State v. Rask ( 2016 )


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    www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
    08/26/2016 02:10 PM CDT
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    Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
    294 Nebraska R eports
    STATE v. RASK
    Cite as 
    294 Neb. 612
    State of Nebraska, appellee, v.
    Bruce V. R ask, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed August 26, 2016.    No. S-15-1009.
    1.	 Statutes: Appeal and Error. Statutory interpretation presents a ques-
    tion of law, which an appellate court reviews independently of the lower
    court’s determination.
    2.	 Criminal Law: Juries: Evidence: Appeal and Error. In a jury trial of
    a criminal case, an erroneous evidentiary ruling results in prejudice to
    a defendant unless the State demonstrates that the error was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt.
    3.	 Verdicts: Juries: Appeal and Error. In a harmless error review, an
    appellate court looks at the evidence upon which the jury rested its
    verdict; the inquiry is not whether in a trial that occurred without the
    error a guilty verdict would surely have been rendered, but, rather,
    whether the guilty verdict rendered in the trial was surely unattributable
    to the error.
    4.	 Jury Instructions: Judgments: Appeal and Error. Whether jury
    instructions given by a trial court are correct is a question of law. When
    dispositive issues on appeal present questions of law, an appellate court
    has an obligation to reach an independent conclusion irrespective of the
    decision of the court below.
    5.	 Blood, Breath, and Urine Tests: Evidence: Proof: Probable Cause.
    As a general rule, preliminary breath test evidence is inadmissible as
    proof that a defendant was impaired or intoxicated; the admissibility of
    the results of a preliminary breath test is limited to the purpose of show-
    ing probable cause either for an arrest or for administering a chemi-
    cal test.
    6.	 Drunk Driving: Blood, Breath, and Urine Tests: Implied Consent.
    Chemical test results are admissible in all legal proceedings, even if that
    chemical test was administered without the advisement required under
    
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 60-6
    ,197 (Cum. Supp. 2014).
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    STATE v. RASK
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    294 Neb. 612
    7.	 ____: ____: ____. 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 60-6
    ,197 (Cum. Supp. 2014) per-
    mits evidence of refusal to prove driving under the influence charges,
    even when the defendant was not properly informed that refusal is a
    separate crime.
    8.	 Statutes. In the absence of anything to the contrary, statutory language
    is to be given its plain and ordinary meaning.
    9.	 Blood, Breath, and Urine Tests: Evidence. A defendant’s refusal
    to submit to a chemical test is evidence of the defendant’s conduct,
    demeanor, statements, attitudes, and relation toward the crime.
    10.	 Trial: Judges: Jury Instructions: Appeal and Error. It is the duty
    of a trial judge to instruct the jury on the pertinent law of the case,
    whether requested to do so or not, and an instruction or instructions
    which by the omission of certain elements have the effect of withdraw-
    ing from the jury an essential issue or element in the case are prejudi-
    cially erroneous.
    11.	 Motor Vehicles. Where a person sits in the driver’s seat of a motor
    vehicle with the engine running, parked on a public road, that person has
    actual physical control of that motor vehicle.
    12.	 Words and Phrases. The word “or,” when used properly, is disjunctive.
    13.	 Motor Vehicles: Words and Phrases. Actual physical control of a
    motor vehicle may be adequately defined as directing influence, domin-
    ion, or regulation of a motor vehicle.
    14.	 Jury Instructions: Proof: Appeal and Error. To establish reversible
    error from a court’s refusal to give a requested instruction, an appel-
    lant has the burden to show that (1) the tendered instruction is a correct
    statement of the law, (2) the tendered instruction is warranted by the
    evidence, and (3) the appellant was prejudiced by the court’s refusal to
    give the tendered instruction.
    15.	 Self-Defense. The choice of evils defense requires that a defendant (1)
    acts to avoid a greater harm; (2) reasonably believes that the particular
    action is necessary to avoid a specific and immediate harm; and (3)
    reasonably believes that the selected action is the least harmful alter-
    native to avoid the harm, either actual or reasonably believed by the
    defendant to be certain to occur.
    Appeal from the District Court for Kearney County, Terri
    S. H arder, Judge, on appeal thereto from the County Court
    for Kearney County, Michael P. Burns, Judge. Judgment of
    District Court affirmed.
    Kevin K. Knake, of Law Office of Richard L. Alexander,
    for appellant.
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    STATE v. RASK
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    294 Neb. 612
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Melissa R.
    Vincent for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Wright, Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, and
    K elch, JJ.
    Heavican, C.J.
    I. NATURE OF CASE
    In the early morning hours of January 17, 2014, Officer
    Jarvis Kring of the Minden, Nebraska, police department dis-
    covered Bruce V. Rask asleep in the cab of his running pickup
    truck. Rask was charged, among other offenses, with driving
    under the influence (DUI), third offense, in the county court
    for Kearney County. A jury convicted Rask of DUI, and, on
    appeal, the district court for Kearney County affirmed. Rask
    appeals to this court. We affirm.
    II. BACKGROUND
    According to evidence presented at trial, on January 16,
    2014, Rask got off work around 11:30 p.m. to midnight. He
    procured a 12-pack of Bud Light beer before leaving work.
    Rask then picked up his friend, Carson Corr. They drove to the
    home of another mutual friend, where Rask and Corr each had
    one or two beers. Rask and Corr stayed at the friend’s house
    until approximately 1 a.m.
    Afterward, Rask drove Corr back to Corr’s residence. Rask
    and Corr testified at trial that Rask was not impaired dur-
    ing the drive back to Corr’s house. However, Kring testified
    that Rask had admitted that he got drunk before returning to
    Corr’s home.
    Rask testified that he left the engine of his pickup truck
    running because it was cold outside. He claims he did not
    pull into Corr’s driveway, because he did not want to wake
    Corr’s dogs and parents. Rask and Corr then sat in the vehicle
    until about 3 a.m., talking and drinking. Rask and Corr testi-
    fied that they finished all but one beer out of the 12-pack of
    Bud Light. There is conflicting evidence in the record, but
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    it appears that Rask had between four and six beers. Corr
    allegedly took the last bottle into his home when he left,
    along with all the empty bottles. Rask testified that he did
    not touch any controls of the truck while sitting in front of
    Corr’s residence.
    After Corr left, Rask decided to sleep in his truck. He
    alleges that he believed sleeping in his truck was the right
    thing to do because he did not want to get in trouble for driv-
    ing drunk. Additionally, Rask testified that even though he
    was friends with Corr’s parents, he did not go into Corr’s
    home because he did not want to wake anybody. However,
    Kring testified that Rask later stated he did not go inside
    because he had had an argument with Corr. In any event,
    according to Rask, he had no feasible alternatives to sleeping
    in his running truck.
    Around 4:40 a.m. on January 17, 2014, Kring was on duty
    and drove past Rask’s truck while on patrol. At about 5:25
    a.m., Kring drove past again and this time noticed an elbow
    visible through the window, so he stopped to investigate. He
    saw Rask, whom Kring recognized, asleep in the driver’s seat.
    Eventually Kring was able to rouse Rask by yelling his name
    through the partially open passenger-side window.
    Rask admitted to Kring that he was drunk. Additionally,
    Kring noticed a “koozie” between Rask’s feet, containing what
    was later discovered to be a mostly empty Miller Lite beer can.
    Corr testified at trial that he left this can in Rask’s truck some-
    time before January 16, 2014. Kring did not find any other
    alcohol containers in or around the truck.
    Kring administered three field sobriety tests, each of which
    Rask was unable to successfully complete. Kring testified at
    trial that Rask also smelled of alcohol. Kring also administered
    a preliminary breath test (PBT). The results of the PBT were
    not offered at trial. After the PBT, Kring asked Rask whether
    he would submit to a chemical blood test; Rask refused. Kring
    testified at trial that during this interaction, Rask became angry,
    kicking his truck and using expletives.
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    STATE v. RASK
    Cite as 
    294 Neb. 612
    The State charged Rask with three offenses: DUI, in vio-
    lation of 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 60-6
    ,196 (Reissue 2010); refusal
    to submit to a chemical test, in violation of 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 60-6
    ,197 (Cum. Supp. 2014); and possession of an open
    alcohol container. The second count, refusal to submit to a
    chemical test, was dropped by the State after a “problem” was
    discovered. In his brief, Rask asserts the “problem” was that
    Kring failed to give Rask a proper advisement required under
    § 60-6,197. The record does not explicitly indicate the nature
    of the so-called problem, but there is no evidence that Kring
    gave the advisement.
    A jury found Rask guilty of the DUI charge, for which the
    county court sentenced Rask to 180 days’ imprisonment, a
    $1,000 fine, and a 15-year suspension of his driver’s license.
    The county court also found Rask guilty of possession of an
    open alcohol container and fined Rask $100 for that infrac-
    tion—a conviction from which Rask does not appeal.
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Rask assigns, restated and renumbered, that (1) the county
    court erred by admitting evidence that Kring performed a PBT,
    (2) the county court erred by admitting evidence that Rask
    refused to submit to a chemical blood test, (3) the State com-
    mitted prosecutorial misconduct by introducing evidence of
    the PBT and the refusal, (4) the county court erred in denying
    Rask’s motion for a mistrial, (5) the county court erred by giv-
    ing a misleading jury instruction on the definition of “actual
    physical control of a motor vehicle,” and (6) the county court
    erred by failing to give the jury instruction on choice of
    lesser harm.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] Statutory interpretation presents a question of law, which
    an appellate court reviews independently of the lower court’s
    determination.1
    1
    State v. Draper, 
    289 Neb. 777
    , 
    857 N.W.2d 334
     (2015).
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    [2] In a jury trial of a criminal case, an erroneous eviden-
    tiary ruling results in prejudice to a defendant unless the State
    demonstrates that the error was harmless beyond a reason-
    able doubt.2
    [3] In a harmless error review, an appellate court looks at
    the evidence upon which the jury rested its verdict; the inquiry
    is not whether in a trial that occurred without the error a guilty
    verdict would surely have been rendered, but, rather, whether
    the guilty verdict rendered in the trial was surely unattribut-
    able to the error.3
    [4] Whether jury instructions given by a trial court are cor-
    rect is a question of law. When dispositive issues on appeal
    present questions of law, an appellate court has an obligation
    to reach an independent conclusion irrespective of the deci-
    sion of the court below.4
    V. ANALYSIS
    1. Motion in Limine
    Rask’s first four assignments of error concern the admis-
    sion of evidence that Kring performed a PBT and that Rask
    refused to submit to a chemical blood test. Before trial, Rask
    filed a motion in limine to exclude all evidence concerning
    the PBT and his refusal. The county court partially granted the
    motion, excluding only the results of the PBT. Rask objected
    to all evidence concerning the tests at trial, and also moved
    for a mistrial on this basis.
    (a) Evidence of PBT
    [5] In Rask’s first assignment of error, he argues that evi-
    dence he performed a PBT was inadmissible. As a general
    rule, PBT evidence is inadmissible as proof that a defendant
    2
    State v. Pangborn, 
    286 Neb. 363
    , 
    836 N.W.2d 790
     (2013).
    3
    State v. Ash, 
    293 Neb. 583
    , 
    878 N.W.2d 569
     (2016).
    4
    State v. Edwards, 
    286 Neb. 404
    , 
    837 N.W.2d 81
     (2013).
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    was impaired or intoxicated; this court has repeatedly limited
    the admissibility of the results of a PBT to the purpose of
    showing probable cause either for an arrest or for administer-
    ing a chemical test.5 Neither of these issues is contested in
    this case.
    In State v. Green,6 as in the present case, the State had
    offered evidence that a PBT was administered and that the
    defendant was arrested after taking the test. This court ques-
    tioned whether it was error to admit evidence that a PBT was
    administered, as distinct from the results of that PBT.7
    But without answering that question, we found harmless
    error. In Green, the State had also presented the arresting offi-
    cer’s testimony that the defendant failed field sobriety tests.8
    Therefore, the verdict was not attributable to the fact that a
    PBT was administered.
    We also find that any error in this case was harmless. At
    trial in this case, Rask did not contest that he was drunk at the
    time Kring administered the PBT. There was ample evidence
    to support this fact. Rask and Corr both testified that Rask
    had consumed approximately five to seven beers between 1
    and 3 a.m., Rask admitted to Kring that he was drunk, Rask
    failed three different sobriety tests, and he smelled of alcohol.
    Considering all of this undisputed testimony, the jury’s verdict
    is unattributable to the admission of the mere fact that Rask
    took a PBT, and any error by the district court in admitting
    such evidence is harmless.
    Rask’s first assignment of error is without merit.
    5
    See, e.g., State v. Scheffert, 
    279 Neb. 479
    , 
    778 N.W.2d 733
     (2010)
    (concerning defendant’s challenge to probable cause for arrest); State v.
    Green, 
    223 Neb. 338
    , 
    389 N.W.2d 557
     (1986); State v. Klingelhoefer, 
    222 Neb. 219
    , 
    382 N.W.2d 366
     (1986).
    6
    Green, 
    supra note 5
    .
    7
    
    Id.
    8
    
    Id.
     See, also, Klingelhoefer, 
    supra note 5
    ; State v. Smith, 
    218 Neb. 201
    ,
    
    352 N.W.2d 620
     (1984).
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    STATE v. RASK
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    (b) Evidence of Refusal
    In Rask’s second assignment of error, he argues the county
    court erred by admitting evidence that Rask refused to submit
    to a chemical blood test. Rask alleges that Kring did not advise
    Rask refusal was a separate crime and, therefore, that his
    refusal was inadmissible for any purpose. Upon our de novo
    review, interpreting § 60-6,197, we find no error.
    Under § 60-6,197(1), “[a]ny person who operates or has in
    his or her actual physical control a motor vehicle . . . shall be
    deemed to have given his or her consent to submit to a chemi-
    cal test . . . .” Refusal to submit to a chemical test is a crime.
    Section 60-6,197 also states:
    (5) Any person who is required to submit to a chemi-
    cal blood, breath, or urine test or tests pursuant to this
    section shall be advised that refusal to submit to such
    test or tests is a separate crime for which the person may
    be charged. Failure to provide such advisement shall
    not affect the admissibility of the chemical test result
    in any legal proceedings. However, failure to provide
    such advisement shall negate the state’s ability to bring
    any criminal charges against a refusing party pursuant to
    this section.
    (6) Refusal to submit to a chemical blood, breath, or
    urine test or tests pursuant to this section shall be admis-
    sible evidence in any action for a violation of section
    60-6,196 . . . .
    Though Rask was convicted of DUI under § 60-6,196, he asks
    us to find that subsection (6) is limited to properly advised,
    informed refusals.
    In State v. Christner,9 this court found that chemical test
    results—not refusals—should be excluded when the defend­
    ant was not properly advised of the consequences of refusal.
    The version of § 60-6,197 then applicable had language
    9
    State v. Christner, 
    251 Neb. 549
    , 
    557 N.W.2d 707
     (1997), overruled on
    other grounds, State v. Anderson, 
    258 Neb. 627
    , 
    605 N.W.2d 124
     (2000).
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    nearly identical to the language of subsection (6) now in
    effect, but did not include the portion of subsection (5) stat-
    ing that the “[f]ailure to provide [an] advisement shall not
    affect the admissibility of the chemical test result in any legal
    proceedings.”10
    [6,7] In light of this revision, we find that our holding in
    Christner does not apply to the present version of § 60-6,197.
    The plain language of subsection (5) contradicts our holding in
    Christner; chemical test results are admissible in all legal pro-
    ceedings, even if that chemical test was administered without
    the proper advisement. Furthermore, based upon subsections
    (5) and (6), as well as public policy, we hold that § 60-6,197
    permits evidence of refusal to prove DUI charges, even when
    the defendant was not properly informed that refusal is a sepa-
    rate crime.
    [8] In the absence of anything to the contrary, statutory
    language is to be given its plain and ordinary meaning.11 And
    the plain language of the statute supports this finding. While
    § 60-6,197 clearly bars prosecution for the crime of refusal if
    the defendant was not properly informed, the statute does not
    specifically address the admissibility of uninformed refusals
    in DUI cases. Instead, subsection (6) is a broad rule, without
    exception—it states only that a refusal is admissible to pros-
    ecute a DUI. We hold that under this broad rule, even unin-
    formed refusals to submit to a chemical test are admissible for
    the purpose of proving DUI charges.
    Further, subsection (5), permitting the admission of unin-
    formed chemical test results, suggests that whether a refusal
    or submission to a chemical test was informed bears only upon
    the ability of the State to bring charges against the defendant
    for said refusal; those results are still admissible to prove the
    elements of a DUI charge. It is illogical to admit the results
    of a chemical test to prove a DUI where the defendant was
    10
    See § 60-6,197(10) (Reissue 1993).
    11
    State v. Loyd, 
    275 Neb. 205
    , 
    745 N.W.2d 338
     (2008).
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    uninformed, but to exclude the defendant’s refusal to take that
    same, uninformed, chemical test.
    [9] Public policy bolsters this reading. This court considered
    the relevance of refusals in DUI cases in State v. Meints.12
    In that case, we determined that a defendant’s refusal to
    submit to a chemical test was evidence of circumstances sur-
    rounding the DUI charge—it showed the “defendant’s con-
    duct, demeanor, statements, attitudes, and relation toward the
    crime.”13 These facts are equally relevant where a defendant’s
    refusal is informed.
    In the present case, Kring testified about Rask’s refusal to
    submit to a chemical test in the context of Rask’s behavior and
    attitude at the time of his arrest. This information was relevant
    to the DUI charge against Rask.
    For these reasons, Rask’s second assignment of error is
    without merit.
    (c) Prosecutorial Misconduct
    and Mistrial
    In Rask’s third and fourth assignments of error, he argues
    that as a result of the evidence of the PBT and his refusal to
    submit to a chemical test, the State committed prosecutorial
    misconduct and the county court erred by denying his motion
    for a mistrial. Finding no merit to Rask’s contention that this
    evidence was wrongly admitted, we decline to further address
    his third and fourth assignments of error.
    2. Jury Instructions
    In Rask’s fifth and sixth assignments of error, he asserts
    that two of the given jury instructions were incorrect. After the
    close of evidence at trial, Rask objected to jury instructions
    Nos. 3 and 4. Specifically, he argued that instruction No. 4
    12
    State v. Meints, 
    189 Neb. 264
    , 
    202 N.W.2d 202
     (1972).
    13
    
    Id. at 266
    , 
    202 N.W.2d at 203
    .
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    incorrectly defined “actual physical control of a motor vehi-
    cle” and that instruction No. 3 should have required the State
    to prove that Rask was not avoiding greater harm by choosing
    to sleep in his truck.
    [10] It is the duty of a trial judge to instruct the jury on the
    pertinent law of the case, whether requested to do so or not,
    and an instruction or instructions which by the omission of
    certain elements have the effect of withdrawing from the jury
    an essential issue or element in the case are prejudicially erro-
    neous.14 Whether jury instructions given by a trial court are
    correct is a question of law. When dispositive issues on appeal
    present questions of law, an appellate court has an obligation
    to reach an independent conclusion irrespective of the deci-
    sion of the court below.15
    In his brief, Rask also asserts that the county court’s
    instructions on the definitions of “intoxication” and “under
    the influence of alcoholic liquor” were “confusing and con­
    tradictory.”16 He further argues that the definition of “operate”
    was irrelevant and confusing to the jury. An alleged error must
    be both specifically assigned and specifically argued in the
    brief of the party asserting the error to be considered by an
    appellate court.17 Because Rask does not assign as error the
    giving of these instructions, we need not discuss this argu-
    ment further.
    (a) Actual Physical Control
    of Motor Vehicle
    In Rask’s fifth assignment of error, he argues that the
    county court erred by instructing the jury that “actual physi-
    cal control of a motor vehicle” means “one present in a
    14
    State v. Davlin, 
    263 Neb. 283
    , 
    639 N.W.2d 631
     (2002).
    15
    Edwards, 
    supra note 4
    .
    16
    Brief for appellant at 11.
    17
    State v. Cook, 
    290 Neb. 381
    , 
    860 N.W.2d 408
     (2015).
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    motor vehicle directing influence, dominion or regulation
    thereof.” We find that the definition provided to the jury was
    adequate.
    [11] This court has not defined “actual physical control
    of a motor vehicle.” Rask cites no case law holding that the
    definition in instruction No. 4 was incorrect or offers an alter-
    native instruction. The entirety of his argument on appeal is
    that the definition was “conclusory and nonsensical” because
    it permitted the jury to believe that sleeping in the driver’s
    seat of a parked, running vehicle constitutes actual physical
    control.18 We now hold that on these facts, where a person sits
    in the driver’s seat of a motor vehicle with the engine running,
    parked on a public road, that person has actual physical con-
    trol of that motor vehicle.
    [12] Among jurisdictions with similar DUI statutes, there
    does not appear to be a bright-line rule for what constitutes
    actual physical control. However, a number of these jurisdic-
    tions have held that the use of the phrase “actual physical
    control” exhibits a legislative intent to prevent persons under
    the influence of drugs or alcohol from creating dangerous con-
    ditions on public roadways.19 The word “or,” when used prop-
    erly, is disjunctive.20 Therefore, these courts have determined
    that to have “actual physical control” must mean something
    other than to “operate.” Thus, they interpret “actual physical
    control” broadly to address the risk that a person not yet oper-
    ating a motor vehicle might begin operating that vehicle with
    very little effort or delay.
    We agree with the reasoning of these jurisdictions. Section
    60-6,196(2) states that “[a]ny person who operates or is in the
    actual physical control of any motor vehicle while [under the
    18
    Brief for appellant at 11.
    19
    See, e.g., Atkinson v. State, 
    331 Md. 199
    , 
    627 A.2d 1019
     (1993); State v.
    Smelter, 
    36 Wash. App. 439
    , 
    674 P.2d 690
     (1984) (citing State v. Schuler,
    
    243 N.W.2d 367
     (N.D. 1976)).
    20
    State v. Thacker, 
    286 Neb. 16
    , 
    834 N.W.2d 597
     (2013).
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    influence of drugs or alcohol] shall be guilty of a crime . . . .”
    (Emphasis supplied.) The acts of starting or driving a vehicle
    fall within the definition of “operate”; thus, we determine that
    the Legislature intended “actual physical control” to describe
    acts short of starting or driving a vehicle.
    [13] Considering the policy purpose and disjunctive lan-
    guage of the statute, we hold that “actual physical control of a
    motor vehicle” may be adequately defined as “directing influ-
    ence, dominion, or regulation of a motor vehicle.” Other juris-
    dictions have accepted similar definitions.21 We do not suggest
    that this is the only correct definition of the term, or that it is
    most correct; rather, we find that in this case, the district court
    did not err in giving that definition.
    In other jurisdictions, courts have looked to a number of
    factors to determine whether a defendant was in actual physi-
    cal control of a motor vehicle, including: whether the key was
    in the ignition or in the defendant’s possession, whether the
    engine was running, whether the vehicle was parked away from
    traffic, and whether the defendant was awake or asleep.22
    Looking to the factors used in other jurisdictions, and the
    preventative nature of the statute, we find that Rask was in
    actual physical control of a motor vehicle. Rask admits that
    he became intoxicated while sitting in the driver’s seat of his
    truck, with the keys in the ignition and the engine running,
    while parked on a public roadway. Rask could have easily
    and nearly instantaneously begun operating the truck, plac-
    ing any surrounding people and property in peril. These facts
    21
    See, e.g., Griffin v. State, 
    457 So. 2d 1070
    , 1072 (Fla. App. 1984)
    (“‘[d]efendant must have had the capability and power to dominate, direct
    or regulate the vehicle, regardless of whether or not he is exercising that
    capability or power at the time of the alleged offense’”); State v. Ruona,
    
    133 Mont. 243
    , 248, 
    321 P.2d 615
    , 618 (1958) (“[u]sing the term in ‘actual
    physical control’ in its composite sense, it means ‘existing’ or ‘present
    bodily restraint, directing influence, domination or regulation’”).
    22
    See, e.g., State v. Robison, 
    281 Mont. 64
    , 
    931 P.2d 706
     (1997); Atkinson,
    
    supra note 19
    ; Schuler, supra note 19; Griffin, 
    supra note 21
    .
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    STATE v. RASK
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    fall within the purpose and language of § 60-6,196. Numerous
    jurisdictions would concur with this result.23
    Rask’s fifth assignment of error is without merit.
    (b) Choice of Lesser Harm
    Finally, Rask asserts the county court erred by refusing his
    request to add an element to the DUI instruction requiring
    the State to prove Rask was not acting to avoid greater harm.
    We find no error in the county court’s failure to so instruct
    the jury.
    [14] To establish reversible error from a court’s refusal to
    give a requested instruction, an appellant has the burden to
    show that (1) the tendered instruction is a correct statement
    of the law, (2) the tendered instruction is warranted by the
    evidence, and (3) the appellant was prejudiced by the court’s
    refusal to give the tendered instruction.24
    Although Rask requested the instruction as a negative ele-
    ment of the DUI charge, choice of lesser harm, or “justifica-
    tion,” is an affirmative defense; the defendant bears the initial
    burden of going forward with evidence of the defense.25 Where
    the record shows there is no legally cognizable defense of jus-
    tification, the issue will not be submitted to the finder of fact.26
    Therefore, we consider whether Rask produced sufficient evi-
    dence to warrant presentation of a choice of evils instruction
    to the jury.
    [15] The choice of evils defense requires that a defendant
    (1) acts to avoid a greater harm; (2) reasonably believes
    that the particular action is necessary to avoid a specific and
    immediate harm; and (3) reasonably believes that the selected
    23
    See, e.g., State v. Godfrey, 
    137 Vt. 159
    , 
    400 A.2d 1026
     (1979); State v.
    Woolf, 
    120 Idaho 21
    , 
    813 P.2d 360
     (Idaho App. 1991); Richfield City v.
    Walker, 
    790 P.2d 87
     (Utah App. 1990); Griffin, 
    supra note 21
    .
    24
    State v. Custer, 
    292 Neb. 88
    , 
    871 N.W.2d 243
     (2015).
    25
    See State v. Wells, 
    257 Neb. 332
    , 
    598 N.W.2d 30
     (1999).
    26
    
    Id.
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    action is the least harmful alternative to avoid the harm, either
    actual or reasonably believed by the defendant to be certain
    to occur.27
    Rask claims that he acted to avoid the greater harm of freez-
    ing to death while walking across town to get home. Even
    assuming that there was a real risk that Rask might die or
    become seriously injured from the cold, his argument fails.
    Even if Rask had no less harmful alternative to sleeping in
    his truck, he had already committed DUI before falling asleep.
    As discussed above, Rask was in actual physical control of
    a motor vehicle when he sat in the driver’s seat of his truck
    with the keys in the ignition and the engine running, parked
    on a public street. The crime, then, took place before Rask
    resorted to sleeping in the truck. Rask chose to get drunk in
    his truck, rather than deciding to remain sober or arrange to
    drink in another location. Thus, the instruction was not war-
    ranted by the evidence and Rask suffered no prejudice from
    its omission.
    Rask’s final assignment of error is without merit.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    We affirm the decision of the district court affirming
    Rask’s conviction.
    A ffirmed.
    Connolly, J., not participating.
    27
    State v. Mowell, 
    267 Neb. 83
    , 
    672 N.W.2d 389
     (2003).