Lead Opinion
OPINION
At approximately 8:30 a.m. on September 19, 1992, an Arizona Department of Public Safety officer found appellant Love’s car stopped, with its engine still running, in the northbound emergency lane of Interstate 17. The vehicle was parked at a slight angle to the roadway, and it first appeared that no one was inside. When the officer approached, however, he found Mr. Love asleep, lying with his head near the passenger door and his legs underneath the steering wheel. The officer eventually awakened appellant after several attempts that included calling to him through the open windows, activating the police car’s siren, and physically shaking him. Appellant sat up and immediately reached for the vehicle’s gearshift. The officer then persuaded him to move over to the car’s passenger side and turn off the ignition.
Detecting an odor of alcohol, the officer administered field sobriety tests. He reported that appellant’s performance was poor. He also noted that his speech was slurred and his eyes were bloodshot. Based on the foregoing, the officer arrested appellant for driving or being in actual physical control of a vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor (DUI). When they arrived at the police station, Mr. Love refused to take a breath test.
A.R.S. § 28-692 provides, in part, that it “is unlawful for any person to drive or be in actual physical control of any vehicle ... [wjhile under the influence of intoxicating liquor” if that person is impaired to the “slightest degree,” or to have “an alcohol concentration of 0.10 or more within two hours of driving or being in actual physical control of the vehicle.” Although the legislature did not define “actual physical control,” this court has held that the phrase may, under some circumstances, apply to persons who are not at the time driving or otherwise putting a vehicle in motion. See, e.g., State v. Webb,
In State v. Zavala,
Relying primarily on Webb and Zavala, the court of appeals here concluded that unless a motorist pulls completely off the travelled portion of the roadway and turns off the ignition, he or she cannot escape a presumption of actual physical control. See also State v. Vermuele,
Such an approach was recently adopted in Maryland. See Atkinson v. State,
The State urges us to perpetuate the policy enunciated in Webb and Zavala requiring drivers, at a minimum, to pull over and shut off their engines in order to demonstrate that they have voluntarily relinquished control of their vehicles. Although we agree that those factors may be important, we do not think they alone should be dispositive. It is unwise to proceed down a path on which we attempt to identify “black letter” criteria for establishing actual physical control as a matter of law in each and every case. Such an effort would invariably fail and is unlikely to serve the interests of justice in any event. A bright line test employing too few factors can easily lead to unfairly pigeonholed results, while the addition of new ones would make it increasingly difficult, if not impossible, to construct a legally sound equation for determining guilt or innocence.
On the other hand, the “totality” approach recognizes that each situation may be different and requires the fact finder to weigh the myriad of circumstances in fairly assessing whether a driver relinquished control and no longer presented a danger to himself or others. It is the method we follow in most other types of cases and is “neither so restrictive ... as to thwart the obvious statutory aim of enabling the drunken driver to be apprehended before he maims or kills himself or someone else, nor ... so expansive as to permit a conviction where clearly not warranted.” Lawrence,
The dissent suggests that the Zavala “test” may be more effective in removing impaired drivers from our highways and in keeping potential victims out of harm’s way than the analysis we have advanced here. We come to quite the opposite conclusion. The totality approach permits drunk drivers to be prosecuted under a much greater variety of situations—for example, even when the vehicle is off the road with the engine not running. The drunk who turns off the key but remains behind the wheel is just as able to take command of the car and drive away, if so inclined, as the one who leaves the engine on. The former needs only an instant to start the vehicle, hardly a daunting task. Thus, we believe the step closer to driving depicted by the dissent is so small as to be illusory. Furthermore, the suggestion that an impaired motorist, stopped off the roadway, should be able to gain immunity by the simple act of turning off the ignition (perhaps even as the police car approaches) best illustrates the absurdity of an inflexible rule. Under a totality analysis, the motorist will not receive automatic absolution with such a flick of the wrist, but can still be found in “actual physical control” of the vehicle.
That the mechanical application of Zavala can lead to highly questionable results was demonstrated in State ex rel. McDougall v. Superior Court,
In closing, it is important for us to note that under A.R.S. § 28-692 a motorist can be convicted for either “driving” or “being in actual physical control” while under the influence of intoxicating substances. Thus, even where a defendant is determined to have relinquished actual physical control, if it can be shown that such person drove while intoxicated to reach the place where he
We hold that whether a driver had actual physical control is a question for the fact finder and should be based upon consideration of all the circumstances. We therefore vacate the memorandum decision of the court of appeals, reverse appellant’s conviction, and remand the case for a new trial at which the principles set forth in this opinion shall be applied to determine his guilt or innocence.
Notes
. Because Justice Martone had been the superior court judge whose decision was overturned by the court of appeals in McDougall, he was compelled to recuse himself when the case came to us on a petition for review. We ultimately were forced to dismiss it because the remaining four justices were equally divided on the issue presented. See 174 Ariz. 343,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. Defendant was passed out or asleep in the front seat of his car parked at an angle in the emergency lane of a controlled access highway with his car’s engine running. When the police officer was finally able to rouse him, his first impulse was to put the car in gear, apparently to drive away. In my view, defendant posed an extreme danger to himself and to others using the highway. Yet, a majority of the court, employing a newly adopted “totality of the circumstances” test, today holds that defendant is entitled to a new trial and may avoid conviction altogether on the theory that he was not in actual physical control of his vehicle. See Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 28-692(A) (Supp.1994). Because I believe that the law does not and should not allow this result, I dissent.
The purpose of section 28-692(A) “is to deter individuals who have been drinking intoxicating liquor from operating their vehicles while in an intoxicated state. The ‘actual physical control’ offense is a preventative measure intended to deter the drunk driver. One who has been drinking intoxicating liquor should not be encouraged to test his driving ability on any road, where his life and the lives of other motorists are at stake.” State ex rel. McDougall v. Superior Court,
In keeping with the legislature’s intent to prevent drunk drivers from causing harm, a person such as defendant should be considered in actual physical control of his vehicle. Such individuals have the ability to direct their vehicles in traffic at any moment and present an extreme threat to others. Defendant, in fact, tried to drive away immediately upon being revived. In State v. Webb,
In light of the purpose of the statute, it should be possible for impaired individuals to escape the law only when they have clearly and unequivocally surrendered their ability to immediately direct their vehicles into traffic. Such a case was Zavala, where this court carved out a narrow exception and held that a driver who had pulled his car off the road and who had turned off his ignition had relinquished actual physical control. See State v. Zavala,
The majority today greatly broadens the narrow Zavala exception, concluding that it is too rigid. To the contrary, I believe the
Because the purpose of section 28-692(A) is to deter and apprehend those who threaten public safety, the inquiry should focus, as it has in our prior cases, on factors that bear on a defendant’s apparent ability to cause harm. See, e.g., State v. Superior Court,
Judge Noyes, in rejecting below the “totality of circumstances” test now embraced by the majority, was correct when he said that “any protection afforded individuals who drink intoxicating liquor and then attempt to drive must be narrowly construed in view of the legislative purpose of deterring such individuals from operating their vehicles at all. We recognize the reasoning reflected in Zavala ____ However, Zavala should not be unduly expanded so as to undermine the paramount goal of deterring drunk drivers from ever getting behind the wheel of their car[s] in the first place.” State v. Love, No. 1 CA-CR 93-0525, slip op. at 8 (Ariz.App. June 2, 1994) (memorandum decision) (citations omitted). I believe the rationale of the court of appeals holds true to the legislature’s intent by unambiguously imposing criminal liability upon those who continue to threaten public safety. I would affirm defendant’s conviction.
. We granted review in the McDougall case, but later dismissed it as improvidently granted for lack of a majority to resolve the issue presented.
