State v. Evans

378 P.3d 413, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 158, 2016 WL 4608111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedSeptember 2, 2016
Docket2515 A-11865
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 378 P.3d 413 (State v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Evans, 378 P.3d 413, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 158, 2016 WL 4608111 (Ala. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Judge ALLARD.

David Evans was arrested for driving under the influence, When Evans refused to take a breath test, the police obtained a search warrant to draw a sample of his blood. A test of that sample showed that Evans had a blood-aleohol level of .094 percent, which is over the legal limit of .08. 1

Evans was subsequently charged with both driving under the influence and refusal to submit to a breath test. He first moved to dismiss the refusal charge, arguing that he could not be subject to 'the penalties for breath-test refusal under Alaska's implied consent statutory scheme when the police had obtained the same evidence through the warrant process and were pursuing a proge-cution for driving under the influence based on that evidence, The district court denied this motion,

Evans then moved to suppress the results of the blood test, arguing that Alaska law did not authorize the courts to issue search warrants for non-consensual blood draws in cases where only alcohol was suspected and the defendant had already refused to submit to a breath test. The district court agreed with this argument and suppressed the results of the blood test. The State petitioned for review.

*415 This petition requires us to construe the legislature's 2001 amendment to Alaska Statute 28,85.081, Alaska's implied consent statute. For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that the statute, as amended, authorizes courts to 'issue search warrants in these cireumstances. Accordingly, we reverse the district court's ruling suppressing the evidence of Evans's blood test result and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this decision,

We emphasize that our holding is limited to the issues directly before us. Evans has not cross-petmoned us to review the trial court's earlier ruling on his motion to dismiss the refusal charge. We therefore express no opinion as to the merits of that decision, 2

Why we conclude that Alaska law does not prohibit courts from issuing warrants for chemical tests of a person's blood even in cases where the person has refused to submit to a breath test and could potentially be prosecuted for the separate crime of breath-test refusal

In Alaska, a motorist lawfully arrested for driving under the influence must submit to a requested breath test upon receiving the proper legal advisements or face prosecution for refusal to submit to a chemical test. 3 The question presented in Evans's case is whether, in the event a motorist refuses to take a breath test, the police may nevertheless obtain a search warrant to compel the motorist to submit to some other chemical test (generally a blood test) for the purpose of establishing the motorist's blood-alcohol level.

The Alaska Statutes do not directly answer this question. Under AS 28.85.081(a), any person who drives a motor vehicle and is lawfully arrested for driving under the influence "shall be considered to have given consent to a chemical test or tests of the person's breath for the purpose of determining the alcoholic content of the person's blood or breath." If a motorist refuses to submit to this breath test after being advised of the legal consequences of that refusal, AS 28,85.082(a) prowdes that "a chemical test may mot be fiven, except as provided, by AS 28.35.0835." (Emphasis added.) Alaska Statute 28.85,.085 . provides two cireumstances in which the police may administer a chemical test of breath or blood without the motorist's consent: (1) if the motorist was involved in an accident that caused death or physical injury; or (2) if the motorist is unconscious or otherwise incapable of refusal. 4

In 1979, in Anchorage v. Geber, 5 the Alaska Supreme Court construed the language of AS 28.35.082(a)-"a chemical test may not be given"-to apply to all chemical tests of both breath and blood. Thus, the Court interpreted the statute to prohibit the police from administering any chemical test of the person's breath or blood without their express consent. 6 The supreme court reasoned that, by elevating refusal to a separate crime and enacting a comprehensive statutory scheme for the state's implied. consent law, the Alaska legislature had made the. breath test the "exelusive method for obtaining direct evidence of a suspect's blood alcohol content, absent his or her express consent to the use of some other form of testing." 7

Five years later, in Pena v. State, 8 the Alaska Supreme Court held that this limitation in AS 28.35,082(a) extended even to po-Hece-initiated non-consensual blood draws performed pursuant to a search warrant. 9 The 'supreme court again reasoned that the implied consent statutory consent scheme was intended to be comprehensive and the State *416 was permitted to charge a person lawfully arrested for DUI with breath-test refusal if the person refused to submit to a requested breath test but the State was not permitted to seek a search warrant to obtain the same evidence through other means. 10

Thus, under Geber and Pena, if a person lawfully arrested for driving under the influ-enee refused to submit to a breath test, the State was entitled to charge that person with the crime of breath-test refusal and could use evidence of the refusal against the person in the prosecution for the underlying offense of driving under the influence; but the State was not entitled to compel the person to comply with a non-consensual chemical test of their breath or blood-even through the warrant process.

Justice Compton dissented from the holding in Pena,. In Justice Compton's view, the implied consent statutory scheme addressed only chemical tests given "at the direction of a law enforcement officer," not tests compelled by court order through a lawfully obtained warrant. 11 Justice Compton observed that there was "nothing in the statutes to indicate that the legislature contemplated restricting searches pursuant to warrant, which derive from the judicial authority of the court, rather than the power of an officer to search an individual at the time of arrest. 12

Six years after Pena, in 2000, the Alaska Supreme Court decided Sosa v. State. 13 Sosa involved a defendant who was arrested for driving under the influence in a remote location. When the police realized that the local breath-test machine was malfunctioning, they applied for, and obtained, a search warrant to seize a sample of Sosa's blood for chemical testing. Sosa resisted the efforts to draw his blood and was later charged with, and convicted of, tampering with physical evidence based on that resistance. 14

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
378 P.3d 413, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 158, 2016 WL 4608111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-evans-alaskactapp-2016.