State v. Raymond

431 A.2d 453, 139 Vt. 464, 1981 Vt. LEXIS 496
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 7, 1981
Docket35-80
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 431 A.2d 453 (State v. Raymond) 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. Raymond, 431 A.2d 453, 139 Vt. 464, 1981 Vt. LEXIS 496 (Vt. 1981).

Opinion

*466 Underwood, J.

The appellant, while operating his motorcycle on Vermont Route 104A in Georgia, on the afternoon of 31 August 1979, apparently lost control and had an accident. He suffered severe head and facial injuries and was transported by ambulance to the Medical Center Hospital of Vermont in Burlington. At the emergency room of the hospital, at the insistence of the investigating state trooper, he was processed for driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor (DWI), and a blood sample was taken from him for analysis. The resulting analysis showed 0.16% of alcohol in his blood by weight.

He was charged with DWI, 23 V.S.A. § 1201(a) (1), and the jury found him guilty as charged. A judgment was entered upon the verdict by the District Court of Vermont, Franklin Circuit, Unit No. 3. It is from this judgment that the appellant appeals.

The appellant has raised and briefed eight assignments of error, two of which are independently sufficient to justify a reversal. The three principal contentions are the following:

(1) The admission into evidence of the implied consent form violated the hearsay rule and constituted an error of such glaring magnitude as to violate the defendant’s constitutional right to a fair trial.
(2) The denial of an evidentiary hearing, out of the presence of the jury, to determine whether the testimony of the State’s witness, Elizabeth Kerr, a licensed practical nurse, should have been suppressed as falling within the patient’s privilege, was reversible error. (12 V.S.A. § 1612(a).)
(3) Permitting Elizabeth Kerr to testify, without a waiver by the defendant of the patient’s privilege, that she observed the odor of alcohol on the defendant’s breath while attending him in her professional capacity was. reversible error.

The state trooper, who processed the appellant in the emergency room of the hospital for DWI, was a proper person to request the appellant to submit to the taking of a blood sample for an alcohol content test. 23 V.S.A. § 1202(a). He testified at length as to the manner in which he informed the appellant of his rights under the implied consent law, 23 V.S.A. *467 § 1202(b), and that the appellant had verbally consented to the giving of a blood sample even though he was physically unable to sign the implied consent form. There was no need for the State to offer the implied consent form itself into evidence. Trooper Miller was present in court and available for cross-examination.

The implied consent form which was admitted into-evidence over the defendant’s objection contained, in part, the following language: “Should you take the [blood] test, an extra sample will be held by the State Health Laboratory for the next 30 days for independent analysis at your request.”' 23 V.S.A. § 1203(a) mandates:

A sufficient amount of breath or blood, as the case may be, shall be taken to enable the person, at his option, to have made an independent analysis of the sample, and shall be held for no more than 30 days from the date the sample was taken.
■: Any time within that period, the respondent may direct that the sample be sent to an independent laboratory of his choosing for an independent analysis. At no time shall the respondent or any agent of the respondent handle or otherwise have access to the sample. The results of any independent analysis made at the direction of the respondent shall be sent only to the respondent or his attorney. Chemical analysis of the person’s breath or blood which is available to that person for independent analysis, shall be considered valid under the provisions of this section when performed according to methods approved by the state department of health.

Whether the defendant exercised his statutory right to have one of the blood samples analyzed by an independent laboratory is of no concern. He does not have to accept the' sample,-and if he does so, he need not later testify as to what he did with it. The jury should not be allowed to speculate or draw inferences from the implied consent form as to whether the defendant did have an independent analysis made,, whether that analysis confirmed the State’s analysis or was more conclusive, or whether the defendant was convinced that the State’s analysis was accurate and that he therefore sought, no independent analysis.

*468 The credibility of the State’s blood alcohol analysis of 0.16% was crucial to a conviction, particularly in this case, where no one observed the motorcycle accident and where the defendant was processed for DWI while in the emergency room of the hospital for treatment of a severe head injury.

This Court has stated in no uncertain terms before:

The purpose and policy of the statute is to protect the defendant and not to manufacture evidence in favor of the state. Nor does it impose an obligation on the defendant to testify what he did concerning a sample obtained by him. And no inference may be drawn against the defendant by the court, prosecutor or jury if he does pick up his sample. He is not to be prejudiced thereby nor placed in jeopardy or at the mercy of the second sample which the statute provides shall be taken and preserved for him .... And this is true whether or not a defendant testifies in his own behalf....

State v. McSheffrey, 131 Vt. 329, 336, 306 A.2d 702, 706 (1973). The admission of the implied consent form is therefore error of a magnitude requiring a reversal and a new trial.

The second and third assignments of error will be treated as one.

Elizabeth Kerr was a licensed practical nurse attending her patient, the defendant, in her professional capacity while he was undergoing medical treatment in the emergency room. If what she then observed of the defendant or heard the defendant say was also necessary to enable her to act in that capacity, then she could not disclose such information unless the defendant were to waive his privilege. 12 V.S.A. § 1612(a) provides:

Confidential information privileged. Unless the patient waives the privilege or unless the privilege is waived by an express provision of law, a person authorized to practice medicine or dentistry, or a registered professional or licensed practical nurse, shall not be allowed to disclose any information which he acquired in attending a patient in a professional capacity, and which was necessary to enable him to act in that capacity.

A careful examination of the transcript indicates a long col *469 loquy about the patient’s privilege between the court, the state’s attorney, the defendant’s attorney and an attorney appointed by the court for Elizabeth Kerr. Although the court characterized this as an in camera hearing, the state’s attorney, defense counsel, Ms. Kerr and her attorney were all present. The State informed the court that it intended to elicit from Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
431 A.2d 453, 139 Vt. 464, 1981 Vt. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-raymond-vt-1981.