Tarzia v. Gordon CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 15, 2023
DocketG060610
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tarzia v. Gordon CA4/3 (Tarzia v. Gordon CA4/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tarzia v. Gordon CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 6/15/23 Tarzia v. Gordon CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

JAMES TARZIA,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G060610

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2021-01186394)

STEVEN GORDON, as Director, etc., OPINION

Defendant and Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, David A. Hoffer, Judge. Reversed with directions. Law Offices of Jonathan Reza and Jonathan Reza for Plaintiff and Appellant. Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Chris A. Knudsen, Assistant Attorney General, Kenneth C. Jones and Bradley Parr, Deputy Attorneys General, for Defendant and Respondent. James Tarzia appeals from a judgment denying his petition for writ of mandate to set aside the Department of Motor Vehicles’ (DMV) suspension of his driver license. He argues the trial court erred in finding he refused to submit to an alternative chemical test of his blood alcohol content, after the arresting officer deemed his chosen chemical test “unavailable.” We agree the court erred and reverse the judgment. FACTS The facts are undisputed. On a Friday morning around 2:39 a.m., Orange County (OC) Sheriff’s Deputy Robert Derifield responded to a dispatch call about a vehicle parked at the drive-through entrance of a fast-food restaurant in San Clemente. Once at the scene, the deputy found Tarzia in the driver’s seat of the car, slumped forward over the steering wheel, with his seatbelt fastened. The car’s engine was running. The deputy noted that Tarzia smelled of alcohol, had an unsteady gait, and slurred his speech. Tarzia performed poorly on field sobriety tests, including a one-leg- stand test, a walk-and-turn test, and a horizontal gaze nystagmus test. He refused to take a preliminary alcohol screening test. The deputy lawfully arrested Tarzia for driving under the influence (DUI) of alcohol. (Veh. Code, § 23152.)1 Deputy Derifield recited the chemical test admonishment, pursuant to the implied consent law (§ 23612), which included telling Tarzia he was required to take a chemical test but had the choice of a breath or blood test. Tarzia agreed to a breath test, but the deputy did not have a device to administer it. Deputy Derifield asked other

1 All further statutory references are to the Vehicle Code unless otherwise indicated.

2 officers2 at the scene for an “EPAS”3 or a “yellow box,” a portable evidentiary alcohol breath test machine. They didn’t have one either. OC Sheriff’s deputies receive training from the Orange County Crime Lab (the crime lab) on breath and blood testing. Deputy Derifield took such a course. Officers are informed that it is the driver’s option to choose whether to submit to a breath or blood test, and that if they do not have a yellow box or it is not working properly, they “can call a different agency and ask to borrow an instrument or [call] somebody from their own agency and ask to borrow an instrument, because . . . they’re meant to be able to be transported to a location as needed.” Officers “are trained and instructed to make reasonable efforts to accommodate that choice of breath test,” including “reach[ing] out to a neighboring agency or California Highway Patrol [(CHP)] . . . to ask to borrow the instrument to use[.]” According to Deputy Derifield, there was a nearby branch or division in Dana Point, another in San Juan Capistrano, and a CHP field office also in San Juan Capistrano. All three locations were about a five-to-ten-minute drive from the scene. Deputy Derifield did not specifically contact any of them to check for a yellow box. He did not contact his supervisor or check with the Aliso Viejo substation, where he picked up his vehicle and equipment at the start of his shift. Deputy Derifield did, however, “put a general broadcast over our specific radio channel to see if anybody had a yellow box[.]” Nobody responded. Deputy Derifield determined he could not administer a breath test because he was “unable to locate” an evidentiary breath-test machine, and so informed Tarzia. He asked if Tarzia would take a blood test instead. Tarzia refused. The deputy advised, “If

2 Video from the patrol vehicle was admitted as an exhibit in the underlying proceedings. It shows three officers, including Deputy Derifield, at the scene.

3 An “EPAS” is used for an “evidentiary breath test.” (People v. Profitt (2017) 8 Cal.App.5th 1255, 1260.)

3 you don’t submit to a blood test, we’re gonna get a warrant.”4 Tarzia asked why a breathalyzer wasn’t available, and the deputy responded, “Cuz it’s not available right now. They don’t have a -- they don’t have a breath machine.” Three minutes and twenty seconds had passed between the time Tarzia agreed to a breath test and the deputy’s mention of a warrant for a blood test. For two of those three minutes and twenty seconds, the sound to Deputy Derifield’s microphone was cut off. His radio call for a yellow box was not captured in the audio recording. The microphone and patrol vehicle are synced, and sometimes they “go in and out of sync.” The deputy can also turn the microphone on and off; he didn’t recall doing so but acknowledged it was possible that he did. Deputy Derifield issued a sworn officer’s statement indicating the “breath test [was] unavailable in area” and Tarzia had refused a blood test. The statement notified Tarzia that his license would be suspended or revoked 30 days from the issuance of the order and that he had 10 days to request a hearing. At the requested hearing, known as an administrative per se hearing, Tarzia submitted a copy of Policy 514 of the OC Sheriff’s Department, which provides in part: “Any person who is unable to submit to a chemical test due to any of the following conditions shall not be considered refusing to comply with the provisions of [ ] § 23612: [¶] 1. The Department is unable to furnish a selected test.” Deputy Derifield testified that he had no reason to believe Tarzia would have refused to provide a breath sample, had a yellow box been available: “[Tarzia] elected to consensually provide one [a breath sample] and then once it [the yellow box] was unavailable, he became uncooperative.” And a forensic scientist with the crime lab’s forensic alcohol section testified that her organization tracks the number of yellow boxes assigned to the OC Sheriff’s Department, which “as a whole[ ] has many instruments.” She estimated that within the department, a

4 Deputy Derifield did eventually obtain a warrant to draw Tarzia’s blood.

4 subagency would receive between one and five or six, depending on the size of the subagency and the average number of tests it performs. In her opinion, “if there is some effort put into it, you could get an instrument within the South County area . . . [¶] . . . fairly easily by just calling a neighboring agency.” The DMV hearing officer sustained the one-year order of suspension, finding all required facts had been established by a preponderance of the evidence, including the fact that Tarzia refused the blood test. The hearing officer added, “The reasonableness of attempts to accommodate [Tarzia’s] request, the arresting agency’s policies, and the procedures of the [crime lab] are not at issue in this hearing.” Tarzia petitioned for a writ of mandate from the superior court.

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