STATE of Alaska, Petitioner, v. Laura A. BLANK, Respondent.
No. S-9721.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
April 30, 2004.
88 P.3d 1120
The superior court entered an order on June 12, 1992 ordering Neil to pay Debra $500 per month as her share of the military retirement benefits earned by Neil during marriage. In State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division ex rel. Inman v. Dean,40 we held that efforts to collect past due alimony payments ordered by decree, like actions to collect past due child support, involve periodic support obligations that are “judgments that vest when an installment becomes due but remains unpaid.”41 This reasoning is equally applicable to past-due installment payments of marital property. Accordingly, each monthly payment owed to Debra pursuant to the 1992 court order was a judgment that vested when it became due and payable. Postjudgment interest accrues on these sums at the statutory rate as prescribed by
IV. CONCLUSION
Because the superior court‘s decision conflicts with the USFSPA, we hold that the court abused its discretion in denying Neil‘s motions for relief under Civil Rule 60(b)(6) and for reconsideration of its amended order. Because different interest rates will apply to judgments vesting at different times, the court must recalculate prejudgment interest. Accordingly, we REVERSE and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Christine S. Schleuss, Anchorage, for Respondent.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, MATTHEWS, EASTAUGH, BRYNER, and CARPENETI, Justices.
OPINION
EASTAUGH, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
A state trooper conducted a warrantless search of a driver‘s breath following a fatal accident. Was this potentially a valid exigent circumstances search even though the driver was not arrested substantially contemporaneously with the search? We first hold that an arrest is not a prerequisite to a valid exigent circumstances warrantless breath test. Next, we construe
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A vehicle driven by Laura Blank fatally struck Pennye McDowell as she walked with a companion on a residential street near Palmer on September 26, 1994.1 Blank and her two daughters were driving home from her friend‘s house. Blank did not stop.2
Blank‘s husband, Greg Blank, arrived at the accident scene while Alaska state troopers were investigating.3 Greg Blank told Trooper Bill Tyler that his wife might have been involved in the accident.4 Trooper Tyler and two other officers followed Greg back to the Blank residence.5 There, Trooper Tyler interviewed Laura Blank in his patrol car.6 Trooper Tyler did not place Blank under arrest.7
Blank told Trooper Tyler during the interview that she had consumed two beers at her friend‘s house before driving home.8 Without attempting to obtain a search warrant, Trooper Tyler asked Blank to take a prelimi
The grand jury indicted Blank in December 1994 for manslaughter12 and leaving the scene of an accident.13 The superior court denied Blank‘s motion to suppress evidence of the preliminary breath test. The superior court held that the test was authorized by
Blank appealed, and the court of appeals reversed.15 It concluded that
The State of Alaska filed a petition for hearing with this court, and Blank filed a cross-petition. We denied Blank‘s cross-petition, but granted the state‘s petition as to three issues: (1) does
III. DISCUSSION
We hold that Trooper Tyler‘s warrantless search of Blank‘s breath was constitutional if it was a valid exigent circumstances search.19
Having overruled Layland, we consider in Part III.B whether
Finally, in Part III.C, we remand so the superior court can determine whether exigent circumstances justified the warrantless search of Blank‘s breath.
A. Schmerber v. California Does Not Require a Contemporaneous Arrest.
In Layland, a state trooper obtained a blood sample without obtaining a search warrant or the driver‘s consent following an accident in which another person was killed.22 Although the trooper had probable cause to arrest the driver for negligent homicide at the time of the search, he did not.23 We considered and rejected four exceptions to the warrant requirement that might have justified the warrantless search.24 Regarding the exigent circumstances exception, we interpreted the United States Supreme Court‘s decision in Schmerber v. California to permit warrantless blood draws only in connection with a substantially contemporaneous arrest.25
The Court held in Schmerber that the warrantless taking of blood from a driver arrested for driving while intoxicated was reasonable because (1) the officer had probable cause to arrest and to believe that a blood alcohol test would produce evidence of the crime; (2) the officer might reasonably have believed he was confronted with an emergency in which the delay necessary to obtain a warrant might result in the destruction of evidence; and (3) the blood draw was performed in a reasonable manner.26 The Schmerber Court concluded that “the attempt to secure evidence of blood-alcohol content in this case was an appropriate incident to petitioner‘s arrest.”27 In Layland, we interpreted Schmerber to require a substantially contemporaneous arrest in addition to the three requirements Schmerber explicitly discussed.
The court of appeals held that Trooper Tyler‘s search of Blank‘s breath could not be
It is not necessary for us to recapitulate the court of appeals‘s helpful presentation of these authorities. Layland attempted to predict the direction of federal law following Schmerber, but we are convinced that subsequent cases have proved our prediction to have been inaccurate. It is sufficient to quote United States v. Chapel, in which the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit sitting en banc reversed its own earlier precedent interpreting Schmerber to impose an arrest requirement:
We now know from the Supreme Court‘s reasoning in a case decided after Harvey that the seizure of blood in Schmerber “fell within the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement.” Winston v. Lee, 470 U.S. 753, 759 (1985). Seizures of evidence based on exigent circumstances do not, of course have to be accompanied by an arrest. . . . Accordingly, an arrest is not essential to support the intrusion in the absence of a warrant, so long as the three explicit Schmerber requirements are met. Thus, the interpretation of Schmerber that formed the basis of our decision in Harvey, though plausible at the time, is no longer sustainable in light of Winston. Harvey‘s arrest requirement therefore cannot stand.30
We agree with Chapel‘s reasoning, and overrule Layland to the extent it required an arrest to justify an exigent circumstances search of a driver‘s blood alcohol content. Trooper Tyler‘s search of Blank‘s breath is therefore constitutional if the three explicit Schmerber requirements are satisfied: probable cause, exigent circumstances, and reasonable procedures.
B. We Read AS 28.35.031(g) , as It Applies to Laura Blank, To Incorporate the Exigent Circumstances Standard for Warrantless Searches.
The superior court upheld the search of Laura Blank‘s breath under
The state argues that we should read Schmerber‘s probable cause requirements into the statute to avoid any constitutional infirmity. Because we have overruled Layland, it no longer constrains a court considering whether subsection .031(g) can be given a narrowing construction that avoids constitutional problems.
Whether to apply a narrowing construction to avoid holding a statute unconstitutional is a question of law to which we bring our independent judgment. For sever
This court will narrowly construe statutes in order to avoid constitutional infirmity where that can be done without doing violence to the legislature‘s intent.33
The text of
In context of the facts presented in this case, we choose to construe subsection .031(g) to incorporate, in addition to the statutory requirements, the exigent circumstances requirements discussed in Schmerber. Thus, if exigent circumstances were present in this case, the warrantless search was valid.36
C. We Remand to the Superior Court To Determine Whether Exigent Circumstances Justified the Search.
Two of the three requirements for an exigent circumstances search—probable cause and reasonable procedures—are clearly met here. Before interviewing Blank, Trooper Tyler investigated the accident scene and learned that McDowell was dead, that Blank may have caused the accident, and that Blank had left the scene.37 Accordingly, Trooper Tyler had probable cause38 to believe that Blank had committed two crimes: felony hit and run39 and either negli
Trooper Tyler also had probable cause to believe that a search of Blank‘s breath would produce relevant evidence of these crimes. Blank told him that she consumed two beers at a friend‘s house shortly before the accident, and Trooper Tyler testified that “the smell of alcohol became quite apparent” once he and Blank were sitting in the patrol car. Trooper Tyler also had substantial indirect evidence of Blank‘s possible impairment based on the circumstances of the accident. He learned that the pedestrians were walking on the edge and shoulder of a straight section of road at the time of the accident, that Blank saw the pedestrians in time to avoid them but inexplicably failed to do so, and that Blank‘s car and the driving conditions were not the cause of the accident. Furthermore, Blank told Trooper Tyler that she did not stop at the scene because she did not even realize that she had hit someone. She initially thought one of the pedestrians had thrown a rock at the car, and chose to keep driving rather than confront them because they were “just kids.”
Thus, Trooper Tyler had evidence that Blank was responsible for an accident resulting in a fatality, that the accident was likely caused by Blank‘s inattention, poor judgment, misperception, poor coordination, or some combination of these, and that Blank smelled of alcohol and admitted to drinking shortly before the accident. We conclude that this evidence was more than sufficient under Schmerber to support probable cause to search Blank‘s breath.41
Another requirement of Schmerber—that a reasonable method of collecting the blood sample be used—is not at issue here. The procedure used in this case was minimally intrusive, involving a breath sample rather than a blood draw. Blank has not challenged Trooper Tyler‘s qualifications to obtain her breath sample and has alleged no impropriety in the manner in which he conducted her test.42
Regarding Schmerber‘s exigent circumstances requirement, we decline to decide this issue for the first time on appeal. Schmerber held that the exigencies posed by serious accidents in combination with the rapid dissipation of alcohol in the bloodstream justified the officer‘s failure to obtain a warrant in that case:
The officer in the present case . . . might reasonably have believed that he was confronted with an emergency, in which the delay necessary to obtain a warrant, under the circumstances, threatened “the destruction of evidence.” We are told that the percentage of alcohol in the blood begins to diminish shortly after drinking stops, as the body functions to eliminate it from the system. Particularly in a case such as this, where time had to be taken to bring the accused to a hospital and to investigate the scene of the accident, there
was no time to seek out a magistrate and secure a warrant.43
Many courts have implicitly or explicitly held that the dissipation of alcohol always creates sufficient exigency to dispense with the warrant requirement,44 although at least one court has held that the state must prove exigency on a case-by-case basis.45
But we decline to address this aspect of the exigent circumstances question presented in this case. Because the lower courts were obliged to follow Layland‘s arrest requirement, and because there was no dispute that Blank was not arrested contemporaneously with the search of her breath, no lower court has yet reached the issue whether exigent circumstances actually justified Trooper Tyler‘s search. Accordingly, we remand to the superior court the issue whether exigent circumstances justified Trooper Tyler‘s search of Blank‘s breath.
IV. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we REVERSE the court of appeals‘s decision requiring suppression of the breath test results and REMAND so that the superior court can determine whether exigent circumstances justified the warrantless search.
MATTHEWS, Justice, with whom CARPENETI, Justice, joins, dissenting in part.
I disagree with one aspect of today‘s opinion. Instead of remanding so that the superior court may decide in the first instance whether exigent circumstances are inherently present where there is a breathalyzer test under
The decision is not a difficult one. Because the body dissipates alcohol over the course of a few hours, most jurisdictions have held that an exigency exists that dispenses with the need for a warrant whenever alcohol is relevant evidence.1 Of course probable
First, the physiological basis for the rule—the relatively rapid elimination of alcohol from the body—is beyond dispute. The rule is easy for the police officer in the field to understand and follow. It eliminates difficult and often undeterminable questions and litigation of those questions—as to whether a warrant application might have been prepared and presented to a judge in time for a warrant to have issued and a test conducted before alcohol levels were diminished beyond the limits of reliable testing.
Second, we adopted a categorical approach to body alcohol evidence under an exigent circumstances exception in Anchorage v. Geber.2 There we rejected an argument that the defendant had a right to have counsel present during field sobriety tests that were conducted at the police station after the defendant had already been arrested.3 She argued that the right to counsel at such tests was analogous to the right to have counsel present at a pre-indictment line-up. We had recognized in Blue v. State4 that the latter right was subject to an exigent circumstances exception—“unless exigent circumstances exist so that providing counsel would unduly interfere with a prompt and purposeful investigation.”5 In Geber we rejected the defendant‘s right to counsel argument categorically, without examining whether under the particular facts of the case the presence of counsel at the police station could have quickly been secured. We stated:
Field sobriety tests are used to determine whether a suspect has used alcohol and, if so, the degree to which his mental and physical skills have been impaired. It is common knowledge that one‘s ability to perform such tests is influenced by the percentage of alcohol in his or her blood, and that that percentage diminishes with the passage of time. Such being the case, if the tests are to provide any real indica
tor of the degree of impairment, if any, existing at the time of the alleged offense, they must be performed as soon thereafter as possible. This fact alone distinguishes such cases from the usual lineup situation . . ., where the passage of a few hours would have little or no effect.6
Geber‘s categorical, rather than case-by-case, treatment of diminishing alcohol-related evidence in the context of the exigent circumstances exception to the right to counsel indicates that a similar approach should be taken in the context of the same exception to the warrant requirement.7
Finally, an especially persuasive reason to conclude that no case-by-case examination of exigent circumstances is required for breath searches under subsection .031(g) lies in the fact that the underlying rationale for such searches is the same as the rationale for garden variety drunk driving breath searches under subsection .031(a). As to the latter it is clear that no case-by-case examination of exigent circumstances is required.8 Because this categorical treatment of the exigency requirement is valid with respect to subsection .031(a), such treatment should likewise be valid when applied to subsection .031(g).
Subsections .031(a) and .031(g) both give statutory authorization for breath tests.9 The first applies to typical drunk driving
Today‘s opinion makes clear that it is probable cause, not the fact of the arrest, that justifies a search for body alcohol content. As construed today, the requirements of subsections .031(a) and .031(g) are parallel.11 When the police officer on the scene can make the probable cause determinations required by Schmerber under subsection (a) as to crimes (a) applies to, he can administer a breath test. There is no reason to require more when the officer makes the same determinations in a case arising under subsection (g) as to crimes to which that subsection applies.
Today‘s opinion holds that the police officer who tested Blank had probable cause to believe that she had just been involved in a motor vehicle accident causing death, that she had committed a crime, and that a breath test for alcohol would produce relevant evidence. I agree with these conclusions and believe that since they parallel the constitutionally required elements for a search under subsection .031(a) we should conclude, as in cases arising under .031(a), that exigent circumstances sufficient to justify the breath test that was given were present. As the Fourth Circuit stated in United States v. Reid:
Society has a recognized interest in protecting its citizens from drunk drivers. Breathalyzer tests cause a lesser intrusion than blood tests. Time is of the essence when testing for alcohol in the bloodstream. The combination of these factors sets out exigent circumstances which are sufficient to require that the police be allowed to test drunk drivers without first having to obtain a warrant.12
For these reasons, I conclude that the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement has been satisfied and would therefore remand this case with instructions to reinstate Blank‘s conviction.
Notes
A person who operates or drives a motor vehicle in this state . . . shall be considered to have given consent to a chemical test or tests of the person‘s breath for the purpose of determining the alcohol content of the person‘s blood or breath if lawfully arrested for an offense arising out of acts alleged to have been committed while the person was operating or driving a motor vehicle . . . while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage. . . . The test or tests shall be administered at the direction of a law enforcement officer who has probable cause to believe that the person was operating or driving a motor vehicle . . . in this state while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage.
A person who operates or drives a motor vehicle in this state shall be considered to have given consent to a chemical test or tests of the person‘s breath and blood and shall be considered to have given consent to a chemical test or tests of the person‘s blood and urine for the purpose of determining the presence of controlled substances in the person‘s blood and urine if the person is involved in a motor vehicle accident that causes death or serious physical injury to another person. The test or tests may be administered at the direction of a law enforcement officer who has probable cause to believe that the person was operating or driving a motor vehicle in this state that was involved in an accident causing death or serious physical injury to another person.
A person who operates or drives a motor vehicle in this state shall be considered to have given consent to a chemical test or tests of the person‘s breath and blood for the purpose of determining the alcoholic content of the person‘s breath and blood and shall be considered to have given consent to a chemical test or tests of the person‘s blood and urine for the purpose of determining the presence of controlled substances in the person‘s blood and urine if the person is involved in a motor vehicle accident that causes death or serious physical injury to another person. The test or tests may be administered at the direction of a law enforcement officer who has probable cause to believe that the person was operating or driving a motor vehicle in this state that was involved in an accident causing death or serious physical injury to another person.
