93 Wash. App. 501 | Wash. Ct. App. | 1998
The City of Mount Vernon appeals the municipal court’s ruling suppressing the results of a breath test administered to Kathryn McEuen. The trial court ruled that the test failed to comply with the protocol in WAC 448-13-050 because the results could not be printed immediately upon completion of the test. Because WAC 448--13-050 does not specify that a printout must be generated immediately after a breath test is completed and there was no evidence the machine was tampered with, we reverse.
On the evening of February 8, 1997, McEuen was arrested by Mount Vernon Police Officer David Deach on suspicion of being in physical control of a motor vehicle while intoxicated. Officer Deach transported McEuen to the Mount Vernon Police Department and asked her to submit two breath samples for testing by the BAC DataMaster Verifier. McEuen provided two breath samples. Officer Deach testified that he inserted a ticket and entered information into the BAC DataMaster. But at the conclusion of the test the machine did not eject a ticket reflecting the results of the breath test as it normally would. Officer Deach placed an “out of service” tag on the machine and notified the DataMaster technician.
Trooper Bosman, the DataMaster technician, testified he was notified that there was a machine at the Mount Vernon Police Station with a stuck ticket. When he arrived at the police station later in the day,
DISCUSSION
I. Validity of Breath Test
WAC 448-13-050 provides:
Test defined. The test of a person’s breath for alcohol concentration using the BAC Verifier DataMaster shall consist of the person insufflating end-expiratory air samples at least twice into the instrument, sufficient to allow two separate measurements. There will be sufficient time between the provision of each sample to permit the instrument to measure each sample individually. The two valid breath samples will constitute one test.
The BAC Verifier DataMaster will perform this test according to the following protocol when being employed to measure*505 an individual’s breath alcohol concentration. Any test not performed according to the following protocol is not a valid test. Successful compliance with each step of this protocol is determined from an inspection of the breath test document. These steps are necessary to ensure accuracy, precision, and confidence in each test.
Step 1. Data entry.
Step 2. Blank test with a result of .00.
Step 3. Internal standard verified.
Step 4. First breath sample provided by subject.
Step 5. Blank test with a result of .00.
Step 6. External standard simulator solution test. The result of this test must be between .090 and .110 inclusive.
Step 7. Blank test with a result of .00.
Step 8. Second breath sample provided by subject.
Step 9. Blank test with a result of .00.
Step 10. Printout of results on a breath test document.[4 ]
McEuen contends that the ticket offered into evidence by the City is not a valid breath test document because WAC 448-13-030(5) defines “breath test document” as “the form which is printed by the BAC Verifier DataMaster on completion of a breath alcohol test.” She argues that because no document was printed “on” completion of the test she was administered, it was not a valid test. The City argues that so long as the results are printed some time after a test is administered, it is a valid test. WAC 448-13--050 expressly provides that a test not performed according to the protocol it establishes is not a valid test.
We construe statutory language according to its plain and ordinary meaning
WAC 448-13-050 contemplates that a printout will generally be produced as soon as a breath test is completed in order “to ensure accuracy, precision, and confidence in each test.” But it falls short of requiring that the ticket be printed immediately after the test is completed. Here there was a direct, logical and sequential connection between the
The central processing unit of the computer while the test is being run stores that information in short-term memory. From the short-term memory it is sent to the printer. There is nothing else [that] can go to the printer except what is in the short-term memory and that can go at the time of the test or can be commanded to go at a later time [a]s a copy if no one else has run the instrument or shut it off or on. If you shut it off or on you empty that short-term memory. If you run another test you displace the information that was in there with the new test. There is no way you can manipulate the data that is in the short-term memory.
It would obviously be preferable to have the machine generate a printout that is signed by the officer who conducted the test immediately after a breath test is administered. This would be in accord with the stated goal of ensuring accuracy, precision and confidence in each test. But there is no basis under these facts for concluding that the printout here did not comply with the protocol established in WAC 448-13-050. McEuen points to no administrative rule
II. Writ of Review
When a municipal court enters an order suppressing evidence, the City has no right to a RALJ appeal unless the trial court expressly finds that the practical effect of the order is to terminate the case.
Reversed and remanded for trial.
Coleman and Appelwick, JJ., concur.
Trooper Bosman testified that he could not recall whether it was morning or midafternoon. Thus, according to his testimony, the ticket was printed between 5 and 12 hours after the test was administered.
The number on the ticket Officer Deach had inserted was 1015746; the number on the ticket he received from Trooper Bosman was 1005198.
The municipal court’s written conclusions of law stated:
1. To be a valid and admissible test the requirements of WAC 448-13-030 must be complied with in [their] entirety.
2. The WAC requires a print out of the results on a BAC document containing all the proper information.
3. The document sought to be introduced herein is incomplete and was not printed out at the completion of the test.
4. The document is also not a document but merely a copy.
5. As a result the document #1005198 is inadmissible into evidence in this matter.
(Emphasis added.)
WAC 448-13-060 also provides that “[a] test shall be a valid test and so certified” if the requirements of WAC 448-13-050 are met, together with those in WAC 448-13-040 and four additional criteria to assure precision and accuracy set out in WAC 448-13-060. See also State v. Wittenbarger, 124 Wn.2d 467, 473, 880
Flanigan v. Department of Labor & Indus., 123 Wn.2d 418, 426, 869 P.2d 14 (1994).
Geschwind v. Flanagan, 121 Wn.2d 833, 841, 854 P.2d 1061 (1993).
Flanigan, 123 Wn.2d at 426.
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1574 (1969). Webster’s cites as examples the phrases “will send a check on receipt of the book,” “will do it on your arrival,” and “was uneasy on arriving home and finding no one there.”
This does not mean that it would not have been prudent for the breath test technician to keep a record of the number of the ticket he pulled out of the machine and the number of the ticket he inserted.
We would reach a different result if there were any reason to believe that the machine had been used after Officer Deach put it aside and marked it “out of service.”
RALJ 2.2(c)(2).
City of Seattle v. Williams, 101 Wn.2d 445, 456, 680 P.2d 1051 (1984).
Williams, 101 Wn.2d at 456.
While Officer Deach testified that this was the first and only time he had ever had a problem with obtaining a printout of a breath test, McEuen mischaracterizes the record when she states that it was his testimony that it was a “shock” to him. In fact it was defense counsel who characterized it as a “[tlotal shock” in the course of asking whether the officer was surprised by the machine’s failure to generate a printout.