State v. Anderson

Dooley, J.,

¶ 19. dissenting. On its face, the majority decision appears to be a plausible interpretation of the statutory scheme as applied to the circumstances of this case. It is particularly plausible that the Legislature would have enacted a bright line standard so that the license suspension procedure could operate in a predictable and *51summary fashion. The majority decision states good reasons why the scheme should work as it has described. In essence, the majority describes the statutory scheme that the Legislature could have, and perhaps should have, created.

¶ 20. We are not the Legislature, however. As desirable as the statutory scheme described by the majority may be, it is not the scheme that the Legislature actually enacted. The majority tries to deconstruct the statute to make the pieces fit, but they do not, and I therefore dissent.

¶ 21. Both the majority and I agree that to suspend an operator’s license under the statute the State must show that the operator had a BAC of 0.08 or above at the time of operation. But the majority adds an additional element to the State’s burden of proof — that defendant’s BAC was 0.08 or more at the time the evidentiary test was taken. This additional element is not contained in the statutory scheme. Further, to the extent that there are inconsistencies in the statutory scheme, the legislative history unequivocally demonstrates that the provision the majority relies upon in support of its holding was not intended to prevent the State from initiating civil suspensions in cases where the evidentiary test result indicates a BAC below 0.08 at the time the test was administered. Nor does the majority’s holding further the Legislature’s policy of quickly getting drunk drivers off the roads, as the majority suggests; if anything, the holding makes it more difficult for law enforcement officers to accomplish that goal.

¶ 22. It is important to state the facts of this case to get a better understanding of the scope of the majority’s holding. At 10:38 p.m. on the evening of October 25, 2003, a state trooper pulled defendant over for failing to stop completely and signal before turning onto a highway. The officer’s affidavit indicates that, upon approaching defendant’s truck, the officer detected an odor of alcohol emanating from the vehicle. The affidavit also indicates that the officer observed that defendant had watery eyes and that he was unsteady on his feet. After defendant had difficulty executing field sobriety tests, the officer administered a roadside alco-sensor test, which indicated a BAC of .093 at 11:03 p.m. Forty minutes later, at 11:43 p.m., defendant submitted an evidentiary breath sample indicating a BAC of 0.077. The officer issued defendant a notice of intention to suspend his license and wrote “.077” in the form to indicate the evidentiary test result.

¶ 23. At the preliminary hearing, defendant noted that the 0.077 figure was inconsistent with the language of the notice form. The State responded that it could establish at the final hearing that defendant’s *52BAC was 0.08 or greater at the time of operation by relating back the test result. The district court dismissed the civil suspension, ruling that the trooper’s affidavit in this case was facially insufficient to support commencement of a civil suspension proceeding because it did not state that a test result indicating a BAC of 0.08 or more had been obtained, as required by 23 V.S.A. § 1205(b)(5). According to the court, “the statutory scheme for civil suspension plainly contemplates that the initiation of the summary procedures requires a DataMaster test result that supports the conclusion that the operator was above .08%, as evidenced by the arresting officer’s affidavit.” The majority affirms this ruling, also relying on the language of § 1205(b)(5).

¶ 24. This is a case of statutory construction. The summary suspension procedure was created in 1989, see 1989, No. 68, with virtually all the pieces contained in the current law. The one additional piece is 23 V.S.A. § 1205(b), added in 1991, the subsection on which the majority partially relies. As enacted in 1989, the statute contained not even a hint that the State must produce a test result indicating a BAC of 0.08 (then 0.10) or above at the time the test was administered. To the contrary, as discussed in more detail below, all statutory references to the time at which the BAC was to be measured were to the time the person was “operating, attempting to operate or ... in actual physical control.” 1989, No. 68, § 5 (amending 23 V.S.A. § 1205(a)). As it does today, the statute contained a presumption that allowed the State to relate back a test result to the time of operation. See id. (adding 23 V.S.A. § 1205(m)). As the majority opinion states, it was intended in 1989 to be “a speedy and summary procedure to get drunk drivers off the roads through license suspension.” Ante, ¶ 3; see State v. Strong, 158 Vt. 56, 58, 605 A.2d 510, 511-12 (1992) (explaining summary procedure).

¶ 25. The majority necessarily believes one of two possibilities about the original 1989 law: (1) without saying so anywhere, the law required that the officer obtain a test result of 0.10 BAC (changed now to 0.08 BAC) or higher to proceed with a summary civil suspension; or (2) the officer could proceed with a test result under 0.10 as long as the officer could relate it back to show that the operator had a BAC above 0.10 at time of operation, attempted operation or actual physical control. I cannot tell which of these positions the majority holds, largely because it cites numerous subsections that existed in the 1989 law to support its position that a test result of 0.08 BAC is now required.

¶ 26. If the majority believes the former — that a test result of 0.10 BAC was required in 1989 — it is judicially legislating this result *53without any support in the statutory language. Thus, I believe that the only real possibility is the latter — that the 1989 law did not require that the officer produce a test result at or above 0.10 BAC. That requirement had to come from a later amendment. Consequently, the real issue in this case is whether, in 1991, the Legislature intended § 1205(b)(5) to preclude the State from initiating civil suspension proceedings in situations when the evidentiary test indicates a BAC below the statutory maximum. See Okemo Mountain, Inc. v. Town of Ludlow, 171 Vt. 201, 210, 762 A.2d 1219, 1227 (2000) (primary objective in construing statute is to effectuate intent of Legislature). My reading of the statutory scheme and the legislative history underlying § 1205(b)(5) leads me to the inevitable conclusion that the Legislature did not intend such a result.

¶ 27. In explaining my position, I first examine the statutory scheme. The operative statement of the violation, both for criminal prosecution and civil suspension, is contained in 23 V.S.A. § 1201(a)(1):

(a) A person shall not operate, attempt to operate, or be in actual physical control of any vehicle on a highway:
(1) when the person’s alcohol concentration is 0.08 or more

Nine additional sections or subsections, either directly or indirectly by cross-reference, contain the language specifying that the BAC is measured at the time of operation, attempted operation or actual physical control.3 For purposes of this case, the important applications *54of the DUI statute are the provisions in the civil suspension section, contained in § 1205. Specifically, subsection (a) provides that upon affidavit of an officer that the officer had reasonable grounds to believe that a person had an alcohol concentration of 0.08 at time of operation, the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles must suspend that person’s operator’s license. 23 V.S.A. § 1205(a). Subsection (c) requires the officer to notify the operator of the suspension when the circumstances described in (a) are present. Id. § 1205(c). Subsection (h) describes the court review, limiting the issues related to the test result to whether “the test results indicated that the person’s alcohol concentration was 0.08 or more at the time of operating ... in violation of section 1201.” Id. § 1205(h)(4).

¶ 28. Here, however, the district court’s decision, accepted by the majority, was based on another subsection — § 1205(b)(5), which was added in 1991.1991, No. 55, § 6.4 Subsection 1205(b), entitled “Form of officer’s affidavit,” provides, in relevant part, that an officer’s affidavit in support of a suspension under § 1205(a)

shall be in a standardized form for use throughout the state and shall be sufficient if it contains the following statements:
(5) The officer obtained an evidentiary test (noting the time and date the test was taken) and the test indicated that the person’s alcohol concentration was 0.08 or more, or the person refused to submit to an evidentiary test.

¶ 29. The parties’ dispute centers around the meaning of § 1205(b)(5). The district court effectively ruled that the plain language of § 1205(b)(5) imposes an additional element of the offense for civil suspension purposes — that is, that a test result must show that the operator had an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or greater when the test *55was administered.5 As discussed above, the addition of a new offense element is discordant with the many other statements of the offense elements in the subchapter on drunken driving. More importantly, it is in conflict with § 1205(h), which limits the issues in the court proceeding. Under the district court’s construction, § 1205(b)(5) adds an element to the case the State must prove, and yet § 1205(h) prevents that element from being shown because it is not among the permissible issues that can be raised at a final civil suspension hearing.

¶ 30.1 recognize that we have rules for resolving internal inconsistencies in statutes, but the first such rule is that we must deal with an apparent inconsistency by harmonizing the statutory sections to avoid the inconsistency. See Gallipo v. City of Rutland, 173 Vt. 223, 235, 789 A.2d 942, 951 (2001). This harmonizing process begins with a close examination of the district court’s conclusion that the plain meaning of § 1205(b)(5) is to add an additional element to the offense. I find the district court’s conclusion unpersuasive in two respects. First, the subsection deals with only the content of the officer’s affidavit, specifying that it must be on a standard form, and stating that “it shall be sufficient” if it contains certain “statements.” 23 V.S.A. § 1205(b). The subsection does not provide that the affidavit is insufficient if it does not contain those statements. Indeed, the required content of the affidavit is specified in subsection (a), not subsection (b), and subsection (a) requires a minimum alcohol concentration of 0.08 at the time of operation, not at the time of testing. The district court held that “the Legislature provided that a notice of suspension must be supported by an affidavit indicating that ‘[t]he officer obtained an evidentiary test (noting the time and date the test was taken) and the test indicated that the person’s alcohol concentration was 0.08 or mare____’ (emphasis added), 23 V.S.A. § 1205(c)(5).”6 As discussed above, the “must be supported” language does not appear in the statute. Rather, the statute describes what content of the affidavit is “sufficient” without specifying what content is required.

*56¶ 31. Second, the words of § 1205(b)(5) do not explicitly state that a BAC of 0.08 is required at the time of testing. The language is-silent on the timing of the BAC measurement. While I agree that in isolation the more logical interpretation of the wording is that the BAC indicated by the test result alone must be above the minimum of 0.08, the failure to state that explicitly introduces an ambiguity, especially because all of the other sections in the statutory scheme do state explicitly the point in time for which the required alcohol concentration must be found. Thus, it is possible that the Legislature used the words of § 1205(b)(5) as a shorthand for the longer statement that the BAC determination is made at the time of operation.

¶ 32. For these two reasons, I conclude that § 1205(b)(5) does not have a plain meaning, and is ambiguous. While the -ambiguity can be resolved from the language alone, we have in this case another statutory construction tool — legislative history — to harmonize the statutes. See Green Mtn. Power Corp. v. Sprint Communications, 172 Vt. 416, 420, 779 A.2d 687, 691 (2001) (recognizing that when statutory language is ambiguous, “legislative history may be used to determine the intent of the Legislature”). Here, the legislative history greatly undercuts the district court’s and the majority’s interpretation of the statute. Indeed, the legislative history makes it plain that the Legislature did not intend to add as an element of the offense that the operator must have an alcohol concentration.above 0.08 at the time the test was administered.

¶ 33. The 1989 law had no subsection on the form of the officer’s affidavit; the requirements were generally set out in § 1205(a) without the concept of a statewide, standardized form. In 1991, the Legislature added subsection (b) on the form of the officer’s affidavit. 1991, No. 55, § 6 (adding 23 V.S.A. § 1205(b), among other amendments). The addition of § 1205(b) was not part of the original bill introduced in 1991. Rather, the language was drafted by Gary Kessler of the State’s Attorneys and Sheriffs Department and inserted into the bill by the Senate Judiciary Committee. At a March 7, 1991 hearing before the Committee, Kessler testified that he drafted the provision to respond to police complaints about the amount of paperwork involved in processing civil suspensions. He explained that the provision was intended to standardize and streamline police paperwork by shortening the length of the required affidavit. He emphasized that he arrived at the criteria set forth in the provision by incorporating the issues allowed at the final hearing under § 1205(h). When members of the Committee asked Kessler if then Defender General Bud Allen had *57approved the provision, Kessler left the committee room to find Allen and later reported back that Allen was content -with the language as long as the new provision preserved the issues contained in § 1205(h).

¶ 34. The provision drafted by Kessler was not changed and later became § 1205(b). At no time did the Committee discuss whether the new provision would add an additional element to the State’s burden of proof or the officer’s power to initiate a civil suspension, and certainly there is no hint that such a result was intended. Rather, the apparent intent behind the amendment was to lighten the State’s burden, not to increase it as the majority holds. In any case, nothing in the Committee’s discussion suggests that it “intended the bright line to be a test result of 0.08.” Ante, ¶ 13. Indeed, the content of the Committee’s discussion is to the contrary.

¶ 35.1 conclude from the legislative history that the district court’s interpretation of § 1205(b)(5) is incorrect. There was clearly no intent to expand the issues to be considered in the civil suspension proceeding as specified by § 1205(h) — whether the person had a BAC of “0.08 or more at the time of operation].” The BAC at the time of test administration is not an issue before the court in a suspension proceeding under § 1205(h). Rather, it is likely that the drafter chose the language of § 1205(b)(5) as. a shorthand for the requirement in all the other statutory sections, and specifically that of § 1205(h)(4). Thus, § 1205(b)(5) must be construed to refer to the BAC at the time of operation.

¶ 36.1 cannot agree with the majority’s distinction between elements the State must prove at the civil suspension hearing and those that must be present when the law enforcement operator prepares an affidavit. The statute sets out one integrated proceeding that begins with the officer’s affidavit and concludes with review by the district court if requested.7 The distinction advanced by the majority would make sense if the State could initiate a civil suspension proceeding without an affidavit, or despite a flawed affidavit, and prove the final hearing issues as specified in 23 Y.S.A. § 1205(h). Obviously, the majority does not believe that such bifurcation of the process is possible; it would affirm the termination of the process in this case with *58no opportunity for the State to reach the final hearing. Thus, the majority is advocating a distinction without a difference — irrespective of how the issue arises, the majority would hold that no suspension could ever occur without a showing that the operator had a BAC above 0.08 at the time the test was administered, obviously an element of the offense beyond those specified in § 1205(h).

¶ 37. The real conflict in the majority’s attempt to parse through the statutory language to explain inconsistency with its construction comes when it reaches § 1205(c). The subsection not only authorizes, but requires, the officer to submit a notice of suspension to an operator whose test shows a BAC of 0.08 or above at time of operation. The language reads: “On behalf of the commissioner of motor vehicles, a law enforcement officer ... directing the administration of an evidentiary test shall serve notice of intention to suspend... on a person who submits to a test the results of which indicate that the person’s alcohol concentration was 0.08 or more at the time of operating, attempting to operate or being in actual physical control of a vehicle in violation of § 1201 of this title.” Id. § 1205(c). If the majority’s distinction were correct, and the Legislature had intended to require a test result with a 0.08 BAC or above, it would have said so in this subsection. Instead, just as in other sections, it specifies that the time for the measurement of the BAC is “the time of operating, attempting to operate or being in actual physical control,” id., and says nothing about a requirement that there be a test result above 0.08 BAC. The majority suggests that the legislative language can be explained by the presence of the evidentiary presumption in § 1205(n) that relates back a test result of 0.08 BAC or greater, a presumption that existed in 1989 before the majority’s new requirement. It is far easier and better explained by a plain meaning interpretation that does not import nonexistent requirements into the language.

¶ 38. Based on the facts described in the outset of this dissent, the officer in this case followed the command of the statute; he could not do otherwise. The majority provides no answer to the conflicted position in which it has placed the officer, other than to ignore the language of the statute and his duty under it.

¶ 39. Defendant and the district court have raised additional reasons for requiring a test result over 0.08, but they are not persuasive. The trial court reasoned that the Legislature did not intend “to imbue law enforcement officers with the expertise of chemists, allowing them to issue civil suspension notices upon their own speculation that a DataMaster result lower than .08% would likely be extrapolated *59reliably to a breath alcohol concentration above the legal limit at the time of operation.” I note that the statutory standard is that “the officer had reasonable grounds to believe” that the person was operating with a BAC over 0.08 and not that the officer know it with certainty. 23 V.S.A. § 1205(a). I believe that the Legislature could have expected a trained officer to meet that standard without a test result above 0.08 in some instances. In saying that, I agree that those instances will be relatively rare, but this case demonstrates those rare circumstances because the officer had (1) physical signs of intoxication, including defendant’s inability to complete field dexterity tests; (2) a contemporaneous roadside alco-sensor test result above the legal limit; (3) an evidentiary test result submitted more than an hour after operation and yet only 0.003 under the legal limit; and (4) information about the person’s eating and drinking history immediately before the stop.

¶ 40. Finally, I do not agree with defendant that the rebuttable presumption set forth in § 1205(n) demonstrates that the Legislature intended to limit civil suspensions to instances in which the test result was 0.08 or more. That statute provides that a showing that a person’s BAC was 0.08 or higher within two hours after operation creates a rebuttable presumption that the person’s BAC at time of operation was above 0.08. The purpose of the statute is to place the burden of producing relation-back evidence on the party best able to meet it — the defendant. State v. Pluta, 157 Vt. 451, 455, 600 A.2d 291, 293 (1991). In this case, of course, the presumption is not applicable because the basic fact — a test result of 0.08 or more — is not present. See V.R.E. 301(c)(1). Defendant’s argument is that the Legislature showed by this subsection that there would always be a test result above 0.08 and that the presumption would serve to relate it back. In fact, the statute shows the opposite. Its statement of what will happen if there is a timely test suggests strongly that the Legislature understood that in some cases there would be no such test, in which case the State would have to bear the greater burden of relating back the test result.

¶ 41. In sum, notwithstanding significant evidence that defendant was alcohol impaired with a BAC above 0.08 at time of operation, the majority has affirmed the district court’s dismissal of the State’s civil suspension complaint based on an added element of the offense never contemplated by the Legislature. I would reverse the trial court’s decision and remand the matter for a final civil suspension hearing.

See 23 V.SA. § 1202(a)(3) (evidentiary test is required of person when officer has reasonable grounds to believe that person was operating, attempting to operate, or in actual physical control, in violation of § 1201); id. § 1203® (when officer has reason to believe person violated § 1201, officer may conduct preliminary breath alcohol screening test); id. § 1205(a) (Commissioner of Department of Motor Vehicles must suspend driver’s license of person when law enforcement officer submits affidavit stating that officer had reasonable grounds to believe that person was operating, attempting to operate, or in actual physical control, in violation of § 1201 and (1) person refused to submit to test, or (2) person submitted to test indicating “that the person’s alcohol concentration was 0.08 or more at the time of operati[on]”); id. § 1205(b)(3) (officer’s affidavit is sufficient if it states that officer had reasonable grounds to believe person was operating, attempting to operate, or in actual physical control, in violation of § 1201); id. § 1205(c) (officer gives notice of intent to suspend when test results indicate person’s alcohol concentration was 0.08 or more at time of operating, attempting to operate, or actual physical control); id. § 1205(h)(1) (issues at final civil suspension hearing include whether officer had reasonable grounds to believe person was operating, attempting to operate, or in actual physical control, in violation of § 1201(h)(1); id. § 1205(h)(4) (issues also include whether *54test results show alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more at time of operation, attempted operation, or actual physical control, in violation of § 1201); id. § 1205® (after hearing, license shall remain suspended if court finds that officer had reasonable grounds to believe that person was operating, attempting to operate, or in actual physical control, in violation of § 1201 and (1) person refused to submit to test, or (2) person submitted to test indicating “that the person’s alcohol concentration was 0.08 or more at the time [of] operation] ”); id. § 1205(n) (if alcohol concentration was 0.08 or more within two hours of operation, attempted operation, or actual physical control, there is rebuttable presumption that it was above 0.08 at time of operation).

When the language of current § 1205(b) was added it caused relettering of subsequent subsections through subsection (1).

Although not directly in issue, the district court’s ruling would not prevent criminal prosecution of the operator because the ruling is limited to the subsection applicable only to civil suspension, 23 V.S.A § 1205(b)(5). The difference in result is anomalous and cannot be justified by the summary nature of the civil suspension proceeding because it means that the civil suspension proceeding requires proof of an additional element, not required in the criminal proceeding.

The district court erroneously cited the section as 23 V.S A. § 1205(c)(5). It is clear from the context that it meant § 1205(b)(5).

The issue first came up at the preliminary hearing in this case, but there is no requirement that it be raised then. Indeed, in numerous eases, we have had appeals where the operator challenges a test result at the final hearing. I assume the majority, despite its distinction, would require the district court to dismiss the civil suspension hearing if the issue of the test result first arose at the final hearing.