State v. Tripp

2010 UT 9, 227 P.3d 1251, 650 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 2010 Utah LEXIS 9
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 2010
Docket20081068
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 2010 UT 9 (State v. Tripp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Tripp, 2010 UT 9, 227 P.3d 1251, 650 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 2010 Utah LEXIS 9 (Utah 2010).

Opinion

DURHAM, Chief Justice:

INTRODUCTION

T1 On writ of certiorari, the State seeks review of the court of appeals' decision in State v. Tripp, 2008 UT App 388, 197 P.3d 99. The State asserts that the court of appeals erred when it reversed the trial court's denial of Defendant Susan Tripp's motion to suppress blood test results in her jury trial on a charge of automobile homicide. The court of appeals held that the State did not meet its burden to prove that her consent was voluntary, and it declined to affirm the trial court under the exigent cireumstances exception or the inevitable discovery doctrine. Id. 126. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

I MS. TRIPP KILLED A MOTORCYCLIST IN AN AUTOMO--BILE ACCIDENT

T2 On April 28, 2004, Ms. Tripp was involved in an automobile-motoreycle accident. At about 6:50 pm., Ms. Tripp drove her truck up to an intersection with a two-way stop sign. The intersection, located on the outskirts of West Jordan, was surrounded by farmland. Claiming she saw no traffic, she drove into the intersection. As she did, Ms. Tripp collided with a motorcyclist. A helicopter transported the severely injured mo-toreycelist to a hospital The motorcyclist died the next day.

II. THE POLICE ASKED AN APPARENTLY UNIMPAIRED MS. TRIPP TO GIVE A BLOOD SAMPLE

13 Shortly after 7:00 p.m., West Jordan Police Officer Doug Saunders arrived at the scene of the crash. Upon his arrival, Ms. *1254 Tripp was sitting in her husband's car. Tripp's husband had arrived sometime earlier. Officer Saunders observed Ms. Tripp crying and shaking. She had a cigarette in her hand and a heavy odor of smoke about her. He did not observe any signs of impairment. Speaking to her from within three feet he did not smell any aleohol, nor could he detect any slurred speech. Officer Saunders asked Ms. Tripp to fill out some paperwork. She returned the paperwork properly completed. When he asked Ms. Tripp if she had consumed any alcohol or taken any pre-seription medications, she replied, "No." Officer Saunders later admitted that he had no reason to disbelieve Ms. Tripp.

4 As a matter of practice in serious investigations, and not based on any particularized suspicion, Officer Saunders wanted to rule out impairment. Officer Saunders asked Ms. Tripp to submit to a blood draw. Ms. Tripp told him that she was afraid of needles and did not want her blood drawn with one. When Officer Saunders asked Ms. Tripp if she would submit to a urinalysis, she said she would, but Officer Saunders never administered the test.

15 At 7:80 pm., Cecilia Budd, a victim advocate in the employ of West Jordan City, arrived at the seene. She spent roughly two hours with Ms. Tripp. When Ms. Budd first made contact with Ms. Tripp, Ms. Tripp was still sitting in her husband's car. Ms. Budd testified that she smelled alcohol in the husband's car when she poked her head through the window but was not sure where the odor came from. Ms. Budd told Ms. Tripp that she was there to support her. Ms. Budd testified that she reported the odor of aleohol in the husband's car to an officer.

6 Ms. Budd observed that Ms. Tripp was very upset and cried most of the time and that her erying "was like a roller coaster." She also saw Ms. Tripp smoke one cigarette because, according to Ms. Tripp, it calmed her down.

T7 At 8:05 p.m., Detective Daniel Roberts arrived at the seene to investigate the expected death. Officer Saunders delegated the task of obtaining Ms. Tripp's blood sample to Detective Roberts. Detective Roberts acknowledged that Officer Saunders did not identify any probable cause justifying a blood draw. Rather, as Detective Roberts understood, the blood draw was standard procedure for an accident involving a death and that if a death was involved he could force the blood draw.

{8 When Detective Roberts asked Ms. Tripp to consent to a blood draw, she refused. She told him that she would only give blood if no needle were used. Detective Roberts knew of no way to obtain blood without a needle. Nonetheless, in the span of about forty-five minutes, Detective Roberts requested three times that Ms. Tripp consent to a blood draw. In at least one of these requests, Detective Roberts was accompanied by two other officers. Ms. Tripp consistently refused to a blood draw by needle, but she again told the officers she would submit to a urinalysis. Nonetheless, the officers never administered a urinalysis, performed any field sobriety tests, or sought a warrant for a blood draw.

9 When speaking with Ms. Tripp, Detective Roberts was about three to four feet away from her. He did not detect any odor of alcohol. He did observe, however, that her eyes were red. He did not see any tears, and no one told him that she had cried. She was shaking and seemed to be nervous. However, Detective Roberts testified that the more he visited with Ms. Tripp, the more concerned he became that Ms. Tripp was perhaps impaired. Specifically, he observed that the redness in her eyes did not dissipate and she did not ery, she "lacked concern" for the victim of the accident, and she continually smoked.

' 10 With this concern in mind, Detective Roberts asked the victim advocates, Cecilia Budd and Diana Greives, to talk with Ms. Tripp in order to calm her down and to help her "become more relaxed to the idea of having a blood draw." Ms. Budd testified that persuading Ms. Tripp to submit to the blood test was "not [her] job." Nevertheless, she explained to Ms. Tripp that she had seen the blood technician draw blood and that he was "good, very gentle, and that Ms. Tripp did not have to look at the needle."

*1255 III DETECTIVE ROBERTS ARRESTED MS. TRIPP BECAUSE SHE REFUSED TO GIVE BLOOD

11 Each time Detective Roberts made his request, Ms. Tripp was seated in her husband's vehicle with her friends, family, and the victim advocates. Upon Ms. Tripp's ada mant refusal of Detective Roberts's third request, he arrested her and informed her that he would foree the blood draw with a warrant. He explained: °

[The more we tried to convinee her, the more defiant she became and then her family and her friends started to intervene and tell us what we could do and what we couldn't do and we were losing control of the situation so I took her into custody and removed her where we could control the whole situation.

When asked how the family and friends interfered, Detective Roberts responded that they were "[tJelling her not to answer the questions.... Telling us that we couldn't take the blood and so I informed her that we were going to obtain a warrant then to get the blood draw and I took her into custody."

{12 Detective Roberts did not handcuff Ms. Tripp, but he placed her in the back of his unmarked police car. At no time did Detective Roberts or any other officer read a Miranda warning to Ms. Tripp.

T13 Detective Roberts asked Officer Joseph Monson to watch Ms. Tripp. Officer Monson did not know why Detective Roberts arrested Ms. Tripp. Officer Monson explained that although the family had interfered with the investigation, Ms. Tripp herself had never interfered. Further, Officer Monson did not detect any signs of impairment in Ms. Tripp. Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
2010 UT 9, 227 P.3d 1251, 650 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 2010 Utah LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tripp-utah-2010.