Patrick J. Heles brought this suit for a declaratory judgment that South Dakota
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law respecting revocation of drivers’ licenses violated the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments by prohibiting him from calling a lawyer for advice before being compelled, on pain of losing his license for one year, to submit to a blood-alcohol test. The District Court,
This is not a class action, nor was there a prayer for damages. The controversy is wholly personal to plaintiff and cannot survive him. Both parties urge us to decide the case nevertheless, on the ground that the issue of law is important and will doubtless recur. We sit, however, only to decide live cases and controversies, not to answer legal questions, no matter how interesting and important they may be as a general matter. The “capable of repetition, but evading review” exception to the rule of mootness is unavailing here, because this question, though it will recur in someone’s case, will not again arise with respect to Heles. See
Murphy
v.
Hunt,
- U.S. -,
It is so ordered.
