James C. Hardesty appeals from the district court’s appellate decision reversing the magistrate’s order granting Hardesty’s motion to present expert testimony. We affirm.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
Hardesty was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI), I.C. § 18-8004(l)(a), after his breath test indicated .15 percent and .14 percent breath alcohol concentration. The state alleged that Hardesty was di'iving while having an alcohol coneen *708 tration of .08 percent or more as shown by analysis of his breath.
Hardesty filed a motion to allow expert testimony at trial. Hardesty sought to have a toxicologist testify regarding the unreliability of breath testing based on the variability of the partition ratio utilized in converting a person’s breath alcohol concentration to a blood alcohol concentration. The state objected to this testimony on the basis that it was speculative and irrelevant under Idaho’s current DUI statute.
At a hearing on Hardesty’s motion, counsel for Hardesty did not submit an offer of proof but indicated that the expert’s opinion — that the standard partition ratio is inaccurate because individual partition ratios vary — would be used to impeach Hardesty’s breath test result. The magistrate granted Hardesty’s motion, holding that I.C. § 18-8004 allowed breath test results to be admissible but it did not insulate either the partition ratio or the testing instrument from attack. The magistrate further held that, assuming a proper foundation, Hardesty’s expert could testify as an expert pursuant to I.R.E. 702. The magistrate did not directly address, and appears to have рresumed, that the expert’s testimony was relevant to the issue of whether Hardesty was driving under the influence of alcohol as defined by I.C. § 18-8004.
The state sought permission from the district court to appeal the magistrate’s interlocutory order, which was granted. On the intermediate appeal, the district court reversed the magistrate’s order. The district court determined that the toxicologist’s testimony regarding the variability of the partition ratio was speculative and irrelevant. Hardesty appeals.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
On review of a decision of the district court, rendered in its appellate capacity, we examine the record of the trial court independently of, but with due regard for, the district court’s intermediate appellate decision.
State v. Bowman,
III.
ANALYSIS
We begin by emphasizing that Hardesty made only a very vague offer of proof to the magistrate as to exactly what Hardesty’s expert would be asked to testify to. Hardesty indicated that the expert would testify that the standаrd partition ratio used to convert breath alcohol concentration to blood alcohol concentration is not accurate for some individuals. On appeal, Hardesty also argues that a toxicologist should be allowed to testify in general terms about the inaccuracy оf breath testing. However, apart from his challenge to the accuracy of the partition ratio, Hardesty made no offer of proof of sufficient specificity below to enable this Court to address the admissibility of the evidence to which he now alludes. Therefore, we will address only the admissibility of еvidence regarding the variability of the partition ratio among individuals.
Prior to the adoption of so-called
per se
breath-alcohol statutes, Idaho’s DUI statute and statutes of several other states made it illegal for a person to operate a motor vehicle only while having a
blood
alcohol concentration of a certain рercent of alcohol, by weight, in the person’s blood.
See
1985 Idaho Sess. Laws, ch. 142 § 1, p. 386;
Fuenning v. Superior Court,
In these states, a person’s
blood
alcohol concentration could generally be measured by blood, breath or urine. If measured by breath, it was necessary to convert the breath alcohol concentration to a blood alcohol concentration by utilizing а partition ratio
*709
in order to determine whether the person had violated the particular DUI statute.
See Fuenning,
In response to these challenges, several states, including Idaho, amended them DUI statutes to eliminate the need for conversion of a breath alcohоl concentration to a blood alcohol concentration by statutorily defining driving under the influence in terms of the concentration of alcohol found in a person’s breath when breath analysis is used. Idaho’s statute, I.C. § 18-8004(l)(a), was amended in 1987 and now reads:
It is unlawful for any person who is under the influence of alcоhol, drugs or any other intoxicating substances, or who has an alcohol concentration of 0.08, as defined in subsection (4) of this section, or more, as shown by analysis of his blood, urine, or breath, to drive or be in actual physical control of a motor vehicle within this state .'..
Thus, the legislature eliminated the language requiring an analysis of alcohol, by weight, in a person’s blood. Driving under the influence is no longer statutorily defined solely in terms of blood alcohol concentration. Driving under the influence is now defined in terms of an alcohol concentration above the statutory limit of .08 percent as found in either a person’s blood, breath, or urine. Idaho Code Section 18-8004(4) provides:
For purposes of this chapter, an evidentiary test for alcohol concentration shall be based upon a formula of grams of alcohol per one hundred (100) cubic centimeters of blood, per two hundred ten (210) liters оf breath or sixty-seven (67) milliliters of urine.
Under the language of Idaho’s amended DUI statute, therefore, a breath alcohol concentration above the proscribed limit of .08 percent is a
per se
violation of the statute regardless of blood alcohol content. Where the language of a statutе is plain and unambiguous, this Court must give effect to the statute as written, without engaging in statutory construction.
State v. Beard,
Hardesty attempts to avoid this result by citing two Idaho cases, which he claims entitle him to challenge the partition ratio used by breath testing instruments. First, Hardesty cites
State v. Hopkins,
Here, Hardesty’s reliance on Hopkins for the pi'oposition that expert testimony regarding the variability of the partition ratio is admissible is misplaced. Under Hopkins, Hardesty would be entitled to challenge the scientific methodology underlying the design of the Intoxilyzer 5000 so far as it measured Hardesty’s breath alcohol concentration. Therefore, as the district court concluded, Hardesty could challenge whether the Intoxilyzer 5000 accurately measured his breath alcohol concentration at the time Hardesty’s breath test was administered. In addition, Hardesty could challenge whether the particular instrument used to measure his breath alcohol concentration was working properly at the time of his breath test and whether his breath test was administered correctly. However, Hopkins does not stand for the broad propositiоn that Hardesty was entitled to challenge the accuracy of the standard partition ratio.
Second, Hardesty cites
State v. Pressnall,
On appeal, this Court held that a defendant charged with DUI by proof of excessive alcohol content was entitled to offer any competent evidence tending to impeach the results of the evidentiary tests admitted. Thus, this Court held that in a prosecution for DUI while having an alcohol content of .10 percent or more as shown by analysis of blood, breath or urine, еvidence of a contradictox-y alcohol content, otherwise proper, was admissible for the purpose of impeaching the results of the evidentiary tests submitted by the state. The px'obative value of such evidence was left to the jury. This Court further held that once a breath test x-esult had beеn admitted into evidence, the reliability and pei'foi’mance of the given machine was subject to challenge and that the reliability of the process utilized may also be challenged.
Here, Hardesty’s application of Pressnall is overbroad. As the district court noted in its intex'mediate appellate decision, the defendant in Pressnall sought to impeach the accuracy of his specific breath test result with evidence that his own blood alcohol content *711 was different thаn his breath alcohol content. The district court’s ruling in this case also provides for such a challenge. Here, however, Hardesty also sought to introduce expert testimony regarding the inaccuracy of the standard partition ratio as it relates to some individuals. Like this Court’s holding in Hopkins, the holding in Pressnall did not entitle Hardesty to mаintain such a challenge through expert testimony. 2
Hardesty’s argument is, in effect, a challenge to the legislature’s formula for determining the proscribed alcohol concentration in a person’s breath. Hardesty claims that this formula is a variation of the standard 2100:1 partition ratio used by breath testing deviсes and that he should not be prevented from introducing expert testimony regarding the variability of the standard partition ratio based on the statutory definition of driving under the influence. This is a challenge to what the legislature has determined to be an element of the crime of DUI. It is uniformly held that the power to define crime and fix punishment rests with the legislature and that the legislature has great latitude in the exercise of that power.
Mallorry v. State,
IV.
CONCLUSION
Under I.C. § 18-8004, Hardesty’s proffered evidence of the variability of the standard 2100:1 partition ratio is irrelevant because a breath alcohol concentration above the prescribed limit of .08 percent is a per se violation of the statute regardless of blood alcohol content. Therefore, we hold that the magistrate erred by granting Hardesty’s motion to introduce evidence regarding the variability of the standard partition ratio because such evidence was irrelevant and inadmissible. The district court’s intermediate appellate decision reversing the magistrate’s order is affirmed.
Notes
. Experts generally agree that the standard 2100:1 partition ratio varies from individual to individual and that an individual’s partition ratio can even vary depending on the circumstances present at the time the breath test is administered.
See People v. Ireland,
. We note that, although a person’s blood alcohol content is irrelevant to whether there has been a violation of the prohibition against driving with a breath alcohol concentration above .08 found in I.C. § 18-8004, our holding does not preclude a person charged with DUI from introducing a contradictory blood or urine alcohol concentration test result taken at the time as impeachment towards the accuracy of his or her individual breath test result. Thus, our holding in this case should not be read to be inconsistent with the holding in Pressnall in that regard.
. Hardesty also relies on out-of-state cases to support his claim that evidence challenging the partition ratio’s accuracy was admissible. However, the courts in the cases relied upon by Hardesty were interpreting statutes that defined DUI solely in terms of blood alcohol concentration. Those courts did not consider the effect a
per se
breath alcohol statute might have on the admissibility of evidence regarding the variability of the standard partition ratio.
See generally Fuenning,
