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State v. Nobach

Court: Montana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2002-05-07
Citations: 2002 MT 91, 46 P.3d 618, 309 Mont. 342
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27 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                                          No. 00-701

               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

                                          2002 MT 91


STATE OF MONTANA,

              Plaintiff and Respondent,

         v.

DAVID PAUL NOBACH,

              Defendant and Appellant.



APPEAL FROM:         District Court of the Eleventh Judicial District,
                     In and for the County of Flathead,
                     The Honorable Katherine R. Curtis, Judge presiding.


COUNSEL OF RECORD:

              For Appellant:

                     Lane K. Bennett, Attorney at Law, Kalispell, Montana

              For Respondent:

                     Hon. Mike McGrath, Attorney General; Jennifer M. Anders,
                     Assistant Attorney General, Stephanie Shanler, Legal Intern,
                     Helena, Montana

                     Thomas J. Esch, Flathead County Attorney; Eric Hummel
                     Deputy Flathead County Attorney, Kalispell, Montana


                                                  Submitted on Briefs: November 8, 2001

                                                              Decided: May 7, 2002
Filed:


                     __________________________________________
                                       Clerk
Chief Justice Karla M. Gray delivered the Opinion of the Court.


¶1      David Paul Nobach appeals from the Judgment and Sentence entered by the Eleventh

Judicial District Court, Flathead County, on a jury verdict convicting him of the

misdemeanor offense of driving under the influence of drugs (DUID). We affirm.

¶2    The      sole    issue     on   appeal       is    whether    the   District     Court

committed reversible error in admitting opinion testimony from a

Montana Highway Patrol officer regarding the effect of prescription

medications on Nobach's driving ability.
                                        BACKGROUND

¶3    Most of the facts in the underlying case are undisputed.                           On

September 14, 1999, Nobach, who is trained as a pharmacist but

worked as a waiter, left his place of employment at Woods Bay,

Montana, after becoming ill at work.                     He set out to drive home to

Kalispell, a distance of about 25 miles.                      Nobach recalls driving

the approximately five miles to Bigfork, but does not recall

leaving     there.          He   regularly     took--and       had    taken     that   day--

prescription          and   over-the-counter            medications    for    his   chronic
pancreatis and low blood pressure caused by atrial fibrillation.

¶4    At about 6:30 p.m., Nobach was driving his vehicle erratically

on Montana Highway 35, followed by six or eight other vehicles,

when Flathead County Sheriff's Deputy Rod Myers noticed the vehicle

while traveling in the opposite direction.                     Myers turned around to

follow Nobach and eventually positioned his patrol vehicle directly

behind Nobach's vehicle.              Myers followed Nobach for approximately

three     or   four     miles     and   observed         Nobach's     vehicle    swerving,

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weaving, making wide turns and forcing other vehicles to take

evasive action.    Nobach's vehicle eventually drove off the road and

rolled over onto its top.       In helping Nobach from his vehicle,

Myers noticed Nobach was extremely pale, disoriented and sweaty.

In addition, Nobach seemed subdued, nonchalant, sleepy and slow.

Paula Gill, a Montana Department of Justice criminal investigator,

happened upon the accident scene; her observations of Nobach were

consistent with those of Myers.

¶5   Montana Highway Patrol Officer Michael Brooks responded to the

accident scene and took over the investigation.          A portable breath

alcohol test registered no alcohol in Nobach's system, which caused

Brooks to conclude that Nobach was under the influence of drugs

because of his physical condition.        That is, Brooks believed Nobach

was "under the influence of something.           I didn't know what it was

at the time." Brooks thought Nobach was under the influence of some

sort of depressant because his pupils were constricted.
¶6   During a pat-down search, Brooks removed approximately 20

pills from Nobach's pants pocket.         He arrested Nobach for DUID and

took Nobach to a local hospital for a blood test.           The toxicology

report on Nobach's blood sample ultimately indicated prescription

medications in Nobach's blood, but no nonprescribed or illegal

medications or drugs.

¶7   The State of Montana charged Nobach with misdemeanor DUID.

Myers, Brooks, Gill, a pharmacist at Kalispell Regional Medical

Center,   and   Nobach   testified   at    the   jury   trial.   Exhibits,

including the toxicology report on Nobach's blood sample, were



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admitted into evidence.        The jury convicted Nobach of DUID and,

thereafter, the District Court sentenced him and entered judgment.

 Nobach appeals.

                                DISCUSSION

¶8   Did the District Court commit reversible error in admitting
Brooks' opinion testimony regarding the effect of prescription
medications on Nobach's driving ability?

¶9     On   direct   examination,   Brooks   testified    he   had    received

training about the effects drugs and alcohol have on people and

their driving behavior.      Specifically, he testified that a person's

demeanor and behavior vary depending on what type of drug(s) they

have   ingested.      The   symptoms   exhibited    by   persons     under   the

influence of narcotic drugs such as two of the medications noted in

the toxicology report, according to Brooks, were those he noticed

in Nobach, namely, "very pale, sweaty;             his speech was slurred;

very slow to answer my questions."           On further inquiry, Brooks

testified he became aware of Nobach's driving on the evening in

question through other people; he had not observed Nobach driving.

 When the prosecution asked Brooks his opinion about whether drugs

affected Nobach's ability to drive, Nobach's counsel objected on

the basis of lack of foundation--on a pharmacological basis--for an

expert opinion by Brooks regarding the effect the drugs mentioned

in the toxicology report would have had on Nobach.                     He also

objected that the opinion would go to the ultimate issue of fact

for the jury.
¶10    The District Court overruled the objection without determining

specifically whether Brooks' opinion would be an expert opinion or



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not.    It merely stated that "opinions can be given, and the fact

that it's an ultimate issue doesn't make it inadmissible. . . .             I

think your objection goes to the weight [the opinion] should be

given, not its admissibility."         Brooks then opined, based on his

training and experience, that Nobach's ability to drive safely was

diminished as a result of         his consumption of drugs.

¶11    On cross-examination, Nobach's counsel asked Brooks whether it

was possible that the levels of various drugs in Nobach's blood, as

contained in the toxicology report, were so low that they would

have no effect.      Brooks replied "I guess anything's possible, but

I'm not sure.      Like I said, I'm not a pharmacist and I don't work

in the forensic lab, so I don't know what those levels mean."

Later, on redirect, the prosecution inquired of Brooks regarding

the effects two or more depressants can have on one another.

Nobach again objected on lack of foundation grounds, but the

District Court overruled the objection based on Brooks' training.

Brooks then opined that the effect of two depressants is that

"[t]hey're multiplied;" in other words, one plus one could equal

four or five.
¶12    On appeal, Nobach asserts that the District Court abused its

discretion    in   admitting      expert   testimony   without   sufficient

foundation,    and   that   the    error   was   prejudicial   and   requires

reversal.     The State contends Brooks' testimony was proper lay

opinion or, in the     alternative, that Brooks was properly qualified

as an expert.      In any event, according to the State, any error by

the District Court in admitting Brooks' opinion that Nobach's



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ability to drive safely was diminished by his consumption of drugs

was harmless.

¶13   We review a district court's evidentiary rulings to determine

whether the court abused its discretion.                State v. Southern, 1999

MT 94, ¶ 48, 249 Mont. 225, ¶ 48, 980 P.2d 3, ¶ 48 (citations

omitted).        If    error    occurred,      we   determine     whether       it   was

structural error, which results in automatic reversal, or trial

error, which may or may not be reversible depending on whether the

error was prejudicial.           See State v. Van Kirk, 2001 MT 184, ¶ 41,

306 Mont. 215, ¶ 41, 32 P.3d 735, ¶ 41.
              a. Lay or Expert Opinion Testimony

¶14   Under     the    Montana    Rules     of   Evidence,      both    lay     opinion

testimony      and    expert    opinion    testimony    may     be     admissible     in

evidence.       Specifically, Rule 701, M.R.Evid., authorizes a lay

witness   to    give    an     opinion    rationally    based    on     the    person's

perception and helpful to a clear understanding of the person's

testimony or the determination of a fact in issue.                            Rule 702,

M.R.Evid., on the other hand, allows the admission of opinion

testimony      about    "scientific,       technical,    or     other    specialized

knowledge" if the opinion will help the jury to understand the

evidence or determine a fact in issue and the witness has been

"qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training,

or education[.]"         Our initial focus, therefore, is on whether

Brooks' testimony constitutes a lay opinion or an expert opinion.

¶15   In support of its position that the District Court properly

admitted Brooks' testimony as lay opinion, the State advances State



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v. Carter (1997), 285 Mont. 449, 948 P.2d 1173, and                    State v.

Bradley (1993), 262 Mont. 194, 864 P.2d 787, for the proposition

that a lay witness may give an opinion regarding intoxication based

on the witness' personal observations.             In Carter, a lay witness

was permitted to testify at trial that, based on his personal

observations of the defendant, the defendant was intoxicated.                  We

upheld the trial court's admission of the opinion under Rule 701,

M.R.Evid., concluding it was rationally based on the lay witness'

visual observation of the defendant for "quite some time," and his

testimony that he knew the objective signs of intoxication and had

"much   experience"   being    around     people    in   varying      states   of

intoxication.     Carter,     262   Mont.   at   456,    948   P.2d    at   1177.

Similarly, we concluded in Bradley that lay opinion testimony that

the defendant was intoxicated, based on the three lay witnesses'

observations of the defendant after the accident at issue, met the

requirements of Rule 701, M.R.Evid.          We expressly held that the

rule "does not preclude lay witnesses from testifying to a person's

state of intoxication."       Bradley, 262 Mont. at 198, 864 P.2d at

789.    The law aside, the fact is that most adults are sufficiently

experienced with people who have been drinking to offer an opinion

that a person is, in fact, intoxicated from alcohol based on their

personal observations.
¶16    The State contends Brooks' opinion that Nobach was under the

influence of alcohol or drugs was based on his observations at the

scene and, consequently, is analogous to the lay opinions accepted

in Carter and Bradley, under Rule 701, M.R.Evid., as proper lay



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opinion testimony.         At the outset, we observe that the portable

breath test Brooks performed at the accident scene ruled out

alcohol as a factor in this case and it was only at that point that

Brooks believed Nobach was under the influence of drugs.                    Thus, the

type of "intoxication" about which the lay witnesses in Carter and

Bradley opined was not at issue here.

¶17   Moreover,     we     are   not     persuaded      that    lay    people     are

sufficiently       knowledgeable       about      common    symptoms        of   drug

consumption,    much      less   the   effects     of   drug    consumption      on   a

person's ability to drive a motor vehicle safely, to offer lay

opinion     testimony      on    those        subjects,    based      on    personal

observations, under Rule 701.            In addition, Brooks' opinions that

Nobach's ability to drive safely was diminished by the consumption

of drugs and as to the effect of two depressants purportedly were

based on his training and experience, subjects which generally

relate to expert opinion testimony.             See Rule 702, M.R.Evid.          Under

the facts before us here, a lay person could as easily have

believed--based on his or her personal observations--that Nobach

was merely ill, as he was when he left his place of employment at

Woods Bay.    Finally, Brooks' opinion that Nobach's ability to drive

safely was diminished by consumption of drugs is substantially

unlike the lay opinions in Carter and Bradley, which did not go to

the effect of the apparent intoxication on the person's ability to

drive.    For all these reasons, we conclude that Brooks' opinion

testimony    was    not    qualitatively        similar    to   the   lay    opinion




                                          8
testimony we held properly admitted under Rule 701, M.R.Evid., in

Carter and Bradley.

¶18    The State also advances Hart-Anderson v. Hauck (1989), 239

Mont.    444,     781      P.2d    1116,    for   the    proposition     that    a   law

enforcement officer may give an opinion about the cause of an

accident and, as a consequence, that the prosecution in the present

case was not required to qualify Brooks as an expert under Rule

702,    M.R.Evid.          In     Hart-Anderson,    a    law    enforcement     officer

testified at trial, over a lack of foundation objection, that the

cause of an accident was driving too fast for existing road

conditions.       There, the officer--while not an eyewitness to the

accident--had investigated hundreds of automobile accidents during

his 14-year career; he also had interviewed the parties involved in

the accident and made observations at the scene of the accident,

including those regarding icy road conditions.                      See Hart-Anderson,

239 Mont. at 448, 781 P.2d at 1118.                     We concluded the officer's

testimony could assist the trier of fact on the causation issue;

the     officer      had     "extensive      experience        in    these   types   of

investigations and an adequate foundation was presented for his

testimony."       Hart-Anderson, 239 Mont. at 449, 781 P.2d at 1119.

While we did not specifically address either Rule 701 or Rule 702,

M.R.Evid., in Hart-Anderson, our reliance on the officer's training

and experience, together with our statement that an adequate

foundation was presented, at the very least suggests that we had in

mind the foundational requirement of Rule 702 that an expert be

qualified       by      "knowledge,        skill,   experience,         training,    or



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education[.]"        Nothing     in    Rule      701,    M.R.Evid.,     or    our    cases

thereunder, suggests the necessity or propriety of such a focus in

determining whether a lay opinion may be admitted.

¶19   The State also posits that State v. Gregoroff (1997), 287

Mont. 1, 951 P.2d 578, is similar to the present case.                                 Its

reliance on Gregoroff is puzzling, since the case supports Nobach's

position rather than its own.              There, the officer was not presented

as an expert witness but offered an opinion that the driver was

under the influence of alcohol to an extent that it diminished his

ability to drive his truck safely; the trial court admitted the

testimony over a lack of foundation objection.                          The officer's

training and experience encompassed 12 weeks' training at the

Highway     Patrol     Academy,       including         special    training     in    DUI

investigation; 8 years' experience as a Highway Patrol Officer; 2

separate 2-week-long traffic investigation courses; an accident

reconstruction course which resulted in recognition as an "accident

reconstructionist;" a course on instructing on DUI detection;

teaching     various      law    enforcement        entities       on   the    subject;

participation in over 100 DUI arrests; and investigation of over

200 traffic accidents.          Gregoroff, 287 Mont. at 4, 951 P.2d at 580.

 On appeal, we stated the officer's training and experience clearly

qualified    her     as    an    expert      in    accident       investigation       and

reconstruction.           We   went   on    to    state    that,   under      Rule    702,

M.R.Evid., an expert witness can assist the trier of fact by giving

an opinion based on her "specialized knowledge," and to hold that

the officer was qualified as an expert to express her opinions



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regarding the cause of the accident.           Gregoroff, 287 Mont. at 4-5,

951 P.2d at 580-81.

¶20   Gregoroff clearly "fills in the blanks" we left in Hart-

Anderson by clarifying that a law enforcement officer can offer an

expert opinion about the cause of an accident so long as sufficient

foundation is presented, as required by Rule 702, M.R.Evid.                   The

officer's expert opinion in Gregoroff is strikingly similar to that

offered by Brooks in the present case, namely, that Nobach's

ability   to    safely   drive    his   vehicle     was   diminished     by   his

consumption of drugs.
¶21   Nobach compares Brooks' opinion testimony to the testimony of

a law enforcement officer regarding the horizontal gaze nystagmus

(HGN) test in Hulse v. State, Dept. of Justice, Motor Vehicle Div.,

1998 MT 108, 289 Mont. 1, 961 P.2d 75.          There, we held that, before

a law enforcement officer may testify regarding a correlation

between   alcohol   consumption      and     HGN,   the   State   must   present

foundation evidence establishing that the officer has special

training or education qualifying him as an expert on the scientific

basis for the HGN test.          Hulse, ¶ 70.       Nobach maintains, and we

agree, that foundation as to scientific training or education also

is required here.

¶22   We conclude Brooks' opinion that Nobach's ability to drive

safely was diminished as a result of his consumption of drugs was

expert opinion testimony requiring an adequate foundation pursuant

to Rule 702, M.R.Evid.

           b.    Foundation



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¶23   The State argues that Brooks' experience and training, like

the officer's in Gregoroff, provides a sufficient foundation for

the admission of his expert opinion that Nobach's ability to drive

safely was impaired by consumption of drugs and as to the effects

of several prescription medications interacting with each other.

We disagree.

¶24   Brooks testified that he had been employed by the Montana

Highway Patrol for three and one-half years.          During that period,

his main duties were "just traffic regulation," although he also

testified that he does traffic accidents and arrests for the

offense of driving under the influence of alcohol.                   Prior to

joining the Highway Patrol, he went to a military academy in San

Antonio, Texas, for two and one-half months, served three years as

a military police officer in the Navy, and attended the Highway

Patrol Academy in Helena, Montana.       He stated generally that he had

training at the Highway Patrol Academy, and also three days of

specialized training in Missoula, in determining whether a person

is under the influence of drugs.
¶25   It is clear that Brooks' training and experience with regard

to the effects of drug consumption--particularly the consumption of

prescription medications--is substantially less than the Gregoroff

officer's    training   and   experience   on   the   effects   of    alcohol

ingestion.     Brooks did not testify regarding the extent of any

training he received relating to determining the influence of drugs

at either the Highway Patrol Academy or the military academy.

Moreover, he testified affirmatively that a lot of the three days



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of drug-related training he received centered around common illegal

or    illicit      drugs     like    marijuana,       methamphetamine,         speed    and

cocaine.     Brooks also admitted his lack of familiarity with some of

the prescription drugs Nobach took regularly and also with some of

those which reflected in the toxicology report on Nobach's blood

sample.

¶26    We    hold     the    foundation       regarding      Brooks'        training    and

experience in this case is insufficient to demonstrate the special

training or education and adequate knowledge on which to base an

expert opinion as required under Rule 702, M.R.Evid.                        See Southern,

¶ 49 (citations omitted).                Because Brooks' experience and training

did not provide a sufficient foundation for the admission of his

expert      opinion,    the    District       Court    abused     its   discretion       in

admitting that testimony.
              c.    Harmless or Reversible Error

¶27    The final portion of our analysis requires a determination of

whether      the    error    in     admitting      Brooks'     expert   testimony       was

harmless, as the State contends, or reversible, as Nobach argues.

We recently addressed and clarified our approach to harmless or

reversible error.           The first step in the analysis is to determine

whether the claimed error is categorized as "structural" error or

"trial"      error.         Structural      error    is   error      that    affects    the

framework     within        which    a    trial    proceeds;    it    typically    is    of

constitutional dimension, precedes the trial, and undermines the

fairness of the entire trial proceeding.                  Van Kirk, ¶ 38 (citations

omitted).       Trial error, on the other hand, typically occurs during



                                              13
the presentation of a case to the jury and includes improper

admission of evidence.        See Van Kirk, ¶¶ 40, 48.

¶28   Based on these definitions of structural error and trial

error, the erroneous admission of Brooks' expert testimony is

clearly trial error.       As such, its admission does not automatically

constitute grounds for reversal but is amenable to qualitative

assessment under our harmless error statute, § 46-20-701(1), MCA,

regarding its prejudicial impact relative to the other evidence

introduced at trial.        See Van Kirk, ¶ 40.        Specifically, we review

whether the finder of fact was presented with admissible evidence

which proved the same facts as did the tainted evidence and, if so,

whether    the   tainted    evidence       would    have   contributed   to    the

conviction qualitatively by comparison.              Van Kirk, ¶ 47.
¶29   On   the   record    before    us,      the   jury    was   presented   with

admissible evidence that proved the same facts as Brooks' disputed

testimony on whether drugs affected Nobach's ability to drive.                 The

State's expert witness, pharmacist Gary Morrison, identified--one

by one--the narcotic and analgesic drugs in the toxicology report

on Nobach's blood sample and discussed the negative side effects of

those   drugs.     He     testified    that    methadone,     a   powerful    pain

reliever, causes drowsiness and slows reaction time and reflexes.

Hydrocodone,      another     pain    reliever,       also    dulls    reflexes.

Phenobarbital, a barbituate, has drowsiness as a side effect.                  The

toxicology report also indicated the presence in Nobach's blood of

Ambien (a sleeping pill), caffeine, and acetaminophen (a Tylenol

ingredient).       Morrison    testified      without      objection   that   this



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combination of drugs in a person's body would cause drowsiness,

cloud judgment and slow reaction time.      He further testified he

would not advise a person to operate a motor vehicle while taking

the drugs contained in the toxicology report and would expect that

a trained pharmacist like Nobach would be aware of the effects of

taking such drugs.    In addition, although Nobach's position at

trial was that his reaction to medication was not the cause of his

accident, he admitted having stated under oath prior to trial that

he believed the accident was caused by an adverse reaction to his

medication.
¶30   The above-described expert testimony of pharmacist Morrison

covered in greater detail and with greater clarity the same subject

matter as the erroneously-admitted testimony of Brooks.    Moreover,

Morrison's testimony was admitted without objection.    Particularly

since Brooks admitted his own lack of familiarity with the meaning

of the levels of the various drugs in Nobach's blood, we conclude

that under the "cumulative evidence" test endorsed in Van Kirk, ¶

43,     Brooks'      erroneously-admitted      testimony--considered

qualitatively in comparison to the other evidence presented--would

not have contributed to Nobach's conviction.

¶31   We hold that while the District Court abused its discretion in

admitting expert opinion testimony from Brooks regarding the effect

of the prescription medications on Nobach's driving ability, the

error was harmless and is not grounds for reversal.

¶32   Affirmed.


                                                /S/ KARLA M. GRAY


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We concur:

/S/   JAMES C. NELSON
/S/   PATRICIA COTTER
/S/   JIM REGNIER
/S/   JIM RICE




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