Thе defendant was involved in a motor vehicle collision on April 24, 1965 on the public highway from Keene to Marlboro, “ both vehicles in the east bound lane. ” The agreed facts are as follows:
“ The Defendant was alone in his car with his feet on the driver’s side and his head on the passenger side of the car. The accident occurred at about 7:00 P. M., and the police arrived to investigate shortly thereaftеr. Officer Rosin gave oxygen to the driver and was unable to talk with him because he had intermittent periods of unconsciousness. The officer observed the strong odor of alcohol on his breath. Officers Rоsin and Metcalf helped the Defendant out of the motor vehicle, at which time he was taken to the hospital by ambulance. Officer Metcalf took pictures of the scene at that time. Upon arrival at the hospital, Dr. Ballou, the attending physician, gave the Defendant emergency treatment for lacerated face, shock, fractures of ankle, etc. In order to treat the pаtient, and in the event he should need blood, Dr. Ballou had Mr. Lawrence Derby, the laboratory technician employed by the Elliot Community Hospital, take blood samples. The initial blood samples taken were used to type and cross-match the Defendant’s blood with other blood in the event he needed a transfusion. At the request of Dr. Ballou, Mr. Derby took a second sample of blood 15 minutes later and a third sаmple of blood about 9:30 p.m. At that time, the second sample of blood was placed in an ordinary test tube and had clotted, and the third sample of blood was placed in the sealed container normally used by the police for alcoholic testing. The second and third samples of blood taken eventually found their way to the police station, there being no evidence of how they wеre transported from the hospital to the police station, and from the police station they were delivered to Miss Guptill at the State Laboratory by Chief Bridgham on April 28, 1965. The State Laboratory testing indicated a .18 alcoholic content in the second sample of blood taken and a .16 alcoholic content in the third sample of blood taken.
The objections and motions, all of which were denied subject to the defendant’s exceptions, were as follows:
“1. The Defendant objected to any testimony by Dr. Ballou on the basis that he was serving in a dual capacity, as attending physician and for the police department in taking the second and third samples of blood.
“2. That the testimony of Dr. Ballou was improper because of a physician-patient privilege.
“3. Thаt the testimony of Dr. Ballou and Mr. Derby be stricken because there was no showing by the State of consent by the Defendant to the taking of his blood.
“ 4. That the testimony of Officer Rosin be stricken with respect to conversation to the Defendant the following day because the Defendant had not been warned prior to the conversation of his legal right to remain silent, and that he might have legal counsel.
“5. That therе was no expert testimony that the Defendant was under the influence of intoxicating liquor.
“ 6. That there was no evidence that the Defendant was the operator of the automobile. ”
The principаl issues presented relate to the defendant’s motion to strike the testimony of the attending physician and the hospital technician, upon the ground there was no showing that the defendant consented to the taking of his blood, and to the motion to strike the testimony of the police officer concerning his conversation with the defendant on April 25, 1965, on the ground that the defendant was not first warned of his constitutional right to remain silent, or advised of his right to legal counsel.
Although the agreed statement does not indicate the specific testimony of the physician and the technician to which objection was mаde, it may be assumed that it served at the least to identify the samples of defendant’s blood which were analyzed and found to have an alcoholic content sufficient under the statute to constitute рrima facie evidence that he was under the influence of intoxicating liquor. RSA 262-A:63.
The gist of the defendant’s objection is that the taking of his
The decision of Schmerber v. California,
In thе case before us however, the agreed facts fail to show that the defendant was under arrest when the blood was taken, or that his arrest was in any sense contemporaneous therewith. See Cannon v. State,
Without a warrant, a lawful arrest could have been made only if there was reason to believe that the misdemeanor was committed in the presence of the arresting officer (RSA 594:10), which was not this case. Where an arrest may lаwfully be made, a search without a warrant made prior to the arrest is not necessarily unreasonable or unlawful if substantially contemporaneous with the arrest (Cipres v. United States,
In the instant case consent was not shown, and so far as appears the search was not proximate to the arrest either in time or place. Preston v. United States,
The testimony concerning statements made to the police officer at the hospital on the day after the accident was properly received. The defendant was not undеr arrest when the statements were made, and the case is not governed by Miranda v. Arizona,
The defendant’s argument that testimony by the physician and by the technician was inadmissible because of a privilege not to disclose communications between patient and physician (State v. Sullivan,
The defendant’s objection that there was “ no evidence ” that the defendant was operating the vehicle in which he was found is without merit. Circumstantial evidence may be utilized as proof of a crime, and eyewitnesses to the offense charged are not essential. State v. Amero, 106 N. H. 134, 136.
Exceptions sustained in part and overruled in part; remanded.
