Opinion
Richard Joseph Burg, hereafter defendant, appeals from a judgment denying his petition for a writ of prohibition. He contends that *261 Vehicle Code section 23152, subdivision (b), 1 fails to give constitutionally adequate notice of the conduct it prohibits, and that the municipal court erred in overruling his demurrer to that eifect. We conclude that section 23152, subdivision (b), is constitutional, and therefore affirm the judgment.
Defendant was arrested at 2:25 in the morning of March 27, 1982, for violation of section 23152, subdivision (a) (driving while under the influence of alcohol). A chemical test administered 50 minutes later revealed a blood-alcohol content of 0.23 percent. He was charged with violating section 23152, subdivision (b), i.e., driving a vehicle while having 0.10 percent or more, by weight, of alcohol in one’s body. The complaint also alleged a prior conviction of former section 23102, subdivision (a) (driving while under the influence of alcohol).
Defendant demurred on the ground that section 23152, subdivision (b), gives constitutionally inadequate notice of the conduct proscribed. The municipal court overruled his demurrer, and defendant sought a writ of prohibition in the superior court. The petition was denied on the merits, and this appeal fоllowed. 2
I. Background
A. The Problem
Eighty years ago an editorialist complained, “Inebriates and moderate drinkers are the most incapable of all persons to drive motor wagons. The general palsy and diminished power of control of both the reason and the senses are certain to invite disaster in every attempt to guide such wagons.” (26 Q.J. Inebriety (1904) 308, 309.) In the ensuing decades motor vehicles have become faster, heavier, and ubiquitous, with proportionately tragic consequences to the victims of drinking drivers. Nearly half of the traffic deaths in California between 1976-1980 involved drinking drivers. (Cal. Highway Patrol, 1980 Ann. Rep., Fatal & Injury Motor Vehicle Traffic Accidents, p. 2, tables la, lb, and p. 58, tables 6a, 6b.) Nearly one-quarter of all traffic accidents resulting in injury involved the use of alcohol. (Id., at p. 3, tables lc, 1d, and p. 58, tables 6a, 6b.) Traffic deaths in the United States exceed 50,000 annually, and approximately one-half of those fatalities are alcohol-related. (U.S. Dept. Transp., 1977 Highway Safety Act Rep., Appen. A-9, table A-l; cf. Jones & Joscelyn, Alcohol and Highway *262 Safety 1978: A Review of the State of Knowledge (U.S. Dept. of Transp. 1978) pp. 11-26.)
The drunk driver cuts a wide swath of death, pain, grief, and untold physical and emotional injury across the roads of California and the nation. The monstrous proportions of the problem have often been lamented in graphic terms by this court and the United States Supreme Court. (See
Taylor
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
B. The Legislative Response
Recognizing the effect of alcohol on drivers, state legislatures early in the century attempted to regulate such conduct. Bеcause “both popular and legal views of the problem centered on the grossly intoxicated driver” (Ross, Deterring the Drinking Driver (1982) p. 2), the laws also reflected that conception. Thus, California’s first statute on the topic read simply, “No intoxicated person shall operate or drive a motor vehicle or other vehicle upon any public highway within this state.” (Italics added.) (Stats. 1913, eh. 326, § 17, p. 646.)
A more satisfactory means of defining the problem of drinking and driving emerged in the middle decades of this century, with the development of scientific measurement of blood-alcohol levels. (Ross, Deterring the Drinking Driver (1982) p. 2; Cameron, The Impact of Drinking-Driving Countermeasures: A Review and Evaluation 1979 Contemp. Drug Prob. 495, *263 497-498.) Research on alcohol’s effect on both motor skills and judgment revealed that impairment occurred at alcohol concentrations as low as 0.05 percent (Hurst, Estimating the Effectiveness of Blood Alcohol Limits (1970) 1 Behav. Research Highway Safety 87), considerably below the point at which typical clinical symptoms of intoxication appear in most persons. (Ross, Deterring the Drinking Driver (1982) p. 2; Jones & Joscelyn, Alcohol and Highway Safety 1978, op. cit. supra, at pp. 35-50.) Thus, in 1969, after a number of intervening amendments that attempted to refine definitions and specified penalties, California’s “driving under the influence” statute (former § 23102) was fortified by the addition of former section 23126, which created a presumption of being under the influence if a driver had 0.10 percent or more by weight of alcohol in his blood. (Stats. 1969, ch. 231, § 1, p. 565.) By 1972, 47 states had similar statutes. (Murray & Aitken, The Constitutionality of California’s Under-the-Influence-of-Alcohol Presumption (1972) 45 So.Cal.L.Rev. 955, 958, fn. 8.)
Even these laws, which considerably assisted the prosecution of “driving under the influence” cases, proved inadequate in many respects. Under them, the ultimate question was defined in terms of the defendant’s subjective behavior and condition: “Wаs the defendant under the influence at the time he drove?” Celerity and certainty of punishment were frustrated by the ambiguity of the legal criteria; no matter what his blood-alcohol level, a defendant could escape conviction merely by raising a doubt as to his intoxication.
(People
v.
Lachman
(1972)
In response to this continuing problem, in the past decade most states enacted additional legislation supplementing existing “driving under the influence” statutes and fashioned after what has been termed the “Scandinavian model.” (Ross, Deterring the Drinking Driver (1982) pp. 21-70; Ross, The Scandinavian Myth: The Effectiveness of Drinking-and-Driving Legislation in Sweden and Norway (1975) 4 J. Legal Stud. 285; Snortum, Alcohol-Impaired Driving in Norway and Sweden: Another Look at “The Scandinavian Myth” (1984) 6 Law & Policy 5; Snortum, Controlling the Alcohol-Impaired Driver in Scandinavia and the U. S.: Simple Deterrence and Beyond (1984) 12 J.Crim.Just. 331; Votey, Scandinavian Drinking-Driving Control: Myth or Intuition? (1982) 11 J. Legal Stud. 93.) These statutes— which are most frequently subdivisions of a general “driving and alcohol” statute—define the substantive offense not by the subjective term “driving under the influence,” but instead as the act of driving with a specified blood-alcohol level. (Macdonald & Wagner, Rep., Nat. Study of Preliminary *264 Breath Test (PTB) and Illegal per se Laws (U.S. Dept. оf Transp. 1981) (Executive Summary) p. xv.) Under these laws, proof of being “under the influence” is unnecessary. The statutes represent a legislative determination that public safety is endangered when a person drives a motor vehicle while having a specified percentage (typically 0.10) or more by weight of alcohol in his blood.
II. Section 23152, Subdivision (b)
As noted, former section 23102 made it illegal to drive while under the influence of alcohol. Conviction required a showing that alcohol had “so far affected the nervous system, the brain, or muscles as to impair to an appreciable degree the ability to operate a vehicle in a manner like that of an ordinarily prudent and cautious person in full possession of his faculties.” (Italics deleted.)
(Byrd
v.
Municipal Court
(1981)
In an attempt to address the continuing threat to public safety posed by drinking drivers, in 1981 the Legislature retained the “driving under the influence” statute, renumbered it section 23152, subdivision (a), аnd added the statute at issue here, section 23152, subdivision (b), which provides: “It is unlawful for any person who has 0.10 percent or more, by weight, of alcohol in his or her blood to drive a vehicle. [¶] For purposes of this subdivision, percent, by weight, of alcohol shall be based upon grams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood.”
At the urging of Congress,
3
statutes of this kind have recently been enacted in 28 states and the District of Columbia. Depending on the statutory scheme, these enactments create either a new offense,
4
or an alternative
*265
definition of “driving under the influence,”
5
or a lesser included offense within driving under the influence.
6
Our statute establishes a new and separate offense.
(Wallace
v.
Municipal Court
(1983)
Contrary to assertions by amici curiae, some commentators,
7
and one court,
8
section 23152, subdivision (b), does not create a conclusive presumption of intoxication, nor does it “eliminate[] the prosecutor’s burden of proof when the accused is found to have [0.10] percent, by weight, of alcohol in [his] blood.”
9
Instead, the statute defines, in precise terms, the conduct proscribed. In other states that have enacted a statute similar to section 23152, subdivision (b), the courts have drawn the same conclusion, notably the Washington Supreme Court which declared, “The statute does not рresume, it defines.”
(State
v.
Franco
(1982)
Although under section 23152, subdivision (b), it is no longer necessary to prove that the defendant was in fact under the influence, the People still must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that at the time he was driving his blood alcohol exceеded 0.10 percent.
(People
v.
Lujan, supra,
III. Constitutional Issues
A. Police Power
We have previously observed that “the area of driving is particularly appropriate for extensive legislative regulation, and that the state’s traditionally broad police power authority to enact any measure which reasonably relates to public health or safety operates with full force in this domain.”
(Hernandez
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles
(1981)
*267
“The wisdom of the legislation is not at issue in analyzing its constitutionality, and neither the availability of less drastiс remedial alternatives nor the legislative failure to solve all related ills at once will invalidate a statute.”
(Hale
v.
Morgan, supra,
at p. 398.) Surely the regulation of drinking drivers in a state that experienced 338,344 arrests for “drunk driving” in 1982
11
is well within the legitimate police power of the Legislature. (Accord,
State
v.
Franco, supra,
B. Void for Vagueness
Five of our sister states have addressed claims of unconstitutional indefiniteness with respect to analogous 0.10 percent statutes, and all have found the contentions meritless.
(Fuenning
v.
Superior Court
(Ariz. 1983)
Both article I, section 7, of the California Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution declare that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law. It has been recognized for over 80 years that due process requires inter alia some level of definiteness in criminal statutes. (Note,
Due Process Requirements of Definiteness in Statutes
(1948) 62 Harv.L.Rev. 77, 77, fn. 2.) Today it is established that due process requires a statute to be definite enough to provide (1) a standard of conduct for those whose activities are proscribed and (2) a standard for police enforcement and for ascertainment of guilt.
(Connally
v.
General Const. Co.
(1926)
*270
To begin with the second component, the statute could not be more precise as a standard for law enforcement. (Freund,
The Use of Indefinite Terms in Statutes
(1921) 30 Yale L.J. 437, 437.) It gives no discretion whatever to the police, and thus is not susceptible of arbitrary enforcement.
(Pryor
v.
Municipal Court
(1979)
Turning now to the “fair notice” component of the void-for-vagueness doctrine, we observe that the real thrust of defendant’s argument is that the statute is in effect “void for preciseness.” His complaint is not that the language of the statute is vague or ambiguous, but that it is too exact. His novel theory is that the statute fails to notify potential violators of the condition it proscribes, because it is impossible for a person to determine by means of his senses whether his blood-alcohol level is a “legal” 0.09 percent or an “illegal” 0.10 percent. The latter obsеrvation is probably true as a matter of fact, but it does not affect the constitutionality of the statute.
Defendant’s theory would render the void-for-vagueness doctrine internally inconsistent: the notice requirement would compete with the need to provide precise standards for law enforcement. When, as in the present case, a statutory standard requires scientific measurement, the very factor that assures due process under the “standards” component would violate due process under the “notice” component. 16
It is apparently defеndant’s contention that due process requires notice that is subjectively verifiable, according to the terms of the statute, at the instant before the alleged violation. He claims the statute is invalid because it is impossible for ordinary persons actually to know when their blood alcohol reaches the proscribed point. No court, however, has interpreted the notice requirement so strictly;
17
indeed, such a view would invalidate many other criminal laws, violations of which depend on an after-the-fact determination by a judge or jury as to the defendant’s state of mind or the reasonableness of his behavior. (E.g.,
Nash
v.
United States
(1913)
“Fair notice” requires only that a violation be described with a “ ‘reasonable degree of certainty’ ”
(People
v.
Mirmirani, supra,
30 Cal.3d
*271
375, 382) so that “ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited.”
(Kolender
v.
Lawson, supra,
One who drives a vehicle after having ingested sufficient alcohol to approach or exceed the level proscribed is neither “innocent” within the meaning of Groyned, nor is he without “fair warning.” His behavior is not “innocent” because one who drives with a blood-alcohol content above 0.05 percent is in jeopardy of violating section 23152, subdivision (a), i.e., driving while under the influence. (§ 23155, subd. (a)(2).) Indeed, in a number of states such a driver would be prima facie impaired well before he reached 0.10 percent. 18 It is difficult to sympathize with an “unsuspecting” defendant who did not know if he could take a last sip without crossing the line, but who decided to do so anyway.
The very fact that he has consumed a quantity of alcohol should notify a person of ordinary intelligence that he is in jeopardy of violating the statute. (Acсord,
Fuenning
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Furthermore, a statute “ ‘ “will be upheld if its terms may be made reasonably certain by reference to other definable sources.”’”
(County of Nevada
v.
MacMillen
(1974)
We decline to frustrate the Legislаture’s clear and legitimate purpose in enacting the statute involved here.
(People
v.
Vis
(1966)
IV. Prior Convictions
Defendant has also been charged with a prior conviction under former section 23102, subdivision (a) (driving while under the influence of alcohol), apparently for the purpose of enhancing penalty under sections 23165 and 23170. He denied this allegation, rather than demurring to it; but because the issue is of great importance and statewide concern, we nevertheless observe in closing that the propriety of such a charge was addressed and correctly resolved in favor of treating the prior violations as enhancements in
People
v.
Lujan, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Bird, C. J., Kaus, J., Broussard, J., Reynoso, J., Grodin, J., and Weinstein, J., * concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a rehearing was denied January 19, 1984.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Vehicle Code unless otherwise indicated.
We note that as of January 1, 1983, appeal is no longer available in these circumstances. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1; see generally,
Gilbert
v.
Municipal Court
(1977)
23 United States Code Annotated, section 408(e)(1)(C) (making enactmеnt of a 0.10 percent blood-alcohol law mandatory for any state wishing to receive federal highway funds to support alcohol traffic safety programs).
Alabama (Ala. Code, tit. 32-5A-191 (a)(1)); Arizona (Ariz. Rev. Stats. Ann., § 28-692 (B)); Arkansas (Ark. Stat. § 75-2503 (b)); Connecticut (Conn. Gen. Stats. Ann., § 14-227a (g)); Colorado (Colo. Rev. Stats., tit. 42-4-1202 (1.5) (a) (0.15 percent)); Florida (Fla. Stats. Ann., § 316.028 (3)); Illinois (111. Rev. Stat., ch. 95 1/2, § 11-501 (1)); Iowa (Iowa Code Ann., § 321.281 (l)(b) (0.13 percent)); Maine (Me. Rev. Stats., tit. 29, § 1312-B (IB), (2C)); Michigan (Mich. Stat. Ann., § 9.2325 (2)); Missouri (Mo. Rev. Stats., § 577.012 (1)); Nebraska (Rev. Stats. Neb., § 39.669.07); North Dakota (N.D., Cent. Code § 39-08-01(l)(a) & (2)(a)); Oklahoma (Okla. Stat. Ann., tit. 47, § 11-902 (A)(1)); Pennsylvania (75 Pa. C. Stats. Ann., § 3731 (a)(4)); South Dakota (S.D. Codified Laws, § 32-23-1 (1)); Utah (Utah Code Ann., § 41-6-44(1) (0.08 percent)); Vermont (Vt. Stаts. Ann., tit. 23, § 1201 (a)(1)); Wisconsin (Wis. Stats. Ann., § 346.63 (l)(b)); District of Columbia (D.C. Code, § 40-716 (b)(1)).
Alaska (Alaska Stats., § 28.35.030 (a)); Delaware (Del. Code Ann., tit. 21, § 4176 (a)); New York (N.Y. Stats., Veh. & Traffic, § 1192 (2); Oregon (Ore. Rev. Stats., §§ 487.540, 487.545 (0.08 percent)); Rhode Island (Gen. Laws R.I., § 31-27-2(b)); Texas (Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann., art. 6701/-1 (2)(b)); Washington (Rev. Code Wash. Ann., § 46.61.502 (1)).
North Carolina (Gen. Stats. N.C., § 20.138(b)). In West Virginia, although driving with 0.10 percent blood alcohol is not itself a crime, it is the basis for mandatory license revocation if the defendant is also convicted of driving while intoxicated. (W.Va. Code, § 17c-5A-1.)
E.g., Scherotter, California Vehicle Code Section 23152 (b): A Guessing Game for California Drivers (1982) 5 Crim.Just.J. 249, 257-261.
People
v.
Lujan
(1983)
Review of Selected 1981 California Legislation (1982) 13 Pacific L.J. 785, 795.
“Section 23152, subdivision (b), prohibits driving a vehicle with a blood-alcohol level of 0.10 percent or higher; it does not prohibit driving a vehicle when a subsequent test shows a level of 0.10 percent or more. Circumstantial evidence will generally be necessary to establish the requisite blood-alcohol level called for by the statute. A test for the proportion of alcohol in the blood will, obviously, be the usual type of circumstantial evidence, but of course the test is not conclusive: the defendant remains free to challenge the accuracy of the test result, the manner in which it was administered, and by whom.
(People
v.
Lewis
(1983)
We also observe that the present case represents a facial attack on the statute following overruling of a demurrer. We therefore need not consider to what extent in particular cases fundamental notions of due process would permit a defendant to show, for example, that he did not knowingly or voluntarily drive or consume alcohol.
Criminal Justice Profile (Cal. Dept. Justice 1982) 58. Indeed, this figure significantly underreports the pervasiveness of the problem. Studies have estimated drinking drivers’ risk of apprehension to be between 1 in 2,000 (e.g., Borkenstein, Problems of Enforcement, Adjudication and Sanctioning, in Proceedings of the Sixth Internal. Conf. on Alcohol, Drugs & Traffic Safety (Israelstam & Lambert, edits. 1975) at рp. 655, 660) and 1 in 200. (Beitel et al., Probability of Arrest While Driving Under the Influence of Alcohol (1975) 36 J. Stud. Alcohol 109, 114.)
(Utah Code Ann., § 41-6-44(1) (0.08 percent); Ore. Rev. Stats. §§ 487.540, 487.545 (0.08 percent). The foreign countries and their respective blood alcohol levels are: Australia (0.05) (Victoria); Austria (0.08); Canada (0.08); France (0.08); Germany (0.08); Great Britain (0.08); The Netherlands (0.05/0.08) (combination of tests); Norway (0.05); Sweden (0.05). The level in New Zealand is 0.10. Ross, Deterring the Drinking Driver (1982) pp. 20-70; Cameron, The Impact of Drinking-Driving Countermeasures: A Review and Evaluation (1979) Contemp. Drug Prob. 495, 512-519; see generally, Ross et al., Deterrence of Drinking and Driving in France: An Evaluation of the Law of July 12, 1978 (1982) 16 Law & Soc’y Rev. 345; Ross, Law, Science and Accidents: The British Road Safety Act of 1967 (1973) 2 J. Legal Stud. 1; Votey, Scandinavian Drinking-Driving Control: Myth or Intuition? (1982) 11 J. Legal Stud. 93; Votey, Control of Drunken Driving Accidents in Norway: An Econometric Evaluation of Behavior Under Uncertainty (1983) 11 J.Crim.Just. 153; Snortum, Controlling the Alcohol-Impaired Driver in Scandinavia and the U. S.: Simple Deterrence and Beyond (1984) 12 J.Crim.Just. 331.)
Other states have also addressed and unanimously rejected challenges to similar statutes on the grounds, inter alia, of equal protection (e.g.,
State
v.
Watts
(Mo. 1980)
In a related context an appellate department held that the 0.10 pеrcent presumption of intoxication applicable to section 23152, subdivision (a), cases (former § 23126, subd. (a)(3), present § 23155, subd. (a)(3)) is not unconstitutionally indefinite.
(People
v.
Perkins
(1981)
The United States Supreme Court recently observed that “[although the [void-for-vagueness] doctrine focuses both on actual notice to citizens and arbitrary enforcement, we have recognized recently that the more important aspect of vagueness doctrine ‘is not actual notice, but the other principal element of the doctrine—the requirement that a legislature establish minimal guidelines to govern law enforcement. ’ ”
(Kolender
v.
Lawson
(1983)
Additionally, if we were to choose to follow the United States Supreme Court’s suggestion that the notice consideration is subordinate to the interest in providing precise standards for law enforcement, defendant’s theory would require that the lesser rationale prevail over the greater.
Due Process requires only “fair notice,” not “actual notice.” (See fn. 15, ante.)
(E.g., N.Y.Stats., Veh. & Traffic, § 1195(c) (blood alcohol between 0.07 and 0.10 is “prima facie impairment”); Mich.Stat.Ann., § 9.2325(l)(3)(b) [presumption of impairment if blood аlcohol is between 0.07 and 0.10 percent].)
As observed by one commentator, “[l]ong and successful administration of a statute establishes patterns of social conduct to which interested parties may have become adjusted. The pattern of conduct may, of course, result eventually in the development of a commonly understood meaning of the statutory term.” (Note, Due Process Requirements of Definiteness in Statutes (1948) 62 Harv.L.Rev. 77, 83.) Although, as noted above, the two subdivisions of section 23152 are substantively different, for purposes of vagueness analysis the 0.10 percent figures employed directly in.subdivision (b) and indirectly in subdivision (a) are analogous.
See Moenssens & Inbau, Scientific Evidence in Criminal Cases (2d ed. 1978) pages 73-74.
We also reject the contentions of amici curiae that section 23152, subdivision (b), constitutes an impermissible discrimination against “those adult drivers who consume alcohol,” or that it has an impermissible “chilling effect” on the right to travel. Equally untenable are assertions that the statute “invests the police with unlimited discretion to randomly stop and detain drivers,” or that it somehow denies equal protection of the laws, or that it is invalid because mixed drinks from different bartenders may contain different amounts of alcohol.
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
