Thompson v. State Dept. of Licensing

982 P.2d 601
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1999
Docket67225-3
StatusPublished
Cited by99 cases

This text of 982 P.2d 601 (Thompson v. State Dept. of Licensing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. State Dept. of Licensing, 982 P.2d 601 (Wash. 1999).

Opinion

982 P.2d 601 (1999)
138 Wash.2d 783

Clayton THOMPSON, Petitioner,
v.
STATE of Washington DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING, Respondent.

No. 67225-3.

Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.

Argued May 25, 1999.
Decided August 19, 1999.

*603 Brungardt & Lowe, Bruce Finlay, Shelton, for Petitioner.

Christine Gregoire, Attorney General, Sharon S. Eckholm, Asst. Atty. Gen., Olympia, for Respondent.

*602 TALMADGE, J.

We must decide in this case if an allegedly erroneous decision in a criminal proceeding, from which the State declined to appeal, has preclusive effect in a subsequent administrative action by a State agency against the same individual. Applying our traditional test for collateral estoppel, we hold the decision in the criminal proceeding precludes a different decision in a subsequent administrative action on the same issue. We therefore reverse the Court of Appeals and remand the case to the trial court to direct the Department to reverse the license disqualification.

ISSUE

Did the trial court properly refuse to apply collateral estoppel to the admissibility of the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) test results suppressed in an earlier criminal proceeding in a later license disqualification proceeding?

FACTS

Clayton Thompson is a commercial truck driver. In the late afternoon of February 24, 1995, he was the subject of a random commercial vehicle check at a weigh scale on I-5 near Ridgefield. At the scale, a State Patrol trooper observed Thompson's red, watery eyes. Thompson also smelled of stale alcohol. The trooper asked Thompson if he had consumed alcoholic beverages and Thompson answered he had early that morning. The trooper then asked Thompson to take a portable breath test.[1] A second trooper, who also noted Thompson's watery, red eyes and the odor of alcohol, administered the portable breath test. The second trooper then summoned a third trooper, Helen Holland, who first administered field sobriety tests to Thompson. Although she reported he showed "no impairment," Report of Proceedings at 68, she noted he did poorly on two of the six tests.

Holland then administered a BAC test to Thompson after giving him two different informed consent warnings, the driving while under influence (DUI) warning pursuant to RCW 46.20.308, and the specific warning for operators of commercial vehicles pursuant to RCW 46.25.120. Holland explained the differences in the warnings to Thompson who expressed no confusion about them. He did, however, express concern about the effect of the arrest on his job. Nevertheless, he signed two forms, thereby acknowledging the respective warnings he received. Holland obtained readings of 0.07 and 0.08. She also asked Thompson if he had been drinking, and he replied he had drunk a half a quart of whiskey at his home the previous evening between 7:00 p.m. and 1:00 a.m.

The State undertook two separate proceedings against Thompson. The Clark County prosecutor filed charges against Thompson in Clark County District Court for violation of RCW 46.25.170(2), driving a commercial vehicle with alcohol in one's system, a gross misdemeanor. The Department of Licensing (Department) also began administrative commercial license disqualification proceedings. Disqualification from driving a commercial motor vehicle occurs pursuant to RCW 46.25.090(1) whenever the Department receives a report from a law enforcement agency that a holder of a commercial *604 driver's license was driving a commercial motor vehicle with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.04 or more, or refused to take a breath test.

In the district court proceeding, Thompson moved to suppress the BAC evidence on the grounds there was no probable cause to detain and test him, and because the informed consent warnings he received were confusing. The district court granted Thompson's motion to suppress the BAC results, stating the informed consent warnings were "confusing and misleading, and would have prevented a completely intelligent decision." Clerk's Papers at 12. Although the record is silent, the gross misdemeanor case was apparently dismissed upon the suppression of the BAC results and the State did not appeal.

The subsequent administrative proceeding had a different course. Because Thompson's BAC result was above 0.04, the Department disqualified his license.[2] He sought a hearing pursuant to RCW 46.25.120(5)[3] on his disqualification from driving commercial motor vehicles.

At the hearing,[4] Thompson stipulated to the accuracy of the BAC readings, but argued the BAC evidence was not admissible because of collateral estoppel stemming from the district court judge's ruling suppressing the BAC evidence in the criminal case. The hearing examiner rejected Thompson's collateral estoppel argument on the ground the burden of proof in an administrative hearing is different from the burden of proof in a criminal trial.

Thompson also argued there was no probable cause to test him, and the implied consent warnings were confusing. The hearing examiner heard evidence from the three troopers involved in the incident and ultimately ruled against Thompson. The hearing examiner found probable cause based on the odor of alcohol and Thompson's admission he had been drinking the night before. The hearing examiner also rejected Thompson's argument the implied consent warnings were confusing, although she did suggest the combined warnings were "overkill." Clerk's Papers at 83-85. The hearing examiner said:

The fact that Mr. Thompson was read the commercial driver licensing warnings is what I am concerned with. He was. He signed them, and what's really lacking here is for me to find in your favor, Mr.
*605 Finlay [Thompson's attorney], is that the reading of both warnings confused your client, and he expressed any confusion to Trooper Holland. That's missing here, and on any implied consent cases that involve a problem with the warnings that are read to a person, as you well know if you've done implied consent cases, that confusion has to be expressed. And I did not hear any mention of that from Trooper Holland in her proceedings of presenting the forms to Mr. Thompson for signature. I didn't hear any concerns about questions that he had, such as "Wait a minute here, what am I being charged with?", and I don't find any irreparable harm that was done by reading both sets of warnings. I think you have to have .... you have to have an effect that was felt on your client at the time, for you to come into a hearing procedure and say, well, this was wrong. It may have been wrong in proper reading of implied consent warnings, but your client was still read the appropriate warnings, had no questions, apparently, about it, and proceeded with the test, so I'm not going to cancel a proceeding based on an argument that he was read too much, or something he shouldn't have been read, when he has shown no argument about how that affected him.

Clerk's Papers at 84-85.

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Bluebook (online)
982 P.2d 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-state-dept-of-licensing-wash-1999.