Opinion
Petitioner challenges the constitutionality of Vehicle Code section 23159, 1 a statute enacted in 1985, which requires a period of *364 confinement in county jail if a person convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol/drugs is also found to have willfully refused to take a test to determine the alcohol content of breath, blood or urine. 2
Petitioner was charged with one count of driving under the influence of alcohol. The complaint also alleged a prior driving under the influence conviction and a refusal to take a test within the meaning of section 23159. Petitioner challenged the section 23159 allegation by a demurrer in the municipal court and then by petition to the superior court. Denied relief, petitioner filed a petition for writ of mandate in this court. The petition was initially denied but, upon direction of the Supreme Court, we issued an alternative writ.
Since 1966, California has had an “implied consent” law requiring suspension of an individual’s driver’s license when the individual, after having been lawfully arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol, refuses to submit to any of the statutorily prescribed tests. (§§ 13353, 23157.) In 1985, the Legislature enacted the La Follette-Katz Chemical Test Enhancement Act, providing the increased penalty of section 23159. (Stats. 1985, ch. 735, § 6.) Section 1 of the act provides in part: “The Legislature finds that the state’s drunk driving laws are not completely effective because of the refusal by many drivers to take the required chemical tests which show their intoxication. It is therefore the intent of the Legislature to enhance the penalties for refusal to complete the chemical test. It is further the intent of the Legislature to reorganize the Vehicle Code so that all current provisions related to the duty of a driver to submit to chemical tests are consolidated in the article prescribing offenses involving alcohol and drugs.” 3
“Past cases have upheld the constitutionality of section 13353 [the “implied consent” law] against claims that the statute (1) violates the driver’s privilege against self-incrimination, (2) authorizes an unreasonable search or seizure, (3) denies equal protection to variously defined classes, and (4) fails to satisfy procedural due process requirements.”
(Hernandez
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles
(1981)
I.
The Privilege Against Self-incrimination
In
Schmerber
v.
California
(1966)
In
Sudduth,
the court considered whether using the refusal as evidence in a prosecution for driving under the influence violated the privilege. The court stated that its reasoning in
People
v.
Ellis
(1966)
While not rejecting the reasoning of the California Supreme Court, the United States Supreme Court in
South Dakota
v.
Neville
(1983)
The reasoning of South Dakota v. Neville is persuasive in considering the issue before us. California has made the choice more difficult but we do not believe it has reached a level of improper coercion which would violate the values behind the privilege against self-incrimination. The arrestee still has his choice—a “safe, painless and commonplace” test or license suspension plus the use of the fact of refusal against him, now including a sentence enhancement should he be convicted of driving under the influence.
Petitioner distinguishes the cases holding that the refusal may be used as evidence in a prosecution for driving under the influence from his case where he is being directly penalized for refusing. He also distinguishes cases which uphold a license suspension as a penalty for refusal (see, e.g.,
Finley
v.
Orr, supra,
*367 II.
The Search and Seizure Claim
Petitioner contends that under the United States and California constitutional protections against unreasonable searches and seizures, he cannot be punished for a refusal to grant permission to a search and seizure. He bases this contention on the case of
People
v.
Wetzel
(1974)
The essential difference between this case and Wetzel is the existence of a statute which conditions the right to refuse on a penalty. Petitioner’s attack must, therefore, be on the authority of the state to impose a condition on the right to refuse.
III.
The Equal Protection and Due Process Claim
Petitioner argues that application of section 23159 violates the guarantee to equal protection because inebriated drivers who refuse to submit to a chemical test may be punished more severely than inebriated drivers who consent to a test. He contends that since section 23159 directly affects liberty, it must satisfy the constitutional standard of strict scrutiny or it will be invalid.
(People
v.
Olivas
(1976)
As the People point out, however, the prerequisite to a valid equal protection claim is a showing that the state has adopted a classification that affects two or more similarly situated groups unequally.
(In re Eric J.
(1979)
In
Hernandez,
the Supreme Court considered a substantive due process challenge to the penalty of license suspension for a refusal to take a chemical test for intoxication. The court held that driving was not a fundamental interest and rejected the application of “strict judicial scrutiny.” Rather, the court applied a ‘‘rational basis” test and upheld the penalty. The United States Supreme Court also eschewed a strict scrutiny review of the penalty of suspension of driving privileges for refusal and held that suspension was a legitimate penalty, assuming procedural protections.
(Mackey
v.
Montrym
(1979)
We have not been referred to, nor has our research revealed, a statute in any other state which imposes a criminal penalty upon the refusal to consent to a chemical test for intoxication. We note first that California has not made the act of refusal a crime. The crime for which sanctions is imposed is the crime of driving under the influence. The penalty for that crime is enhanced if the defendant refused a test by requiring a period of confinement even though probation may have been granted.
The enhancement of the penalty for driving under the influence where a test has been refused does not violate constitutional principles of substantive due process. The purpose of the implied consent statute is to fulfill the need for a fair, efficient and accurate system of detection and prevention of driving under the influence.
(Kesler
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles
(1969)
*369
“[W]hen fundamental liberties are at stake, the test in a free society is whether there are ‘less drastic means’ available to accomplish the government’s purpose.”
(People
v.
Glaze
(1980)
The alternative writ, having served its purpose, is discharged; the petition for a peremptory writ is denied.
Anderson, P. J., and Poché, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s application for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 24, 1987.
Notes
All further statutory references will be to the Vehicle Code unless otherwise designated.
Section 23159 provides the following penalty enhancements: (1) mandatory confinement in the county jail for at least 48 hours if the person is convicted of a first violation of driving under the influence of alcohol (subd. (a)(1)); (2) mandatory confinement in the county jail for 96 hours if the person is convicted of a second violation (subd. (a)(3)); (3) mandatory confinement in the county jail for 10 days if the person is convicted of a third violation (subd. (a)(4)); and (4) mandatory confinement in the county jail for 18 days if the person is convicted of a fourth or subsequent violation (subd. (a)(5)).
The statutory scheme now provides that a person arrested for driving under the influence shall be told that his or her failure to submit to the required chemical test will result in mandatory imprisonment if the person is convicted of driving under the influence as well as suspension of the person’s driving privilege for the requisite period. (§ 23157.)
