Judges: DUSTIN McDANIEL, Attorney General
Filed Date: 3/30/2007
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Roy Ragland State Representative Post Office Box 610 Marshall, AR 72650-0610
Dear Representative Ragland:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion on the following:
*Page 2I have attached a copy of HB1722 of 2007 that authorizes a law enforcement agency or local correctional facility to hold a person who has been arrested for driving while intoxicated, prior to release under bond or otherwise, until the alcohol concentration is less than eight-hundreths (0.08) in the person's breath or blood and the person is no longer intoxicated. The bill provides that a law enforcement officer shall determine if the person is no longer intoxicated and to be released if the person refuses the administration of a chemical test for determination of the alcohol concentration in the person's breath or blood. The person may not be held, prior to release under bond or otherwise, under the provisions of the bill for more than six (6) hours.
With respect to the provisions of HB1722 of 2007, please answer the following questions:
1. When a person has an absolute right to refuse a breathalyzer test, is it unconstitutional to deny the person bond because a law enforcement officer believes the person is intoxicated?
2. Is it unconstitutional to hold a person prior to release under bond if the person is financially able to post bond pursuant to a standing court order?
3. Is the bill constitutionally suspect because it does not provide guidelines concerning when or how often a person may request administration of a chemical test for determination of the alcohol concentration in the person's breath or blood?
4. Is the bill constitutionally suspect because it does not provide guidelines concerning the method, manner, or protocol for the administration of a chemical test for determination of the alcohol concentration in the person's breath or blood after an initial chemical test is performed or after a person refuses an initial test?
5. In your opinion, would HB1722 violate any provisions of the United States Constitution or the Arkansas Constitution?
Question One: When a person has an absolute right to refuse abreathalyzer test, is it unconstitutional to deny the person bondbecause a law enforcement officer believes the person isintoxicated?
Initially, I must note that while there is a right to refuse a breathalyzer test, such refusal can result in a criminal violation against the person who refuses the test. By law, operating a motor vehicle demonstrates an implied consent to submit to a breathalyzer. A.C.A. §
In light of the above, your initial question appears to be whether it is constitutional for an individual who has been arrested for a violation of A.C.A. §
(c)(1) A law enforcement agency or a local correctional facility may hold a person who has been arrested for violating §
5-65-103 , prior to release under bond or otherwise, until the alcohol concentration is less than eight-hundredths (0.08) in the person's breath or blood based upon the definition of breath, blood, and urine concentration in §5-65-204 and the person is no longer intoxicated.(2) If a person refuses the administration of a chemical test described in §
5-65-203 for determination of the alcohol concentration in the person's breath or blood, a law enforcement officer shall determine when the person is no longer intoxicated and to be released subject to the limitation under subdivision (c)(3) of this section.(3) A person shall not be held, prior to release under bond or otherwise, under subdivision (c)(1) or (c)(2) of this section for more than six (6) hours.
H.B. 1722 of 2007, § 1. The bill allows a law enforcement agency or local correctional facility to hold the arrestee "prior to release on bond or otherwise. . . ."1 H.B. 1722 of 2007, § 1. In my opinion, this phrase is ambiguous in the context of H.B.1722. One interpretation of this language would allow a law enforcement agency or local correctional facility to hold an arrestee under the provisions of H.B.1722 regardless of whether the arrestee has posted bond or otherwise been ordered released. The other interpretation is that H.B.1722 would authorize a law enforcement agency or a local correctional facility to hold an *Page 4 arrestee only until the arrestee is ordered released pursuant to some other authorized method. This distinction is important because if the first interpretation is accepted, in my opinion the bill is unconstitutional as intruding upon the power of the judiciary. If the second interpretation is accepted, the bill may, in many cases, be ineffective in light of the fact that release pursuant to a standing court order may be automatic upon satisfaction of the conditions set forth in such an order.
With respect to the first interpretation proffered above, the Arkansas Constitution provides that: "All persons shall, before conviction, be bailable by sufficient sureties, except for capital offenses, when the proof is evident or the presumption great." Ark. Const. art.
The Arkansas Supreme Court recently repeated its clarifications between substantive and procedural laws in Summerville, supra. Specifically, the court stated:
The boilerplate definition of substantive law is "[t]he part of the law that creates, defines, and regulates the rights, duties, and powers of the parties," while procedural law is defined as "[t]he rules that prescribe the steps for having a right or duty judicially enforced, as opposed to the law that defines the specific rights or duties themselves." Black's Law Dictionary 1443, 1221 (7th ed. 1999).
Id. at 8. The right to bail is a substantive right that emanates from the Arkansas Constitution. Henley v. Taylor,
With regard to release without money bail, Rule 9.1 authorizes the appropriate judicial officer to determine whether to release a criminal defendant on his or her own recognizance or on an order to appear and whether to impose conditions on the release. Before the granting of money bail, Rule 9.2(a) requires a judicial officer to "determine that no other conditions will reasonably ensure the appearance of the defendant in court." Rule 9.1 provides conditions that may be imposed on a defendant who is released without money bail. Therefore, in my opinion, Rule 9.1 governing the standards of pre-trial release without money bail would also be considered a procedural rule governing the proper judicial enforcement of the constitutional right to bail.
As noted above, House Bill 1722, depending on its interpretation, may allow a law enforcement agency to continue to detain an individual after a court-ordered release "under bond." In my opinion, if so interpreted, the bill would be held unconstitutional. In effect, this statute could allow a law enforcement agency to ignore a judicial order of release pursuant to the Arkansas Rules of Criminal *Page 6 Procedure or to impose additional requirements on the release of an individual who has been ordered released pursuant to a judicial order by sufficient sureties of money bail or otherwise.
A statute regulating procedure that conflicts with a court's procedural rules will only be granted deference to the extent that the statute does not compromise the rule's purpose and effectiveness.See, e.g., Casement,
With respect to the second interpretation proffered above, in my opinion H.B.1722 would be, in many cases, ineffective. If H.B.1722 only authorizes law enforcement agencies or local correctional facilities to hold an arrestee under its provisions until the arrestee posts bond under Rule 9.2 or is otherwise released under Rule 9.1, a standing court order delineating bond or release provisions may preclude operation of H.B.1722. A standing order from a court, presumably made pursuant to the provisions of Ark. R. Crim. P. 9.2(d)3, setting money bail or release options for non-felony charges would be an exercise of the above-discussed vested authority of the judiciary.4 If interpreted in the second possible *Page 7 manner, House Bill 1722 would not, therefore, prevent release pursuant to a standing order.
Question Two: Is it unconstitutional to hold a person prior to releaseunder bond if the person is financially able to post bond pursuant to astanding court order? Question Three: Is the bill constitutionally suspect because it doesnot provide guidelines concerning when or how often a person may requestadministration of a chemical test for determination of the alcoholconcentration in the person's breath or blood? Question Four: Is the bill constitutionally suspect because it doesnot provide guidelines concerning the method, manner, or protocol forthe administration of a chemical test for determination of the alcoholconcentration in the person's breath or blood after an initial chemicaltest is performed or after a person refuses an initial test? Question Five: In your opinion, would HB1722 violate any provisions ofthe United States Constitution or the Arkansas Constitution?
In light of my response to Question One that H.B.1722 of 2007 is likely unconstitutional on its face, it is not necessary to address the remaining questions of constitutionality posed in your request.
Assistant Attorney General Joel DiPippa prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.