State v. Turner

494 P.2d 146, 94 Idaho 548, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 291
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1972
Docket10925
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 494 P.2d 146 (State v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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. Turner, 494 P.2d 146, 94 Idaho 548, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 291 (Idaho 1972).

Opinion

*549 McQUADE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction entered pursuant to a jury verdict finding appellant guilty of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, in violation of I.C. § 49-1102. 1 The verdict was based in part on evidence, admitted over motion to suppress, showing the positive results of a “Mobat” chemical breath test authorized by I.C. § 49-3S2. 2 Appellant assigns error to admission of this evidence, arguing that it was obtained by methods violative of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and of similar language in Article I, Section 13, of the Idaho Constitution. Appellant also contends that police officers “pressured” him to take the test when his physical condition prevented him from making a knowing and intelligent waiver of his statutory right to refuse.

I

On the evening of August 22, 1970, appellant attended a “bachelor party” at which he consumed several cups of beer. He departed the gathering on a friend’s motorcycle and drove along the edge of a dark county road at thirty-five to forty miles per hour. He swerved into a roadside ditch at 10:45 p. m. Help arrived in the form of police officer Duane W. Owen at 11:45 p. m. Owen found appellant lying in the ditch, bleeding from the mouth, and talking “somewhat irrationally.” At trial Owen testified that appellant then “seemed to be in a very incoherent state and seemed to be quite dazed, that he smelled quite strongly of alcoholic beverages,” and that his eyes were bloodshot and watery. Owen called an ambulance, and notified fellow officer William F. Green to meet the ambulance at Magic Valley Hospital in Twin Falls in order to observe appellant’s condition. Enroute to the hospital, the am *550 bulance attendant noticed that appellant was spitting blood and that he was “dazed and incoherent and smelled of alcohol.”

At the hospital, appellant received painkilling injections in the course of treatment for multiple lacerations of the head and face. As he was attended by the hospital staff, he sat quietly, with his hands shaking. He rose occasionally to spit blood in a sink, and approached the telephone several times before using it to call his wife. The two police officers at that time concluded that appellant had been driving under the influence. When initial treatment of the injuries was completed, they announced the arrest, requesting that appellant take the “Mobat” breath test. A lengthy colloquy ensued, extending thirty to forty-five minutes, during which appellant repeatedly asked what would happen to him if he took, or refused to take, the test. Officer Owen later testified that appellant appeared “somewhat more rational” at this point than at the scene of the accident. The officers explained that if he took the test, the results might be used in court against him; and that if he refused, the Commissioner of Law Enforcement could suspend his operator’s license. Owen, according to the testimony of his partner, also advised appellant that he did not have to answer questions and that he was entitled to have an attorney present. Throughout the discussion appellant “didn’t act like he wanted to take [the test],” but when the “Mobat” device finally was handed to him at 1:30 a. m., he blew into the balloon. No physical coercion was employed.

The test revealed a blood alcohol content of 0.10%. Since alcohol content decreases at the rate of 0.01% to 0.02% per hour after the first forty-five to sixty minutes, the state’s chemical analyst testified that 0.10% was less than the “peak” alcohol content reached earlier that night. Properly instructed on the presumption established by I.C. § 49-1102, 3 the jury returned a guilty verdict, and judgment of conviction was entered accordingly.

II

In Rochin v. People 4 the United States Supreme Court reversed judgment of conviction in a narcotics case based on evidence obtained by police officers, acting without valid arrest or search warrants, who unlawfully broke and entered defendant’s home, physically assaulted him in his bedroom as he swallowed morphine tablets, and subsequently forced him to submit against his will to a stomach pump treatment which recovered the drugs. The Court ruled that admission of evidence obtained by methods which “shocked the conscience,” violated the “community sense of fairness,” and “did more than offend some fastidious squeamishness or private sentimentalism about combatting crime too energetically,” 5 violated the defendant’s Fourteenth Amendment right to due process in a state prosecution. That ruling narrowed the scope of Wolf v. People of State of Colorado, 6 in which the Court previously had held that the Fourteenth Amendment did not forbid admission in a state prosecution of evidence obtained by unreasonable search and seizure.

Of course, decisions in Mapp v. Ohio 7 and Malloy v. Hogan 8 have since opened state prosecutions to Fourth and Fifth Amendment attack. 9 But application of *551 the Fourteenth Amendment due process clause, by itself, remains limited. In Irvine v. People of State of California 10 the Court explained that it was the coercive physical assault which led to reversal in Rochin. In Breithaupt v. Abram 11 the Court held that withdrawal of a blood sample from an unconscious defendant in the hospital, in order to perform a blood alcohol test, did not offend the “community sense of fairness” as did the police conduct in Rochin. More recently, in Schmerber v. California, 12 the Court upheld administration of a blood alcohol test where the defendant knowingly withheld consent. The Court allowed that

“[i]t would be a different case if the police initiated the violence, refused to respect a reasonable request to undergo a different form of testing, or responded to resistance with inappropriate force.” 13

The record in this appeal discloses no such conduct. Neither do the actions of officers Owen and Green bear any resemblance to the improprieties condemned in Rochin. Rather, the facts of this case closely parallel Breithaupt and Schmerber. Appellant cites State v. Kroening, 14 holding that extraction of blood from a semiconscious defendant without requesting or obtaining his consent violated the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. That case may be distinguished on its facts and by the lack of a valid arrest prior to the blood extraction. In any event, the decision preceded

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Bluebook (online)
494 P.2d 146, 94 Idaho 548, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-turner-idaho-1972.