Youngblood v. Austin

424 P.2d 824, 102 Ariz. 74, 1967 Ariz. LEXIS 200
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1967
Docket7855
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 424 P.2d 824 (Youngblood v. Austin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Youngblood v. Austin, 424 P.2d 824, 102 Ariz. 74, 1967 Ariz. LEXIS 200 (Ark. 1967).

Opinion

McFARLAND, Vice Chief Justice:

Plaintiff-appellant brought an action in superior court for injuries received in an automobile accident caused by the alleged negligence of defendant-appellee. Appellant, hereinafter designated as plaintiff, was driving west on McDowell Road in Phoe *75 nix, Arizona, and appellee, hereinafter designated as defendant, was proceeding north on 44th Street. Each driver claimed that the traffic light was in his favor. The jury found for defendant, and plaintiff appealed.

At the close of the trial, the court, with the approval of both parties, withdrew from the jury all issues except the question of which party faced the red light, and instructed the jury that if, at the time of entering the intersection, plaintiff was facing a red light, the verdict should be for defendant; that if defendant was facing the red light, 'the verdict should be for plaintiff; and that if the jury was unable to determine which driver was facing the red light, the verdict should be for defendant. No issue as to the propriety of this instruction was raised by either party, so it is not an issue in the case.

Plaintiff assigns only two errors: The first was that the court erred in refusing plaintiff’s instruction that “The law presumes the results of a blood alcohol test, which is performed at the instance of the law enforcement agencies, is valid and accurate until evidence to the contrary is shown.” Plaintiff’s argument in favor of the instruction may be summarized as follows:

A. A public official, acting in his offi-fcial capacity, is presumed to have properly performed his duty; therefore, the test result is prima facie accurate.

B. Had the instruction been given, the jury might well have found that defendant drank four or five drinks instead of the one drink which he admitted taking.

C. If so, this would have impaired defendant’s credibility in the eyes of the jury so that it might have disbelieved his statement that the light was green for him, and it might have found that his reactions had been impaired by the liquor.

Plaintiff cites four cases in support of her position. She relies heavily upon Smith v. Mott, 100 So.2d 173 (Fla.1958); however, the issues in the Mott case were altogether different than those in the instant case. A county medical examiner had examined the decedent’s body, had taken a blood sample, and had sent it to the state board of health for analysis. The result of the analysis was sent to the state medical examiner where it became part of his official records. The question was whether the result of the analysis was admissible in evidence as a public record, and did not involve the giving of an instruction to the jury that there was a presumption of its validity and accuracy.

In'the case of Smith v. Washburn & Condon, 38 Ariz. 149, 297 P. 879, cited by plaintiff, there was no instruction to a jury involved. The question was whether the court should vacate and set aside a judgment which had been based upon a compromise made by an attorney. The court held only that an attorney, under express authority, may compromise any matter, and such compromise is binding on his client— that he was presumed to have performed his duty. Nor was an instruction in regard to presumption involved in Altman v. Pace, 49 Ariz. 231, 65 P.2d 1164, or in Consolidated Motors v. Skousen, 56 Ariz. 481, 109 P.2d 41, 132 A.L.R. 1040. In Altman the court merely held that where the law requires that it is necessary The Industrial Commission consider all the evidence upon which an award is based:

“* * * [T]hat at least either a majority of the commission be present at the hearing of the testimony; that they have it transcribed and read it; or that they have it read to them by the stenographer who took the original notes. The presumption is' that public officers do their duty, and, unless there is some showing in the record that these requisites were not complied with, we must assume that the rule laid down by us in King v. Alabam’s Freight Co., [38 Ariz: 205, 298 P. 634,] supra, was followed. * * *” 49 Ariz. at 235, 65 P.2d at 1165.

*76 ’ The Consolidated Motors case involved the pre-requisite of a valid tax sale. The court held that:

“ * * * It is the general and almost universally accepted rule that where a public officer is required as a condition precedent to the performance of an official act to do a certain thing, the presumption is that he has done it. 22 C.J. 131 and cases cited.” 56 Ariz. at 486, 109 P.2d at 43.

None of these cases cited by plaintiff hold that a court should instruct a jury that the law presumes a test taken at the instance of a law-enforcement agent is valid and accurate until evidence to the contrary is shown. The question in the instant case was not the admissibility of the evidence of a test as in the Mott case, supra, but the weight that should be given the results of a drunkometer test, which was admitted in evidence. The jury, and not the court, is the judge of the weight which should be given- such expert testimony. Middleton v. Green, 35 Ariz. 205, 276 P. 322; Gerberg v. Crosby, 52 Wash.2d 792, 329 P.2d 184; Burke v. Thomas (Okl.) 313 P.2d 1082; Greitz v. Sivachenko, 143 Cal.App.2d 146, 299 P.2d 374. Since the weight of the evidence in the instant case is a question for the jury, we hold that the instruction in regard to the presumption of the result' of a drunkometer test taken at the instance of a law-enforcement agency being valid and accurate w.as properly refused.

. The second error assigned by plaintiff is that the court erred in permitting defendant to cross-examine the witness, Dr. Con-don, called by plaintiff as an expert on forensic medicine; that the court should have sustained plaintiffs objection to the following question of defendant’s attorney:

"you know enough about the drunkometer to tell me, sir, some of the areas where error can creep in, in the making of such a test?”

The objection was that since defendant did not cross-examine the technician who gave the drunkometer test, defendant is precluded from going into that matter “at this time, by somebody that did not participate in the making of that test.”

The drunkometer test was administered by the witness William Bitsen, an employee of Stahlberg Laboratories, who testified that defendant’s blood contained .091 per cent alcohol by volume. He was not cross-examined. Plaintiff then called Dr. Con-don, who showed on a blackboard how to convert the percentage of alcohol into a figure indicating the number of ounces of whiskey imbibed by defendant prior to the accident. He arrived at a figure of 4.7 ounces. From this, plaintiff argues that defendant must have consumed four or five drinks, as the usual mixed drink at a public bar contains about one ounce of spirits. On cross-examination, the witness stated that a blood test was more reliable than a drunkometer which tests the alcohol in the lungs, as opposed to-the alcohol in the blood.

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Bluebook (online)
424 P.2d 824, 102 Ariz. 74, 1967 Ariz. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/youngblood-v-austin-ariz-1967.