State v. Hido , 2011 Ohio 2560 ( 2011 )


Menu:
  • [Cite as State v. Hido, 
    2011-Ohio-2560
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF CLARK COUNTY, OHIO
    STATE OF OHIO                                    :
    Plaintiff-Appellee                       :   C.A. CASE NO. 10CA0046
    vs.                                             :    T.C. CASE NO. 09TRC10960
    09CRB04379
    STACY HIDO                                       :
    Defendant-Appellant                      :
    . . . . . . . . .
    O P I N I O N
    Rendered on the 27th day of May, 2011.
    . . . . . . . . .
    Michael F. Sheils, Chief City Prosecutor, Atty. Reg. No.0021678,
    50 East Columbia Street, Springfield, OH 45502
    Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellee
    Charles M. Rowland, II, Atty. Reg. No.0065603, 2190 Gateway Drive,
    Fairborn, OH 45324
    Attorney for Defendant-Appellant
    . . . . . . . . .
    GRADY, P.J.:
    {¶ 1} Defendant, Stacy Hido, appeals from her conviction and
    sentence for operating a motor vehicle while under the influence
    of alcohol (OVI).
    {¶ 2} On September 6, 2009, at 10:10 a.m., an Ohio Highway
    Patrol air patrol unit clocked Defendant’s vehicle at 85 m.p.h.
    2
    in a 65 m.p.h. zone, Westbound on I-70 just East of State Route
    54.   Sergeant Bush, who was in a marked cruiser and working with
    the   air   patrol     unit,   stopped    Defendant’s   vehicle.     Before
    Defendant pulled over to the side of the road and stopped, Sergeant
    Bush observed her trying to stuff something underneath the
    vehicle’s front seat.
    {¶ 3} When Sergeant Bush made contact with Defendant, the
    driver and sole occupant of the vehicle, she admitted that her
    driver’s license had expired.            After Defendant rolled down her
    window,     Sergeant    Bush    smelled    a   strong   odor   of   alcohol.
    Defendant’s eyes were glassy and bloodshot, and she was very
    nervous.     When asked by Sergeant Bush, Defendant denied drinking
    any alcoholic beverages.         Defendant stated that her step-father
    had spilled beer on her.
    {¶ 4} Sergeant Bush asked Defendant for identification but
    she   had none.      Sergeant Bush then asked Defendant to sit in the
    front passenger seat of his cruiser so that he could obtain
    information to identify her.             While Defendant was sitting in
    Sergeant Bush’s cruiser, he noticed that a very strong odor of
    alcohol came from Defendant’s breath.
    {¶ 5} Sergeant Bush asked Defendant to perform three field
    sobriety tests.      The first test was the horizontal gaze nystagmus
    (HGN) test.    Sergeant Bush observed six out of six possible clues.
    3
    The next test was the walk and turn test.     Defendant started before
    the instructions were completed, and she raised her arms for
    balance.    The final test was the one leg stand test.          Defendant
    raised her arms for balance and put her foot down at the count
    of seventeen.     Defendant’s having failed all three field sobriety
    tests, Sergeant Bush arrested Defendant for OVI.
    {¶ 6} Another trooper, who had stopped to assist, discovered
    an open container of beer underneath the front seat of Defendant’s
    vehicle.      Defendant was transported to the Springfield Highway
    Patrol post where she was given a breath test that produced a result
    of .117, well over the legal limit.
    {¶ 7} Defendant was charged in Clark County Municipal Court
    with speeding, R.C. 4511.21, driving on an expired license, R.C.
    4510.12, and operating a motor vehicle with a prohibited breath
    alcohol concentration, R.C. 4511.19(A)(1)(d).          Defendant filed
    a motion to suppress the evidence, including the results of the
    field sobriety tests, the Breathalyzer test, and the observations
    and opinions of Sergeant Bush.        A hearing was held on the motion.
    The   trial    court   overruled    Defendant’s   motion   to   suppress
    evidence.
    {¶ 8} Defendant entered a plea of no contest to the OVI charge
    and was found guilty by the court.     In exchange, the State dismissed
    the other pending charges.         The trial court sentenced Defendant
    4
    to ninety days in jail with eighty days suspended, a six hundred
    and fifty dollar fine, and a two year driver’s license suspension.
    Defendant was also placed on six months probation and ordered
    to complete an alcohol abuse assessment and treatment.   Defendant
    filed a notice of appeal from her judgment of conviction.      The
    trial court stayed execution of Defendant’s sentence pending this
    appeal.
    FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    “THE STATE FAILED TO SHOW PROBABLE CAUSE FOR THE ARREST AND
    THE EVIDENCE SHOULD BE SUPPRESSED.”
    {¶ 9} Defendant does not contest that her initial stop for
    speeding was lawful.     Dayton v. Erickson, 
    76 Ohio St.3d 3
    ,
    
    1996-Ohio-431
    .   Rather, Defendant claims that her arrest lacked
    probable cause because police lacked a reasonable, articulable
    suspicion that she was operating her vehicle while under the
    influence of alcohol, which was necessary to justify her continued
    detention for further investigation through field sobriety tests.
    State v. Evans (1998), 
    127 Ohio App.3d 56
    .   Defendant argues that
    the evidence merely demonstrates that Defendant had consumed
    alcohol, not that she was impaired.    State v. Knox, Greene App.
    No. 2005CA74, 
    2006-Ohio-3039
    .   We disagree.
    {¶ 10} Defendant relies upon prior decisions of this court
    holding that an odor of alcohol, or a slight or unspecified odor
    5
    of alcohol, coupled with a de minimus traffic violation, glassy
    bloodshot eyes, and an admission to having consumed one or two
    beers, was insufficient to create a reasonable suspicion of driving
    under the influence and justify further detention in order to
    conduct field sobriety tests.        State v. Spillers (Mar. 24, 2000),
    Darke App. No. 1504; State v. Dixon (Dec. 1, 2000), Greene App.
    No.   2000-CA-30;    State   v.    Swartz,    Miami   App.   No.   2008CA31,
    
    2009-Ohio-902
    .      This court has, however, repeatedly held that a
    strong odor of alcohol alone may be sufficient to provide an officer
    with reasonable suspicion of criminal behavior.              See: State v.
    Marshall, Clark App. No. 2001CA35, 
    2001-Ohio-7081
     (and the cases
    cited therein).
    {¶ 11} Defendant was stopped for going 85 m.p.h. in a 65 m.p.h.
    zone.   This is not a situation involving “nominal” speeding, but
    rather one involving excessive speeding, which we have held is
    some evidence of impairment.         State v. Syx, Montgomery App. No.
    23589, 
    2010-Ohio-5880
    ; State v. Gower, Darke App. No. 1616,
    
    2003-Ohio-5403
    .     When Sergeant Bush made contact with Defendant,
    he smelled a strong odor of alcohol coming from Defendant’s breath
    and noticed that Defendant’s eyes were glassy and bloodshot and
    that she was very nervous.        Simply put, these facts are sufficient
    to give rise to a reasonable suspicion of impairment that justified
    Defendant’s    detention     to     conduct     field    sobriety     tests.
    6
    Furthermore, after Defendant failed all three field sobriety tests,
    police had sufficient probable cause to arrest Defendant for OVI.
    {¶ 12} Defendant’s first assignment of error is overruled.
    SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    “THE STATE FAILED TO MOVE INTO EVIDENCE ANY STANDARDS BY WHICH
    THE   COURT    COULD    FIND    SUBSTANTIAL    COMPLIANCE   FOR    CONDUCTING
    STANDARDIZED FIELD SOBRIETY TESTS.”
    {¶ 13} Defendant argues that because the three field sobriety
    tests Sergeant Bush administered were not shown to have been
    conducted in substantial compliance with National Highway Traffic
    Safety Administration (NHTSA) standards, the results of those tests
    were inadmissible, and without those test results Sergeant Bush
    lacked probable cause to arrest Defendant for OVI.
    {¶ 14} In    State       v.   Reed,   Montgomery   App.     No.   23357,
    
    2010-Ohio-299
    , at ¶53, this court observed:
    {¶ 15} “The results of field sobriety tests are admissible
    at trial if the State presents clear and convincing evidence that
    the officer administered the tests in substantial compliance with
    National      Highway    Traffic      Safety    Administration      (‘NHTSA’)
    standards. R.C. 4511.19(D)(4)(b); State v. Schmitt, 
    101 Ohio St.3d 79
    , 
    801 N.E.2d 446
    , 
    2004-Ohio-37
    ; State v. Davis, Clark App.
    No.2008-CA-65, 
    2009-Ohio-3759
    . The State can satisfy its burden
    without explicit testimony from the officer that he or she
    7
    substantially complied with NHTSA standards in administering the
    tests. Davis. Neither is the State required to actually introduce
    the NHTSA manual or testimony concerning the standards, where the
    record demonstrates, if only by inference, that the court took
    judicial notice of the NHTSA standards. State v. Knox, Greene App.
    No.2005-CA-74, 
    2006-Ohio-3039
    .”         That is the case here.
    {¶ 16} Evidence that the pertinent rules and regulations have
    been followed in conducting field sobriety tests, if unchallenged,
    constitutes a sufficient foundation for admission of the test
    results.     State     v.   Murray,     Greene   App.   No.   2002-CA-10,
    
    2002-Ohio-4809
    .      Only when a defendant sufficiently challenges
    the evidence would the State then need to present more evidence
    of more specific compliance.      
    Id.
        For example, testimony by the
    officer that he or she had been trained to perform the horizontal
    gaze nystagmus (HGN) test, the walk and turn test, and the one-leg
    stand test under NHTSA standards, and that the tests were performed
    in the manner in which the officer had been trained, would suffice
    for admission of the field sobriety test results, absent a challenge
    to some specific way the officer failed to comply with NHTSA
    standards.   Murray; Knox.
    {¶ 17} Defendant points to several matters in the NHTSA manual
    that Sergeant Bush did not remember, most of which have nothing
    to do with the administration of field sobriety tests.           Further,
    8
    Defendant fails to specify in his brief the specific way in which
    Sergeant Bush’s administration of the three field sobriety tests
    failed to comply with the requirements in the NHTSA manual for
    administering those tests.
    {¶ 18} A review of Sergeant Bush’s testimony, particularly
    his cross-examination, not surprisingly discloses that he has not
    committed every detail in the NHTSA manual to memory, nor was his
    administration of the three field sobriety tests in this case in
    strict compliance with every detail in the NHTSA manual. Strict
    compliance is not the standard, however.         Substantial compliance
    is sufficient.     R.C. 4511.19(D)(4)(b); State v. Boczar, 
    113 Ohio St.3d 148
    , 
    2007-Ohio-1251
    .        We agree with the trial court that
    Sergeant    Bush’s   testimony,    taken    as   a   whole,   satisfy   the
    substantial compliance requirement.
    {¶ 19} Sergeant Bush testified that he is trained to use
    standardized field sobriety tests, including the HGN test, the
    walk and turn test and the one leg stand test, that conform to
    NHTSA standards.     He explained how to conduct the horizontal gaze
    nystagmus (HGN) and walk and turn tests.         The parties stipulated
    that Sergeant Bush is familiar with the walk and turn and one leg
    stand tests in the NHTSA manual.           Sergeant Bush testified that
    he performed the field sobriety tests in this case as he was trained
    to do.     That evidence is sufficient to demonstrate substantial
    9
    compliance with NHTSA standards for the field sobriety tests,
    absent a challenge to some specific way Sergeant Bush failed to
    comply with NHTSA standards in administering those tests.
    {¶ 20} Defendant’s second assignment of error is overruled.
    THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    “THE DEFENDANT WAS PLACED IN CUSTODY WHEN SHE WAS SUBJECTED
    TO FIELD SOBRIETY TESTS IN THE TROOPERS CRUISER AND WAS REMOVED
    TO A DIFFERENT LOCATION FOR COMPLETION OF THE STANDARDIZED FIELD
    SOBRIETY TESTS.”
    {¶ 21} After being stopped for speeding and having failed to
    produce a driver’s license or any other form of identification,
    Defendant was asked to sit in the front passenger seat of Sergeant
    Bush’s cruiser while he gathered information to verify Defendant’s
    identity.   The first field sobriety test, the horizontal gaze
    nystagmus (HGN) test, was performed inside Sergeant Bush’s cruiser.
    Defendant argues that there was no legal justification to have
    her sit in Sergeant Bush’s cruiser, which resulted in an illegal
    detention/arrest.
    {¶ 22} We have previously held that a police officer may ask
    traffic offenders who are not carrying their driver’s license
    or any other form of identification to sit in a police cruiser
    while the officer verifies the person’s identity.   State v. Fritz,
    Montgomery App. No. 23054, 
    2009-Ohio-6690
    ; State v. Dozier,
    10
    Montgomery App. NO. 23841, 
    2010-Ohio-2918
    .              Before putting the
    person into the police cruiser, the officer may not lawfully perform
    a weapons patdown if the only reason for putting the person in
    the cruiser is for the officer’s convenience as he verifies the
    person’s identity.        
    Id.
           In the present case no pat-down was
    performed.
    {¶ 23} Having Defendant sit in the front seat of Sergeant
    Bush’s      cruiser   while    he    verified   Defendant’s   identity      and
    administered the horizontal gaze nystagmus test did not convert
    an investigative detention into a full blown arrest.               An arrest,
    which must be supported by probable cause to be valid, is
    characterized by four elements: (1) an intent to arrest; (2) under
    real   or    pretended   authority;      (3)    accompanied   by   actual   or
    constructive seizure or detention; (4) which is so understood by
    the person arrested.          State v. Barker (1978), 
    53 Ohio St.2d 135
    ,
    139.     On the totality of the facts and circumstances in this case,
    it is clear that Sergeant Bush had no intent to arrest Defendant
    until after she failed all three field sobriety tests.               By that
    time, Sergeant Bush clearly had probable cause to arrest Defendant
    for OVI.
    {¶ 24} Defendant’s third assignment of error is overruled.
    The judgment of the trial court will be affirmed.
    FROELICH, J. And HALL, J., concur.
    11
    Copies mailed to:
    Michael F. Sheils, Esq.
    Charles M. Rowland, II, Esq.
    Hon. Thomas E. Trempe
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 10CA0046

Citation Numbers: 2011 Ohio 2560

Judges: Grady

Filed Date: 5/27/2011

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014