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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
3 Plaintiff-Appellee,
4 v. NO. 34,197
5 NATHAN D. PERCY,
6 Defendant-Appellant.
7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF CHAVES COUNTY
8 Steven L. Bell, District Judge
9 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
10 Santa Fe, NM
11 for Appellee
12 Jorge A. Alvarado, Chief Public Defender
13 Will O’Connell, Assistant Appellate Defender
14 Santa Fe, NM
15 for Appellant
16 MEMORANDUM OPINION
17 GARCIA, Judge.
18 {1} Defendant appeals his conviction for aggravated driving while under the
1 influence (“DUI”). [DS unnumbered pages 2-3] This Court issued a notice of
2 proposed summary disposition proposing to affirm, and Defendant has filed a
3 memorandum in opposition to that disposition. Having fully considered that
4 memorandum, we remain unpersuaded and now affirm.
5 {2} Defendant’s first appellate issue challenges the relevance of testimony received
6 in response to a jury question. [DS unnumbered page 19] After a witness had testified
7 that Defendant was being belligerent in a convenience store prior to getting in his
8 truck and driving, a jury question asked how he was being belligerent. [DS
9 unnumbered pages 7, 19] Over Defendant’s objection that the question was not
10 relevant, the court permitted the witness to answer that Defendant was cursing,
11 waving his hands, and yelling. [DS unnumbered page 7] Our notice proposed to hold
12 that the testimony was relevant to the question of whether Defendant was intoxicated
13 before getting in his truck. [CN 3-4] In his memorandum, Defendant continues to
14 assert—as he did in his docketing statement—that this testimony was not relevant to
15 “the only issue presented” by the witness’s testimony, which Defendant asserts to
16 have been whether or not he drove the truck. [MIO 3] We continue to disagree.
17 Defendant does not explain, either in his docketing statement or in his memorandum,
18 why a witness’s testimony should be limited to only one element of the crime with
19 which he was charged. Because intoxication is an element of DUI, evidence of
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1 intoxication will generally be relevant in prosecutions for DUI.
2 {3} Defendant also now asserts that testimony regarding his belligerent actions
3 immediately before driving away was inadmissible as evidence of other bad acts,
4 intended to establish his bad character. [MIO 4] Other-acts evidence is generally
5 inadmissible despite being “logically relevant to show that the defendant committed
6 the crime by acting consistently with his or her past conduct[.]” State v. Gallegos,
7 2007-NMSC-007, ¶ 21, 141 N.M. 185, 152 P.3d 828; see also Rule 11-404(B)(1)
8 NMRA (prohibiting use of other acts “to prove a person’s character in order to show
9 that on a particular occasion the person acted in accordance with the character”). In
10 the context of this prosecution, however, the evidence at issue does not involve past
11 conduct; the testimony concerned his intoxication at the time of the crime for which
12 he was charged. And, in any event, it does not appear that Defendant asserted an
13 objection on the basis that the testimony was inadmissible character evidence at his
14 trial. [DS unnumbered page 7; MIO 3] See Rule 12-208(D)(4) NMRA (requiring that
15 docketing statements include a statement of how each issue was preserved in the trial
16 court). Defendant’s docketing statement and memorandum in opposition each fail to
17 point out where he invoked any ruling of the district court on this issue. “Absent that
18 citation to the record or any obvious preservation, we will not consider the issue.”
19 Crutchfield v. N.M. Dep’t of Taxation & Revenue, 2005-NMCA-022, ¶ 14, 137 N.M.
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1 26, 106 P.3d 1273.
2 {4} Defendant also challenges the admissibility of the breath card used to establish
3 his B.A.C. at the time of his arrest. [DS unnumbered pages 19-20] Our notice of
4 proposed disposition addressed his arguments that the breath card was hearsay and
5 that a proper foundation was not laid for its admission. [CN 4-5] In his memorandum
6 in opposition to that proposed disposition, Defendant “continues to argue” that the
7 breath card was inadmissible for the reasons set out in his docketing statement. [MIO
8 4] We continue to be unpersuaded by those arguments.
9 {5} Finally, Defendant suggests that it was fundamental error for the district court
10 to give a lesser-included jury instruction at the conclusion of trial. In doing so,
11 Defendant argues that it was error to instruct the jury that, if it did not find him guilty
12 of aggravated DUI, it could still convict him of DUI, if alcohol rendered him “less
13 able to the slightest degree . . . to handle a vehicle with safety.” [RP 188] In support
14 of this argument, Defendant’s memorandum asserts that, although there was ample
15 evidence of intoxication, “there was no testimony establishing actual impaired
16 driving.” [MIO 5] We disagree. The jury in this case heard testimony that Defendant,
17 in an apparently intoxicated state, drove his truck. [DS 5] That testimony included a
18 description of Defendant’s driving. [Id.] The jury also heard the testimony of a law
19 enforcement officer to the effect that, after apparently driving his truck, Defendant
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1 was unable or unwilling to perform field sobriety tests. [DS unnumbered pages 7-8]
2 The jury could reasonably infer from such evidence that, while driving, Defendant
3 was impaired by alcohol. We find no error in the district court’s instructions to the
4 jury.
5 {6} Consequently, for the reasons stated in this Court’s notice of proposed
6 disposition, we affirm Defendant’s conviction.
7 {7} IT IS SO ORDERED.
8 ________________________________
9 TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
10 WE CONCUR:
11 _______________________________
12 CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
13 _______________________________
14 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
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