Defendant-appellant Guyus L. Higa appeals his conviction and sentence for driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor (DUI), in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 291-4 (Supp.1992). 1 On ap *3 peal, Higa contends that his conviction should be reversed because: (1) as a first time offender, he was entitled to a jury trial; and (2) the administrative license revocation proceeding barred a subsequent criminal prosecution under the principles of double jeopardy, res judicata, and/or collateral es-toppel.
For the reasons discussed below, we affirm Higa’s conviction.
I.BACKGROUND
On February 26, 1993, Higa was arrested and charged with DUI. The police confiscated Higa’s license and issued him a thirty-day temporary driving permit. As a result of the administrative review that automatically followed his arrest, Higa’s license was revoked. Subsequently, Higa requested an administrative hearing regarding his license revocation. At the hearing before the Administrative Driver’s License Revocation Office (AD.LRO), the administrative decision revoking Higa’s license was “rescinded” by the hearings officer on the ground that Higa had requested, but was not given, a blood alcohol test. 2
At his arraignment on the DUI charge on May 25, 1993, Higa pled not guilty and requested a jury trial, which the court denied. On December 17, 1993, Higa filed a pretrial motion to dismiss the DUI charge against him, arguing that the plaintiff-appellee State of Hawaii (the prosecution) should be barred from prosecuting the case on the grounds of double jeopardy, res judicata, and/or collateral estoppel. The motion was denied. Thereafter, Higa consented to a stipulated facts trial and was convicted and sentenced as a first-time DUI offender to: (1) a ninety day revocation of his driver’s license; (2) fourteen hours of alcohol abuse counseling and assessment; and (3) a fine of $150.00. Higa’s sentence was stayed pending disposition of this timely appeal.
II.STANDARD OF REVIEW
Questions of law are reviewed under the right/wrong standard of review.
State v. Nakata,
III.DISCUSSION
Preliminarily, we believe it pertinent to recite the description of Hawaii’s Administrative Revocation Program, which has been aptly set forth in
Kernan v. Tanaka,
Administrative revocation begins when a police officer stops a motorist suspected of DUI, arrests him or her, and takes possession of the arrestee’s driver’s license, giving the arrestee notice of the revocation action. The police also present the arres-tee with a thirty-day temporary driving permit. HRS § 286-254 requires informing the arrestee of the specific violation for which he or she is arrested, the consequences of refusing to be tested for blood-alcohol content, that the revocation will be administratively reviewed, and that he or she may request an administrative hearing after the review. HRS § 286-254.
An administrative review of the police officer’s actions occurs automatically after the arrest. HRS § 286-258. The arrestee is allowed to submit written information for the reviewing officer to consider along with the breath or blood test results and the sworn statements of the law enforcement officials. HRS § 286-258(b)-(c) and HRS § 286-257. The reviewing officer will revoke the arrestee’s license if it is determined that: (1) reasonable suspicion to stop the driver existed; (2) probable *4 cause was shown that the driver operated the vehicle under the influence of intoxicating liquor; and (3) the evidence proved by a preponderance that the arrestee did in fact drive under the influence. HRS § 286-258(d). A written decision is mailed to the arrestee within eight days after the arrest and issuance of the notice of the revocation.. HRS § 286-258(a). If the ar-restee’s license is revoked, he or she is further informed of the right to request an administrative hearing, of the right to review the evidence, and all applicable procedures. HRS § 286-26800.
The arrestee is provided five days from the mailing date of the administrative review decision to request an administrative hearing. HRS § 286-259(a). The hearing must be scheduled to commence no later than twenty-five days after the notice of revocation was issued, unless continued by the director for good cause. HRS § 286-259(a). The arrestee may be represented by counsel. HRS § 286-259(c). The director conducting the hearing (hearing officer) has the authority to examine witnesses and take testimony, receive and determine the relevant evidence, issue subpoenas, regulate the hearing, and make a final ruling. HRS § 286-259(d). The hearing officer may affirm the revocation if: (1) reasonable suspicion to stop the driver is found to have existed; (2) probable cause to believe that the driver was operating the vehicle under the influence of intoxicating liquor is shown; and (3) there is sufficient evidence to prove by a preponderance that the driver did in fact drive under the influence. HRS § 286-259(e). The hearing is recorded in a manner “to be determined by the director.” HRS § 286-259(h). If the hearing is continued for good cause at the request of the director, the director is required to extend the arrestee’s temporary driving permit during the period of the delay. HRS § 286 — 259(j). The final written decision of the director is mailed to the arrestee within five days of the hearing. HRS § 286-259(i).
An adverse decision of the hearing officer may be appealed to the district court by filing a petition for judicial review within thirty days after the adverse decision is mailed. HRS § 286-260(a). There is no stay of the revocation pending the appeal. HRS § 286-260(a). Judicial review is confined to the record of the administrative hearing. HRS § 286-260(b). The issues on appeal may include whether the director exceeded his authority, erroneously interpreted the law, acted in an arbitrary or capricious manner, committed an abuse of discretion, or made a determination that was unsupported by the evidence. HRS § 286-260(c). An affirmation of the revocation by the district court may be appealed to the supreme court under the general jurisdiction statutes. See HRS §§ 602-5(1) and 641-l(a). (See Part II, supra).
Id.
at 17-20,
A. Higa’s Request for a Jury Trial
Higa argues that, because the offense of DUI is constitutionally serious, he is entitled to a trial by jury. This argument was thoroughly considered and rejected by this court in
Nakata
wherein we held that “no right to a jury trial attaches to first-offense DUI.”
Nakata,
B. Higa’s Motion to Dismiss
Higa essentially contends that, “where the prior administrative proceeding before the [ADLRO] ended in [his] favor,” 3 any subsequent criminal prosecution for DUI is barred under the principles of double jeopardy, res judicata, and/or collateral estoppel.
*5 1. Double Jeopardy
Double jeopardy protects individuals against: (1) a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal; (2) a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction; and (3) multiple punishments for the same offense.
State v. Lessary,
With respect to the first protection, Higa seemingly argues that, because the ADLRO proceeding “ended in his favor,” he should not be forced to undergo a second prosecution for the same offense. In other words, Higa implicitly equates “ended in his favor” with an “acquittal,” thus implicating the first protection enunciated in Lessary and Halper. However, because we conclude in the following discussion that the ADLRO proceeding does not bar a subsequent criminal prosecution, whether the ADLRO proceeding “ended in his favor” or resulted in an “acquittal” is immaterial. We therefore turn to the issue regarding multiple punishments for the same offense.
Higa argues that he is being exposed to multiple punishments for the same offense, and that, by permitting the government two chances to revoke his driving privileges via a civil administrative proceeding and a subsequent criminal prosecution, both the letter and the spirit of the protection that the double jeopardy clause was designed to ensure is violated.
The prosecution, on the other hand, argues that, because the revocation procedure is a civil administrative proceeding that is separate and distinct from a subsequent criminal prosecution, double jeopardy does not attach. More specifically, the prosecution contends that: (1) the administrative procedure does not entail a criminal prosecution; (2) criminal sanctions cannot be imposed at the ADLRO level; (3) a license revocation is a civil sanction that is remedial in nature; and (4) any criminal sanctions that may be imposed does not qualify as a “second punishment” for the same offense, as proscribed by the double jeopardy clause.
Both Higa and the prosecution rely on
Halper
to bolster their respective positions.
4
We have previously had occasion to examine
Halper
in
Loui v. Board of Medical Examiners,
we view the Halper decision as applying mainly to prevent instances where the government seeks to extract monetary damages entirely unrelated to the goal of making the government whole in a civil proceeding from an individual who has already been “punished” in a criminal proceeding.
In the instant case, we are not analyzing the constitutionality of any monetary sanction designed to compensate the government for losses it sustained as a result of Loui’s criminal actions. We are only looking at the one-year suspension of Loui’s *6 license to practice medicine. Thus, the Halper test, which “requires a comparison between the civil penalty and the government’s loss resulting from the defendant’s conduct,” does not apply to the facts of this case. Instead, we must look more broadly at the principles enunciated in Halper to determine whether the Board’s revocation of Loui’s license to practice medicine constitutes a second punishment for purposes of double jeopardy.
Loui,
As in
Loui, Halper
does not apply
6
to the present case because “we are not analyzing the constitutionality of any monetary sanction designed to compensate the government for losses it sustained as a result of [the defendant’s] criminal actions.”
Loui,
Revocation of an individual’s driver’s license appears to have a two-fold purpose. First, the procedure protects the public interest by removing potentially threatening drivers from our state’s roadways; and, second, between the time offending drivers are cited and their criminal adjudication, the procedure precludes such drivers from continuing to drive.
See Kernan,
the main benefit of administrative revocation is that it allows the State to remove a drunk driver’s license before the culmination of a lengthy prosecution under the criminal statute. Currently, a person charged with driving under the influence must be allowed to continue driving until he or she is found guilty in a court of law. This process takes an average of seven or eight months in Hawaii, and even longer, and while this process is going on, the dangerous driver, who quite likely is an inveterate repeat offender, remains on the road.
Hse.Conf.Comm.Rep. No. 137, in 1990 House Journal at 824-25; Sen.Conf.Comm.Rep. No. 137, in 1990 Senate Journal at 825.
Although license revocation may, from .Higa’s point of view, “carry the sting of punishment,”
Loui,
For example, in
Johnson v. State,
The Court of Special Appeals first held that the administrative hearing was civil, not criminal, in nature. Although the court admitted that the statute did sanction offenders, it held that the administrative purpose was primarily to protect the public insofar as license revocation effectively deters drunk driving and reduces fatalities caused by drunk drivers awaiting criminal adjudication. Thus, the court concluded that Johnson was not “subject to criminal punishment for the same offense under the Double Jeopardy Clause.”
Id.
at 573,
In
Freeman v. State,
In
State v. Strong,
Based on the foregoing, we hold that Hawaii’s ADLRO proceedings serve legitimate, nonpunitive, and purely remedial functions, and, therefore, the administrative license revocation proceeding based on DUI did not bar Higa’s subsequent criminal prosecution on the grounds of double jeopardy principles.
2. Res Judicata
Higa also contends that his DUI conviction violated the doctrine of res judicata, under which
[t]he judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction is a bar to a new action in any court between the same parties or their *8 privies concerning the same subject matter, and precludes the relitigation, not only of the [claims that] were actually litigated in the first action, but also of all grounds of claim [and defense that] might have been properly litigated in the first action but were not litigated or decided.
State v. Magoon,
The doctrine of res judicata applies when three conditions are present: (1) the issue in the prior adjudication is identical to the present one; (2) there was a final judgment on the merits; and (3) the party against whom the doctrine is asserted was a party, or was in privity with a party, in the prior adjudication.
Morneau v. Stark Enterprises, Ltd.,
Higa claims that his argument should be addressed by the three criteria set forth in Momean and approved by this court in Magoon and Santos. Assuming, but not agreeing that the Momean test is appropriate in this case, Higa’s arguments must fail. The burden of proof applicable to an ADLRO hearing is different than that of a criminal prosecution in that the former seeks to determine whether the defendant was DUI by a preponderance of the evidence, whereas the latter seeks to determine the same question but beyond a reasonable doubt. Further, an ADLRO hearing is an administrative proceeding that serves a remedial function and is non-punitive. Finally, as Higa admits, the ADLRO officer and the prosecution are “not in privity per se” and “the prosecutors do not represent the government at the ADL-RO.”
Higa also relies on
State v. Alvey,
Noting the three factors enunciated in
Momean
and
Santos,
the
Alvey
court stated, “we must go beyond the three factors cited in
Momean
and
Santos
because those cases dealt only with previously litigated matters.”
Id.
at 54,
Although the Alvey court concluded that the first five factors were equally weighted, it declined to analyze them, holding that the sixth factor weighed heavily against applying either res judicata or collateral estoppel to prison disciplinary committee findings because: (1) a resultant “logistical nightmare” would ensue; 7 (2) the functions of the prison *9 and criminal justice systems differ markedly; (3) the disciplinary committee’s investigative ability is limited; (4) the penalties imposed by each system differ; and (5) the state has an interest in protecting the citizenry from those who commit prison crime. Therefore, the Alvey court determined that the finding of the prison disciplinary committee did not have res judicata or collateral estoppel effect.
Even if we were to apply the Alvey factors to the present case, they clearly weigh against Higa. The informal ADLRO hearing, before a hearings officer, is markedly dissimilar from the formality of a criminal proceeding before a judge, and, as previously noted, is subject to a different burden of proof. Furthermore, it is clear that the state did not have an adequate opportunity to litigate the DUI charge at the administrative level, nor, as Higa admits, did privity exist between the ADLRO and the prosecution. Most significantly, the final Alvey factor weighs heavily against Higa. As with prison disciplinary hearings, granting ADLRO proceedings preclusive effect would defeat the very purpose of the hearings insofar as the prosecution would then seek to intervene and fully litigate ADLRO hearings. Such a result would unnecessarily clog ADLRO hearings and prevent those proceedings from achieving their remedial goal — to protect the public by expeditiously removing potentially dangerous drivers from the state’s highways. Because the legitimate remedial purpose is in the public’s best interest and is fairly served by the ADLRO proceedings, Higa’s res judi-cata arguments must fail.
3. Collateral Estoppel
“[Collateral estoppel is an aspect of res judicata which precludes the relitigation of a fact or issue [that] was previously determined in a prior suit on a different claim between the same parties or their privies.”
Sussel,
In
State v. Walker,
The
Walker
court also rejected the application of collateral estoppel on a common law basis, noting that “[collateral estoppel effect is generally denied to traffic convictions and minor offenses under accepted common law principles,”
id.
at 509,
[t]o subject the state to issue preclusion from civil proceedings in an informal forum where it lacked incentive to litigate as fully as it would in a criminal forum would circumvent the legislature’s purposes in creating the expedited dispositional procedures for civil traffic violations.
Id.
at 508,
the application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel to the civil traffic judgment in this ease is clearly unwarranted. We hold that a criminal defendant may not raise collateral estoppel as a bar to prosecution of a criminal felony offense when preclusion is alleged to result from a judgment of acquittal following a civil traffic hearing[J
Id.
at 510-11,
Having held that Higa’s subsequent criminal prosecution is not barred by double *10 jeopardy principles, we reject Higa’s constitutionally based collateral estoppel arguments. Moreover, because the prosecution did not have a full and fair opportunity to litigate in the ADLRO proceedings, Higa’s common law based collateral estoppel arguments are also rejected.
IV. CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we hold that, in light of Nakata, Higa, as a first-time DUI offender, is not entitled to a jury trial. We also hold that, because Hawaii’s ADLRO proceedings serve legitimate, nonpunitive, and purely remedial functions, Higa’s subsequent criminal prosecution is not barred by the principles of double jeopardy, res judica-ta, and/or collateral estoppel. Accordingly, we affirm Higa’s conviction and sentence for DUI.
Notes
. HRS § 291-4 provides in pertinent part:
(a) A person commits the offense of driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor if:
(1) The person operates ... any vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, meaning that the person concerned is under the influence of intoxicating liquor in an amount sufficient to impair the person’s normal mental faculties ...; or
(2) The person operates ... any vehicle with 0.10 per cent or more, by weight of alcohol in the person’s blood.
We note that the 1995 Legislature passed House Bill 715, Conference Committee Draft 1 on May 1, 1995, which lowered the blood alcohol content level to 0.08 per cent. As of the filing of this opinion, the governor had not as yet signed the bill into law.
. In order to sustain the license revocation, there must be a showing by a preponderance of the evidence that the driver did in fact drive under the influence of alcohol or drive with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.10 percent or greater or refused to submit to a breath or blood test. See HRS § 286-259(e)(3). Because there was no blood alcohol reading of at least 0.10 percent and Higa did not refuse to take the test, there was insufficient evidence to sustain the license revocation. We note that, although the hearings officer used the term "rescind,” the ruling is actually a "reversal” under HRS § 286 — 259(i).
. As previously stated, because the ADLRO determined that Higa had requested, but was not given a blood alcohol test, the decision revoking his license was reversed. See supra note 2. According to Higa, such result means that "the [ADLRO] ended in [his] favor.” Based on our discussion regarding the double jeopardy issue, we believe the outcome of the ADLRO proceeding is immaterial.
. In
Halper,
the defendant was convicted of sixty-five violations of the criminal false-claims statute, for which he was fined $5,000.00 and sentenced to two-years imprisonment. Subsequently, the government was granted summary judgment against the defendant in an action under the civil False Claims Act, for which the defendant faced a statutory penalty of more than $130,000.00. In determining that this later prosecution violated the double jeopardy clause, the United States Supreme Court announced a rule for the rare case wherein “a fixed-penalty provision subjects a prolific but small-gauge offender to a sanction overwhelmingly disproportionate to the damages he [or she] caused.”
Id.
at 449,
. We note that it is irrelevant under
Halper
whether the criminal proceeding follows or precedes the civil proceeding.
Loui,
. Other cases have also distinguished
Halper. See Johnson v. State,
. As this court explained in
Alvey,
"if a finding of innocence in a prison hearing precludes a criminal charge then the prison hearing will become the main focus of the criminal litigation. No
*9
doubt the prosecutor will ask to intervene in serious cases and the disciplinary hearings will become mini-trials.”
Alvey,
