261 N.E.2d 290 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1970
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Canton Municipal Court entered pursuant to proceedings under R. C.
This matter was thoroughly considered by the trial court, as reflected by two separate journal entries, the first styled "Court's Ruling" filed April 18, 1969, and the second styled "Court's Ruling on Motion for Reconsideration — Reversal of Suspension Ruling" filed April 25, 1969.
Because of the clarity with which they set forth the issues, we set them forth in full:
"The entire procedure in this case is subject to the provisions of R. C.
"R. C.
"`Any person whose license or permit to drive or nonresident operating privilege has been suspended under this section, may, within twenty days of the mailing of the notice provided above, file a petition in the Municipal Court or the county court, * * * in whose jurisdiction such person resides, agreeing to pay the cost of the proceedings and alleging error in the action taken by the Registrar of Motor Vehicles under division (D) * * *. The *121 scope of such hearing shall be limited to the issues of whether a police officer had reasonable ground to believe the person had been driving a motor vehicle upon the public highway in this state while under the influence of alcohol, whether the person was placed under arrest, whether he refused to submit to the test upon request of the officer, and whether he was advised of the consequences of his refusal.'
"Subsection (G) provides in part:
"`In hearing the matter and determining whether such person has shown error in the action taken by the Registrar of Motor Vehicles under division (D) of this section, the court shall decide such issue upon the registrar's certified affidavit and such additional relevant, competent, and material evidence as either the registrar or the person whose license is sought to be suspended submits.
"If the court finds from the evidence submitted that such person has failed to show error in the action taken by the registrar of motor vehicles under division (D) of this section or in one or more of the matters within the scope of the hearing as provided in division (F) of this section * * *.'
"The court notes that subsection (G) places the burden of proof on the appellant to show any error in the action taken by the Registrar. This subsection also provides that the court shall decide this issue upon the registrar's certified affidavit and such additional evidence as either side submits.
"The scope of the hearing is also spelled out in subsection (F) of R. C.
"1. Whether the officer had reasonable grounds to believe that the defendant had been driving a motor vehicle upon the public highways in this state while under the influence of alcohol.
"2. Whether the defendant was placed under arrest.
"3. Whether she refused to submit to the test upon request of the officer.
"4. Whether she was advised of the consequences of her refusal. *122
"The appellant offers no evidence and raises no issue on the first three grounds. On issue number 4 there is no denial that she was offered some advice, and that something was read to her, but that she did not understand the meaning of what was read and said to her.
"The court believes that both officers did tell her that if she did not take the test she would lose her license for six months. The appellant has been in this country for many years, during which she has been exposed to the English language, and a person who speaks a foreign language usually understands English better, and before they learn to speak it.
"The court is of the opinion that the appellant has failed to show any error in one or more of the matters within the scope of this hearing in the action taken by the Registrar of Motor Vehicles, and the court hereby assesses the costs against the appellant and orders that the operator's license of the appellant be and the same is hereby suspended for a period of six months. Exceptions to the appellant.
"JUDGE"
"Webster's Third New International Dictionary defines the word `understand' as follows: `To grasp the meaning of; comprehend. To apprehend the meaning or idea by knowing what is conveyed by the words.'
"The exact state of the mind of the defendant at the time of her arrest and as to how clear she did or did not understand what was told her, only she will ever know. The court has attempted to form a mental picture of the events and circumstances surrounding her apprehension and detention. The court pictures this defendant stopped by a police officer a few blocks from her home late at night. *123 She is somewhat of an emotional person, and there were words, and even a tussle between her and the arresting officer to the extent that she suffered a cut on her hand and she was handcuffed.
"The court further notes that her English was not too good, and as heretofore stated, just how much and how well she understood everything that was said and read to her under these circumstances, is subject to some question or doubt in the court's mind.
"This being a criminal case, every phase of the proof on behalf of the State ought to satisfy a court beyond a reasonable doubt. Her knowledge and understanding is an essential element to be considered.
"Taking all of these things into consideration, the court believes that error was committed in the opinion heretofore rendered, and now reverses said opinion, and finds that the petitioner has shown error in the proceedings, and the petition is granted and no suspension of her driver's license shall be imposed.
"Exceptions to the state.
"JUDGE"
After these Municipal Court proceedings were completed and this matter pending in our Court of Appeals, the Supreme Court of Ohio in the case of State v. Starnes,
The second paragraph of the syllabus reads:
"Section
Applying that paragraph of the syllabus, we hold that it was reversible prejudicial error to require proof "beyond a reasonable doubt."
In view of the fact that the first two justiciable issues under R. C.
Likewise, the court's finding on the third and fourth justiciable issue, that, in fact, the officers had requested her to take a test and had given the licensee the requisite statutory advice in the statutory form and manner, was in favor of the state. No prejudice results therefrom even though the court stated that it tested the evidence by the standard of "beyond a reasonable doubt."
The Municipal Court did not, in its second entry, state upon which justiciable issue it had erred in the first entry. Therefore, we proceed to examine which, if any, statutory issues require a subjective understanding on the part of the licensee.
Because of the licensee's admissions on cross-examination, it is insupportable to construe the Municipal Court's second entry, finding reasonable doubt that the licensee "understood everything that was said and read to her under these circumstances," to include doubt that she understood she was being asked to take a test to determine if she were drinking. However, under the Starnes case,
Having determined that a reversal is required, we must determine whether to remand the cause to the Municipal Court for rehearing or enter final judgment in favor of the state.
We determine both those points of law against the licensee.
The licensee does not claim, nor does any evidence indicate, that she was such a person. Her claim is simply that (1) she did not understand why the officers wanted to test her or (2) the consequences of her refusal. For reasons which follow, we hold, as a matter of law, that she has demonstrated no error in this respect.
On cross-examination the licensee admitted that she knew that the officers were asking her to take a test and that the purpose of the test was to determine whether she had been drinking. However, she had already admitted drinking; therefore, she couldn't understand why they wanted to test her to find out something she had already told them:
"Q. And, you say that they did ask you to take a test?
"A. Well, to tell the truth, they asked me to take a test. I told them I knew I was drinking, I don't know it was a must, I knew I was drinking a little bit, I tell them. *126
"Q. You knew what the test was for, to test whether or not you were drinking or not?
"A. Well, yes, but I say I was drinking; I told them I worked from different places; I told them I was drinking; that is all I know.
"Q. Did you know why they wanted you to take a test?
"A. I don't know why.
"Q. They didn't tell you why?
"A. No, sir."
We hold, as a matter of law, that that is an admission of all the understanding necessary to establish an actual refusal to take the test.
All the understanding requisite to a refusal to take the test is an understanding that one has been asked to take a test. One who does not understand he has been asked to take a test cannot, of course, be said to have refused to take a test. Whether one who has been asked to take a test has understood that such a request has been made is a question of fact to be determined by the court from all the evidence. In this case it was admitted. This evidence may include the licensee's claim that he did not understand the advice as to the consequences of the refusal to take the test. But an understanding of the consequences of the refusal to take the test is not an element of understanding that a request to take the test has been made, nor a precondition of refusal.
The fact of refusal to take the chemical test provided for in R. C.
We recognize that the Legislature has required an actual subjective refusal to take the test, but in this, as in all other cases, the state of the person's mind must be gathered from all the evidence, including that of his objective conduct. In these civil administrative licensing cases this includes all reasonable inferences flowing from his having voluntarily operated a motor vehicle upon the public highways of this state.
Minimum language skills are inherent in the ability to drive safely and essential to pass the written licensing examination.
Conversations with an arresting officer are now a part of the statutory administrative procedures included in the basic fabric of the Ohio driver's licensing regulations.
We hold that a person who voluntarily operates a motor vehicle upon the highways of this state is estopped, in a proceeding under R. C.
For a stronger reason, the incapacity cannot be asserted where it depends in part upon the effect of alcoholic beverages upon the licensee. Reasonably extended, such a contention would require that a statute enacted to clear drunk drivers from the highway could be judicially repealed by the defense of "too drunk to understand" the licensing procedures.
In the instant case the arresting officer felt it necessary to restrain the licensee with handcuffs. There was no claim that she lacked capacity to refuse the test, and the evidence confirms that she had the capacity to and did effectively block the taking of the test.
It is not clear what proportionate causal role the licensee's temperment, voluntary use of alcohol and lack of language skill played in this regrettable incident. What *128 is clear is that, taken together, the circumstances aggravate rather than mitigate. They justify the suspension rather than avoid it.
That contention cannot prevail, for the reason that there is no requirement that the officer give her any advice respecting the license suspension consequences of a driving-under-the-influence conviction or any legal opinion as to the comparative severity of the two upon her personal right to drive.
In short, it is no defense, even if true, that she did not understand a subject upon which the officers are neither required nor permitted to give her legal advice.
We do not examine the general finding made by the trial court, that there is reasonable doubt on the evidence before it respecting the licensee's understanding, because State v.Starnes,
Whether that fact is shown by the evidence by any degree of proof is without independent legal consequence.
We hold, as a matter of law, that, where there is, in fact, a refusal to take the test, and where the advice as to the consequences of the refusal to submit to the test is given in the manner and form prescribed by the statute, it is not a defense to the license suspension that the licensee did not subjectively understand or fully comprehend the consequences of refusing to take the test.
If there was no subjective awareness on the part of the licensee that she was being asked to take the test, then, of course, it could not be true that she refused to take it. However, refusal to take a test when requested is a separate factual matter from an understanding of the consequences of the refusal.
Evidence bearing upon the fact question of whether the person under arrest understood what was told him may be considered for whatever light, if any, it may shed upon the issue whether such person did, in fact, refuse to submit to the test. However, where, under the statutory circumstances, there is in fact a refusal to take the test and where the advice as to the consequences of the refusal to submit to the chemical test is given in the manner and form prescribed by law, nothing more need be shown. The issue whether the advice was subjectively understood by the person under arrest is not an independently justiciable issue.
The Legislature has prescribed the form and manner in which the advice must be given to the licensee by the officer, and when compliance with all the statutory procedures appears it is not legally permissible or competent for the licensee to negate such compliance by establishing the fact that he did not understand the advice.
It is not mysterious why the Legislature has clearly provided the foregoing. The broad purpose of the statutes is to clear the highways of unsafe drivers, and the Legislature has not provided a means for the licensee to regain his license merely by asserting those personal defects which tend to impair his ability to be a safe driver. *130
The title "Implied Consent," following the statute number, is expressly stated in the first paragraph to relate to consent to a chemical test, and immediately thereafter the Legislature provides that those incapable of refusal shall be deemed not to have withdrawn this consent, and the test may be administered in those cases.
A statute authorizing a test upon a "person who is dead, unconscious, or who is otherwise in a condition rendering him incapable of refusal, * * *" should not be judicially amended to prohibit a test upon someone incapable of understanding advice.
Those provisions are constitutionally authorized, reasonable regulations, under the police power of the state, in the interest of public safety, upon the privilege to operate a motor vehicle upon a public street or highway.
R. C.
"(C) Any person under arrest for the offense of driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol shall be advised at a police station of the consequences of his refusal to submit to a chemical test designated by the law enforcement agency as provided in division (A) of this section. The advice shall be in a written form prescribed by the Registrar of Motor Vehicles and shall be read to such person. The form shall contain a statement that the form was shown to the person under arrest and read to him in the presence of the arresting officer and one other police officer or civilian police employee. Such witnesses shall certify to this fact by signing the form."
R. C.
"The person tested may have a physician, or a qualified *131 technician, chemist, registered nurse, or other qualified person of his own choosing administer a chemical test or tests in addition to any administered at the direction of a police officer, and shall be so advised. The failure or inability to obtain an additional test by a person shall not preclude the admission of evidence relating to the test or tests taken at the direction of a police officer."
We hold that the two statutes are to be read separately. The second paragraph of the syllabus of State v. Starnes,
"* * * for the sure and true (a) interpretation of all statutes in general (be they penal (B) or beneficial, restrictive or enlarging of the common law,) * * *
"* * * the office of all the judges is always to make such (d) construction as shall suppress the mischief and advance the remedy, and to suppress subtle inventions and evasions for continuance of the mischief and pro privato commodo, and to add force and life to the cure and remedy according to the true intent of the makers of the Act, pro bono publico." Heydon'scase (1584), 3 Co. Rep. 7 a, 76 Eng.-Rep. 637, at 638.
The statutes, R. C.
Those statutes have as their general purpose the protection of the public from drunk drivers, and to give effect to that general purpose there is prescribed separate from, independent of, and cumulative to criminal prosecution a clear remedy of suspending the licenses of those drivers *132 who refuse to take a sobriety test. We construe the statute to suppress the mischief and advance the remedy.
R. C.
"(C) Any person under arrest for the offense of driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol shall be advised at a police station of the consequences of his refusal to submit to a chemical test designated by the law enforcement agency as provided in division (A) of this section. The advice shall be in a written form prescribed by the Registrar of Motor Vehicles and shall be read to such person. The form shallcontain a statement that the form was shown to the person underarrest and read to him in the presence of the arresting officer and one other police officer or civilian police employee. Such witnesses shall certify to this fact by signing the form.
"(D) If a person under arrest for the offense of driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol refuses upon request of a police officer to submit to a chemical test designated by the law enforcement agency as provided in division (A) of this section, after first having been advised of theconsequences of his refusal as provided in division (C) of thissection, no chemical test shall be given, but the registrar of motor vehicles, upon the receipt of a sworn report of a police officer that he had reasonable grounds to believe the arrested person had been driving a motor vehicle upon the public highways of this state while under the influence of alcohol and that the person refused to submit to the test upon the request of the police officer and upon the receipt of the form as provided indivision (C) of this section certifying that the arrested person was advised of the consequences of his refusal, shall suspend his license or permit to drive, or any nonresidence operating privilege for a period of six months, subject to review as provided in this section; * * *." (Emphasis added.) *133
For this Court of Appeals to render a final judgment of suspension, we would be required to find as a matter of law, construing the evidence most favorably in favor of the licensee, that reasonable minds could only conclude that the form was shown to Sylvia Hurbean.
The evidence does not call for such a finding. We hold that the Legislature has made showing the form to the licensee a condition precedent to the existence of refusal, and that the evidence on this issue requires a remand for rehearing.
On this fact issue of whether the form was shown to her, Sylvia Hurbean, the licensee-appellant in the case at bar testified:
"Q. Can you tell us today whether or not you saw a piece of paper like this that evening or whether it was shown to you?
"A. No, sir.
"Q. Did they show you anything?
"A. No, didn't see nothing.
"Q. You didn't see a paper like that?
"A. No.
"Q. Do you know whether or not the officer read something to you from a paper? Do you know whether the officer read anything from a paper?
"A. I can't remember that."
"* * *
"Q. Did you know why they wanted you to take a test?
"A. I don't know why.
"Q. They didn't tell you why?
"A. No, sir.
"* * *
"Q. Do you remember them reading to you from a paper?
"A. No, I don't remember that."
"* * *
"Q. Did he have a piece of paper in front of him or in his hands?
"A. I don't see it." *134
* * *
"Q. Do you remember him telling you if you didn't take the test, your license would be taken from you?
"A. No, he asked me, would I take the test. I said I know I was drinking.
"Q. And, no one asked you anything about it, or told you anything about it, is that what you are saying?
"A. No, they put me in jail after that over there."
The affidavit filed in Municipal Court containing as a part thereof the form prescribed under R. C.
With reference to showing her the test, Patrolman Skraba testified:
"Q. This form that you use says in bold lettering `The following must be read and shown to the person under arrest'; isn't that right?
"A. That is what it reads, yes, sir.
"Q. And, you cannot say here today that you showed her a form of this kind, isn't that right?
"A. That is right, I do not remember."
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the Canton Municipal Court for further proceedings according to law not inconsistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
VAN NOSTRAN, P. J., and RUTHERFORD, J., concur in the syllabus and in the judgment of reversal and remand to Canton Municipal Court for a new trial and further proceedings according to law. *135