1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 Opinion Number:
3 Filing Date: October 5, 2017
4 NO. S-1-SC-36197
5 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
6 Plaintiff-Petitioner,
7 v.
8 LARESSA VARGAS,
9 Defendant-Respondent.
10 ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI
11 Briana H. Zamora, District Judge
12 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
13 John Kloss, Assistant Attorney General
14 Santa Fe, NM
15 for Petitioner
16 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender
17 Steven James Forsberg, Assistant Appellate Defender
18 Albuquerque, NM
19 for Respondent
1 OPINION
2 CHÁVEZ, Justice.
3 {1} The United States Supreme Court recently held that (1) a law enforcement
4 officer may require a warrantless alcohol breath test from a person who is arrested for
5 driving while intoxicated (DWI) from alcohol because a breath test is a reasonable
6 search incident to arrest, but (2) an officer cannot require a warrantless blood test
7 unless the officer has probable cause to require the blood test and demonstrates
8 exigent circumstances. Birchfield v. North Dakota, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 136 S. Ct.
9 2160, 2184-86 (2016). Thus, under Birchfield, a person who is arrested for DWI may
10 be punished for refusing to submit to a breath test under an implied consent law, but
11 may not be punished for refusing to consent to or submit to a blood test under an
12 implied consent law unless the officer either (a) obtains a warrant, or (b) proves
13 probable cause to require the blood test in addition to exigent circumstances.
14 {2} In this case, defendant Laressa Vargas consented to and submitted to two
15 breath tests, but refused to consent to a blood test. The arresting officer did not
16 obtain a warrant for a blood test, nor could he do so under New Mexico law, because
17 he did not have probable cause to believe that Vargas had committed a felony or
18 caused death or great bodily injury to another person while driving a motor vehicle
19 under the influence of alcohol or a controlled substance as required by NMSA 1978,
1 Section 66-8-111(A) (2005). Vargas was convicted of violating NMSA 1978,
2 Section 66-8-102(D)(3) (2010, amended 2016) because she refused to submit to a
3 blood test; she received a sentence of ninety days in jail, with credit for seventy-five
4 days for time served.
5 {3} The Birchfield opinion had not been decided when the Bernalillo County
6 Metropolitan Court entered its judgment convicting Vargas; however, Birchfield was
7 published while Vargas’s appeal was pending before the New Mexico Court of
8 Appeals. The Court of Appeals applied Birchfield and reversed Vargas’s conviction
9 for aggravated DWI. See State v. Vargas, 2017-NMCA-023, ¶¶ 2, 26, 389 P.3d 1080.
10 We granted the State’s petition for writ of certiorari to consider whether the Court of
11 Appeals erred in applying Birchfield. State v. Vargas, 2016-NMCERT-___ (No. S-1-
12 SC-36197, Feb. 14, 2017). We conclude that the Court of Appeals correctly applied
13 Birchfield to the pending appeal because of a person’s fundamental right under the
14 Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution not to be subjected to
15 unreasonable searches, and because Birchfield prohibits punishment under implied
16 consent laws based on an arrestee’s refusal to consent to and submit to a warrantless
17 blood test. See Birchfield, ___ U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2160, 2186.
18 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
3
1 {4} On April 23, 2011 at approximately 1:00 a.m., Bernalillo County Deputy
2 Sheriff Patrick Rael was part of a force conducting a DWI checkpoint on Coors
3 Boulevard in Albuquerque when he encountered Vargas. As Vargas approached the
4 checkpoint, she stopped fifteen to twenty yards before she reached where Deputy
5 Rael was standing, and Deputy Rael waved his flashlight to get her attention to
6 indicate that she should move forward. Vargas then rolled down her window and said
7 “good afternoon,” which Deputy Rael found odd, given the time of night.
8 {5} Deputy Rael immediately noticed the odor of alcohol emanating from both
9 Vargas’s person and her vehicle. He also observed that Vargas’s eyes were bloodshot
10 and watery. Deputy Rael asked Vargas if she had been drinking, to which she
11 answered that she had not. She explained that she was the designated driver for her
12 passenger, who had been drinking. Deputy Rael described Vargas as “confused” and
13 “nervous.”
14 {6} Deputy Rael requested that Vargas submit to field sobriety tests (FSTs), and
15 Vargas agreed. Vargas performed poorly on the FSTs. At that point Deputy Rael
16 believed that Vargas was intoxicated and could not safely operate a vehicle, so he
17 placed her under arrest.
18 {7} Deputy Rael read the pertinent provisions of the New Mexico Implied Consent
4
1 Act to Vargas, after which she agreed to a breath test. Vargas provided two breath
2 test samples, which resulted in readings of 0.04 at 1:33 a.m. and 0.05 at 1:35 a.m.
3 Because he believed that the breath test results were inconsistent with Vargas’s signs
4 of impairment, Deputy Rael determined that a blood test was the only other means to
5 confirm Vargas’s intoxication, particularly because he suspected that drugs were the
6 cause of her impairment. Deputy Rael then reread the Implied Consent Act to Vargas
7 and explained that he was entitled to ask her for both a breath test and a blood test.
8 He subsequently asked Vargas to submit to a blood test, and she agreed to do so.
9 Deputy Rael wanted to verify Vargas’s answer, so he asked her again if she was
10 willing to submit to a blood test. Deputy Rael explained that the possible
11 consequences of refusing the blood test included an aggravated sentence and license
12 revocation. Vargas refused to take the blood test the second time she was asked, and
13 she was subsequently charged with aggravated DWI.
14 {8} At the conclusion of the bench trial, the metropolitan court determined that the
15 State had proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Vargas drove while she was under
16 the influence of alcohol to the slightest degree.1 It also concluded that officers have
1
17 While Section 66-8-102(A) does not provide the exact language of “impaired
18 to the slightest degree,” State v. Sisneros, 1938-NMSC-049, 42 N.M. 500, 82 P.2d
19 274 effectively created that standard, and State v. Gurule, 2011-NMCA-042, 149
20 N.M. 599, 252 P.3 823 reaffirms it. See Sisneros, 1938-NMSC-049, ¶ 18 (“A person
5
1 the discretion to request breath tests, blood tests, or both, and that Vargas’s refusal
2 aggravated the underlying DWI. The metropolitan court sentenced Vargas to a term
3 of ninety days in jail for aggravated DWI under Section 66-8-102(D)(3) (2010),
4 which provides that
5 [a]ggravated driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs
6 consists of: refusing to submit to chemical testing, as provided for in the
7 Implied Consent Act, and in the judgment of the court, based upon
8 evidence of intoxication presented to the court, the driver was under the
9 influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs.
10 {9} Vargas subsequently appealed to the Second Judicial District Court and then
11 to the Court of Appeals. After the United States Supreme Court decided Birchfield,
12 Vargas raised for the first time on appeal to the Court of Appeals the defense that the
13 warrantless request for the blood test was an unreasonable search under the Fourth
14 Amendment, and that her refusal to submit to it could not be used to prove aggravated
15 DWI.
16 {10} Although the Court of Appeals concluded that Vargas’s constitutional
17 who has taken a drink of intoxicating liquor is not necessarily under its influence; but
18 if it affects him so that, to the slightest degree, ‘he is less able, either mentally or
19 physically or both, to exercise the clear judgment and steady hand necessary to handle
20 as powerful and dangerous a mechanism as a modern automobile with safety to
21 himself and the public,’ he is under the ‘influence of intoxicating liquor’ within the
22 meaning of the statute.” (citation omitted)); see also Gurule, 2011-NMCA-042, ¶ 7
23 (stating that a defendant found to be “impaired to the slightest degree” has violated
24 Section 66-8-102(A)).
6
1 argument was not preserved, it decided the issue on the merits. See Vargas, 2017-
2 NMCA-023, ¶¶ 14-15. The Court reversed Vargas’s aggravated DWI conviction and
3 remanded the case to the metropolitan court for resentencing on the DWI charge
4 based on Vargas being impaired to the slightest degree pursuant to Section 66-8-
5 102(A). Id. ¶¶ 2, 9, 19, 26. The State makes two arguments before us: (1) Birchfield
6 does not apply retroactively, and (2) the Court of Appeals erred in applying Birchfield
7 because the issue was not preserved.
8 II. DISCUSSION
9 A. Birchfield Applies Retroactively
10 {11} The State’s argument that Birchfield should not be applied retroactively is not
11 persuasive. In Teague v. Lane, the United States Supreme Court established the
12 analysis that courts must follow to determine whether a new rule applies retroactively.
13 See 489 U.S. 288, 299-310 (1989). New Mexico courts have adopted this analysis.
14 See Kersey v. Hatch, 2010-NMSC-020, ¶¶ 21, 25, 148 N.M. 381, 237 P.3d 683. “An
15 appellate court’s consideration of whether a rule should be retroactively or
16 prospectively applied is invoked only when the rule at issue is in fact a new rule.”
17 State v. Mascareñas, 2000-NMSC-017, ¶ 24, 129 N.M. 230, 4 P.3d 1221 (internal
18 quotation marks omitted). The Teague Court determined that “a case announces a
7
1 new rule if the result was not dictated by precedent existing at the time the
2 defendant’s conviction became final.” 489 U.S. at 301 (emphasis omitted). The new
3 rule “applies to cases pending on direct appeal, as long as the issue was raised and
4 preserved below . . . .” Kersey, 2010-NMSC-020, ¶ 19 (citing State v. Nunez, 2000-
5 NMSC-013, ¶ 114, 129 N.M. 63, 2 P.3d 264). Vargas did not preserve her Fourth
6 Amendment argument in the metropolitan court. Nonetheless, the Court of Appeals
7 properly exercised its discretion to address her unpreserved argument because of the
8 fundamental right to be free from illegal searches and seizures, including warrantless
9 blood tests. See Vargas, 2017-NMCA-023, ¶ 15. Birchfield announced an expansion
10 of courts’ previous understanding of blood tests under the Fourth Amendment. See
11 ___ U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2174-76 (“[T]he founding era does not provide any
12 definitive guidance as to whether [breath and blood tests to measure blood alcohol
13 content (BAC)] should be allowed incident to arrest. Lacking such guidance . . . we
14 examine the degree to which [they] intrud[e] upon an individual’s privacy and . . . the
15 degree to which [they are] needed for the promotion of legitimate governmental
16 interests.” (fourth through seventh alterations in original) (footnote omitted) (internal
17 quotation marks and citation omitted)). Birchfield specifically held for the first time
18 that police officers do not need to obtain a search warrant for a breath test from a
8
1 subject because a breath test is a search incident to arrest, but officers must obtain a
2 search warrant for a blood test unless probable cause for the blood test and exigent
3 circumstances are present. Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2185. This new rule cannot apply
4 retroactively unless “(1) it is a substantive rule that alters the range of conduct or the
5 class of persons that the law punishes, or (2) it is a watershed rule of criminal
6 procedure.” Kersey, 2010-NMSC-020, ¶ 31.
7 {12} The rule recently announced in Birchfield fits squarely within the first Teague
8 exception to the general principle against retroactive application because the new rule
9 “places ‘certain kinds of primary, private individual conduct beyond the power of the
10 criminal law-making authority to proscribe.’ ” Teague, 489 U.S. at 307 (citation
11 omitted). Birchfield bars criminal sanctions previously imposed upon a subject for
12 refusing to submit to warrantless blood tests. See ___ U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2185-
13 86. Therefore, Birchfield is applicable here.
14 B. The Court of Appeals Had Broad Discretion to Review Sua Sponte the
15 Unpreserved Fourth Amendment Issue on Appeal
16 {13} Generally, “[t]o preserve a question for review it must appear that a ruling or
17 decision by the district court was fairly invoked . . . .” Rule 12-216(A) NMRA
18 (1993); see also Rule 3-706(I) NMRA (“The Rules of Civil Procedure for the District
19 Courts shall govern the procedure on appeal from the metropolitan court.”). During
9
1 her bench trial, Vargas moved to suppress any indication of her drug use and her
2 refusal of the blood test based on three grounds: (1) Deputy Rael did not perform a
3 drug recognition evaluation, (2) there were no blood results, and (3) the theory upon
4 which the State was prosecuting Vargas was ambiguous. The metropolitan court
5 denied Vargas’s motion and focused primarily on her third reason in concluding that
6 the State had discretion to prosecute based on either alcohol intoxication, drug-
7 induced intoxication, or both. Importantly, Vargas’s motion to suppress was not
8 based on the Fourth Amendment grounds which formed the basis of her argument to
9 the Court of Appeals, and as a result, the metropolitan court’s ruling did not apply to
10 the specific constitutional issue on appeal. Therefore, this issue was not properly
11 preserved under Rule 12-216(A) (1993).
12 {14} However, questions involving “general public interest [or] fundamental error
13 or fundamental rights of a party” are exceptions to the general rule requiring
14 preservation. Rule 12-216(B)(1)-(2) (1993). “[F]reedom from illegal search and
15 seizure is a fundamental right,” which is a matter of general public interest, and an
16 appellate court may exercise its discretion to consider an issue involving search and
17 seizure protections even if it is not preserved by a defendant. State v. Gomez, 1997-
18 NMSC-006, ¶ 31 n.4, 122 N.M. 777, 932 P.2d 1.
10
1 {15} The State’s concern with the Court of Appeals’s review sua sponte of the
2 merits of Vargas’s argument is that it was not provided an opportunity for additional
3 briefing to address the scope and applicability of Birchfield, and was therefore
4 inhibited from developing the record to address the circumstances that would support
5 probable cause and exigent circumstances justifying a warrantless blood test. We
6 agree that the Court of Appeals should have asked for additional briefing, particularly
7 to address Birchfield, which was decided while the present case was on appeal.
8 Nevertheless, we remind litigants that when an appellate court fails to request
9 supplemental briefing, filing a motion for rehearing is a valid option when the motion
10 is “based upon a point of law . . . not raised, briefed or argued by any party but relied
11 upon by the court in its disposition of the matter . . . .” Rule 12-404(A) NMRA
12 (2009). Despite the fact that the Court of Appeals did not ask for additional briefing,
13 the record in this case is adequate to address the proper application of Birchfield, and
14 we therefore conclude that the Court of Appeals did not abuse its discretion by
15 addressing the application of Birchfield.
16 C. Vargas Was Unconstitutionally Punished for Refusing to Submit to an
17 Unreasonable Blood Test
18 {16} We review the merits of Vargas’s Fourth Amendment argument de novo. See
19 State v. Ryon, 2005-NMSC-005, ¶ 11, 137 N.M. 174, 108 P.3d 1032 (“The legality
11
1 of a search . . . turns on the question of reasonableness [and we] review the
2 determination of reasonableness de novo.”).
3 {17} “The Fourth Amendment, incorporated against state actors [such as police
4 officers] via the Fourteenth Amendment, requires that all searches and seizures be
5 reasonable in their execution.” State v. Leyva, 2011-NMSC-009, ¶ 9, 149 N.M. 435,
6 250 P.3d 861 (citations omitted). To identify reasonableness, we balance “public
7 interest and the [subject]’s right to personal security free from arbitrary interference
8 by law officers.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
9 {18} Both breath tests and blood tests are searches, with each test implicating
10 varying privacy concerns. Birchfield, ___ U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2173-74, 2176.
11 Breath tests elicit few privacy concerns; they only reveal a subject’s BAC, no sample
12 is left in the possession of the officer which may be used to obtain additional
13 information, there is no great embarrassment associated with this testing, and the tests
14 collect only breath, which we expel at all times. Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2176-78. In
15 contrast to breath, we do not regularly shed blood, and a blood test provides an officer
16 with a sample from which more information than mere BAC can be extracted. Id. at
17 ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2178.
18 {19} The Fourth Amendment permits warrantless breath tests incident to legal
12
1 arrests because noninvasive breath tests only slightly impact a subject’s privacy and
2 because the state has an interest in testing BAC to maintain highway safety and deter
3 drunk driving. Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2184. The Birchfield Court held that blood
4 tests bear too heavily on a subject’s privacy interests to permit the state to seize
5 warrantless samples at all DWI stops. Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2178. Therefore, when
6 a subject does not consent to such a search, officers must obtain a warrant or establish
7 probable cause and exigent circumstances to justify a warrantless search. See id. at
8 ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2185-86 (concluding that drivers do not consent to criminal
9 penalties for refusing invasive blood tests by virtue of driving on public roads).
10 Vargas consented to two breath tests. Deputy Rael subsequently asked Vargas to
11 consent to a warrantless blood draw. Because she refused, Deputy Rael should have
12 assumed that a warrant was necessary, unless probable cause to request the blood test
13 and exigent circumstances obviated the need for a warrant.
14 {20} Section 66-8-111(A) defines the probable cause that is necessary to obtain a
15 warrant when a person under arrest refuses to consent to a chemical test.
16 If a person under arrest for violation of an offense enumerated in the
17 Motor Vehicle Code . . . refuses upon request of a law enforcement
18 officer to submit to chemical tests designated by the law enforcement
19 agency as provided in Section 66-8-107 NMSA 1978 [the implied
20 consent provision], none shall be administered except when a municipal
21 judge, magistrate or district judge issues a search warrant authorizing
13
1 chemical tests as provided in Section 66-8-107 NMSA 1978 upon [the
2 judge] finding in a law enforcement officer’s written affidavit that there
3 is probable cause to believe that the person has driven a motor vehicle
4 while under the influence of alcohol or a controlled substance, thereby
5 causing the death or great bodily injury of another person, or there is
6 probable cause to believe that the person has committed a felony while
7 under the influence of alcohol or a controlled substance and that
8 chemical tests as provided in Section 66-8-107 NMSA 1978 will
9 produce material evidence in a felony prosecution.
10 {21} Deputy Rael had probable cause to believe that Vargas had driven a motor
11 vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or a controlled substance, but he did not
12 have probable cause to believe that Vargas had caused the death or great bodily injury
13 of another person while driving under the influence. Nor did Deputy Rael have
14 probable cause to believe that Vargas had committed a felony while under the
15 influence of alcohol or a controlled substance and that the chemical test would
16 produce material evidence in a felony prosecution. Vargas’s arrest occurred at a DWI
17 checkpoint. The State does not contend that she was driving under the influence and
18 caused either death or great bodily injury to another. The State also does not contend
19 that Vargas committed a felony while she was under the influence of alcohol or
20 another substance.
21 {22} Because Deputy Rael lacked the probable cause required by Section 66-8-
22 111(A) to obtain a warrant, whether exigent circumstances existed is not relevant.
14
1 See State v. Tywayne H., 1997-NMCA-015, ¶ 16, 123 N.M. 42, 933 P.2d 251
2 (“[W]arrantless searches are only permissible if they fall within an exception to the
3 warrant requirement. Exceptions include . . . probable cause plus exigent
4 circumstances . . . .” (citation omitted)). Therefore, Deputy Rael’s warrantless request
5 of Vargas’s blood sample cannot be justified as reasonable. Vargas was warned of
6 potential additional punishment if she refused to submit to what was an unreasonable
7 search. Implied consent laws can no longer provide that a driver impliedly consents
8 to a blood draw. Birchfield, ___ U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2185. We conclude that
9 Vargas cannot be subjected to criminal penalties for refusing to submit to an
10 unreasonable search. Contra id., ___ U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 2172, 2185-86
11 (reasoning that if the warrantless search comports with the Fourth Amendment, “it
12 follows that a State may criminalize the refusal to comply with a demand to submit
13 to the required testing”).
14 III. CONCLUSION
15 {23} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Court of Appeals in reversing
16 Vargas’s conviction for aggravated DWI and remanding for resentencing on DWI,
17 impaired to the slightest degree.
18 {24} IT IS SO ORDERED.
15
1 ___________________________________
2 EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice
3 WE CONCUR:
4 ___________________________________
5 JUDITH K. NAKAMURA, Chief Justice
6 ___________________________________
7 PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice
8 ___________________________________
9 CHARLES W. DANIELS, Justice
10 ___________________________________
11 BARBARA J. VIGIL, Justice
16