State v. Nugent

2014 VT 4, 88 A.3d 429, 195 Vt. 411, 2014 Vt. 4, 2014 WL 92239, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 10, 2014
DocketNo. 13-078
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2014 VT 4 (State v. Nugent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nugent, 2014 VT 4, 88 A.3d 429, 195 Vt. 411, 2014 Vt. 4, 2014 WL 92239, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 1 (Vt. 2014).

Opinion

Reiber, C.J.

¶ 1. The State of Vermont appeals from the trial court’s grant of defendant’s motion for judgment as a matter of law on his civil driver’s license suspension. The trial court held that the State did not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that defendant’s blood alcohol concentration (BAC) was 0.08 or above at the time he operated a motor vehicle. We affirm the trial court’s decision.

¶ 2. The facts are uncontested. On October 6, 2012, at 7 p.m., several witnesses observed as defendant drove his truck off the [412]*412road at a curve on Route 2 in Lunenburg, Vermont. The truck was flung across a lawn and over an embankment, managing to knock over a large tree before coming to rest on its side in water. The officer who arrived on scene observed that defendant appeared moderately impaired. Defendant told the officer that he had one beer between 4:30 and 5 p.m., and nothing to drink during the thirty minutes before the crash or afterward. Defendant was taken to the hospital, where a blood test administered at 9:19 p.m. showed a blood alcohol level of 0.137 percent.

¶ 3. The State initiated a civil license suspension proceeding, and a hearing was held on January 17, 2013. Because the police tested defendant’s BAC more than two hours after the time of operation, the State was required to prove through relation-back evidence that defendant’s BAC was over the legal limit while he was driving. See 23 V.S.A. § 1205(n) (stating that a person’s BAC will be presumed to have been over the legal limit while driving if the person’s BAC was over the legal limit within two hours of driving).

¶ 4. The State’s expert submitted an affidavit and also testified in person that, based on her calculations relating the BAC level taken at the hospital back to the time of the accident, defendant’s BAC at the time of operation was 0.172. Defendant objected to the admission of the expert’s testimony under Vermont Rule of Evidence 702, arguing that her relation-back calculation methods did not conform to minimum scientific standards and that her estimate was not to a reasonable degree of scientific reliability. The court took defendant’s objection under advisement. On cross-examination, defendant questioned the assumptions involved in the expert’s calculation, especially the assumption that the alcohol elimination rate was 0.015 percent per hour, on the grounds that elimination rates vary between individuals and the expert could only speculate as to defendant’s elimination rate.

¶ 5. The court issued its decision on January 29, 2013. It first ruled that the expert’s affidavit and testimony were admissible under the liberal evidentiary rules for civil suspension hearings. See V.R.C.R 80.5(f)(3) (“Evidence is admissible if it is of a type commonly relied upon by reasonably prudent persons in the conduct of their affairs . . . .”). Further, the court noted that the affidavit “provides prima facie evidence that the test results were accurately evaluated,” citing 23 V.S.A. § 1205(h)(1)(D). However, the court ultimately ruled that “the weight of [the expert’s] [413]*413opinion is insufficient for the Court to adopt her calculation as establishing BAC at time of operation.” The court reasoned as follows:

If 0.015/hr is one rate that occurs on a spectrum, what is the full variation of the spectrum, and where on that spectrum does 0.015 fall? Is it just barely below the mean, so that 51% of people ehminate faster than that, or is it toward the end of the spectrum so that 95% of people eliminate faster than that? Alternatively, if elimination rates used by other experts were applied to the facts of this case, would they also show that [defendant’s] BAC was 0.08% or more at the time of operation? While [the expert] may have credible answers to these questions, the answers were not elicited at the hearing.

¶ 6. The court thus granted defendant’s motion for judgment as a matter of law

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Related

State v. Henry Nash
Vermont Superior Court, 2019
State v. Kelly M. Taylor
2015 VT 104 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2015)
State v. Nugent
195 Vt. 411 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 VT 4, 88 A.3d 429, 195 Vt. 411, 2014 Vt. 4, 2014 WL 92239, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nugent-vt-2014.