Plaintiff appeals by leave granted from the trial court’s interlocutory order preventing the introduction into evidence of the results of a blood sample analysis.
Plaintiff, as the administrator of the estate of Frаnk R. Gilbert, instituted this action claiming that defendant operated in a grossly negligent fashion the automobile in which the defendant *724 Kenneth Leach and Gilbert were riding, and that this negligence resulted in the collision which caused Gilbеrt’s death. Prior to trial, the complaint was amended to allege that Kenneth Leach was intoxicated at the time of the accident.
During the trial, the defendants moved for a protective order to prеvent the admission into evidence of a blood alcohol test performed on Kenneth Leach in the hospital shortly after the accident. Outside of the presence of the jury, the trial court heard testimоny by Kenneth Leach and, from the plaintiff, received depositions of several medical personnel. The trial court ruled that the plaintiff had failed to show that Kenneth Leach had consented to taking of а blood sample and that, therefore, the search was unlawful and the analysis had to be excluded. The court, in determining if a consent had been proven, concluded that plaintiff had failed to meet the legal test requiring a showing of an "intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege”. The court then granted plaintiff’s motion for a continuance to enable him to bring this interlocutory appeal.
This case presents the interesting question of whether it was proper to grant a protective order in order to prevent disclosure, in a civil case, of the test results of a blood alcohol sample taken, while a defendant was conscious, and analyzed by the Michigan State Crime Laboratory.
The resolution of this issue depends primarily upon the application to these facts of the rule of
Lebel v Swincicki,
The Court in
Lebel
considered the .United States Supreme Court case of
Breithaupt v Abram,
Lebel v Swincicki
resolves a number of the sub-issues inherent in this appeal. First, the case establishes the proposition that evidence obtained by an unlawful search is not admissible in civil cases in this jurisdiction.
2
See also
McNitt v Citco Drilling Co,
Second, the taking of a blood sample by hospital personnel at the request of thе police and the furnishing of this sample to police does constitute a search and seizure which is subject to the constitutional requirement of reasonableness. The exclusionary rule operates to prevent the admission of evidence unlawfully obtained by or at the behest of government officials.
Burdeau v McDowell,
Subsequent to the opinion in
Lebel,
the United States Supreme Court handed down
Schmerber v California,
The most difficult question posed for this Court is whether the defendant Kenneth Leach gave a valid consent to taking of the blood sample. Lebel and McNitt offer little assistance on this problem since in those cases the persons from whom the blood was extracted were both unconscious at the time. The trial court in the present case resolved the issue, after a motion for a protective order had been made, by hearing testimony on the issue outside of the jury’s presence. It concluded that there had been nо showing of an intentional relinquishment of a known right or privilege.
We conclude that the trial court properly examined the evidence relating to consent outside of the presence of the jury. The validity of a consent to search, it is true, is a question of fact to be determined from all of the evidence and reasonable inferences.
People v Chism,
Although this is a civil case, we think the determination of the legality of the search, after a motion for a protective order, is better left in the province of the trial court and not the jury. To allow the jury to hаve complete knowledge of the damaging evidence sought to be excluded and then to ask them not to consider this evidence if it was illegally obtained effectively denies the defendant the benefit of his рrotective order. Such mental gymnastics should not be required of the jury — in a civil or criminal case. See
McCormick, Evidence
(2d ed), § 53, p 121.
Cf. Jackson v Denno,
Although the trial court properly considered the consent issue outside of the presence of the jury, it did nоt apply the correct standard to determine the validity of the consent. This is, perhaps, understandable considering the recent developments in this area. The "intentional relinquishment” standard was first enunciated in
Johnson v Zerbst,
*729
To be valid, a consent to search must be unequivocal, specific and freely and intelligently given.
People v Kaigler,
*730 Although the trial court did not apply the precisely correct legal standard, a review of the evidence submitted is convincing that it was totally insufficient to justify a conclusion that the consent was voluntary. For this reason, the motion for a protective order to prevent the admission of the blood sample analysis was properly granted.
Affirmed. Costs to defendants.
Notes
The Court in Lebel, however, concluded that, although the search was unlawful, reversal was not warranted since the defendant’s negligence and his drinking of intoxicating liquor was established by his own admissions. Thus, his intoxication was established beyond question by evidence other than the blood test.
The exclusionary rule in criminal cases has a firm foundation in Michigan.
People v Marxhausen,
Thе exclusionary rule has been applied in noncriminal proceedings in other jurisdictions.
See, e.g., One 1958 Plymouth Sedan v Pennsylvania,
In
Lebel,
it is unclear whether or not a request for the blood sample was made by the police. The sample was, however, delivered to the Michigan State Police. It has been argued that
Lebel
stands for the proposition that in Michigan civil cases state action is not required for the еxclusion of illegally obtained evidence.
Recent Developments, Evidence Illegally Seized by Private Persons Excluded From Criminal Prosecution,
64 Mich L Rev 143, 150 (1965). We think, however, Justice Frankfurter’s reading of
Lebel
in
Elkins v United States,
Lebel relied upon Const 1908, art 2, § 10 which is substantially the same as Const 1963, art 1, § 11.
No question is raised by the present facts concerning a blood sample initially taken for therapeutic treatment and later utilized for liability purposes. The blood sample in this case was clearly taken for the purpose of delivering it to the state police labоratory.
We are not dealing with the extraction of blood after a lawful arrest for driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or for driving while a person’s operating ability is impaired due to the consumption of intoxicating liquor. Under these circumstances, the implied consent law, MCLA 257.625c; MSA 9.2325(3), operates so that the person is deemed to have given consent to the chemical test of his blood. A defendant’s consent or refusal to submit to a blood test is irrelevant if the extraction properly occurs as incident to a valid arrest.
People v Keen,
