State v. Paul

437 S.W.2d 98, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 731
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 21, 1969
Docket33252
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 437 S.W.2d 98 (State v. Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Paul, 437 S.W.2d 98, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 731 (Mo. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

*100 CLEMENS, Commissioner.

A jury found defendant Donald Roy Paul guilty of driving a motor vehicle while in an intoxicated condition, and imposed a $500 fine. (Under § 564.440(1) 1 the offense is a misdemeanor.) Following the denial of his after-trial motion, allocution and judgment, the defendant appeals. We reverse and remand, holding that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of chemical tests.

The decisive issue concerns admissibility of a chemical analysis of defendant’s breath made after testing with a Double Piston Cylinder (DPC) intoximeter. The defendant objected to this because he had requested but had been denied full information concerning the test, to which he was entitled under § 564.441, subdivision 4.

A simpler issue is defendant’s challenge to sufficiency of the evidence. We recite it without reference to the intoxi-meter test. On the night of January 20-21, 1968, defendant spent several hours at a social hall, drinking (he said) three glasses of beer. About 2 a. m. he left the hall, driving his car on Gravois avenue. He rear-ended Thomas Parchomski’s car which was stopped at an intersection traffic signal. Someone called the police and soon Patrolman Virgil Seib arrived. The two men described the defendant’s gait, eyes and breath odor. Each then gave his opinion, without objection, that defendant was intoxicated. The evidence was sufficient. Compare State v. Ryan, Mo., 275 S.W.2d 350; and State v. Hatcher, 303 Mo. 13, 259 S.W. 467 [1, 9],

Before relating evidence of the DPC intoximeter test, we point out the pertinent statutory provisions. By § 564.440 it is a crime to operate a motor vehicle while intoxicated. By § 564.442 the amount of alcohol in a defendant’s blood, as shown by chemical analysis of his breath, is admissible in evidence; a percentage of alcohol in excess of 0.15 is prima facie evidence of intoxication. Our primary concern is § 564.441. Subdivision 1 declares a driver’s “implied consent” to a chemical test. Subdivision 2, with our emphasis added, provides: “Chemical analysis of the person’s breathy to be considered valid * * * shall be performed according to methods approved by the state division of health * * The division is authorized to approve methods and issue permits to qualified persons to conduct analyses. By Subdivision 3 a person so tested is authorized to have an additional test made by a physician, or other qualified person, of his own choice. Defendant rests his appeal on Subdivision 4: “Upon the request of the person who submits to a chemical test at the request of a law enforcement officer, full information concerning the test shall be made available to him.”

The intoximeter test evidence: When Patrolman Seib met the defendant at the collision site he explained the implied consent law and defendant agreed to the test. The officer drove defendant to a hospital for a physical examination to determine injury. About three hours after the collision defendant and Patrolman Seib arrived at police headquarters. There Corporal James Brady, a state-licensed “type three operator”, gave defendant the DPC intoxi-meter test by having him blow through the machine into a chemically treated glass tube. The color of this sample indicated to Corporal Brady that defendant was intoxicated to some degree. Thereupon a second sample was taken, put into a “magnesium perchlorate tube”, sealed, marked and stored. Three days later this tube was turned over to Mr. Robert Seto, the police department’s chemist. Mr. Seto was a state-licensed “type one operator” authorized to make quantitative analyses of blood alcohol as shown by breath sampled with a DPC intoximeter.

This prosecution moved speedily. On January 23, 1968, Mr. Sidney Faber, associate prosecuting attorney for the City of *101 St. Louis, filed the information. On February 8 the defendant pleaded not guilty. Then on March 11, three weeks before trial, defendant and his counsel wrote the St. Louis Police Department requesting “full information” concerning the chemical test of defendant’s breath. They particularly asked about the type of equipment used, whether and when it had been inspected for accuracy and the result thereof, the names and qualifications of persons making the chemical analysis, the time defendant had been observed by the testing personnel, and a description of the procedure used in testing for alcoholic content of the defendant’s blood. The police did not grant this request; instead, they referred it to Mr. Faber, who told them not to answer. This was contrary to § 564.441, subdivision 4.

At trial, chemist Seto told how a DPC intoximeter works. With a DPC intoxi-meter and its tubes (not the ones used here) he demonstrated the procedure in taking breath samples. Mr. Seto testified he “ran an analysis” on the defendant’s breath sample. Asked the “number reading” on the test, he answered — over defendant’s objection hereafter discussed — that it “showed a blood alcohol concentration of 0.24 percent * * * the subject was undoubtedly intoxicated.”

The defendant objected to the admission of results of the chemical analysis on the ground he had requested but the police had denied him full information concerning the test — in violation of § 564.441, subdivision 4. If this objection was valid, the answer (“showed a blood alcohol concentration of 0.24 percent * * * the subject was undoubtedly intoxicated”) was prejudicial. State v. Burchett, Mo., 302 S.W.2d 9[1],

As said, the decisive issue here is whether the State’s failure to comply with subdivision 4 of § 564.441 barred the State from introducing evidence of the chemical analysis. We say it did.

This conclusion is based on our construction of § 564.441. Each of three approaches leads to that result. First, subdivision 4 is mandatory rather than directory and, hence, failure to comply with it nullifies compliance with other provisions of § 564.-441. Second, this follows our further conclusion that § 564.441 establishes a statutory substitute for the necessary common-law foundation for showing results of mechanical tests. Third, subdivision 4 favors the defendant, must be construed favorably to him, and must be harmonized with the other provisions of § 564.441.

Mandatory Nature. The mandatory or directory nature of a statute is determined from the legislative intent. This depends primarily on the purpose of the enactment. 2 When that purpose relates to the essence of a thing to be done, rather than to a matter of convenience, the provision is deemed mandatory. 3 Here, the purpose of subdivision 4 is clear: to give the accused a pretrial look at information available to the State to convict him — to enable the accused to intelligently exercise his right to challenge the test’s accuracy.

A further factor should be considered: the effect of a different construction. 4

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Bluebook (online)
437 S.W.2d 98, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-paul-moctapp-1969.