State v. Simpson

73 P.3d 596, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 77, 2003 WL 1949578
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 25, 2003
DocketNo. A-8367
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 73 P.3d 596 (State v. Simpson) 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. Simpson, 73 P.3d 596, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 77, 2003 WL 1949578 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinions

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

Under the due process clause of the Alaska Constitution, a person arrested for driving while intoxicated is entitled to an independent test of his blood aleohol level. The State charged Gregory Simpson with felony driving while intoxicated (DW1) based in part upon two prior California convictions for diving while intoxicated. Simpson moved to suppress the State's use of his prior California convictions on the ground that those convictions were constitutionally suspect under Alaska law because his right to an independent test was not constitutionally protected in California. Superior Court Judge Stephanie E. Joannides agreed with Simpson and granted his motion. The State filed a petition for review. We granted the petition. We reverse Judge Joannides's decision and conclude that Simpson's prior California convictions are admissible to support the felony DWI charge.

Normally driving while intoxicated is a class A misdemeanor.1 But the State can charge the person with a class C felony if the person has two or more prior convictions "since January 1, 1996, and within the 10 years preceeding the date of the present offense."2 Judge Joannides's ruling prevented the State from using Simpson's two prior California convictions to charge Simpson with a felony.

In reaching her decision to not allow the State to use Simpson's prior convictions to support a felony driving while intoxicated charge, Judge Joannides relied on two cases where we held that some prior convictions were too unreliable to enhance a defendant's sentence. In Pananen v. State,3 we addressed a prior conviction where the defendant had not been afforded a right to counsel. In Pananen, the defendant was convicted of two counts of driving while intoxicated.4 The trial court sentenced the defendant as a third offender because he had two prior convictions for that offense in Wisconsin.5 On appeal, the defendant argued that the first of the two Wisconsin convictions was invalid to enhance his sentence because, under Wisconsin law, he was not afforded the right to be represented by counsel.6 We concluded "that an uncoun-seled conviction is simply too unreliable to be depended on for purposes of imposing a sentence of incarceration, whether that sentence is imposed directly or collaterally." 7 Based on this conclusion, we held that "[blecause Wisconsin law did not extend to Pananen the right to court-appointed counsel for his first DWI offense, Pananen's first Wisconsin conviction should not have been relied upon by the district court as a basis for determining the applicable mandatory minimum sentence." 8

In State v. Peel,9 we addressed whether a prior driving while intoxicated conviction could be used to support a mandatory minimum sentence for driving while intoxicated where the defendant had been denied the right to a jury trial. In Peel, the trial court concluded that it would not use the defendant's prior Louisiana conviction for driving while intoxicated to impose a mandatory minimum sentence required by law for second driving while intoxicated offenders.10 The trial court relied on the fact that, under [598]*598Louisiana law, Peel had not been entitled to a trial by jury for his prior offense.11 The State challenged the trial court's ruling, distinguishing Pananenr by arguing that the right to a jury trial was not as critical as the right to counsel.12 We relied on Alaska decisions that equated the right to counsel and the right to a jury trial and upheld the trial court's decision to not use the prior Louisiana driving while intoxicated conviction to apply the mandatory minimum sentencing provisions.13

Using the logic of these two decisions, Judge Joannides concluded that Simpson's two prior California convictions could not be used to support enhancing Simpson's offense from a misdemeanor to a felony. She held that because California did not mandate that a defendant was entitled to an independent test of his blood aleohol level, Simpson's prior convictions, like the prior convictions we disallowed in Pananen and Peel, were constitutionally suspect. The State petitioned, arguing that the right to an independent test is not the equivalent to the right to counsel or the right to a jury trial.

In order to understand the nature of the right to an independent test in Alaska, it is helpful to explore the history of the development of that right. The Alaska Supreme Court first recognized a due process right to challenge the result of a police-administered breath test in Lauderdale v. State.14 In Lauderdale, the court held that in order to introduce the result of a police administered breath test at trial, the State had to give the defendant a reasonable opportunity to challenge the breath test result.15 The court required the State to preserve ampoules that were part of the breath test procedure so that the defendant could independently test the ampoules to potentially attack the breath test result.16

In Anchorage v. Serrano,17 this court was asked to determine whether, under the logic of Lauderdale, the State should be required to preserve a breath sample so that a person charged with driving while intoxicated could have the breath sample independently examined to challenge the result of a State administered breath test.18 Relying on Lauderdale, we concluded that "due process [requires] the prosecution to make reasonable efforts to preserve a breath sample in those cases in which they wish to admit the result of a breath test." } But we concluded that the State was not limited to preserving a breath sample to allow the defendant to challenge a breath test result. We pointed out that the State could "take other steps" to allow a defendant to determine the accuracy of the breath test.19 We suggested that the defendant could be informed of his right to secure an independent test and, if he requested an independent test, could be allowed or assisted to obtain that test.20

The Alaska Supreme Court has continued to expand and protect the right to an independent test. The court has explained that "[a] positive Intoximeter test result is the single most important piece of evidence against a defendant accused of driving while intoxicated" and concluded that "[slince a defendant must provide the state with potentially incriminating evidence at the risk of criminal penalties, ... the defendant [must] be given an opportunity to challenge the reliability of that evidence in the simplest and most effective way possible, that is, an independent test." 21 The State has met its obligation to provide defendants with the [599]*599right to challenge their breath test results by providing them with the opportunity to take an independent blood test.22

Other courts have generally reached a different result. In California v. Trombetta,23 the United States Supreme Court held that "the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not require that law enforcement agencies preserve breath samples in order to introduce the results of breath-analysis tests at trial."24

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 P.3d 596, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 77, 2003 WL 1949578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-simpson-alaskactapp-2003.