On April 27, 1965, defendant was indicted for the crime of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, he being a second offender. Section 321.281 of the 1962 Code. Pursuant to the provisions of chapter 444, Acts of the Sixty-first General Assembly, relative to the procedure to be followed in imposing enhanced punishment as a result of prior convictions, this indictment was dismissed and an information was filed to conform with the new provision. Trial was had on October 25, 1965, and the jury returned a guilty verdict. On November 17, 1965, judgment was entered against him and he was *735 ordered to pay a fine of $300 and the costs of prosecution. It was also recommended that no new driver’s license be issued to him for a period of sixty days thereafter. When motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled, he. appealed.
In his brief he poses two questions: (1) Does the taking'of a blood sample from an unconscious person violate the due process clause of Amendment 14 to the Federal Constitution or any provisions of the Constitution of the State of Iowa? (2) Does 1 he consideration of the results of a blood test taken from an unconscious person not under arrest violate Amendment 14 to the Constitution of the United States, or any provisions of the Constitution of the State of Iowa, where no express consent is given by the defendant? Under the circumstances revealed by this record, our answer must be in the negative.
At approximately 6:30 p.m. on February 6, 1965, as the defendant, alone, was driving an automobile in a northerly direction on Highway 149 about eight miles south of Sigourney, Iowa, he was involved in a collision with another automobile traveling in the opposite direction. All occupants of the automobiles were injured, and defendant was in a semiconscious condition when he was observed at the scene and when he was taken by ambulance to a Sigourney hospital. He was unconscious when a physician was called to treat him at the hospital. One of the observers who said defendant smelled strongly of liquor was the sheriff, who had been called to the accident scene. This caused him to suspect defendant was intoxicated. Later, on his arrival at the hospital the sheriff requested the attending doctor to take a blood sample from defendant. Although the doctor refused because he had already given the defendant preliminary emergency treatment, he did sign a certification to the effect that defendant was not in a conscious condition so as to give a consent to the taking. While defendant had not been arrested, at the direction of the officer a blood sample was taken by a registered nurse then on duty at the hospital. It was placed in a container, delivered to the officer, who then transmitted it by registered mail to an Iowa City laboratory for examination and testing. From the laboratory report it appeared the specimen contained 220 mg. of alcohol per 100 cc. *736 of whole blood, which the examining doctor said indicated intoxication. Defendant’s arrest, trial and conviction followed.
Appellant contends the trial court erred by admitting evidence of a blood test taken while defendant was unconscious be&ause (1) it violated defendant’s constitutional right of due process as provided by Amendment 14 and Amendment 4 to the Constitution of the United States, and Article I, section 8, of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution of Iowa, (2) the taking of his blood under the circumstances constituted an invasion of privacy and a.n unreasonable search and seizure, for there was no actual consent of defendant either as to the taking of his blood or as to the admission of the results of the test in the trial, and (3) there was no necessary arrest of defendant either before or at the time of the taking.
Aside from existing federal authority, it would appear this court is writing on a clean slate as to whether under the circumstances revealed and the statutory law of Iowa it is permissible to introduce in a criminal proceeding evidence relating to a blood specimen taken without warrant from an unconscious person not under arrest. We shall first consider the applicable statutory law of this state.
I. The Sixtieth General Assembly in 1963 enacted what is commonly referred to as the “Iowa Implied Consent Law” (ch. 114, sec. 51, 60th G.A.), now found in chapter 321B, Code of Iowa, 1966. Section 321B.3 (ch. 114, sec. 39, 60th G.A.) provides that any person who operates a motor vehicle upon a public highway, under such circumstances as to give reasonable grounds to believe the person is in an intoxicated condition “shall be deemed to have given consent to the withdrawal from his body of * * * blood * * * and to a chemical test * * # for the purpose of determining the alcoholic content of his blood, subject to the provisions hereinafter set out.” This section further states the test can be administered only upon the written request of a peace officer having reasonable grounds to believe such person was driving while intoxicated, “and only after the peace officer has placed such person under arrest for the offense of operating a motor vehicle while in an intoxicated condition.” It further provides such person may reject these tests, *737 and under section 321B.7 Ms driver’s license shall be revoked. A test must be made within two hours after arrest and, upon request, the results of the test shall be made available to the accused.
However, section 321B.5, Code, 1966 (ch. 114, see. 41, 60th G.A.), the provisions of which were in effect on the 6th of February, 1965, provides: “Any person who is dead, unconscious or who is otherwise in a condition rendering him incapable of consent or refusal shall be deemed not to have withdrawn the consent provided by section 321B.3, and the test may be given; provided that a licensed physician shall certify in advance of such test that such person is dead, unconscious or otherwise in a condition rendering him incapable of consent or refusal. In such case such condition shall obviate the requirements of arrest and advice pursuant to section 321B.6.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Section 321B.10 provides for the use of this evidence in court proceedmgs, criminal and civil.
The Iowa Implied Consent Law properly and clearly provides a workable rule governing “searches and seizures”, which rule takes into account the “practical demands of effective criminal investigation and law enforcement.” Ker v. California,
There was ample evidence of compliance and the jury so found. Officers investigating the accident had reasonable cause to suspect defendant was intoxicated, obtained a certificate of *738 Ms unconsciousness, ordered blood withdrawn in a medically-approved manner, and had it analyzed in a proper laboratory.
Appellant directs our attention to the case of State v. Weltha,
II. Neither the Federal nor State Constitution requires a finding that any search of the body of an unconscious person not under arrest, and the seizing therefrom of body fluid for alcoholic determination, is an unreasonable invasion of one’s privacy. Amendment 4 to the Federal Constitution and Article I, section 8, of the Iowa Constitution, do not require an arbitrary rejection of all such takings. Circumstances are to be considered, and the test often announced is whether the process of the taking “shocked the conscience.” It is the cruel, “brutal” and “offensive” taking which is repulsive to due process. Rochin v. California,
The overriding function of the Fourth Amendment is to protect personal privacy and dignity against unwarranted intrusion by the State. Schmerber v. California,
This test was given in a hospital by a trained nurse according to the accepted medical practice. There is no claim of resultant infection or pain, and we conclude no constitutional prohibition against the State’s minor intrusion into defendant’s body under the stringent and limited conditions shown here was violated.
III. Although as a general rule a residence may not be searched without a search warrant unless the search is incident to a lawful arrest (section 751.3, Code, 1962), there are recognized situations in which this rule does not apply to limit or circumscribe reasonable and necessary action by officers of the law. Chapman v. United States,
Tbe situation is different where the delay will cause the destruction of the evidence, and where as here there is a showing the officer believes delay will result in a loss of the vital evidence necessary either to convict or absolve the defendant of the offense reasonably suspected, there is an “emergency” or “exceptional circumstance” sufficient to justify the search either with or without consent of the suspect. In such a situation, of course, prior arrest is not required if the party is unconscious, under specific provisions of the Iowa law now found in chapter 321B, Code, 1966.
True, under our law, if the suspect is not unconscious or not in a condition rendering him incapable of consent or refusal, there must be a prior arrest and an opportunity given him to withdraw his prior implied consent to the test. Section 321B.3, Code, 1966. But this is not the case at bar, where the evidence shows the officers reasonably believed defendant drove while intoxicated, where he was unconscious when the officer ordered the nurse to take the specimen of blood from defendant in an approved medieal manner, and where no arrest had been made until some time after. The public interest requires a holding that the disappearing evidence due to bodily assimilation created an emergency requiring prompt action. Under those conditions we find no unreasonable search and seizure and no substantial violation of defendant’s constitutional right of due process.
Breithaupt v. Abram, supra, was also a case in which police officers caused blood to be withdrawn from the driver of an automobile involved in an accident, and the Supreme Court therein found ample justification for the officer’s conclusion that the driver was under the influence of liquor. There, as here, the extraction was made by a trained person in a simple, medically-acceptable manner in a hospital. There also the driver was unconscious at the time blood was withdrawn and hence had no opportunity to object to the procedure. The United States Supreme Court, in affirming the conviction, held that under the circumstances the withdrawal did not offend that “sense of justice” of which it spoke in the previous case of Rochin v. California, supra,
In the recent California case of People v. Huber,
In Volume 79 of the Harvard Law Review, No. 3, of
*742
January 1966, at pages 677, 678, there appears a comment under the heading of “Constitutional Law — Due Process of Law— Analysis of Blood Extracted without Warrant from Unconscious Suspect is Admissible in Criminal Trial”, citing People v. Huber,
While the author wrote before the Sehmerber case, he believed there were less objections to the blood withdrawal from an unconscious person than a conscious objecting one. That distinction now seems resolved, and under proper conditions both are permissible.
IY. If the officer ordering the intrusion, as here, reasonably believed he was confronted with an emergency, a situation in which the delay necessary to obtain a warrant threatened “the destruction of evidence” (Preston v. United States,
*743 It is almost common knowledge, and here there is expert testimony, that the percentage of alcohol in the blood begins to diminish shortly after the drinking stops, that a test taken two hours thereafter will not reflect the true state of intoxication when the vehicle was operated. There was testimony here that the accident occurred about 6:30 p.m. and the test was administered about 8:40 p.m. after the sheriff returned from the scene- of the accident. It seems clear any further delay which would have been required to obtain a warrant would have made this test useless. An emergency thus appears to justify the taking. Preservation of the record is necessary and proper.
Y. Appellant seems to claim a distinction between the consent to take and the consent to use the results of the test, but we find no merit to this contention. See sections 321B.3 and 321B.10, Code, 1966, on taking and use of tests. He cites two cases in support of his contention. State v. Ball,
Our attention has not been directed to any other jurisdictions having a similar “Implied Consent Law” where a different result has been reached, and we have found none. Wb.en the procedural requirements of the legislature have been followed, this law has been upheld and applied to permit evidence of the taking and testing before the court. Typical of the court’s expression is that found in People v. Duroncelay,
VI. ¥e conclude here the showing was sufficient that an “emergency” or “exceptional circumstance” existed, the scientific reliability was established by proper authority, the taking of the sample of blood from defendant was done in a medically-approved manner, and the procedure did not constitute brutality or shock the conscience or deprive defendant of due process of law as set out in Rochin v. California, supra,
