State v. Osborne

3 Fla. Supp. 2d 83
CourtPalm Beach County Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1983
DocketCase No. 83-44893 TT A02
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Fla. Supp. 2d 83 (State v. Osborne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Palm Beach County Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Osborne, 3 Fla. Supp. 2d 83 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

EDWARD FINE, County Judge

This action came before the Court upon the Defendant’s motion to suppress certain evidence. He seeks to suppress a .20 blood alcohol reading. The reading was obtained shortly after his arrest on charges of driving under the influence of alcoholic beverages to the extent that his [84]*84normal faculties were impaired1 and; driving with an alcohol-blood concentration of .10 per cent (.0010) or above.2

A breath-testing instrument—the Breathalyzer, was used to analyze the alcoholic content of the defendant’s breath. Once the breath concentration was analyzed it was automatically converted by the Breathalyzer machine into units of blood-alcohol concentration.

Driving with a blood-alcohol concentration of .10 per cent (.0010) or above is a crime in Florida. Defendant’s breathalyzer reading was .20 per cent (.0020) or double the lawful amount.

Defendant is also charged with driving while his normal faculties were impaired by alcohol. If defendant has .10 per cent or more alcohol in his blood, it is prima facie evidence that he is guilty of this charge.3 The .20 Breathalyzer reading is twice this amount.

The Breathalyzer machine readout of .20 per cent is a critically important piece of evidence. It’s accuracy is also critical because:

A. It will be heavily relied upon by the jury as being an objective measure of the defendant’s guilt or innocence.
B. The test can not be verified by independent testing because no breath sample was preserved.

The defendant claims that there are simple, inexpensive, expedient, state-approved means to preserve and later test an actual sample of the defendant’s breath taken at the time he blew into the Breathalyzer machine. If this breath had been adequately preserved it could have been re-tested to confirm or refute the Breathalyzer readout. The defendant claims that the means to preserve the sample were so simple and the effort needed so minimal, that to not have done so but yet to submit the Breathalyzer readout against him is fundamentally unfair, a violation of Article I section 9 of the Florida Constitution and Amendment 14 of the U.S. Constitution, which provide in part that the State may not deprive any person or life, liberty or property without due process of law.

The State contends that the introduction of the Breathalyzer machine reading is not unfair and is not a denial of due process since:

A. Breath preservation methods have not been proven to be technologically sound.
[85]*85B. The defendant has no right to make the police gather evidence for the defense.

Today’s issue is not a new issue. It first arose in Palm Beach County in 1978.4 It arose even earlier in other jurisdictions.5

Around the State and throughout the country, trial judges and panels of appellate judges have failed to reach a uniform decision on today’s issue, but though this conflict in judgment is unsettled, though different courts will decide differently, still a decision has to be made in this case.

The Court decides that it is a denial of due process of law for the State to introduce a Breathalyzer readout into evidence without having made a minimal effort to preserve an additional sample of the tested breath. The Court reasons that:

In order for a breath test result to be admissible the test must be administered after the suspect has been arrested.6 The machine test is used as a tool to investigate and gather evidence, not as a means of deciding whether to arrest a person. If an arrested person had a .0000 breathalyzer machine readout he would still be under arrest.

The Breathalyzer machine is a spectrophotometer. Two ampules, which are small vials of liquid, are placed in the machine between a light bulb and a light meter. There is a dial on the machine that adjusts the machine so that the light meter is in equilibrium between the light being read through one vial and the light being read through the other vial. One of the vials is unsealed, a tube is inserted into it and the suspect blows into the Breathalyzer machine.

The machine traps and then pumps a specified volume of the defendant’s breath through the tube and into the vial. If there is alcohol present in the breath a chemical reaction will lighten the color of the liquid in the opened vial. The light meter then will pick up an imbalance between the amount of light passing through the two vials, the sealed vial having less light passing through it than the lighter test vial. The change will be reflected in the movement of a sensitive needle on the Breathalyzer machine.

The movement of the needle is caused by the reaction of the light meter, which in turn is caused by a color change, the result of a chemical reaction, which is directly proportional to the amount of alcohol in the defendant’s breath, which is in turn directly proportional [86]*86to the amount of alcohol in the defendant’s blood. By noting the movement of the needle, a reading is obtained indicating the machine’s readout of the alcohol-blood concentration of the subject.

In 1978 in the local case of State v. Walker, 77-68583 TT A04, the testimony of the inventor of the Breathalyzer machine, William Borkenstein was taken. He stated that Florida has among the highest standards in the nation for the maintenance, testing and operation of the Breathalyzer. These high standards were set and are maintained by the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services about which more will be noted below.

Only licensed operators may operate these machines. In Palm Beach County licensed Breathalyzer operators are on call day and night in order to test someone. They often operate out of the Sheriff’s Department mobile breathalyzer testing units which are called Batmobiles. These are vans equipped with Breathalyzer equipment and video tape equipment. These vans allow video tape and breathalyzer equipment to be transported nearer to the location of arrests for DWI cases in order to cut down on the time delay between the time a person is arrested and the time that they are actually tested. These vans cost approximately $40,000 each when fully equipped.

The use of the vans and the video tape equipment has substantially improved the fairness of DWI trials. Juries through the use of video tape now have the ability to see and hear a defendant soon after the time of his arrest. Before the use of a video tape there was often no direct evidence of the defendant’s condition. All evidence was indirect, namely the recollection and characterizations of eye witnesses and a Breathalyzer machine reading.

The Indian Crimper crimps a soft metal tube approximately four inches long made of indium, which is a metal that when pressed together self-welds. These tubes cost $10.00 each. The suspect blows by way of a hose into a bag, once the bag is full the air is directed into the indium tube. As the breath enters the tube the police officer uses the crimper, which is a specially manufactured box with a set of crimping jaws inside ($250.00). The crimper is placed around the tube and with a small amount of pressure welds the tube into three separate sections. Each section contains a separate sample of the breath.

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Related

People v. Hedrick
557 P.2d 378 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1976)
Garcia v. Dist. Court, 21st Jud. Dist.
589 P.2d 924 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1979)
State v. Bender
382 So. 2d 697 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1980)
State v. Johnson
280 So. 2d 673 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1973)
Baca v. Smith
604 P.2d 617 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Fla. Supp. 2d 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-osborne-flactyct50-1983.