Stellwagon v. DIRECTOR OF REVENUE, STATE

91 S.W.3d 113, 2002 Mo. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 31750164
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 2002
DocketSC 84438
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 91 S.W.3d 113 (Stellwagon v. DIRECTOR OF REVENUE, STATE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stellwagon v. DIRECTOR OF REVENUE, STATE, 91 S.W.3d 113, 2002 Mo. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 31750164 (Mo. 2002).

Opinion

LAURA DENVIR STITH, Judge.

The trial court set aside the Director of Revenue’s one-year revocation and five-year denial of Kenneth Stellwagon’s driving privileges under sections 302.304 and 302.060, RSMo 2000 1 , respectively, on the basis that the director failed to meet her burden of proof. The director appeals, arguing that once she introduced the administrative record showing that Mr. Stellwagon had two prior convictions for driving while intoxicated, the burden of producing evidence shifted back to Mr. Stellwagon to show that the convictions were “uncounseled” or otherwise inadequate to support revocation or denial of his license.

While the driver bears the ultimate burden of persuasion, once Mr. Stellwagon showed he was qualified for a driver’s license, then under Kinzenbaw v. Director of Revenue, 62 S.W.3d 49 (Mo. banc 2001), the burden of producing evidence shifted to the director. To meet this burden, the director was required to make a prima facie showing of each of the statutory elements necessary to support denial of Mr. Stellwagon’s license under section 302.060(10) by offering evidence, based on the administrative record or otherwise, that Mr. Stellwagon had two prior convictions, that his prior municipal court conviction was before a judge who was an attorney, and that it was “counseled” or that Mr. Stellwagon waived counsel.

Here, however, contrary to Mr. Stell-wagon’s contention, the director did make *114 such a showing when the administrative record is considered in conjunction with a copy of the uniform complaint and summons, Form 37A. The trial court erred in determining otherwise. The administrative record also supported revocation of Mr. Stellwagon’s license for one year under section 302.304. For these reasons, the Court reverses and remands with directions to reinstate the one-year revocation and five-year denial of Mr. Stellwag-on’s license.

1. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On February 25, 2000, Kenneth Stellwagon was found guilty of driving while intoxicated (DWI), for which he received a sentence of 48 hours in jail and a $350 fine. On March 14, 2000, the director advised Mr. Stellwagon by letter that, effective April 15, 2000, his “privilege to drive a motor vehicle in Missouri will be denied for 5 years for being convicted a second time for driving while intoxicated (refer to section 302.060 RSMo) within a 5 year period,” and that “this denial resulted from the following convictions: [1] 02/25/2000 DRIVING WHILE INTOXICATED; [2] 04/29/1997 DRIVING WHILE INTOXICATED.”

Section 302.060(10) states that the director shall not issue any license and shall deny any driving privilege:

to any person who has been convicted twice within a five-year period of violating state law, or a county or municipal ordinance where the judge in such cases was an attorney and the defendant was represented by or waived the right to an attorney in writing, of driving while intoxicated ... The director shall not issue a license to such person for five years from the date such person was convicted ... for driving while intoxicated for the second time.

Sec. 302.060(10), RSMo. On March 14, 2000, the director also informed Mr. Stell-wagon by letter that effective on April 15, 2000, his driving privileges would be administratively revoked for one year, pursuant to section 302.304, based on the 12 points he accumulated for his February 25, 2002, DWI conviction. 2

Both letters informed Mr. Stellwagon that he had thirty days to appeal these decisions. Mr. Stellwagon timely sought review in the Circuit Court of Greene County. In his petition, he asserted that the legal bases for denying him a license for five years under section 302.060(10) or for revoking it for one year under section 302.304 were not met in that “the basis of this denial and revocation are two convictions for driving while intoxicated occurring on February 25, 2000 and April 29, 1997. A check of the records of the Municipal Court of Springfield, Missouri, does not reveal the existence of a DWI conviction occurring on or about April 29, 1997.”

The only evidence introduced at the trial was a certified copy of the administrative record on which Mr. Stellwagon’s denial and revocation had been based. As relevant here, the record included Mr. Stell-wagon’s driving record, the director’s March 14, 2000, letters denying and revoking his license, and the two uniform complaint and summons forms that reflected Mr. Stellwagon’s DWI convictions on February 25, 2000, and April 29, 1997. The portions of the 1997 form setting out his arrest for DWI, the date of the conviction, the complaint number, the sentence and *115 the fact that the judge was an attorney were legible, but much of the rest of the form, particularly the pre-printed words, was so difficult to read as to be illegible.

The trial court reinstated Mr. Stellwag-on’s driver’s license, stating, “having reviewed the evidence, the Court finds the Department of Revenue has failed to carry its burden of proof. Judgment for Plaintiff.” The director appealed to the Missouri Court of Appeals, Southern District, which affirmed based on the illegible nature of the documents in the administrative record. This Court granted transfer. Mo. Const, art. V, sec. 10.

II. ANALYSIS

Both parties agree that this appeal is determined by this Court’s opinion in Kin-zenbaw, but they disagree as to that opinion’s meaning. Kinzenbaw held a driver:

has the burden of producing evidence that he is qualified for a driver’s license, and the director has the burden of producing evidence that he is not. The director meets her burden by introducing the administrative record. The burden of persuasion, as distinct from the burden of producing evidence, is at all times on [the driver] and never shifts. It is [the driver’s] burden to prove that the facts on which the director relied in denying the license are not true or are legally insufficient to support the denial or suspension of the license.

Kinzenbaw, 62 S.W.3d at 51.

The director contends that by this language Kinzenbaw meant that, once the driver contests the denial or revocation and the pleadings show the driver is qualified for a Missouri license, all the director has to do to meet her burden of going forward is to introduce the administrative record. At that point, she argues, the burden shifts back to the driver to show that the administrative record does not reflect the statutory requirements for denial or revocation or that the bases the record shows are inaccurate or are otherwise insufficient to support the director’s actions. Since Mr. Stellwagon offered no such evidence, he, therefore, failed to meet his burden.

The director misunderstands this Court’s holding in Kinzenbaw. The portion of the opinion quoted above, and relied on by the director, cannot be read in a vacuum, but rather must be read in the context of the entire opinion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 S.W.3d 113, 2002 Mo. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 31750164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stellwagon-v-director-of-revenue-state-mo-2002.