Texas Department of Public Safety v. Adrian Lamar Cuellar

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 2023
Docket01-22-00085-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Department of Public Safety v. Adrian Lamar Cuellar (Texas Department of Public Safety v. Adrian Lamar Cuellar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Department of Public Safety v. Adrian Lamar Cuellar, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 7, 2023

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-22-00085-CV ——————————— TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY, Appellant V. ADRIAN LAMAR CUELLAR, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law Washington County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2021-120

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Texas Department of Public Safety (“DPS”), challenges the county

court’s order reversing an order of an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) that granted

DPS’s petition to suspend the driver’s license of appellee, Adrian Lamar Cuellar, for ninety days.1 In two issues, DPS contends that the county court erred in reversing

the ALJ’s administrative order.

We reverse and render.

Background

On July 7, 2019, Cuellar was arrested for the offense of driving while

intoxicated.2 DPS filed a petition to suspend Cuellar’s driver’s license and served

him with a Notice of Suspension.3 Cuellar requested an administrative hearing

before an ALJ to contest the suspension of his driver’s license.4

At the hearing, the ALJ admitted into evidence the report of Brenham Police

Department (“BPD”) Officer Z. Greig, stating that on July 7, 2019, at about

1:46 a.m., he responded to a call for emergency assistance related to a

“disturbance,”5 where one of the parties to the disturbance was “seen leaving the

1 See TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. § 524.022 (“Period of Suspension”); see also id. § 524.041 (“A person whose driver’s license suspension is sustained may appeal the decision by filing a petition not later than the 30th day after the date the [ALJ’s] decision is final.”). 2 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 49.04. 3 See TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. §§ 524.011, 524.013, 524.014. 4 See id. § 524.031. 5 In his report, Officer Greig explained, as to the “disturbance,” that the emergency dispatch operator reported that Cuellar’s ex-wife called for emergency assistance and stated that Cuellar was at her home. She said that Cuellar was dangerous and known to hit people. The emergency dispatch operator could hear the sister of Cuellar’s ex-wife crying.

2 scene.”6 While responding, Greig saw a car, a “[b]lack 4 door passenger car,”

driving at “a high rate of speed.” The dispatch operator told Greig that “the suspect”

had left the scene of the “disturbance” in a “[b]lack Chevrolet car,” which matched

the car that Greig saw driving at “a high rate of speed.” When the car drove past

Greig, Greig turned his patrol car around and followed the car. The car “pulled over

onto the side of the road,” and Greig activated his patrol car’s emergency lights and

conducted a traffic stop. Greig stopped his patrol car, exited, and approached the

car. Cuellar was the driver.

Cuellar told Officer Greig that “he had just c[o]me from” the home of his

ex-wife. Cuellar stated that there had been a “domestic dispute” and he “kinda lost

it” and was “banging on the door.” (Internal quotations omitted.) And “there was a

disturbance between him,” his ex-wife, and his ex-wife’s sister. Because Cuellar

knew that his ex-wife was “going to contact law enforcement,” he “le[ft] the scene

to try and escape.” (Internal quotations omitted.) Cuellar admitted that he was

driving “at a high rate of speed,” explaining that he was “trying to[] leave before”

law enforcement officers arrived.

According to Officer Greig, while speaking with Cuellar, he “detected the

odor of an alcoholic beverage emitting from [Cuellar’s] breath.” And when asked if

6 Cuellar objected to the admission of Officer Greig’s report because “around th[e] time when [he] was arrested,” his ex-wife “had an affair with th[e] officer.”

3 he had any alcoholic beverages to drink that night, Cuellar stated that “he had a

couple of drinks” at a bar. Cuellar estimated that he had three beers, but he told

Greig that he “fe[lt] like he [was] good.” Cuellar noted in his report, as to signs of

Cuellar’s intoxication or consumption of alcohol, the “odor of an alcoholic beverage

emitting from [Cuellar’s] breath” and that Cuellar had stated that he had drank about

three beers that night.

According to Officer Greig, Cuellar consented to perform certain standardized

field sobriety tests and exited his car. Cuellar told Greig that he was not diabetic,

had not “suffered a recent brain injury,” and did not wear contact lenses. Greig

administered the horizontal gaze nystagmus test and found clues of intoxication.

Greig also found clues of intoxication during the walk-and-turn test—Cuellar

attempted to start the walk-and-turn test before being instructed to do so, Cuellar

walked an incorrect number of steps during the test, and Cuellar did not know how

many steps he had taken. Greig did not find any clues of intoxication during the

one-leg-stand test. After completing the one-leg-stand test, Cuellar told Greig that

he had drank about four beers and “a shot,” containing “multiple types of alcohol,”

in a two-hour period, and he drank his last beer less than an hour before Greig saw

Cuellar driving his car.

After taking Cuellar into custody for the offense of driving while intoxicated,

another law enforcement officer at the scene told Officer Greig that Cuellar’s car

4 had damage consistent with the damage to a car belonging to the neighbor of

Cuellar’s ex-wife. And Greig was told that the sister of Cuellar’s ex-wife had

reported that Cuellar obstructed her call for emergency assistance and “struck her in

the face” that night. According to the sister, Cuellar took the sister’s cellular

telephone from her while she was calling for emergency assistance and locked the

cellular telephone and himself in his car. Later, Cuellar got out of the car and threw

the cellular telephone at his ex-wife’s sister and “struck her in the face with an open

hand.” Cuellar’s ex-wife, whom Cuellar consented to take possession of his car that

night, told Greig that Cuellar had hit her neighbor’s car with his car and Cuellar had

taken her sister’s cellular telephone while her sister was attempting to call for

emergency assistance. Cuellar’s ex-wife also reported that Cuellar hit her sister in

the face.

Officer Greig then transported Cuellar to jail, where Cuellar consented “to

provid[ing] a breath specimen” for testing after being given a copy of, and Greig

reading aloud, the DIC-24 statutory warning.7 Greig reported that the breath test

7 A DIC-24 form contains the information that, pursuant to statute, a law enforcement officer must provide to a suspect before requesting a blood or breath specimen. See Brown v. State, No. 01-12-01040-CR, 2014 WL 60965, at *3 n.1 (Tex. App.— Houston [1st Dist.] Jan. 7, 2014, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication); see also TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. § 724.015.

5 results showed a breath alcohol concentration of 0.112 and 0.116.8

Included with Officer Greig’s report was a notice of suspension and temporary

driving permit, which stated that Cuellar had provided “a specimen of breath or

blood[] and an analysis of the specimen showed an alcohol concentration of .08 or

greater following [Cuellar’s] arrest for an offense involving the operation of a motor

vehicle.”

The ALJ also admitted into evidence a “Breath Test Technical Supervisor

Affidavit DIC-56.”9 In the affidavit, Desiree Hutson, the custodian of records for

the Texas Breath Alcohol Testing Program, testified that on July 7, 2019 at

3:15 a.m., a breath test was administered to Cuellar by Officer Greig.

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