Thе Director of Revenue (Director) appeals from the judgment reinstating Tha-
Director notified Bacandreas that his driving privileges would be revoked for failing to take a chemical test of his blood. Bacandreas filed a petition for review in the circuit court. The court assigned the case to a traffic commissioner. The case was submitted on the сertified records of the Department of Revenue including among other things the Alcohol Influence Report and Investigative Report with a narrative portion.
The following is derivеd from portions of the submitted certified records. On the evening of October 21, 2000, a police officer observed Bacandreas’s vehicle traveling at a high rate of speed. When the vehicle turned, the officer heard the tires squealing and a loud bang. The officer believed the vehicle struck a lane divider. The officer then saw the vehicle tailgatе another vehicle and drive by that vehicle on the shoulder. The officer stopped the vehicle and in the backseat saw a “six pack” container of beer with three bottles missing. The officer smelled alcohol on Bacandreas’s breath and he admitted to drinking three beers. Bacandreas’s eyes were bloodshot and glassy and his speech was slurrеd. The officer administered field sobriety tests some of which Bacan-dreas failed. Bacandreas took a portable breath test that indicated the presence of аlcohol. The officer arrested Bacandreas for driving while intoxicated. When the officer asked Bacandreas whether he had smoked any marijuana, he said that about thrеe days before he had taken three hits. The officer read the Implied Consent Law to Bacandreas and he agreed to take a breath test. The test indicated a bloоd alcohol content of .067. 1 At 11:16 p.m., the officer read the Implied Consent Law to Bacandreas for a second time and asked him to submit to a blood test. At that time, Bacandreas told the officer his attorney’s name and asked to speak to him. Bacandreas did not know his attorney’s phone number. After attempts to locate the number using the phone boоk were unsuccessful, Bacandreas agreed to take the blood test. As the officer drove into the hospital entrance for the blood test, Bacandreas asked the оfficer why he was asking for the test. The officer told Ba-candreas that the blood test was for drugs. Bacandreas stated he would not take the test until he spoke with his attorney. At Bacandreas’s request, the officer called Bacandreas’s sister. But she did not know the attorney’s phone number and Bacan-dreas refused to ask his sister for any advise. According to the оfficer, “as [a] result of Bacandreas’[s] refusal to answer any questions, and the fact that he stated he would not take the test until he ha[d] spoken with his attorney, Bacandreas received a refusal to take a chemical test.”
The commissioner found that the officer had probable cause to arrest Bacandreas for driving while intoxicated but that Ba-candreas did not refuse to submit to a chemical test. The commissioner recommended that Bacandreas’s driving privileges be reinstated. The circuit court adopted the commissioner’s findings and recommendations as the judgment of the court. Director appeals from this judgment, raising one point.
We will affirm the trial court’s judgment unless there is no substantial
Section 577.041.1 RSMo.2000, provides in part that “If a person when requested to submit to any test allowed pursuant to section 577.020 requests to speak to an attorney, thе person shall be granted twenty minutes in which to attempt to contact an attorney. If upon the completion of the twenty-minute period the person continues to refuse to submit to any test, it shall be deemed a refusal.” When a person conditions a refusal on consulting with an attorney, but is not given a reasonable opportunity to attempt to do so, the person is not deemed to have refused to submit to a chemical test.
Lorton v. Director of Revenue,
The offiсer read the Implied Consent Law to Bacandreas at 11:16 p.m. 2 The record does not indicate, however, that Bacandreas was given twenty minutes to contact his attorney. But, Director argues that Bacandreas should be deemed to have refused the blood test because his attempts to contact his attorney proved futile and he thereafter abandoned his attempts to contact his attorney. Director also argues that she met her burden to show no actual prejudice to Bacandreas.
The purpose of the twenty-minute provision in section 577.041.1 is to provide a person with a reasonable opportunity to contact an attorney.
Keim,
The officer asked Bacandreas to take a blood test and then read the Missouri Implied Consent Law to Bacandreas at 11:16 p.m. Bacandreas asked to speak with his attorney. Although at one point Bacandreas agreed to take the blood test, he restated his desire to speak with his attorney. The officer’s narrative does not state the time when Bacandreas agreed to take the blood test, restated his desire to speak with his attorney or when the officer determined that Bacandreas refused to submit to the test. The Alcohоl Influence Report also does not have the time when Bacandreas was deemed to have refused the test. 3 Under these circumstances, Director did not meet her burden tо show that Bacandreas had ceased attempting to contact his attorney and that he intended to make no additional attempts to contact an attorney within the twеnty-minute period. Furthermore, the officer determined that Bacandreas refused the blood test because he would not take the test until he spoke to his attorney and he refusеd to answer any questions. Director did not meet her burden to show that Bacandreas was not actually prejudiced by being denied twenty minutes to contact his attorney. Director’s point is denied.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. In 2000, section 302.505 stated in part that a person’s license shall be suspended or revoked if "the person was arrested upon probable cause to believe he wаs driving a motor vehicle while the blood alcohol concentration in the person’s blood or breath was ten-hundredths [now eight-hundredths] of one percent or more by weight of alcohol in his blood....” (emphasis added).
. Section 571.020.2 RSMo.2000, allows an officer to request up to two chemical tests.
Wilson v. Director of Revenue,
. The Alcohol Influence Report does show that Bacandreas agreed to take the breath test at 10:52 p.m.
