Respondent Alexander Killens 1 , Commissioner of the North Carolina Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV), appeals from order of the trial court finding DMV was collaterally estopped from litigating the existence of probable cause to arrest petitioner Stephen Brower (Brower).
On 10 February 1994 Brower was stopped by Trooper R.D. Mendenhall while traveling on Interstate 40 in Guilford County and subsequently arrested for operating his vehicle under the influence of an impairing substance. Trooper Mendenhall offered Brower the opportunity to submit to chemical analysis of his breath. Brower was marked as having refused such analysis.
As a result of the alleged refusal, DMV revoked Brower’s license. Brower requested, and received, an administrative hearing to contest the automatic license revocation. By letter dated 24 June 1994, the revocation was upheld. On 30 June 1994 Brower instituted the present action for de novo review of the revocation (case II).
In September 1994 the criminal case against Brower for driving while impaired was called in Guilford County District Court (case I). At trial Brower challenged his arrest for lack of probable cause. After a full hearing, the trial court, by order issued 14 September 1994, concluded Trooper Mendenhall had insufficient probable cause to arrest Brower. The trial court suppressed the tainted evidence and granted Brower’s motion to dismiss.
On 20 October 1994 Brower amended his complaint in case II to assert collateral estoppel as an affirmative defense to the license revocation. By order filed 23 June 1995 the trial court concluded DMV was estopped from relitigating whether or not Trooper Mendenhall had probable cause to arrest Brower for driving while impaired.
On appeal DMV contends the trial court erred by: (1) concluding DMV was collaterally estopped from relitigating the probable cause issue; and (2) signing an invalid order.
I.
We first consider whether DMV is collaterally estopped from relit-igating the existence of probable cause to arrest Brower for driving while impaired.
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“The doctrine of collateral estoppel provides that a party will be estopped from relitigating an issue where 1) the issue has been necessarily determined previously and 2) the parties to that prior action are identical to, or in privity with, the parties in the instant action.”
State v. O’Rourke,
Privity exists where one party is “so identified in interest with another that [it] represents the same legal right [as the other].”
County of Rutherford ex rel. Hedrick v. Whitener,
DMV argues this Court’s decision in
State v. O’Rourke,
The
O’Rourke
Court focused on two factors in concluding the District Attorney and DMV were not in privity. First, the criminal pro
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ceeding directed by the District Attorney and the civil licensing hearing controlled by DMV protect different interests.
Id.
at 440,
Subsequent to this Court’s decision in O’Rourke, however, our Supreme Court clarified that it was actually the people of North Carolina, rather than District Attorneys, who are the real parties in interest in criminal prosecutions.
Simeon v. Hardin,
Nevertheless, we remain bound by the
O’Rourke
Court’s admonition,
In re Civil Penalty,
The present case, however, does not implicate the same concerns of non-representation as
O’Rourke
because the District Attorney’s office was necessarily involved from the inception of the criminal case against Brower. Therefore, we believe our Supreme Court’s decision in
State v. Lewis,
In
Lewis,
the State, through its New Bern Child Support Agency, filed a civil proceeding against defendant seeking indemnification for public assistance it rendered two of defendant’s minor children.
Id.
at
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728,
The Supreme Court, affirming the trial court, stated, “[defendant . . . contends that the state in this [civil] action is not identical to or in privity with the state in the prior criminal action. We find this argument feckless.”
Id.
at 732,
Likewise, in the present case, the State instituted both the criminal prosecution for driving while impaired and the civil license revocation hearing. The State represented the same interest in both actions — that of the citizens of North Carolina in maintaining safe roadways.
See Joyner,
Our holding is a narrow one. Indeed, by finding privity in the present case, we do not imply DMV is collaterally estopped from relit-igating any other issue previously determined in a criminal trial for driving while impaired. Such an expansive rule would ignore our Supreme Court’s admonition that:
the same motor vehicle operation may give rise to two separate and distinct proceedings. One is a civil and administrative licensing procedure instituted by the Director of Motor Vehicles to determine whether a person’s privilege to drive is revoked. The other is a criminal action instituted in the appropriate court to determine whether a crime has been committed. Each action proceeds independently of the other, and the outcome of one action is of no consequence to the other.
Joyner,
We believe, by limiting our holding to probable cause determinations, our decision remains faithful to the Supreme Court’s recognition of the fundamental difference between criminal prosecutions and civil license revocation proceedings.
See Id. See also State v. Chandler,
Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order collaterally estop-ping DMV from relitigating whether or not Trooper Mendenhall had probable cause to arrest Brower.
II.
Finally, DMV contends the trial court’s order is invalid because it does not contain a judgment.
It is well settled that when, as here, the contested order is “defective because it did not contain [an appropriate judgment] . . . [t]he remedy to correct this deficiency ... is not a new trial, but rather a remand for entry of a proper judgment.”
Pitts v. Broyhill,
Accordingly, under Pitts, we remand this case to the trial court for entry of an order consistent with this opinion which satisfies the strictures of N.C.R. Civ. P. 52(a)(1).
Affirmed and remanded.
Notes
. Effective 29 April 1996, Alexander Killens resigned as Commissioner of DMV. At present, Frederick Aikens is the Acting Commissioner.
