Opinion
Thе People (real party in interest in the superior court) appeal from judgment 1 ordering the issuance of a writ of prohibition/mandate restraining the municipal court from proceeding in an action charging petitioner with violation of Vehicle Code section 23102, subdivision (a) (driving a vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor), and ordering it to dismiss the action.
The minute order granting the petition reflects the court’s findings of fact: Following his arrest for violation of section 23102, subdivision (a), defendant petitioner was taken to a police station where a breath test to determine the alcoholic сontent of his blood was administered. He then was taken to a hospital for examination for possible neck injuries. At the hospital petitioner stated he wished to have a blood test, and offered to pay for the test. A technician with the equipment necessary to take a blood sample was available at the hospital. Nevertheless, the police officer accompanying petitioner refused to allow a blood test, telling petitioner that he could return to the hospital and have the test made after being released from custody. Petitioner was taken back to jail and wаs not released until three or four hours later. The court concluded that *361 the refusal of the police officer to allow petitioner to procure a sample of his blood prevented him from obtaining evidence necessary to his defense, and constituted a denial of due process of law “entitling him to his discharge.”
Appellant contends: (1) the refusal of petitioner’s request for a blood test did not constitute a denial of due process of law; and (2) even if there was a denial of due process, dismissal of the action against petitioner was not warranted. We disagree with the first contention but conclude there is merit to the second contention, and order reversal of the judgment.
I
The denial of an opportunity to procure a blood test on a charge of intoxication prevents the accused from obtaining evidence necessary to his defense, and is a denial of due process of law.
(In re Newbern
(1961)
Appellant argues there was no denial of due process here because petitioner was free to procure a blood test after his release from jail, relying upon
In re Howard
(1962)
Unlike the situation in
Howard,
the record herein indicates that petitioner was released from jail four and one-half or five and one-half hours following the incident for which he was arrested.
2
Henсe, a blood test made after his release would not have had probative value. “It is a matter of common knowledge that the intoxicating effect of alcohol diminishes with the passage of time. . . . The efficacy of a blood test depends upon its being made as soon as possible after the time of the offense. To be of any probative value the test must be ‘near’ to the offense in point of time. If it is not taken promptly after the arrest, it proves nothing.”
(In re Newbern
(1959)
Appellant contends that any opportunity available to an accused to secure a blood test is sufficient to satisfy due process. However, it is сlear that he must be given an opportunity “reasonable under the circumstances, to procure a
timely
sample of his blood . . . .”
(In re Koehne, supra,
Appellant’s argument that petitioner cannot claim a denial of due process because police gave him a breath test to determine the alcoholic *363 content of his blood before he requested a blood test, is without merit, for Vehicle Code section 13354, subdivision (b), gives a person arrested on a charge of drunk driving the right to procure, at his own expense, a blood alcohol test in addition to any such test administered by police.
II
A refusal by police to allow one accused of intoxication to procure a timely blood test amounts to a suppression of evidence. (See
In re Martin, supra,
At the station, police administered a breath test to determine the alcoholic content of petitioner’s blood. Hence, the purpose of the blood test requested by him presumably was to impeach the reliability or credibility of the results of the breath test. Where potentially impeaching evidence on behalf of a defendant is suppressed, due process does not require dismissal of the action, but only exclusion of the prosecution’s evidence which might have been impeаched by the evidence suppressed. Such is the conclusion reached in
People
v.
Hitch
(1974)
It is true that
In re Newbern, supra,
In Hitch, a breathalyzer test was administered to defendant by police pursuant to Vehicle Code section 13353, and their subsequent destruction of the test ampoule and its contents constituted the suppression of potentially impeaching evidencе on behalf of defendant. Appellant contends' that because the impeaching evidence herein would have consisted of a separate blood test administered at petitioner’s request, the results of the breath test administered to him by police cannot be suppressed in light of Vehiclе Code section 13354, subdivision (b). That statute reads: “(b) The person tested may, at his own expense, have a physician, registered nurse, licensed vocational nurse, duly licensed clinical laboratory technologist or clinical laboratory bioanalyst or any other person of his own choosing administer а test, in addition to any administered at the direction of a peace officer, for the purpose of determining the amount of alcohol in his blood at the time alleged as shown by chemical analysis of his blood, breath or urine. The failure or inability to obtain an additional test by a person shall not preclude the admissibility in evidence of the test taken at the direction of a peace officer.” (Italics added.) In our view, this section does not make admissible the results of a test administered by police where the police have prevented the accused from obtaining a test on his behalf, as opposed to a situation where he fails to obtain a test through his own inaction or his inability to pay for the test.
The primary consideration in construing a statute is to ascertain the intent of the Legislature so as to effectuate the purpose of the law.
(Select Base Materials
v.
Board of Equal.
(1959)
In the case at bench no such failure or inability on the part of petitioner deprived him of the opportunity to procure a blood test on his own behalf; rather, it was the action of police which deprived him of such opportunity, resulting in thе suppression of evidence. Accordingly, section 13354, subdivision (b), does not require that the test administered to petitioner by police be admitted in evidence. The suppression of the results of such test will be sufficient to afford petitioner a fair trial. 4 Contrary to petitioner’s contention, due procеss does not require the sanction of dismissing the municipal court action against him.
The judgment is reversed.
Thompson, J., and Hanson, J., concurred.
Notes
The notice of appeal states that the appeal is taken from “the order granting Petitioner’s Writ of Prohibition and Mandamus entered on July 21, 1977 . . . .” The minute order granting the petition ordered counsel for petitioner to prеpare a judgment and “peremptory writ of prohibition and mandamus.” Thus, the minute order was merely a preliminary order authorizing a subsequent judgment, and was not appealable.
(Grattan
v.
Silbaugh
(1953)
This fact is gleaned from a transcript of the hearing on petitioner’s motion, made in the municipal court, to suppress as evidence the results of the breath test administered to him by police. The transcript was admitted in evidence in the subsequent superior court proceeding for writ of prohibition/mandate. Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 12(a), we have had the transcript made a part of the record on appeal.
In the case at bench, the police officer refused petitioner’s request for a blood test on the ground that he already had been given a breath test by the' police. The trial court *364 made no finding of malice or bаd faith on the part of the officer in refusing to honor petitioner’s request. Although it appears that the officer may have been unaware of Vehicle Code section 13354, subdivision (b), we cannot say, as a matter of law, that he demonstrated bad faith.
As appellant points out. petitioner may. in the alternative, exploit at his trial the fact that the police prevented him from procuring an additional test of his blood alcohol level. (See Evid. Code, § 413:
People
v.
Harris, supra,
