Rhody R. Mallick appeals from a judgment convicting him of driving while intoxicated (second offense). He raises a single issue: whether the trial court erred when it admitted evidence that he refused to perform field sobriety tests at the requеst of the arresting officer. We see no error and affirm the judgment.
In the early morning hours of July 31, 1993, Officer Paul Pagel of the Plover Police Department observed Mallick weaving off the roadway, making a wide turn, and driving with the left wheels of his cаr over the centerline. Pagel stopped Mallick and asked him to perform various field sobriety tests. When Mal-lick refused, Pagel arrested him for driving while intoxicated and took him to the Portage County Sheriffs headquarters, where Mallick agreed to provide a sample of his breath for analysis. The test results indicated a blood-alcohol content in excess of the legal limit.
Mallick filed a motion in limine asking the trial court to bar any evidence regarding his rеfusal to sub *429 mit to the field tests. The trial court denied the motion, concluding that the evidence was relevant in determining his guilt or innocence and that its probative value outweighed any possible prejudicial effect. On appеal Mallick argues that the court erred as a matter of law. He contends that the tests are the equivalent of a "testimonial act," the evidence of which is inadmissible under the self-incrimination provisions of Article I, § 8 of the Wisconsin Constitution. 1
As the primary legal authority for his position, Mallick offers an Oregon Court of Appeals decision,
State v. Green,
*430 The Green court considered the dispositive issue as not whеther evidence of the refusal is itself "communicative" in that it communicates the defendant's state of mind but "whether the communication is the result of governmental compulsion" of the sort prohibited by the constitutional bar against self-incrimination. Id. at 577. According to the court, when the "communication" — performance of field sobriety tests — is something compelled by police, evidence of refusal as implying guilt is inadmissible: "Because defendant had no obligаtion to take the test, there could also be no conditions placed on his refusal." Id. at 579. Thus, said the court," [u]se of the fact that he refused enables the state to obtain communicative evidence to which it would otherwisе have no right, as a result of defendant's refusal to provide noncommunicative evidence to which it also had no right." Id. That is about as clear as the court's reasoning gets.
We are more impressed with the reasoning of the Virginia Court of Appeals in
Farmer v. Commonwealth of Virginia,
*431 The privilege against self-incrimination protects an accused only from being compelled to testify against himself, or otherwise provide the State with evidence of a testimonial or communicative nature. In order to be testimonial, an accused's communication must itself, explictly or implicitly, relate a factual assertion or disclose information. In Schmerber [v. California,384 U.S. 757 , 764 (1966)], the Supreme Court stated that the Fifth Amendment offers no protection against сompulsion to submit to fingerprinting, photographing, or measurements, to write or speak for identification, to appear in court, to stand, to assume a stance, to walk, or to make a particular gesture. The fact оf the refusal to perform tests that do not themselves constitute communicative or testimonial evidence is equally non-communicative and non-testimonial in nature... .
Asking a suspect to submit to a field sobriety test does not place the suspect in the cruel trilemma of self-accusation, perjury or contempt.
Id. at 373 (quotations and quoted sources omitted).
We are particularly impressed with Chief Justice Traynor's reasoning in
People v. Ellis,
It was circumstantial evidеnce of consciousness of guilt, and like similar evidence, such as escape from custody, false alibi, flight, suppression of evidence, and failure to respond to accusatory statements when not in police custody, its admission does not *432 violate the privilege. Moreover, as in the foregoing examples, the evidence did not result from a situation contrived to produce conduct indicative of guilt.
Although conduct indicating consciousnеss of guilt is often described as an "admission by conduct," such nomenclature should not obscure the fact that guilty conduct is not a testimonial statement of guilt. It is therefore not protected by the Fifth Amendment. By acting like a guilty person, a mаn does not testify to his guilt but merely exposes himself to the drawing of inferences from circumstantial evidence....
Id. at 397-98.
In
State v. Hubanks,
Likewise, in this case, the court-ordered voice sample was to be used only for the purposes of voice identifiсation. Hubanks was not asked to reveal his thoughts or speak his guilt. Rather, the words he was to speak had been chosen for him and did not compel him to reveal the contents of his mind.
Id.
at 15-16,
In
State v. Babbitt,
Field sobriety tests are not testimoniаl in nature because the suspect does not intend to convey a statement as to his or her state of sobriety by performing the test. Furthermore, [they] involve no requirement that the suspect make admissions or respond to pоlice inquiries regarding prior alcohol use. Finally, there is no compulsion in violation of the fifth amendment because the suspect is not required to perform the test. We thus conclude that, although Babbitt had a fifth amendment right to refrаin from answering the officers' questions, her refusal to perform the field sobriety test was not protected by the fifth amendment.
Babbitt,
Mallick correctly points out that, in
Babbitt,
we expressly stated, "In the interest of clarity, we note that our conclusion should not be construed to mean that a defendant's refusal to submit to a field sobriety test may be used as evidence at trial," indicating that
*435
our holding related only to the question of probable cause to arrest.
Id.
at 363,
*436 By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Article I, § 8 is the Wisconsin counterpart to the Fifth Amеndment to the United States Constitution, and the Wisconsin Supreme Court has held that the self-incrimination provisions of Article I, § 8 are co-extensive with those of the Fifth Amendment and that, as a result, "[there is] no basis for interpreting [the] state constitutiоnal language beyond the articulated scope of federal constitutional guarantees . . . ."
State v. Sorenson,
We declined to reach Hubanks's argument that the specific words he was ordered to speak were "non-neutral" and "content-laden," and that the court's actions were inherently prejudicial because the jury had not yet heard one of the sentences he was asked to repeat.
State v. Hubanks,
Mallick stresses in his brief that there is a distinction between a breath test and field sobriety tests in that a law requires all motorists to submit to the former but no law requires them to submit to the latter. We found the distinction
*434
unpersuasive in
State v. Babbitt,
Despite that comment, there is no doubt that we considered and decided the basic relevancy and Fifth Amendment issues in
Babbitt,
and we note in this regard that" 'when a cоurt of last resort intentionally takes up, discusses, and decides a question germane to, though not necessarily decisive of, the controversy, such decision is not a
dictum
but is a judicial act of the court which it will thereafter recognize as a binding decision.' "
State v. Kruse,
As indicated,
Farmer
relied on
Schmerber v. California,
Other "compulsion" cases have reached similar conclusions with respect to compelling a defendant to (1) stand in a lineup, place tape on his face and utter the words "put the money in the bag,"
United States v. Wade,
