David Nelson and Mauricio Fernandez, on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated (hereafter collectively “Nelson”), appeal from the district court’s judgment on the pleadings in their 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against the City of Irvine, its chief of police, and several individual officers (hereafter collectively “City of Irvine”), alleging that following their arrests for driving under the influence of alcohol they were coerced into submitting to blood tests in order to determine their blood alcohol level, and deprived of the statutorily mandated option to take a breath or urine test instead.
I. Facts and Procedural History
The plaintiffs’ motion for class certification was pending when the district court dismissed this suit on the pleadings. The claims of the proposed class representatives are described in the first amended complaint, and for purposes of this appeal we accept those allegations as true. McGann v. Ernst & Young,
Irvine Police Department officer Troy Gielish arrested David Nelson on suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol (“DUI”). En route to the police station, Officer Gielish radioed ahead for a blood technician, and asked Nelson if he “had a problem” with taking a blood test. Nelson was not advised that he had a choice of a blood, urine, or breath test and, as he interpreted the officer’s question as rhetorical, he felt he had no choice in the matter. Nelson submitted to the blood test without offering any verbal or physical resistance, but had. hе been given a choice, he now alleges he would have selected a breath or urine test.
Officer Gielish stopped Mauricio Fernandez on suspicion of DUI and asked him to blow into a Preliminary Alcohol Screening Device to determine whether or not he was intoxicated. Officer Gielish advised Fernandez that the results of the preliminary breath test would not be admissible in court regardless of the outcome. Fernandez asked Officer Gielish to list his options. Officer Gielish told him, “a blood, urine, or breath test.” Fernandez replied he would take whatever breath test he had to. Fernandez flunked the preliminary breath test, so Officer Gielish arrested him and took him to the station. The officer told Fernandez that a technician was “going tо get a blood sample.” Fernandez did not verbally or physically resist the taking of the sample. Fernandez alleges that, had he been allowed to exercise his free choice, he would have selected a breath or urine test.
The claims of other plaintiffs provide variations on the same theme. David Tyler was not informed by arresting Irvine P.D. officers that he had a choice of tests, and was told that if he did not cooperate in the taking of a blood test he would be held in jail over the weekend. Vicki Caruso was not informed by Irvine P.D. officers that she had a choice of blood-alcohol tests, and was told she had to submit to a blood test. Jeffrey Capler initially agreed to take a blood test but then changed his mind and infоrmed the arresting officer that he wanted to take a breath test. Although a breath test machine was available, and the blood sample had not yet been taken, the officer told Capler that he could not change his mind and must submit to a blood test. Kristi Giordano was initially permitted to take a breath test, but the officer stopped her in the middle, told her she was doing it wrong, and required her to take a blood test instead. A blood sample was taken against her will. Jeffrey Chancellor was told that if he submitted to a blood test he would be released in four hours, but if he selected a urine test he would not be released for at least 17 hours. He was not offered a breath test. He submitted to a blood test.
: Richard Heil was arrested for DUI, transported to the station, and told he had to provide a blood sample. He claims he was not advised of his choice of tests, but instead was told that if he did not provide a blood sample voluntarily, he would be strapped to a chair so that a sample could be forcibly taken. Heil was told that if he resisted and the officer had to call for assistance, he would be jailed for 48 hours. Heil submitted to a blood test. He claims that had he been offered a choice, he would have selected a breath or urine test.
This court reviews de novo Rule 12(c) judgments on the pleаdings. McGann,
II. Constitutional Claims
A. Fourth & Fourteenth Amendments
To pass constitutional muster under the Fourth Amendment a search must be reasonable. Ohio v. Robinette,
1. Reasonableness.
In Schmerber v. California,
Petitioner is not one of the few who on grounds of fear, concern for health, or religious scruple might prefer some other means of testing, such as the “Breathalyzer” test petitioner refused.... We need not decide whether such wishes would have to be respected.
Id. at 771,
In Winston v. Lee, the Supreme Court held that it violated the Fourth Amendment forcibly to remove from the chest of a robbery suspect a bullet having evidentiary value. The Court clarified and applied the Schmerber balancing test as “the appropriate framework of analysis,” noting that “the question whether the community’s need for evidence outweighs the substantial privacy interests at stake is a delicate one admitting of few categorical answers.”
Assuming the threshold requirements of probable cause and a warrant оr an exception to that requirement have been met, the next step in the Schmerber inquiry is to “consider a number of other factors in determining the ‘reasonableness’ of the blood test.” Id. at 761,
“The integrity of an individual’s person is a cherished value in our society.” Schmerber,
To be “[wjeighed against these individual interests is the community’s interest in fairly and accurately determining guilt or innocence.” Id. A blood test is “a highly effective means of determining the degree to which a person is under the influence of alcohol.” Schmerber,
Especially given the difficulty of proving drunkenness by other means, these considerations showed that results of the blood test were of vital importance if the State were to enforce' its drunk driving laws. In Schmerber, we concluded that this state interest was sufficient to justify the intrusion, and the compelled blood test was thus “reasonable” for Fourth Amendment purposes.
Winston,
California law provides that the amount of alcohol in a person’s blood may be shown by chemical analysis of that person’s blood, breath, or urine, Cal. Veh.Code § 23155(a), and criminalizes “driving either with the specified blood-alcohol levеl or with the specified breath-alcohol level.” People v. Bransford,
When a DUI arrestee consents to undergo a breath or urine test, the government has available to it an effective alternative to a blood test as a means of obtaining the same evidence. We must decide whether, under such circumstances, forcing the arrеstee to undergo a blood test is unreasonable.
This appears to be an issue of first impression, although this court considered a closely related issue on similar facts in Hammer v. Gross,
Timothy'Hammer was arrested on suspicion of DUI, and handcuffed after he failed a series of field sobriety tests. At the hospital, Hammer was told he would be required to take one of three chemical tests (blood, breath or urine), but he refused to take any test. The officer handcuffed Hammer to a-chair and asked whether Hammer would take a blood test; Hammer аgain refused. A lab technician made her first attempt to take a blood sample. Hammer jumped and tried to wrestle away, overturning his chair. The officer told Hammer he was going to take blood “the easy way or the hard way.” Id. at 844. Hammer said he would consent to a breath test “if that’s what it’s going to come to.” Id. The officer insisted on a blood sample, which the technician took while the officer held Hammer down in the chair. Id.
Hammer brought a § 1983 suit alleging police violated the Fourth Amendment by
The en banc panel rehearing the case issued a split decision. The central issue in Hammer was whether a rational jury could have concluded that the amount of force used by the officers to obtain the blood sample was unreasonable under the circumstances. Hammer, 932, F.2d at 845. As Hammer makes clear, the inquiry into the reasonableness of use of force to obtain a blood sample requires, inter alia, an evaluation of the “degree of the authorities’ need for the blood sample.” Id. at 846 (plurality opinion).
The plurality opinion describes factors that should be analyzed to determine whether the force, used to extract a blood sample was unreasonable, including severity of the сrime, whether the suspect actively resisted, and whether he posed an immediate threat to the officers or others. “It is also appropriate to consider whether the police ‘refused to respect a reasonable request to undergo a different form of testing.’ ” Id. (quoting Schmerber,
In concurring, Judge Kozinski wrote: “For me, this case turns on a single fact: Hammer agreed to submit to an alternative alcohol test to avoid having blood drawn from his vein, but he was nonetheless subjected to the forcible extraction of his blood.” Id. at 851 (Kozinski, J., concurring). This, according to Judge Kozinski, was unreasonable:
If an alternative test is readily available and a suspect requests it, police officers may not arbitrarily refuse to administer it simply because the suspect did not have the presence of mind to make a decision more promptly or because he changed his mind. The standard, as always under the fourth amendment, is reasonableness. Defendants have offered no explanation for [the officer’s] refusal to comply with Hammer’s request. Based on .the evidence, the jury could conclude that [the officer’s] refusal to administer an alternative test was unreasonable.
The government’s need for the blood is, of course, critical: It would be senseless, cruel and unreasonable for the government to draw blood without needing it. Yet, that’s what the jury could have found happened here: Because Hammer consented to a breath test, the government had no need for the blood but nonetheless obtained it forcibly.
Id. at 852. Judge Kozinski argued that under the circumstances of the case, none of the other factors listed in the plurality opinion mattered:
No matter how serious the offense, the availability of an equally effective, consensual method of obtaining the evidence conclusively renders use of the nonconsensual method unreasonable. If the suspect requests a breath or urine test and it will do the job just as well, it must be used in lieu of a blood test-even where the suspected crime is murder in the first degree.2
Id.
Thus, a majority of the en banc panel indicated that if an alternative test is readily
The Hammer dissent relied upon California eases that have held that police are not required to give an arrestee a second opportunity to comply with the statutory requirement that they take a blood-alcohol test after their initial refusal, and that “California courts have repeatedly indicated that section 13353 does not alter the analysis of fourth amendment claims.” Id. at 854-55 (Fernandez, J., dissenting). As such, “the outcome of [the] case is controlled entirely by Schmer-ber and its progeny.” Id. at 855.
In the case at bar, the City makes a similar argument, and the district court agreed that “the implied consent law does not create any constitutional rights to have performed, or even be informed of, any of the three testing options.” While failure to advise DUI arrestees of their choice of tests appears to violate the California implied consent statute, such a failure does not violate the Fourth Amendment’s reasonableness requirement. The Supreme Court has not announced a Mircmdo-type requirement that suspects be advised of their Fourth Amendment rights. See Ohio v. Robinette,
The City of Irvine mistakenly relies upon Skinner v. Railway Labor Exec. Ass’n,
The City of Irvine’s reliance upon Skinner is misplacеd because the Court distinguished the drug testing of railroad employees from other searches conducted by law enforcement officers:
We have recognized exceptions to this rule, however, “when ‘special needs, beyond the normal need for law enforcement, make the warrant and probable-cause requirement impracticable.’” When faced with such special needs, we have not hesitated to balance the governmental and privacy interests to assess the practicality of the warrant and probable-cause requirements in the particular context.
Id. at 619,
In Skinner, the Court reviewed a testing scheme that included breath, blood and urine tests, and had the occasion to discuss each testing method individually and judge the relative invasiveness of each. That general discussion of the tests is useful here. The Court reiterated its assessment in Schmerber that blood tests are commonplace, and “ ‘society’s judgment thаt blood tests do not consti
The breath tests authorized by ... the regulations are even less intrusive than the blood tests.... Unlike blood tests, breath tests do not require piercing the skin and may be conducted safely outside a hospital environment and with a minimum of inconvenience or embarrassment. Further, breath tests reveal the level of alcohol in the employee’s bloodstream and nothing more____ [B]reath tests reveal no other facts in which the employee has a substantial privacy interest.
Id. at 625-26,
The City of Irvine relies upon Vernonia School Dist. v. Acton,
In the case at bar, we need not speculate as to what less intrusive alternatives might be available. Breath and urine tests are established alternative methods which state statutes both approve as evidence and require the police to offer to DUI arrestees. No second-guessing of the California legislature is required. Further, although the intrusiveness of blood tests is a factor to be considered in the reasonableness inquiry, this case does not turn on the relative intrusiveness of the tests.
2. Exigent Circumstances
In Schmerber, the Supreme Court carved out an exception to the warrant requirement for blood-alcohol tests. “[T]he percentage of alcohol in the blood begins to diminish shortly after drinking stops, as the body functions to eliminate it from the system.”
B. Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Claim
“Unless a classification trammels fundamental personal rights or implicates a suspect classification, to meet constitutional challenge the law in question needs only some rational relation to a legitimate state interest.” Lockary v. Kayfetz,
Nelson advances two distinct equal protection arguments alleging two different classification schemes. First, Nelson alleges the Equal Protection Clause is violated by the City of Irvine’s systematic deprivation of all Irvine DUI arrestees’ statutory rights to choose which form of alcohol test they will take. Nelson argues that because DUI ar-restees stopped by law enforcement agencies elsewhere in the state “(presumably) were treated in compliance with the law,” DUI arrestees in Irvine were being arbitrarily singled out and deprived of their rights.
This first theory must fail because none of the defendants through their policies created a classification scheme among those arrested within their jurisdictions. The alleged disparities in treatment across the state resulted from differences between the policies of the City of Irvine and other city, county and state law enforcement agencies.
Alternatively, Nelson argues that City of Irvine police officers required most, but not all, DUI suspects to submit to a blood test and their .selection process was arbitrary. According to Nelson', City o'f'Irvine police officers intentionally and arbitrarily discriminated against some DUI ar-restees.
Nelson’s second equal protection claim is tautological. Nelson alleges that the City of Irvine arbitrarily discriminated against a сlass of persons, whose defining characteris-, tic is their having, been arbitrarily required to take a blood test, by, arbitrarily requiring them to take a blood test. By such reasoning, an equal protection claim would arise whenever a law was enforced with something less than perfect regularity.
C. Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Claim
Nelson claims that the California implied consent law creates a liberty interest that is entitled to the procedural due process protections of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that the City of Irvine’s policy not to give DUI hrrestees the statutorily required choice of tests deprived class representatives of their right to due process.
Despite the plaintiffs’ failure to raise this claim below, Nelson asks this court to consider it. We must еxercise our discretion to decide whether to consider an issue raised for the first time on appeal. Singleton y. Wulff,
No jurisdictional question is involved here. Nor has Nelson set forth reasons why public policy requires us to consider this argument which was not presеnted to the district court. Injustice might result from an appellate court’s failure to consider an argument that would affect an appellant’s determination of guilt or length of incarceration. Nelson does not contend, however, that if each class member were given his choice of tests he would not have been found to be intoxicated. Nelson therefore points to no injustice that might result from our failure to consider the due process argument raised for the first time on appeal. Accordingly, we decline to consider Nelson’s Fourteenth Amendment due process claim.
III. State Law Claims
A. California Civil Code § 52.1
Nelson alleged that City of Irvine police officers, by threats and coercion, interfered with the arrestees’ rights secured by the U.S. Cоnstitution and the California implied consent statute, in violation of California Civil Code § 52.1. That section provides in relevant part:
(a) Whenever a person or persons, whether or not acting under color of law, interT feres by threats, intimidation, or coercion, or attempts to interfere by threats, intimidation, or coercion, with the exercise of enjoyment by any individual or individuals of rights secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or of the rights secured by the Constitution or laws of this state, the Attorney General ... may bring a civil action for injunctive or other appropriate equitable relief....
(b) Any individual, whose exercise or enjoyment of rights secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or of rights secured by the Constitution or laws of this stаte, has been interfered with, or attempted to be interfered with, as described in subdivision (a), may institute and prosecute ... a civil action for damages—
Cal. Civ.Code § 52.1 (West 1997).
The district court dismissed Nelson’s claim under California Civil Code § 52.1 because Plaintiffs “fail[ed] to allege Defendants interfered with their legal rights due to Plaintiffs’ ‘race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, age, disability, or position in a labor dispute.’” Order at 5 (quoting Boccato v. City of Hermosa Beach,
The court of appeal that decided Boccato acknowledged that thе text of § 52.1 does not' contain the limitation it imposed, but reasoned that because the statute was enacted to stem the tide of hate crimes, it must be read in conjunction with Cal. Civ.Code § 51.7, a separate provision which establishes the right of all persons to be free of “violence, or intimidation by threat of violence, committed against their persons or property because of their [membership in a protected classification].” Id.
Believing Boccato to be erroneous, Nelson asks this court to interpret the statute literally, without the restriction to protected classifications imposed by Boccato. Because this is a state law issue which has been squarely decided by a state appeals court, we are restricted in our рower to do as Nelson urges.
When interpreting state law, federal courts are bound by decisions of the state’s highest court. In the absence of such a decision, a federal court must predict how the highest state court would decide the issue using intermediate appellate court decisions, decisions from other jurisdictions, statutes, treatises, and restatements as guidance. However, where there is no convincing evidence that the state supreme court would decide differently, a federal*1207 court is obligated to follow the decisions of the state’s intermediate appellate courts.
In re Bartoni-Corsi Produce, Inc., 130 F.3d 857, 861 (9th Cir.1997).
The California Supreme Court denied review of Boccato, and has discussed § 52.1 in two subsequent decisions, Jones v. Kmart Corp.,
B. Assault and Battery
The district court dismissed Nelson’s battery claim because “the touching was consensual” as a matter of law under the California implied consent law which provides that any “person who drives a motor vehicle is deemed to have given his or her consent to chemical testing of his or her blood, breath, or urine.” Cal. Veh.Code § 23157(a)(1). Consent is a complete defense to a battery claim. Ashcraft v. King,
Sections of statutes should be construed consistently with other statutory sections whenever possible. See United States v. Bear,
Conclusion
When an arrestee has agreed to submit to a breath or urine test which is available and of similar evidentiary value, the government’s need for a blood test disappears. Under such circumstances, it is unreasonable to require a blood test and the Fourth Amendment is violated. Further, when a DUI suspect agrees to take an available alternative test of equal evidentia-ry value, the risk that evidence will be lost disappears and the exigent circumstance that excused the policе from obtaining a warrant likewise disappears, rendering a warrantless nonconsensual blood test in such circumstances unconstitutional.
Taking the plaintiffs’ allegations as true, as we must when reviewing a dismissal under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c), it was unreasonable to require Mauricio Fernandez to submit to a blood test after he agreed to take “whatever breath test he had to” and to require Jeffrey Capler to submit to a blood test after he requested a breath test. Therefore, concluding that Mauricio Fernandez and Jeffrey Capler failed to allege facts sufficient to make out a constitutional violation and a claim under 42 U.S.C § 1983 was erroneous. -
The Supreme Court, however, has “long held that the ‘touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness,’ ” Robinette, 519 U.S. at-,
-Further, plaintiffs, as a matter of law, stated a valid claim for common law assault and battery. California’s implied
AFFIRMED in рart, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. See, e.g., Centers for Disease Control, U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Services, Guidelines for Prevention of Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Hepatitis B Virus to Health-Care and Public-Safety Workers, 17-18 (1989) ("Blood from all individuals should be considered infective," and the "[u]se of needles and syringes should be limited to situations in which there is no alternative”); Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Dep't of Health & Human Services, Update: Provisional Public Health Service Recommendations for Che-moprophylaxis After Occupational Exposure to HIV, 276 JAMA 90 (1996) (“preventing blood exposures is the primary means of preventing occupationally acquired human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection”); Ronald L. Nichols, Percutаneous Injuries During Operation: Who is at Risk For What?, 267 JAMA 2938 (1992) ("[N]eedle-stick and other sharp injuries ... account for greater than 80% of occupationally acquired cases of HIV infection in [health care workers]”).
. Judge Kozinski resolved the other two factors as follows: 1) "[Wjhether the suspect resists is certainly relevant in determining how much force the police may use” but "because the police had no need for the blood, they weren’t entitled to use any force to obtain it.” Id. 2) "The remaining factor-whether the individual is a threat to the officers-has no bearing at all here.... I just can't imagine a case where the police need to administer a blood test in self-defense.” Id.
. The class representatives who have not allеged they requested or consented to a breath or urine test include David Nelson, David Tyler, Vicki Caruso, Kristi Giordano, Jeffrey Chancellor, Richard Heil.
. Alcohol typically dissipates from the human body at a rate between .015% and .018% per hour, and the scientific community agrees that rate will not exceed .022% per hour, observable in severe alcoholics. E. John Wherry, Jr., Vampire or Dinosaur: A Time to Revisit Schmerber v. California?, 19 Am. J. Trial Advoc. 503, 516 (1996). Using a process known as "retrograde extrapolation,” the blood alcohol level of a suspect who was only barely above the California legal limit of .08% when stopped by police can be determined from a test performed 3 1/2 hours later. Id. at 517.
. We do not know of any exception to the warrant requirement other than exigency that could excuse the officers’ failure to obtain warrants, and the City of Irvine has not alleged that another exception applies.
