State v. Brian Kendall ( 2016 )


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  • Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.
    ENTRY ORDER
    SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2016-179
    DECEMBER TERM, 2016
    State of Vermont                                      }    APPEALED FROM:
    }
    }    Superior Court, Rutland Unit,
    v.                                                 }    Criminal Division
    }
    }
    Brian W. Kendall                                      }    DOCKET NO. 149-9-15 Rdcs
    Trial Judge: Thomas A. Zonay
    In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:
    Defendant appeals the civil suspension of his driver’s license, arguing that the State failed
    to prove that he was operating his truck while intoxicated. We affirm.
    At approximately 12:15 a.m. on September 21, 2015, a Rutland police officer was
    dispatched to a courthouse parking lot in downtown Rutland after an unidentified female called
    the police and reported that an intoxicated underage male was in his vehicle. According to the
    officer’s affidavit, the caller reported “that they tried to take the vehicle keys away but the vehicle
    starts without keys.” The officer also indicated in his affidavit that when he arrived at the scene,
    he observed a male in the driver’s seat of a truck with the headlights illuminated. The officer
    stated that the engine was running, but defendant’s girlfriend—who was also at the scene and the
    only witness at the civil suspension hearing—testified that the engine was not running and that she
    had control of the keys to the truck at all times. After observing that defendant exhibited several
    indicia of intoxication—a strong odor of alcohol emitting from his breath, watery and bloodshot
    eyes, and slurred speech—the officer had defendant exit the truck and perform field dexterity
    exercises. Based on the indicia of intoxication and defendant’s performance of the exercises, the
    officer arrested defendant for driving while intoxicated (DWI) and transported him to the police
    barracks, where at 1:33 a.m. he submitted to an evidentiary breath test that revealed a blood-alcohol
    concentration (BAC) of 0.133. A second evidentiary test administered nine minutes later revealed
    a BAC of 0.132. Defendant was charged with operating or being in actual physical control of a
    motor vehicle with a BAC of 0.08 or more. See 23 V.S.A. § 1201(a)(1).
    As noted, defendant’s girlfriend was the only witness who testified at the license
    suspension hearing. Among other things, she testified that defendant arrived at a Rutland nightclub
    shortly after 10:00 p.m. on the evening of September 20, 2015 to pick her up. According to the
    girlfriend, they argued over whether he should drive because of her concern that he was
    intoxicated. She testified that defendant left the nightclub and shortly thereafter she joined him at
    the courthouse parking lot, where she attempted to convince him not to drive. She further testified
    that she took defendant’s keys, walked to her grandmother’s house, got a car, and returned to the
    courthouse parking lot, at which point the police arrived. The State presented no witnesses but
    relied on the officer’s DUI affidavit along with his accompanying narrative affidavit, in which the
    officer stated, among other things, that defendant indicated he had driven from Ludlow and arrived
    in Rutland about twenty-five minutes before police confronted him at the courthouse parking lot.
    Defendant argued at the hearing that the State failed to prove that the officer had a
    reasonable basis for concluding that he was in actual physical control of his truck, given his
    girlfriend’s testimony that the engine was not running and that she had control of the keys. He
    also argued that the State failed to provide relation-back evidence to establish his BAC at the time
    of operation. The trial court found that defendant consumed alcohol prior to driving to Rutland,
    drove from Ludlow to Rutland and arrived at the courthouse parking lot around 11:50 p.m.,
    approximately 25 minutes before the Rutland police officer arrived. On the basis of these findings,
    and defendant’s BAC test of .133 at 1:33 a.m., the trial court concluded that defendant operated
    the vehicle within two hours of the BAC test that was above 0.08. Accordingly, the court
    concluded that the statutory presumption of 23 V.S.A. § 1205(n) applied.1
    On appeal, defendant argues that the State failed to prove that defendant had operated the
    vehicle while intoxicated. He further argues that the State did not prove that he drove within two
    hours of the BAC test, so the State is not entitled to the statutory presumption that he was
    intoxicated while driving. At their core, both arguments rely on defendant’s claim that the trial
    court should have credited defendant’s girlfriend’s testimony rather than the affidavit of the officer
    on the scene and the statements attributed to defendant reflected in that affidavit.
    On the first issue, in their briefs, the parties focus primarily on whether there was sufficient
    evidence to show that defendant was in actual physical control of his vehicle at the time the officer
    arrived at the courthouse parking lot shortly after midnight. They debate whether sitting behind
    the wheel in the driver’s seat with the headlights on is actual physical control. But the trial court’s
    finding that defendant operated the vehicle at 11:50 p.m. was not based on the view that his sitting
    in the driver’s seat with the headlights on constituted operation. Instead, the court found, based
    on the State’s affidavit from the officer on the scene, that defendant informed the officer at the
    1
    The trial court also found that the officer had reasonable grounds to believe that defendant
    was operating, attempting to operate, or in actual physical control of his vehicle while intoxicated.
    In the circumstances of this case, whether the officer had “reasonable grounds” to request the
    evidentiary test is not conclusive of any contested legal issue. When the basis of a civil license
    suspension is a BAC over the legal limit rather than refusal to take an evidentiary test, “the State
    must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant was operating a vehicle, rather
    than showing merely that the arresting officer had reasonable grounds to believe that the defendant
    was operating the vehicle.” State v. Green, 
    173 Vt. 540
    , 540 (2001) (mem.) (affirming trial court
    ruling); see also State v. Westcom, 
    173 Vt. 561
    , 562 (2002) (mem.) (noting Green holding but
    applying reasonable-grounds-by-officer standard because civil license suspension was based on
    refusal to take breath test). The reasonable-grounds standard is similar to the probable-cause
    standard for issuance of a search warrant, and thus lower than the preponderance-of-the-evidence
    standard applicable to determining whether a defendant operated or was in actual physical control
    of a vehicle. See Shaw v. Vt. Dist. Court, 
    152 Vt. 1
    , 5-6 (1989) (comparing two standards); see
    also State v. Melchior, 
    172 Vt. 248
    , 251 (2001) (stating that standard for finding probable cause
    that evidence of crime will be found in place to be searched “requires something less than the
    more-likely-than-not standard”). We do not understand the trial court’s superfluous discussion of
    whether the officer had “reasonable grounds” to believe defendant had operated the vehicle while
    intoxicated to negate the court’s own finding that defendant drove the vehicle until around 11:50
    p.m.
    2
    courthouse parking lot that he had driven his truck from Ludlow to Rutland, arriving twenty-five
    minutes earlier, and that he had had his last drink at 9:30 or 10:00 that evening.2 Thus, as the trial
    court found, defendant’s own statement, as reported in the officer’s affidavit, indicates that
    defendant was operating his vehicle at approximately 11:50 p.m., twenty-five minutes before the
    officer arrived at 12:15 a.m. and within two hours of his producing a breath test with a BAC above
    the legal limit.
    The testimony of the only defense witness—defendant’s girlfriend—concerning the
    timeline for defendant operating his vehicle, does not persuade us otherwise. The trial court
    explicitly found that her testimony on this point was not credible. Hence, we find unavailing
    defendant’s argument that his girlfriend’s testimony is more reliable than the officer’s averred
    statements as to what defendant told him. See Prior v. Bean, 
    2003 VT 79
    , ¶ 17, 
    176 Vt. 1
     (“As the
    trier of fact, it [is] the province of the trial court to determine the credibility of the witnesses and
    weigh the persuasiveness of the evidence.” (quotation omitted)); State v. Freeman, 
    2004 VT 56
    ,
    ¶ 7, 
    177 Vt. 478
     (“Recognizing that the trial court is in a better position to determine the weight
    and sufficiency of the evidence presented, this Court applies a clearly erroneous standard to the
    trial court’s finding of historical facts.”).
    We also reject defendant’s second argument that the State was required to produce relation-
    back evidence because he rebutted the presumption contained in § 1205(n). That section provides
    that if a person has a BAC above the legal limit within two hours of operation, it will be presumed
    that the person’s BAC was above the legal limit at the time of operation. Defendant has the burden
    of providing evidence to rebut the presumption. State v. Pluta, 
    157 Vt. 451
    , 453-54 (1991). “[T]o
    rebut the presumption in § 1205(n), a defendant must only produce evidence sufficient to support
    a finding that his BAC was under 0.08% at the time of operation.” State v. Giard, 
    2005 VT 43
    ,
    ¶ 9, 
    178 Vt. 544
     (mem.) (quotation omitted). Defendant’s argument that the presumption does not
    apply again rests on his argument that the court should have credited his girlfriend’s testimony as
    to the timeline of defendant’s driving. As noted, the trial court rejected as not credible the
    testimony of defendant’s girlfriend concerning the timeline of defendant’s operation of his vehicle,
    which conflicted with defendant’s own statement to the officer as to when he last operated the
    truck. Indeed, at the civil suspension hearing, defendant’s counsel conceded that if the court found
    2
    The officer indicated in the DUI affidavit that defendant answered “I’d say 9:30” to the
    question, “How long ago did you stop drinking?,” but stated in his attached narrative affidavit that
    defendant said “10 o’clock” when asked when he had his last drink. Defendant argues that this
    discrepancy demonstrates that the affidavits are not reliable. We disagree. The discrepancy may
    have resulted from defendant’s varying statements or from the officer’s failure to recollect the
    exact time stated by defendant, but either way, the unchallenged evidence was that defendant
    stopped drinking between 9:30 and 10:00 that evening. Because the State relies on the statutory
    presumption that defendant was intoxicated, and there is no evidence of any post-operation
    drinking, whether defendant’s last drink was a 9:30 or 10:00 is immaterial.
    3
    that defendant operated his vehicle at the time as reported in the officer’s affidavit, he could not
    rebut the § 1205(n) presumption.
    Affirmed.
    BY THE COURT:
    _______________________________________
    Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice
    _______________________________________
    Marilyn S. Skoglund, Associate Justice
    _______________________________________
    Beth Robinson, Associate Justice
    4
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2016-179

Filed Date: 12/16/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021