delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellant was charged by summons with having on *328 January 28, 1968, driven his motor vehicle under the influence of intoxicating liquor in violation of Maryland Codе, Article 66%, Section 206. He was tried and convicted in the Magistrate’s Court for Queen Anne’s County and from that judgment he appealed to the Circuit Court. The case was tried by that court without a jury оn November 6, 1968. .During .the course of the arresting officer’s testimony, he was asked by the trial judge whether appellant “wanted to take a breathalizer test or if he would take a breathаlizer test.” Appellant vigorously objected to the court’s question. The objection was promptly overruled and the arresting officer stated that appellant had refused to tаke the test. Appellant was convicted of the charge and thereafter petitiоned for a writ of certiorari pursuant to Code, Article 5, Section 21. We granted the petition, limited to the quеstion whether, in view of the provisions of Section 100 of Article 35 of the Code, the trial judge errеd when he inquired, sua sponte, whether appellant had refused to take the breathalizer test.
The statute in question makes provision for the administration of chemical tests for alcohol in the blоod of individuals charged with driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor. 1 Subsection (c) thereof, in effеct at the time of appellant’s trial, provided:
“No person shall be compellеd to submit himself or any part of his body or bodily substance for the purpose of a chemicаl analysis provided for in this section and evidence of chemical analysis shall not be deemed admissible if obtained contrary to the provisions of this subsection; and no inference or presumption concerning either his guilt or innocence arises by reason of his refusal to submit as hereinbefore set forth, nor shall the fact of his refusal to so *329 submit be admissible into evidence at his trial.” (Emphasis supplied.) 2
In view of the plain provisions of the statute, it was obvious еrror for the trial judge to admit the challenged evidence.
See People v. Reeder,
The State urges, however, that the error was harmless, first because appellant, by his own testimony on direct examination, acknowledged the fact that he refused to take the breathalizer test; and, second, because there was abundant evidence apart from that now challenged to show that appellant had been driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor.
We agree with the State that a party may, under some circumstances, waive his objection to testimony by subsequently offering testimony on the same subject.
Peisner v. State,
While the State correctly points out that there was evidence, apart from that now challenged, from which the trier of fact could find that appellant had been driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor, it was not so overwhelming that we could properly say that the admission of the objectionable evidence had no likelihood of changing the result of the trial, particularly since the trial judge personally sought out such evidence and likely inferred therefrom, in violation of the statute, that refusal to take the test was indicative of guilt. Wе think then that the error was material to appellant’s right to a fair trial and may have had a substantial influence on the verdict of the trier of fact.
See Womble v. State,
Judgment reversed; case remanded for a new trial.
Costs to be paid by the county commissioners of Queen Anne’s County.
