State v. Triplett

355 S.W.3d 543, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1682, 2011 WL 6989830
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 2011
DocketWD 73486
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 355 S.W.3d 543 (State v. Triplett) 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. Triplett, 355 S.W.3d 543, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1682, 2011 WL 6989830 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The State of Missouri appeals the trial court’s order dismissing without prejudice the charge against Christopher Triplett, respondent, following the trial court’s decision to sustain Triplett’s motion to suppress evidence. We dismiss the appeal.

Statement of Facts

Respondent Christopher Triplett was involved in a vehicular accident on 1-29 in Platte County, Missouri. The incident occurred as he was passing a semi-tractor trailer driven by Laverne Brown on a snowy and ice-covered stretch of pavement. According to Mr. Brown, Triplett was passing him on the left, lost control on the ice, and slid into his trailer. No one was hurt, but a window on Triplett’s vehicle was broken. No one addresses the issue of whether the vehicles were required to wait at the scene (as opposed to some other form of reporting the accident), but in any event, both drivers waited at the scene for the Highway Patrol. Triplett pulled his vehicle onto the shoulder in front of Brown’s truck.

Trooper Kutzner of the Missouri Highway Patrol arrived about forty minutes later. Kutzner talked to the drivers at the scene. He asked Triplett to join him inside his patrol car. Once inside, Kutzner detected a strong odor of alcohol coming from Triplett. When asked, Triplett ac *545 knowledged having “had, like, two beers” earlier at a restaurant and bar. The odor of alcohol, and the admission, prompted Kutzner to administer a series of field sobriety tests. Triplett acquiesced. Kutz-ner administered the horizontal gaze nys-tagmus (“HGN”) test, an alphabet test, a counting-backward test, and a finger-pat test. Kutzner did not ask Triplett to perform any other recognized tests, such as the walk and turn test, because Triplett would have had to exit the patrol car and perform the tests on a snow-covered road.

Kutzner asked Triplett to place his back against the passenger-side door of his patrol car and to follow his finger as he passed it from side to side as he performed the HGN test. Triplett cooperated with Kutzner’s request. During the test, Kutz-ner observed that Triplett’s pupils were of normal size but his eyes were bloodshot. In conducting the HGN test, Kutzner found six possible clues of intoxication that were consistent with intoxication.

On two other field sobriety tests, Triplett performed without flaw. Kutzner asked Triplett to say a portion of the alphabet in an effort to assist him in deciding whether he should arrest Triplett for driving while intoxicated. This test required Triplett to start with the letter “C” and stop at “M.” Consistent with these instructions, Triplett began at “C” and stopped at “M.” In the process, Triplett said each letter without repetition, omission, or slur. The officer then had Triplett perform a finger-to-thumb pat test. This test required Triplett to touch the tip of each finger with the tip of his thumb in sequential order, first increasing, and then decreasing. He did so in proper sequence without skipping or omitting a number.

The officer asked Triplett to submit to a preliminary breath test (sometimes called a “portable breath test”), the result of which is not admissible as evidence of intoxication but may be considered in the probable cause determination as simply evidence that the subject has consumed some alcohol. See § 577.021 RSMo 1 ; York v. Dir. of Revenue, 186 S.W.3d 267, 272 (Mo. banc 2006), overruled in part on other grounds by White v. Dir. of Revenue, 321 S.W.3d 298 (Mo. banc 2010).

The preliminary breath test indicated confirmation that Triplett had consumed some alcohol. The preliminary breath test was not designed to indicate intoxication or estimate a blood alcohol level, so it merely confirmed Triplett’s admission of earlier consuming some beers. As a result of the HGN and preliminary breath test, Kutzner placed Triplett under arrest for driving while intoxicated.

The State formally charged Triplett with driving while intoxicated, in violation of section 577.010, and operating a motor vehicle in a careless and imprudent manner, in violation of section 304.012. On July 14, 2010, Triplett filed a motion to suppress all evidence obtained by the State during and subsequent to his allegedly unlawful stop and arrest. He combined that motion with a motion to dismiss the charge of driving while intoxicated. In his motion, Triplett sought

an evidentiary hearing, out of the presence of the jury, and requested] the court to enter one or more of the following orders, to wit: (1) grant his motion to suppress, and to dismiss the charge of driving while intoxicated on the grounds that there is insufficient evidence for the State of Missouri to proceed to a trial; (2) enter a finding that there was not probable cause to believe the defendant was driving while intoxi *546 cated, that as a result, there is insufficient evidence for the State of Missouri to proceed to a trial ..., and to dismiss the charge against him; and (3) enter an order for such other and further relief as this court deems proper in the circumstances.

(Emphasis added.) The motion reads like a combination motion to suppress evidence and motion to dismiss based on a claim of lack of evidence to warrant taking the case to trial. The motion to dismiss apparently was predicated upon the suppression of the evidence on the basis of an invalid arrest.

The prosecution filed no formal response to the motions. There is no requirement that the prosecution file a written response to a motion to suppress to preserve its right to contest the motion. One might expect the State, however, to seek to reserve to itself (and not concede to the court) the right to dismiss the case if indeed a substantial part of the evidence is suppressed. The State here, nevertheless, made no response or comment as to the combined motion to suppress/motion to dismiss other than to present evidence as indicated below.

At the hearing scheduled in response to Triplett’s filing, on December 2, 2010, the State appeared and presented the testimony of Mr. Brown, the driver of the other vehicle involved in the collision with Triplett, and Officer Kutzner. Mr. Brown testified that he was driving slowly in icy, snow-packed conditions on 1-29 when he saw in his side mirror that Triplett’s vehicle, which presumably was attempting to pass, slid into the left side of his semi tractor-trailer due to the ice. He testified that the weather was “extremely icy, winter conditions, real cold.” He testified that no one was hurt in the collision. Triplett moved his vehicle from the point of the collision to a point on the shoulder in front of Mr. Brown’s vehicle. They waited in separate vehicles for the Highway Patrol.

Officer Kutzner also testified about his arrival at the scene, his contact with Triplett, and his detection of the odor of alcohol and the field sobriety testing. He testified that he was with Triplett for about half an hour before the arrest. He said that when he asked Triplett about what time the accident occurred, Triplett referred to his cell phone to check the time of his phone call made shortly after the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
355 S.W.3d 543, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1682, 2011 WL 6989830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-triplett-moctapp-2011.