618 A.2d 80 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1991
The plaintiff appeals the decision of the defendant commissioner of motor vehicles (commissioner) suspending his motor vehicle operator's license for ninety days pursuant to General Statutes
The police arrested the plaintiff on February 18, 1991, on the charge of operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol, a violation of General Statutes
The court finds that the commissioner's decision adversely affected a specific personal and legal interest of the plaintiff, his right to operate a motor vehicle, and concludes, therefore, that he is aggrieved by that decision within the meaning of General Statutes
The essential facts of the case, as revealed by the record, are undisputed. Although the police officer who stopped and arrested the plaintiff did not testify at the hearing, his report was admitted into *308 evidence. the report states, "I was told by a motorist that the above vehicle was zig zagging all over the road and I spotted the vehicle and I stopped it." In another section, the report states that the informant described the vehicle as a "red hearse." The report goes on to relate that the officer smelled alcohol on the plaintiff's breath after he stopped him and that the plaintiff failed the usual field sobriety tests. He was then placed under arrest.
Subsequent to the commissioner's decision on the license suspension but prior to oral argument to the court on this appeal, the plaintiff appeared before the court at geographical area No. 16 on the criminal charge of violating General Statutes
In his brief and oral argument to the court on this appeal, the plaintiff advances three principal arguments as the bases of his appeal. First, he contends that the police lacked sufficient cause or reason to stop him prior to arresting him and, therefore, the commissioner's findings and conclusions on the issues of probable cause and arrest were erroneous. Second, he claims that the evidence obtained by the police after he was stopped does not support the commissioner's finding of probable cause for the arrest. Third, in the alternative, he argues that Judge Shaughnessy's decision in the criminal case is conclusive on the issues of probable cause and lawful arrest in this administrative appeal under the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel. *309
The report of the arresting officer, which was admitted in evidence at the administrative hearing, is the only evidence in the record concerning the circumstances under which the police initially stopped the plaintiff. As previously indicated, the report states that the police officer received a tip from an anonymous source who said he saw a vehicle described as a "red hearse" zigzagging "all over the road." There was no indication as to when or where the informant saw the vehicle, nor does the report indicate who was driving the vehicle when it was allegedly zig zagging or even give a description of the driver. There is no indication that the police officer observed the vehicle zig zagging or otherwise being operated abnormally. There are no other facts reported which indicate that the police observed any criminal or even suspicious behavior on the part of the plaintiff.
An investigatory stop, such as the police performed in this case, is a seizure within the meaning of the federal and Connecticut constitutions. State v. Scully,
In the present case, the commissioner's decision does not indicate whether the hearing officer made any findings or conclusions concerning the legality of the initial stop of the plaintiff by the police. The hearing officer did find that there was probable cause for the plaintiff's arrest, but the record clearly shows that all of the facts relied on in support of that finding were developed by the police after they stopped the plaintiff. The court has carefully examined the whole record and concludes that the police did not have the requisite legal basis for stopping the plaintiff prior to arresting him.
In the present case, the anonymous tip contained nothing to identify the plaintiff, no allegation of a specific crime, and no information as to time or place of observation by the informant. Although the tip described the vehicle that the plaintiff was driving when stopped, that was the only detail that the police could corroborate. Significantly, the police observed neither any abnormal operation as reported by the informant nor any other suspicious behavior. In this regard, the report merely states that "I spotted the motor vehicle on Federal St. the vehicle headed East on New Britain Ave. and I stopped the motor vehicle."
Analysis of the relevant case law supports the court's conclusion that the police were not authorized to make the initial investigative stop of the plaintiff under the circumstances of this case. In State v. Scully, supra 674, the court emphasized that an investigative stop must be based on "some objective manifestation *311 that the person stopped is, or is about to be, engaged in criminal activity" and "[b]ased upon the whole picture the detaining officers must have a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the particular person stopped of criminal activity." (Internal quotation marks omitted, emphasis in the original). "The idea that an assessment of the whole picture must yield a particularized suspicion contains two elements, each of which must be present before a stop is permissible. First, the assessment must be based upon all of the circumstances . . . [which, second,] must raise a suspicion that the particular individual being stopped is engaged in wrongdoing." Id. 675. (Internal quotation marks omitted). In the present case, the "whole picture" that the police had consisted of the informant's tip of erratic driving coupled with their own brief observation of the vehicle being operated normally. Clearly, this "whole picture" did not amount to an "objective manifestation" that the person they saw driving the vehicle was then, or was about to be, engaged in erratic driving or other wrongdoing. As previously indicated, the police report does not indicate where the informant saw the vehicle or how much time had elapsed before he notified the police. The tip did not describe the driver. The information the police had, therefore, did not even provide "a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the particular person" (the plaintiff) of driving the vehicle erratically at some time prior to their observation.
Other cases have enlarged the rule in Scully to accommodate special or more urgent circumstances and to cover tips concerning completed crimes. In United States v. McClinnhan,
In State v. Mitchell,
At the administrative hearing, the plaintiff objected to the admission of the police officer's report, but the objection was based on technical arguments of little merit. The plaintiff did not object to the admission of the report on the basis that the evidence contained therein was obtained as the result of an illegal stop. The hearing officer properly overruled the objection that the plaintiff did make. The hearing officer was entitled, therefore, to rely on the statements in the report in reaching his findings and conclusions. Volck v. Muzio,
The court's conclusion with respect to the poststop evidence, however, is not dispositive of the case. The plaintiff has consistently raised claims that his constitutional rights were violated as a result of the illegal stop prior to the arrest. He raised these claims at the administrative hearing and in his brief and oral argument to this court. He specifically attacks the commissioner's finding of probable cause as the illegitimate result of the stop. Accordingly, the court must address the question whether an illegal stop by the police requires reversal of the commissioner's suspension of an individual's license under General Statutes
The general statutory scheme of Connecticut's "per se" drunk driving laws makes it illegal for a person to operate a motor vehicle "while the ratio of alcohol in the blood of such person is ten-hundredths of one per cent or more of alcohol, by weight." General Statutes
An axiomatic rule of statutory construction is that statutes "should be construed so that no part of a legislative enactment is to be treated as insignificant and unnecessary, and there is a presumption of purpose behind every sentence, clause or phrase in a legislative enactment." 84 Century Limited Partnership v. Board of Tax Review,
As the above excerpts from the legislative proceedings make clear, the legislature intended that the license suspension procedure be subject to basic constitutional safeguards, including the requirement of lawful conduct on the part of the police officers who stop, arrest and test individuals suspected of violating the per se law. This legislative purpose would be severely undermined, if not destroyed, if the police in such cases were not required to follow the rules in making investigative stops that our courts have imposed under the constitution. Put another way, if the administrative proceedings were not subject to these constitutional *317
restraints, the police would be free to make unjustified and unlawful random stops of vehicles, which could then provide a basis for the state to deprive citizens of their licenses administratively even if it could not prosecute them for criminal violations. As has been frequently observed, the administrative penalty is potentially more severe than the results of criminal prosecution. This court holds, therefore, that the probable cause requirement in General Statutes
The principles just discussed cause the court further to conclude that the requirement in section
In interpreting the Illinois statute, which provides that the person must have been "placed under arrest," *318
the court in People v. Krueger,
Similarly, in Gallagher v. Secretary of State,
"We cannot conceive that the Legislature had the remotest intention by its wording of subsection 2, to mean that law enforcement officers can on what they alone consider `reasonable grounds' without any judicial restraint, supervision, or requirement of prior valid arrest, request a citizen to take a chemical test of bodily substances or suffer the grave penalty of license loss or suspension on refusal to comply.
"Hence we hold that the sine qua non to energize the statutory mandate of the `implied consent' law is a prior valid arrest.
"Since the arrest in this case was invalid so was the request to submit to the test or suffer the consequences of refusal. To this extent and to this extent alone do we uphold the injunction against further proceedings emanating from the alleged drunken driving by appellee."
In Holland v. Parker,
"Thus, it would seem that if a police officer, implementing search and seizure procedures in accordance with constitutional proscriptions, cannot require a person to take a blood test without a warrant unless there is a lawful arrest and emergency circumstances, then neither could the officer demand that a licensee submit to the blood test, without these same constitutional prerequisites, when refusal would result in automatic loss of his license. If it were any other way, the
Further, in State v. Mulcahy,
On the basis of the forgoing analysis, this court holds that the requirement in the Connecticut statute that the person be "placed under arrest" means that the arrest must be valid and lawful. Thus, at a license suspension hearing, the hearing officer must find that the arrest was valid and lawful in determining whether the person was "placed under arrest." Since the court has found that the evidence in the record reveals that the investigatory stop by the police in this case was unlawful, it follows that the commissioner's finding that the plaintiff was "placed under arrest" was erroneous. For that reason, the plaintiff's appeal must be sustained. *322
The plaintiff claims that because the trial court granted his motion to suppress in the parallel criminal proceedings against him on grounds that the investigatory stop of plaintiff's vehicle was improper, the present appeal should be sustained. Specifically, the plaintiff states that under the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel, the trial court's decision in that case "controls the outcome of this case." The plaintiff argues that the decision of Judge Shaughnessy "should be considered conclusive as to the lack of probable cause."
Without commenting on the general applicability of the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel to a civil license suspension proceeding where the prior action is a criminal proceeding, however, it is clear that these doctrines do not apply under the circumstances of the present case. On appeal from a license suspension proceeding, the court does not find facts but reviews the record to determine whether the facts found by the hearing officer are supported by evidence in the record. This court does not function as a fact-finder on appeal and, thus, this appeal does not involve a relitigation of a fact or issue determined in the criminal proceedings. Furthermore, the hearing officer made his findings, including the finding that there was probable cause to arrest, before the trial court issued its decision on the motion to suppress in the criminal case. Thus, at the time the hearing officer issued his decision, there was no prior determination of the relevant issues by the criminal court. The doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel are inapplicable to the present case.
As previously indicated, the court finds that the administrative findings on the issues of probable cause and arrest, as provided in