Defendant’s motor vehicle operator’s license was suspended pursuant to the Vermont administrative suspension law, 23 V.S.A. § 1205. Although he uses a scattergun approach to this appeal, we can reduce the issues he raises to three: (1) the administrative suspension proceeding is essentially criminal and so requires the procedural trappings of a criminal trial; (2) this Court’s implementation of the administrative suspension proceeding through the procedures of D.C.C.R. 80.5 improperly impinges on the powers of the Legislature; and (3) the expert testimony in this case was admitted without a proper foundation. We affirm.
Defendant was stopped for driving under the influence (DUI) on February 5, 1991. He was asked to, and did, take a breath test. When the results showed a blood-alcohol content of 0.275%, he was charged with DUI and notified, on February 15, 1991, of the State’s intention to suspend his operator’s license. 23 V.S.A. § 1205(c). He requested a hearing in district court. Id. § 1205(e), (f). A preliminary hearing was held on March 6,1991, and a final hearing on April 24,1991. Based in part on affidavits filed by the issuing officer and the state chemist, the trial court *277 found in favor of the State and sent notice of suspension to the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. Id. § 1205(h).
While defendant argues that the procedures used violate the Vermont and federal constitutions and the rules of evidence, he does not directly attack the conclusion of the trial court. Defendant’s first argument boils down to whether the license suspension proceeding is civil or criminal for purposes of the relevant procedural safeguards. There is no question that, were the proceeding criminal, it would be unconstitutional, because it does not provide a jury trial, afford confrontation of witnesses or require proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
The claims defendant raises are largely foreclosed by our recent decision in
State v. Strong,
Without repeating all of the analysis of Strong, we see no reason to distinguish among the various procedural safeguards defendant seeks in determining whether the license suspension proceeding is criminal. We hold that it is not criminal and defendant is not entitled to a jury trial, appointed counsel, protection against self-incrimination, proof beyond a reasonable doubt or confrontation of witnesses as protected by the Sixth Amendment, as those protections apply to criminal proceedings. 1 Nor, for the same reason, is defendant entitled to the *278 protections accorded to criminal defendants by the Vermont Constitution.
In his brief defendant argues generally that the administrative license suspension proceeding denies him due process of law even if not of a criminal nature, under the United States Supreme Court’s holding and analysis in
Matthews v. Eldridge,
Defendant’s second challenge is that this Court’s implementation of the administrative license suspension procedure through D.C.C.R. 80.5 infringes on legislative power. We fail to see the relevance of this argument to defendant’s circumstances since he complains about no specific provision of the rule. In the absence of some effect of the alleged constitutional
*279
violation on defendant, he is in no position to complain about it. See
In re Vermont Supreme Court Administrative Directive No. 17,
In any event, there is no separation of powers violation. Chapter II, § 37 of the Vermont Constitution directs this Court to “make and promulgate rules governing practice and procedure in civil and criminal cases in all courts,” subject to revision by the Legislature. Under this provision, the power to establish practice and procedure is shared, with the Judiciary having the primary responsibility in the area. See Dooley, The Regulation of the Practice of Law, Practice and Procedure, and Court Administration in Vermont — Judicial or Legislative Power?, 8 Vt. L. Rev. 211, 241-52 (1983). D.C.C.R. 80.5 is a procedural rule authorized by the Vermont Constitution. 2 Because the constitution itself establishes the judicial power for rule promulgation, there can be no violation of the separation of powers established by Chapter II, § 5.
Defendant’s third argument contests the admission of the affidavit of the State’s chemist showing defendant’s blood-alcohol test results. He contends that the evidence is inadmissible because the calculation used to derive the percentage of alcohol in defendant’s blood from the breath test result relied upon the characteristics of a “general pool of individuals” rather than those of defendant.
3
He asserts that this use constituted an opinion based on speculation and so violated V.R.E. 703. See, e.g.,
Jackson v. True Temper Corp.,
*280
Because it is based on a rule of evidence, defendant’s argument has no application to administrative license suspension proceedings, as they are not governed by the rules of evidence. See D.C.C.R. 80.5(f) (hearings shall be conducted pursuant to small claims rule, D.C.C.R. 80.3(f)); D.C.C.R. 80.3(f) (except for the rules with respect to privilege, Vermont Rules of Evidence do not apply). In any event, this precise argument was rejected in
State v. Blake,
Affirmed.
Notes
In his argument, defendant relies on a decision of the Oregon Supreme Court holding that Oregon’s civil DUI law involved a criminal proceeding, despite the Legislature’s label, and required the use of criminal procedures. See
Brown v. Multnomah County Dist. Ct.,
Oregon has since enacted a scheme similar to that of Vermont, separating the license suspension proceeding from the criminal prosecution. The Oregon courts have upheld the administrative license suspension proceeding as civil in nature. See
Carney v. Motor Vehicles Div.,
It is also authorized by statute, 23 Y.S.A. § 1205(p), indicating that the Legislature failed to see any incursion on its powers.
The Legislature has eliminated the basis for this argument in the 1991 amendments to the statute. The threshold test result that triggers the statute is defined in terms of the operator’s “alcohol concentration.” 23 V.S.A. § 1205(h). The term “alcohol concentration” is separately defined, depending upon whether breath or blood is being measured. Id. § 1200(1). For breath, alcohol concentration is defined as the number of grams of alcohol per 210 liters of breath. In effect, the Legislature has defined a statutory conversion ratio between blood-alcohol and breath-alcohol levels, applicable in all cases.
