35 N.C. App. 652 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1978
Defendant contends that the court committed reversible error when it allowed Trooper Banks to testify concerning the results of the breathalyzer test he administered to defendant. This contention is based on G.S. 20-139.1(b) which provides that “in no case shall the arresting officer or officers administer” the chemical test for alcohol. “The purpose of this limitation in the statute is to assure that the test will be fairly and impartially made.” State v. Stauffer, 266 N.C. 358, 359, 145 S.E. 2d 917, 918 (1966). Defendant, in essence, argues that Trooper Banks should be considered as the arresting officer and his testimony excluded in order to serve the purposes of the statute. His argument is based on Banks’ opportunity to have a preconceived notion that defendant’s test should disclose a high alcoholic content.
Trooper Banks had arrested defendant for driving under the influence at about 3:00 a.m. on the same morning, following an accident in which defendant was involved. After taking a breathalyzer test, defendant was released on bond and left the police station with his attorney. Approximately 20 minutes after his release, defendant was arrested by Officer Martin on the charge that gives rise to the present appeal. Trooper Banks was still at the police station and administered the breathalyzer analysis. In State v. Stauffer, supra, the Court held that the officer who stopped defendant’s car for the purpose of investigating his erratic driving was an arresting officer, even though his cap
The principle that underlies the statute seems to be that, in the interest of fairness as well as the appearance of fairness, an officer, whose judgment in selecting a defendant for arrest or in making the arrest may be at issue at trial, should not administer the chemical test that will either confirm or refute the soundness of his earlier judgment in causing the arrest. In State v. Stauffer, supra, the officer who administered the test was the one who caused the arrest and was on the scene when it was made by another officer. He, therefore, had the same interest in the outcome of the test that he would have had if he had made the actual arrest. It was, therefore, improper to allow him to administer the test or to testify as to the result. In Green and Dail, however, the officers who administered the tests neither selected the defendants for arrest nor made the arrests. It was, therefore, proper for them to administer the tests even though their prior observations of the accused may have allowed them to have preconceived notions about what the tests would probably disclose. In the case at bar, Trooper Banks had nothing to do with defendant’s arrest. His arrest of defendant on a similar charge earlier in the morning does not bring him within the disqualification set out in the statute. There was no error, therefore, in allowing him to testify as to the results of the test.
No error.