Following a single car accident, John D. Peake (Peake) was arrested at the hospital for driving under the influence. He refused to consent to a blood alcohol test and, as a result, the South Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles (the Department) suspended his driver’s license. The suspension was affirmed at an administrative hearing and on appeal to the circuit court. We reverse.
FACTUALIPROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On February 5, 2005, Trooper J.T. Manley of the South Carolina Highway Patrol responded to a one car accident on 1-26 in Charleston County. He found Peake, the sole occupant of the wrecked car, buckled into the driver’s seat. As Trooper Manley spoke with Peake, he observed a strong smell of alcohol on Peake’s breath and noted his slurred speech. EMS arrived shortly after Trooper Manley and transported Peake to Trident Regional Medical Center. At the hospital, Trooper Manley placed Peake under arrest for driving under the influence. Peake was read the
Miranda
rights and the Advisement of Implied Consent Rights. Trooper Manley then requested Peake provide a blood sample believing Peake’s
After receiving the Notice of Suspension, the Department suspended Peake’s license for ninety days. Peake requested an administrative hearing pursuant to South Carolina Code section 56-5-2951(B)(2) (2006). At the April 26, 2005, hearing, Trooper Manley appeared and testified on behalf of the Department. He said he requested the blood sample because Peake was “not able to give a breath sample due to his condition.” The record contains no explanation of Peake’s condition. Peake did not appear though he was represented by counsel. Peake’s counsel did not cross-examine Trooper Manley but asserted the mandatory suspension should be rescinded because the Department did not show medical personnel deemed Peake unable to give a breath sample in accordance with South Carolina Code section 56-5-2950(a). The hearing officer’s order sustained the suspension reasoning “[Peake] verbally refused to give a blood or urine sample, as he was unable to give a breath sample.”
Peake next appealed to the Court of Common Pleas in Charleston County where he complained Trooper Manley’s testimony did not justify the request for a blood sample. Peake contended section 56-5-2950(a) requires law enforcement to seek the opinion of a medical professional that a person is incapable of providing a breath test. The Department argued Peake was improperly shifting the burden of proof, the Department’s actions were presumably correct pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act, and the record’s substantial evidence supported the hearing officer’s findings.
In its written order, the circuit court interpreted section 56-5-2950(a) to “require the opinion of a medical professional if the subject is unable to give a breath sample for some reason outside those enumerated by the statute (e.g. injured mouth, unconscious, dead).” However, the judge then affirmed the suspension concluding “under these facts, the officer was not required to seek the opinion of a medical professional as to Petitioner’s ability to give a breath sample.”
The South Carolina Administrative Procedures Act, S.C.Code Ann. section 1-23-310,
et seq.,
(2005), establishes the “substantial evidence” rule as the standard for judicial review of a decision of an administrative agency.
Lark v. Bi-Lo, Inc.,
The court may not substitute its judgment for the judgment of the agency as to the weight of the evidence on questions of fact. The court may affirm the decision of the agency or remand the case for further proceedings. The court may reverse or modify the decision if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced because the administrative findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions are:
(a) in violation of constitutional or statutory provisions;
(b) in excess of the statutory authority of the agency;
(c) made upon unlawful procedure;
(d) affected by other error of law;
(e) clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on the whole record; or
(f) arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion.
The findings of an administrative agency are presumed correct and will be set aside only if unsupported by substantial evidence.
Kearse v. State Health & Human Servs. Fin. Comm’n,
LAW/ANALYSIS
The issue in this case is whether the circuit court erred in finding Trooper Manley properly requested a blood test despite the absence of any opinion by licensed medical personnel that Peake was unable to provide a breath sample as required by the implied consent statute. We find no substantial evidence establishing Trooper Manley’s compliance with the procedure mandated in section 56-5-2950(a).
I. The Implied Consent Statute
Being licensed to operate a motor vehicle on the public highways of this state is not a property right, but is merely a privilege subject to reasonable regulations under the police power in the interest of the public safety and welfare.
State v. Collins,
Section 56-5-2950(a) states in pertinent part:
A person who drives a motor vehicle in this State is considered to have given consent to chemical tests of his breath, blood, or urine for the purpose of determining the presence of alcohol or drugs or the combination of alcohol and drugs if arrested for an offense arising out of acts alleged to have been committed while the person was driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or a combination of alcohol and drugs. A breath test must be administered at the direction of a law enforcement officer who has arrested a person for driving a motor vehicle in this State while under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or a combination of alcohol and drugs. At the direction of the arresting officer, the person first must be offered a breath test to determine the person’s alcohol concentration. If the person is physically unable to provide an acceptable breath sample because he has an injured mouth, is unconscious or dead, or for any other reason considered acceptable by the licensed medical personnel, the arresting officer may request a blood sample to be taken.
No test may be administered or samples obtained unless the person has been informed in writing that:
(1) he does not have to take the test or give the samples, but that his privilege to drive must be suspended or denied for at least ninety days if he refuses to submit to the tests and that his refusal may be used against him in court;
(2) his privilege to drive must be suspended for at least thirty days if he takes the tests or gives the samples and has an alcohol concentration of fifteen one-hundredths of one percent or more;
(3) he has the right to have a qualified person of his own choosing conduct additional independent tests at his expense;
(4) he has the right to request an administrative hearing within thirty days of the issuance of the notice of suspension; and
(5) if he does not request an administrative hearing or if his suspension is upheld at the administrative hearing, he must enroll in an Alcohol and Drug Safety Action Program.
(emphasis added).
Under section 56-5-2951(A), the Department of Motor Vehicles must suspend the license of anyone who drives a motor vehicle and refuses to submit to a test provided for in section 56-5-2950 or who takes the test and registers an alcohol concentration of at least fifteen percent. A person issued a notice of suspension may request an administrative hearing within thirty days. S.C.Code Ann. § 56-5-2951(B)(2) (2006).
Section 56-5-2951(F) mandates “the scope of the administrative hearing must be limited to whether the person: (1) was lawfully arrested or detained; (2) was advised in writing of the rights enumerated in Section 56-5-2950; [or] (3) refused to submit to a test pursuant to Section 56-5-2950.... ” “The gravamen of the administrative hearing is a determination of the efficacy and applicability of the implied consent law. The query is: did the person violate the implied consent law.”
South Carolina Dep’t of Motor Vehicles v. Nelson,
II. Rules of Statutory Construction
The primary rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of legislature.
Joiner v. Rivas,
When a statute’s language is plain and unambiguous, and conveys a clear and definite meaning, the rules of statutory interpretation are not needed, and this court has no right to impose another meaning.
Catawba Indian Tribe of South Carolina v. State,
The legislature’s intent should be derived primarily from the plain language of the statute.
Jones v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
If the language of an act creates doubt or uncertainty as to legislative intent, the construing court may search for that intent beyond the borders of the act itself.
State v. Morgan,
III. Compliance with Section 56-5-2950(a)
The plain language of section 56-5-2950(a) permits an arresting officer to request a blood sample but unambiguously limits this to situations where a person is physically unable to provide a breath sample due to an injured mouth, unconsciousness or death, or for any other reason considered acceptable by the licensed medical personnel. In the case at bar, the Department has not asserted Peake had an injured mouth or was unconscious. Therefore, the Department was required under the implied consent statute to show Peake was physically unable to give an acceptable breath sample for a reason found acceptable by licensed medical personnel.
In
State v. Stacy,
Reading the statute as a whole, this court held “the statute requires a licensed physician, licensed registered nurse, or other medical personnel trained to take blood samples ... to determine whether an acceptable reason exists for finding that a person is unable to provide an acceptable breath sample.”
Id.
at 107,
This court considered compliance with section 56-5-2950(a) and suppression of blood test results in
City of Columbia v. Moore,
The City alleged the arresting officer’s belief Moore would remain at the hospital a long time, coupled with the circumstances of his transport, provided a sufficient basis to conclude Moore was physically unable to give a breath sample. This court answered “[hjowever reasonable these conclusions may
To allow the arresting officer to make the determination that a person is physically unable to give an acceptable breath sample, absent an injured mouth, unconsciousness, or death, is a relaxation of the plain requirement of the statute, and would allow the substitution of the officer’s judgment for that of licensed medical personnel.
Id.
at 295,
[A driver’s implied] consent is only to chemical tests under the procedure plainly set forth in the statute. The penalty for refusal to submit to testing is the administrative loss of license for ninety (90) days.....In view of this statute, it would be pure legal fiction to infer Moore’s ‘consent’ at the hospital was a voluntary relinquishment of his right to require compliance with the statute as written.
Id.
Although this court acknowledged the inability to leave a medical facility could provide a legally sufficient basis to conclude a person was physically incapable of providing a breath sample, we required “the evidence must establish the reason a blood test was ordered in lieu of a breath sample is for a reason found acceptable by licensed medical personnel.” Id. (emphasis added).
In
State v. Kimbrell,
Unlike a breath test, the blood test is physically invasive. By enacting the implied consent statute, the legislature clearly intended to protect against this invasion where it is used simply as a convenience to the arresting officer, absent the agreement of the accused. There can be no valid agreement where the accused is not advised of his or her right to a breath test instead of a blood test.
Id.,
In
State v. Long,
[The first] two paragraphs essentially alter the procedural prerequisites which must be met under § 56-5-2950 before an officer may order a blood test for a Felony DUI suspect. Under § 56-5-2946, the officer need no longer offer a breath test as the first option, nor must he obtain a medicalopinion that such a test is not feasible before ordering a test or sample.
Id.
at 363,
In the case sub judice, Peake was not suspected of felony DUI and the parties concede no breath test was first offered. Apodictically, under section 56-5-2950(a), Trooper Manley could only have requested a blood sample if Peake was physically unable to provide a breath sample due to an injured mouth, unconsciousness, death, or for any other reason considered acceptable by the licensed medical personnel. The record contains no substantial evidence supporting any of these exceptions. Indeed, the uncontested facts show the administrative hearing officer and the circuit court relied only on an unsubstantiated reason considered acceptable by Trooper Manley.
The Department asserts “a reasonable mind could conclude ... that [Peake] was ‘unable to give a breath sample.’ ” In Moore, we established this conclusion, “however reasonable,” was legally insufficient because section 56-5-2950(a) plainly establishes the determination of the licensed medical personnel is the standard.
The Department additionally contends that because a person cannot be transported from a medical facility to the locale of a DataMaster until released by licensed medical personnel, the statutory requirement of a medical opinion is necessarily satisfied “every single time a motorist is taken to a medical facility for treatment and is not soon thereafter discharged.” The Department limits application of this notion to administrative hearings. We are unaware of any statutory or jurisprudential basis for this proposition. Although this court in Moore held the inability to leave a medical facility could form a legally sufficient basis for ordering a blood test, we expounded the record must show this determination is based on the opinion of licensed medical personnel.
Section 56-5-2950(a) clearly articulates the statutory structure for chemical testing to which drivers impliedly consent. The record is absolutely devoid of any evidence showing
CONCLUSION
Although the administrative hearing officer correctly concluded Peake was lawfully arrested, advised of his section 56-5-2950 rights, and refused to submit to a test, no substantial evidence shows the Department honored these rights in accordance with statutory provisions. Therefore, the findings of the administrative hearing officer and the circuit court judge are
REVERSED.
