OPINION
William Bernard was arrested for suspected drunk driving and refused to take a breath test requested by police under the state’s implied consent law. The state charged Bernard with the crime of test refusal. The district court dismissed the charge, reasoning that the Constitution prohibits the state from criminalizing refusal to submit to a search that could not be compelled without a warrant. We reverse because the state may prosecute a suspected drunk driver for test refusal under the implied consent law when the requesting officer had other lawful means to obtain a nonconsensual test.
FACTS
South St. Paul police received a call that three drunk men had just got their pickup truck stuck attempting to remove a boat from the Mississippi River at a public boat ramp. Police arrived and witnesses pointed out a stumbling, underwear-clad man as the truck’s driver. That man was William Bernard. The officers noticed one axle of Bernard’s truck hanging over the edge of the ramp’s pavement, indicating it had just been driven, but neither Bernard nor his two companions — all smelling strongly of alcoholic beverages — would admit to being the driver.
Because two witnesses had identified Bernard as the driver and the caller had reported that the driver, like Bernard, was wearing only underwear, the officers focused on him. Complementing the smell of alcoholic beverages on Bernard’s breath, his eyes were bloodshot and watery. Bernard admitted that he had been drinking but denied driving the truck. He was holding the keys to the truck. He refused to take field sobriety tests, and the officers took him into custody. An officer drove him to the South St. Paul police station, read him the Implied Consent Advisory, and gave him the opportunity to contact an attorney. Bernard did not call an attorney. When the officer asked him to submit to a breath test, he refused. The state charged Bernard with two counts of DWI-
Bernard moved the district court to dismiss the charges. He argued that Minnesota’s test-refusal statute is unconstitutional under the doctrine of unconstitutional conditions and, alternatively, that the Supreme Court’s decision in Missouri v. McNeely, — U.S. -,
The state appealed, and we heard oral arguments. We then stayed the appeal pending the supreme court’s decision in State v. Brooks,
ISSUE
Did the district court err by concluding that the state cannot criminalize Bernard’s refusal to submit to a warrantless breath test because there was no constitutionally permissible basis to conduct a warrantless search?
ANALYSIS
When the state appeals a pretrial order dismissing criminal charges, it must show clearly and unequivocally “that the district court erred and that the error, unless reversed, will have a critical impact on the outcome of the prosecution.” State v. Gradishar,
The state argues that the district court erroneously dismissed the charges. The challenge raises a question of law, so we may review the undisputed facts independently and decide whether the district court erred by dismissing the charges. State v. Harris,
Bernard’s two counts of felony test refusal consist of “refus[ing] to submit to a chemical test of the person’s blood, breath, or urine.” Minn.Stat. § 169A.20, subd. 2 (2012). The statute criminalizes refusal to submit to testing authorized under the implied consent law, which provides that anyone who drives a vehicle and is suspected of being under the influence of alcohol or other drugs has impliedly consented to a blood, breath, or urine test for alcohol. Minn.Stat. § 169A.51, subd. 1(a) (2012). We have interpreted section 169A.20, subdivision 2 as criminalizing refusals to submit to searches that are constitutionally reasonable. See State v. Wiseman,
Our state supreme court held in State v. Shriner that a warrantless blood draw was constitutionally reasonable because the natural dissipation of alcohol in the blood constituted a per se exigent circumstance.
Bernard takes the position that the Supreme Court relandscaped in McNeely by holding that the dissipation of alcohol in the bloodstream did not constitute a per se exigent circumstance permitting police to draw blood for testing against the will of a suspected drunk driver. See
The state supreme court recently considered McNeely’s impact on our implied consent law in State v. Brooks,
We focus on Wiseman, which we do not read as narrowly as Bernard implicitly asks us to. As we explained in Wiseman, under the implied consent statute “the legislature has criminalized a suspect’s refusal to comply with a police officer’s lawful search.”
Bernard would have us hold that because exigent circumstances did not exist when the officer asked him to submit to a chemical test (so that the Fourth Amendment would have precluded the officer from forcing a hypothetical warrantless test against Bernard’s will), prosecuting him for refusing to consent to the test violates his due process rights. But we think the broader proposition that we summarized in Wiseman also applies here. We explained there that “[t]he imposition of criminal penalties for refusing to submit to a constitutionally reasonable police search, namely, a chemical test of ... breath ... supported by probable cause, is a reasonable means to facilitate a permissible state objective.” Id. We do not here consider the constitutionality of a hypothetical warrantless search in the absence of consent as we did in Wiseman when we rejected Wiseman’s constitutional argument. Assuming under these facts that, after McNeely, the officer would not have been justified to conduct a warrantless search (a proposition the state disputes), we can consider whether the officer’s request was appropriate on other grounds. We hold that it was.
Because the officer indisputably had probable cause to believe that Bernard was driving while impaired (he was identified by witnesses as the driver, he was holding the truck keys, and his wardrobe, instability, and odor indicated that he was intoxicated), the officer also indisputably had the option to obtain a test of Bernard’s blood by search warrant. See U.S. Const, amend. IV. (requiring probable cause for search warrants); Minn.Stat. § 626.11(a) (2012) (“If the judge is satisfied ... that there is probable cause ... the judge must issue a signed search warrant.... ”); Minn.Stat. § 169A.20, subd. 1 (“It is a crime for any person to drive ... any motor vehicle ... when ... the person is under the influence of alcohol.”); Illinois v. Gates,
Although it does not drive our analysis, we add that this holding affords a significant practical advantage over the holding that Bernard urges. Prohibiting the state from charging a driver for test refusal on the notion that the state’s authority depends on whether, in each particular case, exigent circumstances would have justified the requesting officer to conduct a war-rantless search at the time she made the request adds prosecutorial and judicial complications without providing any constitutionally significant benefit to defendants. The new constitutional rule would put the myriad test-refusal factual scenarios on a spectrum depending on various circumstances surrounding the test request, especially after McNeely. On one end, exigent circumstances would have clearly justified a hypothetical warrantless search at the time of the refused test request, so the refusal to test could certainly be prosecuted. On the other end, exigent circumstances would clearly not have justified a warrantless search, so the refusal could certainly not be prosecuted. And in the vast majority of cases in the middle, one could reasonably argue either way as to whether the temporal and logistical and practical circumstances supported a hypothetical warrantless search, so another round of collateral litigation would become necessary. We would probably call it a Bernard hearing. Anticipating the hearing, arresting officers would have the incentive to delay asking for the chemical test until near the end of the two-hour statutory testing period, see Minn.Stat. § 169A.20, subd. 1(5), making a finding of exigency more likely. Some offenders could be prosecuted and others not, based on details that differ in constitutionally insignificant ways. (For example, an officer has a mechanical problem on the way to jail with her intoxicated arrestee while another officer does not; the delayed officer can make an argument that exigent circumstances existed at the time of the test refusal while the other cannot.)
The state offers two alternative theories to contend that the officer could have conducted a warrantless chemical test here.
We similarly do not reach the state’s argument that the district court applied the wrong test when it relied on the factors announced in Dorman v. United States,
DECISION
The state is not constitutionally precluded from criminalizing a suspected drunk driver’s refusal to submit to a chemical test under circumstances in which the requesting officer had grounds to have obtained a constitutionally reasonable non-consensual chemical test by securing and executing a warrant requiring the driver to submit to testing.
Reversed and remanded.
