OPINION
Following respondent’s DWI arrest, and after failing a breath test, respondent’s driver’s license was summarily revoked. The district court rescinded the revocation, ruling that an additional chemical test had been prevented or denied by the police. The
FACTS
On December 5, 1995, at approximately 9:30 p.m., respondent Rodney Haveri stopped at a restaurant in Crystal after leaving a party. At the restaurant, Haveri began to feel the effects of the alcohol he drank at the party. To avoid driving home in that condition, Haveri decided to rest in his car; he did not know that the law prohibited his being in physical control of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. Approximately two hours later, a police officer found Haveri asleep in the driver’s seat of his car with the engine running; the car was located in the restaurant parking lot. Haveri was subsequently arrested for DWI.
After speaking with an attorney, Haveri submitted to a breath test, which yielded an alcohol concentration of .10 or more. Haveri then informed an attending officer that the attorney had instructed him to collect a urine .sample and that someone would bring him a container. Haveri’s sister, Jolene Ross-Bergh, subsequently brought a glass jar to the station. Ross-Bergh departed and the jar was taken to Haveri, who urinated in the jar in the presence of an officer. The jar was then placed with Haveri’s belongings and given to him upon his release a few hours later. Haveri did not have the sample analyzed.
The Commissioner revoked Haveri’s driver’s license, and Haveri petitioned for judicial review pursuant to the implied consent statute. After a hearing, the district court rescinded the revocation, ruling that the police had prevented or denied an additional chemical test. This appeal followed.
ISSUES
1. Was an additional chemical test prevented or denied by police?
2. Was Haveri’s limited right to counsel vindicated?
3. Was Haveri denied due process of law in failing to understand the scope of the implied consent law?
ANALYSIS
1. The implied consent statute provides that after a person submits to a chemical test, he may have an additional test administered at his own expense:
The person tested has the right to have someone of the person’s own choosing administer a chemical test or tests in addition to any administered at the direction of a peace officer; provided, that the additional test sample on behalf of the person is obtained at the place where the person is in custody, after the test administered at the direction of a peace officer, and at no expense to the state. The failure or inability to obtain an additional test or tests by a person shall not preclude the admission in evidence of the test taken at the direction of a peace officer unless the additional test was prevented or denied by the peace officer.
Minn.Stat. § 169.123, subd. 3 (1994) (emphasis added).
Ross-Bergh testified that when she arrived at the police station with the glass jar, an officer asked whether she was there for Hav-eri; Ross-Bergh replied, “Yes,” and she handed the jar to the officer. She intended to pick up Haveri, but the officer told her that Haveri would not be released yet and that Ross-Bergh could leave. The jar was then delivered to Haveri in his cell.
The district court found that an additional test had been prevented or denied and accordingly rescinded the revocation. 1 The district court stated that the police were required to afford Ross-Bergh direct access to Haveri.
In determining whether an additional test has been prevented or denied, we must draw a distinction between an officer’s
failing to assist
and an officer’s
hampering
an attempt to obtain such a test.
See Theel v. Commissioner of Pub. Safety,
Haveri argues, and the district court agreed, that the police were obliged to facilitate Ross-Bergh’s personal delivery of the jar to Haveri in order to fulfill Haveri’s statutory right to have a person of his own choosing administer the test. Haveri asserts that, in effect, the police actually administered his urine test. Haveri concedes that the police must have some latitude to prohibit direct access to a person in custody in some situations, but he contends that the police could have satisfied such safety concerns here, perhaps by escorting Ross-Bergh to Haveri’s cell. Ross-Bergh would then have been able to leave with the sample, thereby establishing a chain of custody.
Caselaw makes clear that officers must allow a sample to be collected and an additional test to be administered, but they need not act affirmatively to facilitate the test. In
Frost,
the arrestee’s father (who was an attorney) was allowed to call a doctor from the police station, but the officer refused to talk to the doctor to set up the test.
We hold that the police did not prevent or deny an additional chemical test.
2. By notice of review, Haveri challenges the district court’s conclusion that his right to counsel was vindicated.
A driver has a limited right to consult with an attorney before deciding whether to submit to a chemical test.
McNaughton v. Commissioner of Pub. Safety,
At the hearing, an officer testified that he gave Haveri access to a telephone and phone book and that Haveri paged through the book but could not find the proper section. The officer testified that he
Haveri testified that he told the officer that he did not know any attorneys in the area; the officer then indicated that a number of people call Sessoms and wrote down that attorney’s telephone number for Haveri. On direct examination, Haveri stated:
Well, I didn’t know of any attorneys, and [the officer] said, well, there’s the book, he opened it up and he says I’ll write the number down. There’s somebody — some people call him, you know, and so he wrote the number down for me and I called Sessoms.
On cross-examination, Haveri made the following statements:
Oh, [the officer] just said if you want to call a lawyer, and I said, yes, sir, and he says — he opened the pages to lawyers and I looked down at it, and he said, a lot of people call him, and I says, okay, and he wrote the phone number down and gave it to me and I called him. Sessoms.
* * * * * *
Well, [the officer] said that a lot of people use him, and he says, I’ll write the phone number, is that all right, and I said yeah, and he wrote the phone number down for me.
* * * * * *
No, I didn’t ask [the officer] to pick one. I said, I don’t know any lawyers here in town and he said, well, a lot of people use this man.
The district court did not make a finding as to whether the officer suggested that Haveri call Sessoms, although it noted the conflicting testimony on the issue. Instead, the district court concluded that, even if the officer suggested an attorney as Haveri stated, Haveri’s choice of attorneys was not so restricted as to constitute a violation of his right to counsel..
Haveri argues that the officer’s suggestion was inherently coercive and that therefore Haveri’s ability to choose his own attorney was impermissibly restricted. Haveri insists that officers should not go beyond the minimum requirement of providing access to a telephone and phone book.
Ordinarily, a driver must be permitted to use the phone personally when trying to obtain counsel.
Mulvaney v. Commissioner of Pub. Safety,
Our recent decision in
McNaughton,
In this case, McNaughton was handed a list of five pre-selected attorneys. McNaughton was essentially limited to the attorneys on this list: he had no access to telephone books, either local or out-of-town, and he had no direct access to the telephone or directory assistance.
Id. at 915. We held that the driver’s right to counsel was not vindicated under such circumstances “because he was not given a reasonable opportunity to consult with an attorney of his own choosing.” Id.
Here, we hold that Haveri’s right to counsel was vindicated, even accepting his version of the events. Unlike the situations in
Del-more
and
McNaughton,
Haveri was given direct access to a telephone and a phone book. By his own testimony, Haveri looked at the phone book, stated that he did not know any attorneys, and orally agreed to the
3. Also by notice of review, Haveri challenges the district court’s rejection of his due process claim. Haveri argues that he was misled into believing that the law prohibited only driving while under the influence of alcohol; he was not aware that being in physical control of a vehicle was also illegal. Haveri testified that a South Dakota police officer had told him during a prior DWI incident that he should have remained parked in the vehicle and not driven on the road. Haveri also cited various television advertisements, pamphlets, billboards, and common knowledge, all indicating that it is illegal to drink and drive; Haveri stated that he assumed that sleeping in a car while intoxicated was therefore permitted. Haveri conceded on direct examination that he did not know the source of the various public service messages.
Haveri’s due process argument is derived from the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Raley v. Ohio,
While there is no suggestion that the Commission had any intent to deceive the [defendants], we repeat that to sustain the judgment of the Ohio Supreme Court on such a basis after the Commission had acted as it did would be to sanction the most indefensible sort of entrapment by the State — convicting a citizen for exercising a privilege which the State clearly had told him was available to him.
Id.
at 438,
The Minnesota Supreme Court has apparently adopted the doctrine enunciated in Ra-ley, applying the
long-established rule that a government may not officially inform an individual that certain conduct is permitted and then prosecute the individual for engaging in that same conduct.
State v. McKown,
We conclude, however, that this “due process entrapment” rule does not apply here. The South Dakota police officer cannot speak for the State of Minnesota, and Haveri could not establish either the exact content or the source of the announcements he had seen. Haveri did not show that the State of Minnesota officially informed Haveri or anyone else that being in physical control of a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol is permitted by law.
DECISION
The police did not prevent or deny an additional chemical test by failing to act affirmatively and instruct Ross-Bergh to take the glass jar to Haveri and leave with the sample. Haveri’s right to counsel was vindicated. Haveri was not denied due process of law by being misled about the scope of the DWI law. We reverse the district court order rescinding the revocation of Haveri’s driver’s license and reinstate the revocation.
Reversed.
Notes
. The parties stipulated at the hearing that the results of Haveri's breath test would not be admissible if an additional test was prevented or denied.
. We neither decide nor imply that the police would have had a duty to allow Haveri’s sister to have access to him had either made such a request.
