State v. Cabanilla

273 P.3d 125, 351 Or. 622, 2012 WL 753224, 2012 Ore. LEXIS 103
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 2012
DocketCC 08071452C; CA A141868; SC S059289
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 273 P.3d 125 (State v. Cabanilla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cabanilla, 273 P.3d 125, 351 Or. 622, 2012 WL 753224, 2012 Ore. LEXIS 103 (Or. 2012).

Opinion

*624 DE MUNIZ, C. J.

Defendant in this criminal case is a native Spanish speaker whose command of the English language is weak. A witness observed defendant’s vehicle leave the road at a high rate of speed, roll over, and come to rest in an onion field. The police officer responding to the event arrested defendant for driving under the influence of intoxicants. The issue presented in the case is whether, for purposes of the implied consent laws, the police officer “informed” defendant of the consequences of refusing to take a breath test when the officer explained those consequences to defendant in English. The trial court concluded that defendant had been adequately informed and declined to suppress evidence of defendant’s refusal to take a breath test. A jury convicted defendant of driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII), ORS 813.010, and the trial court convicted defendant of refusing to take a breath test, ORS 813.095. 1 The Court of Appeals affirmed defendant’s convictions without opinion. We allowed defendant’s petition for review to consider whether the state was required to prove that defendant understood the statutory advice of the rights and consequences of a driver’s refusal to take a breath test before his refusal to take the test could be admitted in evidence against him in his criminal cases. We now hold that evidence of a DUII defendant’s refusal to take a breath test is admissible against that *625 defendant even if the state does not establish that the defendant understood the information given about the rights and consequences of refusing to take the breath test.

The following facts are not in dispute. On June 28, 2008, defendant and a coworker drank beer together at the end of the workday, and then defendant left the workplace, alone, in his vehicle. Sometime later, a witness saw defendant’s car make a turn while at high speed. The witness saw the car hit the side of the road, fly into the air, travel a few hundred feet, roll, and then land in an onion field. The witness, who lived near the scene of the accident, called the sheriffs office and then continued to watch the vehicle until help arrived. She did not observe anyone leave the vehicle. Two officers, Leavitt and Romans, arrived on the scene and found the vehicle in the field. The vehicle was registered to defendant and his wife. Defendant was inside the vehicle, in the passenger seat, wearing a seat belt. Defendant was bleeding from his nose and there was blood on both the steering wheel and the passenger door of the vehicle. Defendant smelled of alcohol and had bloodshot, glassy eyes, with droopy eyelids.

Defendant told Romans that someone else had been driving. He identified the driver as “Juan Martinez,” and indicated that the driver had run from the vehicle in the direction of town. The officers looked in the muddy field for footprints but did not find any. Romans did not believe that anyone else had been driving the vehicle.

Romans noticed a language barrier in his communication with defendant. Romans spoke a few words of Spanish and used those words and gestures when conveying information and requests to defendant; similarly, defendant responded with gestures and a few words of English. For example, Romans asked defendant to perform various field sobriety tests by asking him in English, using a few Spanish words, and occasionally demonstrating the test. Defendant complied with the request to perform field sobriety tests, although he did not always understand, before Romans demonstrated, exactly what Romans wanted him to do. Defendant performed poorly on the field sobriety tests. Romans concluded that defendant was impaired and arrested him.

*626 Romans transported defendant to the police station and took him into a room with an Intoxilyzer machine. Romans read to defendant the Department of Motor Vehicles implied consent form “word for word in English” and then asked defendant whether he would take the breath test. 2 Defendant responded by asking Romans what he would do. Romans replied that it was defendant’s choice whether or not to take the test. At that point, Romans believed that defendant understood that he was being asked to submit to a breath test. According to Romans, defendant then “stated in substance he did not want to take the test.” At trial, Romans could not remember whether defendant responded verbally or simply shook his head no in response to the request.

Defendant was charged with DUII and refusing to take a breath test. 3 Before his trial on those charges, defendant moved to suppress the evidence of his refusal to take the breath test, arguing that, because he could not understand English, he was not “informed” of the consequences of refusing the breath test under ORS 813.130, and, therefore, evidence of his refusal was not admissible against him at his trial. 4 The trial court conducted a hearing on the matter, but ultimately concluded that it was bound by the Court of Appeals decision in State v. Nguyen, 107 Or App 716, 813 P2d 569 (1991). In that case, the Court of Appeals held that, despite a language barrier (the defendant spoke only Vietnamese), the statute was satisfied by the sheriff reading the rights and consequences in English aloud. According to that court, the statute requiring the officer to inform the arrestee of the rights and consequences of refusing a blood alcohol test did not require that the arrestee actually understand that information. Id. at 720. Based on Nguyen, the trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress. 5 As previously *627 noted, defendant was convicted on all charges, 6 and the Court of Appeals affirmed without opinion.

On review, defendant argues that Romans violated the implied consent statutes by reading the rights and consequences to him in a language that Romans knew he would not understand, and that that statutory violation required suppression of his refusal to take a breath test in his prosecution for DUII and refusing to take a breath test.

A brief overview of the relevant statutes provides a framework for our analysis.

Under ORS 813.100(1), anyone driving on public roads in Oregon has impliedly consented to a chemical test of his or her breath for purposes of determining the person’s blood alcohol content if the person has been arrested for DUII. 7 ORS 813.100(1) provides:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 P.3d 125, 351 Or. 622, 2012 WL 753224, 2012 Ore. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cabanilla-or-2012.