A рolice officer issued a uniform traffic citation charging appel-lee Kaemptah Kachwalla with driving under the influence of drugs to the extent he was a less safe driver. OCGA § 40-6-391 (a) (2). Appel-lee filed a demurrer in which he contended, among other things, that OCGA § 40-6-391 (a) (2) is an unconstitutional violation of the equal protection clauses of the state and federal constitutions. Relying on our decision in
Love v. State,
This case is concerned, as was
Love v. State,
with the interplay of subsections (a) and (b) of OCGA § 40-6-391. Subsection (a) sets out six methods of proving that a person is driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. See
Lester v. State,
In the case at bar, the defendant was not charged with a violation of (a) (6); instead, he was charged with violating (a) (2), which prohibits a person from driving “while . . . [u]nder the influence of any drug to the extent that it is less safe for the person to drive! . . .” An (a) (2) violation, unlike an (a) (6) violation, is not a per se violation since impaired driving ability is an element of the crime that must be proven to obtain a conviction.
1
Compare Love and
Stevenson v. State,
The defendant in the case at bar maintains that he nonetheless faced unconstitutional disparate treatment because § 40-6-391 contains two levels of impairment necessary to convict a driver of driving under thе influence of drugs: “less safe to drive” found in subsection (a), and “rendered incapable of driving safely” found in subsection (b), with the level of impairment the State must prove dependent upon whether the driver was legally еntitled to use the drug. After reviewing the history of.our DUI statute and the case law interpreting it, we conclude that one accused of violating (a) (2) does not suffer disparate treatment because “less safe tо drive” and “rendered incapable of driving safely” are equivalent standards, legally, *888 historically, and semantically.
While Georgia has had a statute generally prohibiting “driving under the influence” since 1910, it was not until 1953 that the DUI statute contained a speсific standard of impairment. The act regulating automobiles and their use enacted in 1910 made it unlawful for “any person who is intoxicated ... to propel or operate [an automobile]” on any Georgia highway. Ga. L. 1910, pp. 90, 93, § 9. In a special legislative session called by the governor in 1915, the General Assembly passed a law which prohibited the operation of a motor vehicle on public streets while “under the influеnce” of intoxicating liquors or drugs. Ga. L. 1915 (Ex. Sess.), p. 107, § 15. 2 Operating a motor vehicle while “under the influence of intoxicating liquors or drugs” remained the standard until 1953, when the General Assembly, while maintaining that standard for intoxicating liquors, made it unlawful for a person to drive while under the influence of a drug “to a degree which renders him incapable of safely driving a vehicle. . . .” Ga. L. 1953, p. 556, § 47. See also Ga. L. 1921, p. 255; Ga. L. 1927, p. 226, § 13.
During the decades when the standard was “undеr the influence,” the Court of Appeals defined that term as the condition a driver finds himself in “when he is so affected by intoxicating liquors as to make it less safe for him to operate such vehicle than it would be if he was not affected by such intoxicating liquor.”
Hart v. State,
In
Cargile v. State,
The decision in Cargile that there is no discernible difference between “it is less safe for thе person to drive” and “renders him incapable of safely driving” is also correct semantically. Assuming that one who has not consumed an intoxicant drives safely, one is guilty of driving under the influence if one’s ingestion of an intoxicant has affected one to the extent that one is a less safe driver than one would have been had one not been affected by the intoxicant. Stated another way, one is driving under the influence whеn the ingestion of an intoxicant has made one unable to drive as safely as one would have had he/she not ingested. “Unable to drive safely” and “rendered incapable of driving safely” state the same prоposition.
The standards set in place in 1953 — “under the influence” for intoxicating liquors and “under the influence . . . to a degree which renders him incapable of safely driving” when drugs or a combination of drugs and alcohol wеre involved — remained in place until 1988, when the General Assembly made it illegal for a person to drive under the influence of alcohol, any drug, or any combination thereof “to the extent that it is less safe for the person to drive[,]” and set out the “incapable of driving safely” standard in subsection (b). Ga. L. 1988, pp. 1893,1895, § 2. Since the General Assembly is presumed to know what this Court has held the law to be on a particular subject when the legislаture enacts laws
(Margeson v. Givens,
The
Cargile
statement of equivalency was not mentioned in
Steele v. State,
Because “less safe to drive” and “rendered incapable of driving safely” set the same standard of impairment necessary to establish that a driver is driving under the influence of alcohol or other intoxicating substance, the trial court erred when it concluded that OCGA § 40-6-391 (a) (2) violates thе equal protection clauses of the U. S. and Georgia constitutions. Accordingly, the trial court’s grant of the defendant’s general demurrer is reversed.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Impaired driving ability is not an element of an (a) (6) offense and nеed not be proved. Compare OCGA § 40-6-391 (a) (l)-(4), all of which require the State to establish that the driver was impaired, i.e., that the driver’s ingestion of drugs or alcohol made it “less safe for the person to drive.”
This enactment was declared unconstitutional in
Jones v. State,
