Alcotest room, at which time another officer, Lieutenant
Christopher Garrity, Chief of the Avon Police Department, performed an
Alcotest analysis of defendant's breath samples using Neptune's Alcotest
machine.
On cross-examination, Officer Lynch acknowledged that he was not
certified by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHSTA) to
perform the standardized field sobriety tests. At the conclusion of Officer
Lynch's testimony, the prosecutor introduced a DVD recording of the dashcam
MVR from Officer Lynch's patrol vehicle that recorded his interactions with
defendant during the stop, as well as defendant's completion of the sobriety tests.
A-2286-21 7 Defendant's trial resumed on April 13, 2021, at which time Chief Garrity
was called as a second prosecution witness. Chief Garrity identified his Alcotest
certification which was admitted into evidence without objection.
Chief Garrity testified that beginning at 4:09 a.m. on February 29, 2020,
he had conducted the Alcotest analysis of defendant's breath samples. He
explained that before administering the test, he read defendant the Alcotest
instructions "word for word" and testified that she seemed to understand the
instructions. Defendant provided an insufficient breath sample during the first
attempted test, so Chief Garrity installed a new mouthpiece and performed two
additional tests. Defendant provided satisfactory breath samples and the results
demonstrated that her blood alcohol content (BAC) was 0.18 percent. Chief
Garrity testified that he used the Alcotest calculator to determine that those two
tests were within acceptable tolerance to establish the reliability of those results.
Chief Garrity also identified for the court the Alcohol Influence Report,
which contained the results of defendant's two satisfactory breath samples .
On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Chief Garrity only one
question: whether he was "trained in the NHTSA field sobriety tests." Chief
Garrity responded that he was not.
A-2286-21 8 The municipal prosecutor sought to move into evidence various exhibits,
which he described as the Neptune Alcotest "foundational documents."2
Defense counsel objected, arguing the foundational documents had not been
properly authenticated as admissible business records by a suitable witness from
the Neptune Police Department.
In response, the municipal prosecutor argued the exhibits were admissible
as business records maintained by the Neptune Police Department. The
prosecutor represented to the court that he was "specifically told, just so the
record is clear, in case this goes anywhere on appeal, that the Neptune Township
police officer, Neptune Township discovery officer, would not appear to testify
as to the business records admissibility of it." The municipal judge responded:
"Just so I'm clear, the State has reached out to [the] Neptune Township business
records person, [who] told you they would not appear in regards to that,
correct?" The prosecutor responded, "That is correct."
2 As the Supreme Court discussed in State v. Chun, 194 N.J. 54, 148 (2008), these "foundational documents" are required to lay an adequate foundation for the Alcotest results because they could "reveal some possible flaw in the operation of the particular device" and "establish the good working order of the device." The Court held that the foundational documents and the Alcohol Influence Report are not testimonial for purposes of the Confrontation Clause. Id. at 143, 147. A-2286-21 9 Based on these circumstances, the municipal judge granted defense
counsel's motion and suppressed the Alcotest evidence, including the results of
the tests and the foundational documents. Notably, the State did not move for
leave to appeal that interlocutory adverse evidentiary ruling to the Law Division
pursuant to Rule 3:24(a). The State also did not seek a stay of the completion
of the municipal case pending such an appeal.
After the State rested, defense counsel asked for a continuance for time to
consider whether to call an expert as to the validity and sufficiency of the field
sobriety tests. The court granted the continuance. The State did not attempt to
take advantage of that interval by filing an interlocutory appeal concerning the
excluded Alcotest results.
Defendant's trial resumed on May 11, 2021, at which time defendant
rested without testifying or calling an expert witness. Defendant then moved
for a directed verdict, which was denied.
Both defense counsel and the prosecutor presented summations, but the
judge reserved decision because he had not yet viewed the MVR of defendant's
stop.
On August 24, 2021, the municipal judge read his oral decision into the
record. Finding defendant guilty of DWI, the judge stated: "My review of the
A-2286-21 10 video clearly show[ed] that the defendant was under the influence of alcohol at
the time. The tests given do show that the defendant clearly was intoxicated
beyond a reasonable doubt . . . [.]"
The judge sentenced defendant to pay various fines and also ordered an
interlock device be placed on defendant's vehicle for three months. Defendant's
license was suspended only until the interlock device was placed on her vehicle.
The summons for failure to exhibit a driver's license, N.J.S.A. 39:3-29, merged
with the DWI conviction, and the charge for careless driving, N.J.S.A. 39:4-97,
was dismissed. A judgment of conviction memorializing these terms was
apparently issued. 3
Defendant appealed her DWI conviction to the Law Division, pursuant to
Rule 3:23-2, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence establishing her guilt
of DWI. The State opposed the municipal appeal, but it did not cross-appeal the
municipal judge's evidentiary ruling that had excluded the Alcotest results.
The Law Division conducted a trial, de novo, on February 1, 2022, which
consisted of briefing and oral argument by counsel. The following day, the Law
Division issued an order and written opinion. Among other things, the Law
3 The parties have not furnished a copy of the municipal judgment of conviction in the appendix, but it is undisputed that such a judgment was issued and that defendant appealed it to the Law Division. A-2286-21 11 Division concluded that the State had established defendant's guilt on the DWI
charge:
A thorough review of the transcripts and the MVR video demonstrates that the State has proven defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. [Officer] Lynch pulled defendant's car over at 2:45 a.m. after observing her driving at a high rate of speed; he detected a strong odor of alcohol coming from defendant's car and he continued to smell alcohol after defendant was placed in his police vehicle; defendant definitively failed three field sobriety tests, was slow in her movements, and admitted to drinking earlier that evening. The State has presented sufficient evidence of defendant's guilt to sustain an observational conviction of DWI.
Although the State neither cross-appealed to the Law Division, nor sought
interlocutory leave to appeal during the municipal trial, the Law Division
proceeded, sua sponte, to review the municipal court's ruling suppressing the
Alcotest evidence. The Law Division expressed concerns about the municipal
prosecutor's assertion that "he could not authenticate the foundational
documents without a 'business records' witness from Neptune and that Neptune
had refused to make such a witness available."
The Law Division then reviewed the suppressed Alcotest documents, and
concluded those exhibits should have been admitted in the municipal court trial
under the business records exception to the hearsay rule, N.J.R.E. 803(c)(6) .
A-2286-21 12 Because admission and consideration of the Alcotest evidence would require the
imposition of "a mandatory four-month license suspension, a sentence greater
than that imposed by the municipal judge[,]" the Law Division believed it had
been placed "between the Scylla of imposing a mandated sentence and the
Chrybdis of running afoul of the DeBonis policy."4 Consequently, the Law
Division fashioned the following remedy, albeit one the State had not requested:
[T]his matter will be remanded to the municipal court with the direction to reconsider the State's motion to admit the foundational documents consistent with the findings in this court's opinion. If the judge finds they are not admissible without additional testimony, the State will be permitted to re-open the trial for the purpose of calling a witness to authenticate the foundational documents.
Defendant filed a timely motion for reconsideration of the remand order,
arguing the Law Division's remand order unfairly and unconstitutionally
exposed him to a harsher sentence.
On February 17, 2022, the Law Division denied defendant's motion for
reconsideration, concluding the cases cited by defendant were distinguishable.
The court elaborated:
[D]efendant benefitted from an erroneous evidentiary ruling by the municipal court, which is conceded by the State, and seeks to prevent a remand which would
4 We discuss the holding in DeBonis, infra. A-2286-21 13 correct the mistake and result in the appropriate mandated penalty. But for an arguably anachronistic policy, dating back 50 years when some municipal judges were not even admitted to the bar, [State v. DeBonis, 58 N.J. 182 (1971)], this court would have considered the Alcotest evidence at the trial de novo and imposed the appropriate sentence.
The Law Division determined that the remand was permitted by Rule
3:23-8(a), which allowed "the record to be supplemented for the limited purpose
of correcting a legal error in the proceeding below." The court reasoned: "While
the State is not permitted to correct substantive failures of proof on remand, the
decision by the municipal judge to suppress the Alcotest results was a trial error
and not a failure of proof. Clearly, the State is permitted to correct trial errors
on remand."
The State timely filed a motion for a stay and interlocutory review of the
Law Division's remand order, which we granted. On June 20, 2022, the Law
Division submitted an amplified written opinion pursuant to Rule 2:5-1(b).
Aligned with defendant on appeal, the State argues in its brief that the
Law Division's remand to the municipal court directing the reopening of the case
was improvident. Although such a remand theoretically could be to its litigation
advantage, the State acknowledges that exposing defendant to a potential greater
sentence on remand violates DeBonis and other case law "that protects a
A-2286-21 14 defendant from the risks of being penalized for filing an appeal." The State
further doubts the constitutionality of such a remand, asserting "[i]t is without
question that the State could not have filed an appeal of the municipal court's
evidentiary ruling following entry of defendant's conviction as such an action
would clearly violate double jeopardy protections." Defendant endorses these
arguments.
II.
Rule 3:23-2 authorizes a defendant, but not the State, to appeal to the Law
Division a judgment of conviction entered by the municipal court. That Rule
also authorizes a defendant, or the State, to appeal to the Law Division "if
aggrieved by a final post-judgment order" entered by such a municipal court of
limited jurisdiction." R. 3:23-2. And, as we noted above, Rule 3:24(a) provides
an avenue for the State or a defendant to seek leave from the Law Division to
appeal an interlocutory order issued by the municipal court:
(a) Either the prosecuting attorney or the defendant may seek leave to appeal to the Superior Court, Law Division from an interlocutory order entered before trial by a court of limited criminal jurisdiction.
Rule 3:24(b) does provide a limited expansion of the appellate jurisdiction
available to the State, solely with respect to a municipal court's order dismissing
a complaint or, as here, suppressing evidence:
A-2286-21 15 (b) The prosecuting attorney may appeal, as of right, a pre-trial or post-trial judgment dismissing a complaint and, notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (a), an order suppressing evidence entered in a court of limited criminal jurisdiction.
[(Emphasis added).]
A discretionary appeal by the State of an order suppressing the prosecution's
evidence must be filed within thirty days of the municipal court's suppression
order. R. 3:24(c).
Additionally, subsection (d) of Rule 3:24 dictates how the Law Division
shall conduct its review of an appeal by the State of a municipal court's
suppression order:
(d) On appeal by the State from the grant of a motion to suppress the matter shall be tried de novo on the record. In cases in which the Attorney General or county prosecutor did not appear in the municipal court, the State shall be permitted to supplement the record and to present any evidence or testimony concerning the legality of the contested search and seizure. The defendant shall be permitted to offer related evidence in opposition to the supplementary evidence offered by the State.
Here, as we underscored in our Introduction and Part I, the State did not
appeal the municipal court's ruling that suppressed the Alcotest evidence. Nor
A-2286-21 16 did the State ask to supplement the record in the Law Division to show that the
municipal court erred in suppressing that proof.
Because the State did not invoke the Law Division's appellate review
powers in accordance with Rule 3:24, the question of whether the municipal
court properly excluded the evidence was not within the Law Division's
jurisdiction. Hence, the Law Division exceeded its authority in reviewing the
suppression order, sua sponte. 5
We further agree with both parties that the Law Division's remand order
transgressed the Supreme Court's holding in DeBonis, 58 N.J. at 188. In
DeBonis, a defendant convicted of an offense in the municipal court appealed
his sentence to the County Court, a precursor to the present Law Division. Id.
at 185. The County Court imposed a more severe sentence. Ibid. On appeal,
the Supreme Court ruled that "as a matter of policy and apart from constitutional
compulsion, a defendant who appeals from a municipal court should not risk a
greater sentence." Id. at 188. The Court recognized the need "to afford the
5 We do not agree with the Law Division's premise that it was authorized in the present setting under Rule 3:23-8(a)(2) to "permit the [municipal court] record to be supplemented for the limited purpose of correcting a legal error in the proceedings below." That provision logically applies to situations in which an appellant has argued there was "legal error" committed by the municipal court and seeks relief from that error. In this case, the State did not file such a municipal appeal claiming any errors. A-2286-21 17 litigant [in a municipal court proceeding], frequently a stranger to the locality,
the opportunity to seek a redetermination by a court at a higher level without the
risk of a larger penalty." Id. at 189.
In State v. Kashi, 180 N.J. 45, 49 (2004), the Court, citing DeBonis, took
the opportunity "to reaffirm [its] prior policy decision that a defendant convicted
and sentenced in a municipal court may not be subjected to a greater sentence
on appeal." See also State v. Eckert, 410 N.J. Super. 389, 406-07 (App. Div.
2009) (citing and applying this same principle from DeBonis); State v. Duthie,
200 N.J. Super. 19, 26 (App. Div. 1985) (same).
Here, in its written opinion, the Law Division specifically acknowledged
that even if it could consider the Alcotest evidence supporting a per se DWI
offense, DeBonis prevented it from imposing a greater sentence than the one
imposed on defendant by the municipal court:
Because defendant's blood alcohol concentration was higher than 0.15%, finding her guilty under the per se theory would require this court to impose a mandatory four-month license suspension, a sentence greater tha[n] that imposed by the municipal judge. Placed squarely in issue is the applicability of the Supreme Court's decision in State v. DeBonis, 58 N.J. 182 (1971), which held that a defendant convicted and sentenced in a municipal court may not be subjected to a greater sentence on appeal.
...
A-2286-21 18 The substantively unchallenged Alcotest evidence requires a four-month suspension of defendant's license; DeBonis prevents this court from imposing this sentence.
The Law Division attempted to forestall the consequences of DeBonis and
its progeny by remanding the matter to the municipal court, in anticipation that
the municipal court would reopen the case, admit the Alcotest evidence, and find
defendant guilty of a more serious offense. With all due respect to the Law
Division, such an unrequested remedy is inconsistent with the policies of
DeBonis. It would, in effect, penalize defendant for appealing her judgment of
conviction. We are constrained by DeBonis from approving that course of
action.
We do not read the cases relied upon by the Law Division to support the
remand order. In particular, State v. Kashi, 360 N.J. Super. 538 (App. Div.
2003), aff'd, 180 N.J. 45 (2004), is not on point because it concerned a situation
in which the State relied on appeal on incriminating evidence of field
observations that had been admitted into evidence at the municipal trial. Here,
as we have discussed, the Alcotest results were not admitted into evidence and
the State did not appeal that exclusion. Nor does State v. Sisti, 209 N.J. Super.
148 (App. Div. 1986), justify the remand in this case because the incriminating
A-2286-21 19 evidence relied on by the Law Division as an alternative basis of guilt was not,
as here, excluded at the municipal trial. The circumstances in the present case
are not comparable to those in Kashi or Sisti.
In light of our disposition, we need not reach the constitutional double
jeopardy arguments presented. See Randolph Town Ctr. L.P. v. Cnty. of Morris,
186 N.J. 78, 80 (2006) (reciting the well-established principle that courts should
not reach constitutional issues unless it is "imperative" to do so). Nor do we
need to comment on whether the municipal prosecutor was remiss with respect
to the circumstances that led the court to exclude the Alcotest documents, since
that exclusion was never appealed. 6
Affirmed in part as to the finding of defendant's guilt, vacated in part as
to the remand to the municipal court, and remanded to the Law Division for
sentencing limited by the principles of DeBonis.
6 At oral argument, the assistant prosecutor represented to this court that, in light of the Law Division's concerns about the foundational documents, the County Prosecutor's Office reviewed the municipal prosecutor's handling of this matter and concluded that no further action was warranted. As noted, we decline to comment on the substance of that topic. That said, we appreciate the Law Division's concerns and the public safety considerations at stake in the effective enforcement of our drunk driving laws. A-2286-21 20