*170 OPINION
The district court suppressed blood-alcohol evidence in the vehicular homicide prosecution of Joseph Heaney on the ground that the evidence is privileged under Minnesota’s physician-patient privilege, set forth in Minn.Stat. § 595.02, subd. 1(d) (2002). The state appealed, claiming that an exception to Wisconsin’s medical privilege statute, allowing for the admission of this type of evidence, should apply because treatment and blood testing occurred in Wisconsin. The court of appeals affirmed the suppression of the blood-alcohol evidence. We reverse.
During the early morning hours of November 18, 2001, a Minnesota peace officer responded to a one-vehicle rollover accident in Houston County, Minnesota. The officer determined shortly after arriving at the scene of the accident that one of the vehicle’s four occupants had died. Respondent, Joseph Heaney, admitted to the officer that he had been driving the vehicle involved in the accident and that he and his friends had been consuming alcohol earlier that evening. The officer administered a portable breath test to Heaney, resulting in a reading of .101. Heaney was transported by ambulance to the Gunder-son Lutheran Medical Center in LaCrosse, Wisconsin, the closest available hospital for treatment of his injuries.
Shortly thereafter, a different Minnesota officer arrived at the medical center and read Heaney Minnesota’s implied consent advisory, including the portion indicating that the officer had probable cause to believe Heaney had violated Minnesota’s *171 criminal vehicular homicide law. The officer then requested a blood sample for testing. Heaney initially consented to give a blood sample, but later withdrew his consent. The officer indicated his belief that he had a right to take a blood sample despite Heaney’s refusal. Heaney eventually acquiesced to a urine test, which was administered nearly three hours after the time of the accident. Analysis of the urine showed that Heaney’s alcohol concentration at the time of the test was .08.
The Minnesota officer later learned that before he arrived at the medical center and within two hours of the accident the medical center had obtained a blood sample from Heaney. Following Wisconsin statutory procedures, the officer then completed a request for production of certain items, along with a supporting affidavit, seeking a copy of Heaney’s medical records and the blood sample. A deputy LaCrosse County Attorney filed this request at the LaCrosse County District Court. The court then issued a subpoena for documents as well as an order requiring the medical center to release the requested documents and the blood sample. The Minnesota officer served the subpoena on the medical center, after which Hea-ney’s medical records and the blood sample were given to the officer. The report showed that Heaney’s blood alcohol concentration was .144 within two hours of the accident. This result was independently confirmed at the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension lab in St. Paul, Minnesota.
On May 1, 2002, a complaint was filed in Houston County District Court charging Heaney with four counts of criminal vehicular operation resulting in death under Minn.Stat. § 609.21, subd. 1 (2002), as well as four counts of criminal vehicular operation resulting in substantial bodily harm under Minn.Stat. § 609.21, subd. 2 (2002). Both crimes require proof that the defendant drove while having an alcohol concentration of .10 or more, measured within two hours of the time of driving. At an omnibus hearing, Heaney sought to suppress the blood-alcohol evidence on the grounds that the evidence was obtained in violation of Minnesota’s physician-patient privilege statute, Minn.Stat. § 595.02, subd. 1(d). The court granted his motion to suppress the hospital and laboratory blood-alcohol evidence because the evidence was obtained in violation of Minnesota’s physician-patient privilege. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that under either lex fori or a “better rule of law” analysis, the district court correctly applied Minnesota’s physician-patient privilege statute.
State v. Heaney,
The state sought review on the issue of whether Heaney’s blood-alcohol evidence is admissible in Minnesota where the evidence was properly obtained under Wisconsin law but Minnesota’s physician-patient privilege statute would preclude its admission at trial. We reverse the decision of the court of appeals and remand for trial.
I.
When reviewing a pretrial order suppressing evidence where the facts are not in dispute, we may conduct an independent review and determine, as a matter of law, whether the district court erred in suppressing the evidence.
State v. Harris,
*172
The state argues that
State v. Lucas,
Both the district court and court of appeals found the exclusionary rule analysis of Lucas to be inapplicable to the facts of the present case. The district court rejected the Lucas analysis, stating that in Lucas the criminal activity occurred in Wisconsin, whereas in the present case the criminal activity occurred in Minnesota. We do not find this distinction persuasive. In Lucas, as in the present case, the evidence was seized in Wisconsin and the location of the criminal activity did not control the evidentiary question. The court of appeals took a different approach, distinguishing Lucas on the basis that Lucas involved the violation of a constitutional right of the defendant, whereas in the present case only a statutory right is implicated. We do not find such a distinction between Lucas and the instant case. The Lucas court did not conclude that any constitutional rights were implicated, only the meaning of a Wisconsin statute concerning surveillance techniques. Id. at 737.
Nevertheless, we agree with the lower courts that the exclusionary rule analysis in Lucas need not be applied in this case. Where the police have engaged in illegal conduct in obtaining evidence or where, as in Lucas, police conduct was lawful but a statute concerning privacy interests renders the evidence inadmissible, an exclusionary rule analysis is appropriate. But where, as here, there is neither conduct by police that is illegal under the statutes or constitution of either the forum or search jurisdictions, nor any statute or constitutional principle in the search jurisdiction that would make the evidence inadmissible, an exclusionary rule analysis does little to determine which state’s law should be applied. 1 An exclusionary rule analysis alone does not take into account important policy considerations such as those discussed in Part II of this opinion. A traditional conflict of laws analysis, therefore, is appropriate to determine the admissibility of evidence obtained in another state in a criminal case.
II.
We now proceed to the conflict of *173 laws question. 2 In the present case, the Minnesota and Wisconsin physician-patient privilege rules directly conflict. Minnesota’s physician-patient privilege has its genesis in Minn.Stat. § 595.02, subd. 1(d) (2002):
A licensed physician * * * shall not, without the consent of the patient, be allowed to disclose any information or any opinion based thereon which the professional acquired in attending the patient in a professional capacity, and which was necessary to enable the professional to act in that capacity.
A blood sample taken for treatment purposes is information acquired by the physician that is necessary to enable him to act in a professional capacity and is included in the privilege.
See State v. Stoat,
Wisconsin’s privilege statute, on the other hand, excepts the type of evidence at issue in the present case from privileged status. Wis. Stat. § 905.04, subd. 2 (2001-02) sets out Wisconsin’s general rule of privilege: “A patient has a privilege to refuse to disclose and to prevent any other person from disclosing confidential communications made or information obtained or disseminated for purposes of diagnosis or treatment of the patient’s physical, mental, or emotional condition * * *.” However, the statute goes on to state “[t]here is no privilege in trials for homicide when the disclosure relates directly to the facts or immediate circumstances of the homicide.” Id., subd. 4(d) (2001-02). Further, “[t]here is no privilege concerning the results of or circumstances surrounding any chemical tests for intoxication or alcohol concentration.” Id., subd. 4(f). Either exception would apply to bring the medical center’s disputed blood-alcohol evidence into court.
To resolve this conflict of laws, the court of appeals applied the doctrine of lex fori (the law of the forum). The court concluded that since physician-patient privilege statutes are evidentiary rules, and evidentiary rules are matters of procedure, they are governed by the laws of the forum state.
State v. Heaney,
Privileges are not like other rules of evidence and hold a unique place in the law. A question of privilege is an evidentiary question,
Gianakos,
Rules of evidence are designed to provide better answers to questions of fact than could be obtained without the rules. * * * [This] does not apply to privileges. For in this area, government weighs the value of better answers to litigated questions of fact against other public policies. Where it decides that a privilege is to be recognized * * *, it fosters a policy unrelated to litigation at the price of worse answers to questions of fact.
Jack B. Weinstein, Recognition in the United States of the Privileges of Another Jurisdiction, 56 Colum. L. Rev. 535, 535 (1956).
The “unrelated” policy
of
the physician-patient privilege is to promote unfettered communication between patient and physician.
Staat,
We note that
Milkovich v. Saari,
the case that replaced the doctrine of lex loci with the “better rule of law” analysis, was a civil tort action for negligence involving an automobile accident, not a criminal case.
The Restatement provides a conflicts rule unique to privileges that balances all of the foregoing considerations. The Restatement establishes two prongs:
(1) Evidence that is not privileged under the local law of the state which has the most significant relationship with the communication will be admitted, even though it would be privileged under the local law of the forum, unless the admission of such evidence would be contrary to the strong public policy of the forum.
(2) Evidence that is privileged under the local law of the state which has the most significant relationship with the communication but which is not privileged under the local law of the forum will be admitted unless there is some special reason why the forum policy favoring admission should not be given effect.
Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 139 (1971). The state of “most significant relationship with the communication” will be the state where the communication took place, unless there is a prior relationship between the parties. Id. at cmt. e. If there is a prior relationship between the parties, the state where the relationship is centered has the most significant relationship, unless the state where the communication took place has “substantial contacts” with the parties and the transaction. Id.
By focusing the inquiry on the state with the most significant relationship with the communication, the Restatement approach recognizes both the substantive nature of the privilege statute and the interest of the state where the communication took place in facilitating unfettered communications within such privileged relationships. The two prongs of the test also sufficiently appreciate the procedural nature of the privilege statute and its effect on the forum, possibly resulting in worse answers to questions of fact. Under the first prong, evidence will always be admitted, absent a strong public policy in the forum, if it is admissible in the state of most significant relationship with the communication. Under the second prong, evidence *176 will more than likely be admitted if the forum favors admission and the state of most significant relationship does not. Evidence will not be admitted where it is privileged in both the forum state and the state of most significant relationship.
The Restatement rule has been adopted in Iowa, Washington, and Illinois in cases involving out-of-state seizure of privileged blood-alcohol evidence. The Iowa Supreme Court specifically adopted the Restatement approach in a case with facts nearly identical to the present case.
See Iowa v. Eldrenkamp,
For these reasons, we conclude that conflict of laws related to the recognition of the privileges of foreign jurisdictions will be resolved under the “significant relationship with the communication” approach outlined in Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 139.
Applying the Restatement approach to this case, the state with the most significant relationship to the communication is the state where the communication
*177
occurred unless there is a prior relationship between the parties to the communication.
Id.
§ 139 cmt. e. Here, the communication occurred in Wisconsin, the state with the most significant relationship to the communication, and there was no prior relationship between the hospital and Heaney. Furthermore, there is no strong public policy reason in Minnesota for excluding the evidence. On the contrary, the state’s interest in prosecuting those who violate the state’s criminal vehicular operation laws counsels admission of the evidence.
See, e.g., State v. Oevering,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. We do not reach the question of whether it was proper for a Minnesota peace officer to go outside Minnesota's borders and attempt to compel a blood sample under Minnesota law. In this case, the sample was obtained using Wisconsin's procedure inside Wisconsin's borders and our holding is limited to these facts.
. Both parties make arguments regarding
Schmerber v. California,
. Where exceptions to a statutory privilege are concerned, the court “prefer[s] * * ⅜ to defer a policy determination * * ⅝ to the legislature.”
Gianakos,
.
See, e.g., Indep. Petrochemical v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
