Prior to his trial on a DUI charge, Matthew Alan Stewart moved to suppress evidence relating to the breathalyzer test administered to *543 him, based upon his alleged failure to understand the implied consent warnings given by police. The trial court granted that motion, and the State filed this appeal pursuant to OCGA § 5-7-1 (a) (4). Finding that the trial court failed to apply the relevant law, we reverse.
In reviewing a trial court’s decision on a motion to suppress where, as here, “the evidence was uncontroverted and no question regarding the credibility of witnesses was presented, an appellate court must conduct a de novo review of the trial court’s application of law to the undisputed facts.” (Punctuation and footnote omitted.)
State v. Brown,
The record shows that on June 9, 2002, Stewart was stopped for speeding after he passed a marked Fulton County Police Department patrol car while traveling at a high rate of speed. After giving Stewart field sobriety tests, Detective Danny Doyle placed him under arrest for DUI. Doyle told Stewart several times that he was being arrested for DUI and each time Stewart replied that he “did not understand,” at one point asking the officer to “explain it in English.” Doyle placed Stewart in the patrol car and read him the implied consent notice, as required by OCGA § 40-5-67.1 (b). When Stewart again responded that he “did not understand,” Doyle read him the implied consent notice several more times. Each time Stewart responded that he “did not understand.”
Doyle then transported Stewart to the Fulton County jail, where he attempted to give Stewart a breathalyzer test. Doyle explained to Stewart what the breathalyzer machine was and how it operated and then asked him, “Are you going to take it? Step up and blow if you are.” Stewart went to the machine without objection and put his mouth over the mouthpiece, but plugged the hole with his tongue and declined to blow a breath sample into the tube. Eventually the machine “timed out” and gave a reading of an “insufficient sample” to determine Stewart’s blood alcohol level. Doyle treated Stewart’s conduct as a refusal to take the test and made no further attempts to obtain a breath sample from Stewart.
The State planned to introduce at trial evidence of Stewart’s refusal to provide a breath sample as circumstantial evidence of his guilt. Stewart moved to suppress this evidence, arguing that his failure to understand the implied consent warnings invalidated any consent he gave to take the breathalyzer test. 1 The trial court agreed, and granted Stewart’s motion, finding that he did not knowingly and voluntarily consent to the breathalyzer test.
*544 Neither Stewart’s arguments nor the order of the trial court address the legal issues actually presented by Stewart’s motion to suppress, which were: (1) whether Stewart’s conduct can be construed as a refusal to take the breathalyzer test; and, if so (2) whether Stewart’s professed inability to understand the implied consent warnings warrants excluding the evidence of that refusal. We now turn to those issues.
1. As the term “implied consent” indicates, “every driver’s consent to a chemical test for intoxication is implied by law.”
State v. Webb,
“[Unless a person is encumbered by a physical or medical limitation, he or she may be considered to have refused to submit to the test if an adequate breath sample has not been provided.” (Footnote omitted.)
Chamberlain v. State,
The record contains no evidence that Stewart suffered from a physical or medical condition that would prevent him from providing an adequate breath sample. We must therefore conclude that his conduct constitutes a refusal to provide such a sample.
2. In light of the foregoing, the second question before us is whether any grounds exist for suppressing the otherwise admissible evidence of Stewart’s refusal to submit to chemical testing. Stewart argues that his failure to understand the implied consent notice read to him warrants such suppression. We disagree.
Stewart asserts that his professed inability to comprehend Georgia’s statutorily-mandated implied consent notice meant that he *545 could not understand his rights or the consequences of his actions. Thus, he argues, neither his consent to nor his refusal to submit to chemical testing are valid, and his conduct with respect to the breathalyzer test was neither knowing nor voluntary. Whether Stewart understood the implied consent notice, and therefore comprehended the import of his actions, however, is irrelevant.
The law views the implied consent to chemical testing, or the revocation of that consent, as valid so long as the arresting officer reads the driver the implied consent notice set forth in OCGA § 40-5-67.1 (b). See, e.g.,
Leiske v. State,
Notably, however, “drivers are entitled only to be
advised
of their rights under the implied consent law, that is, to have the implied consent notice read to them. The law does not require the arresting officer to ensure that the driver
understands
the implied consent notice.” (Citations and footnote omitted; emphasis in original.)
Furcal-Peguero,
supra,
Because Detective Doyle read Stewart the implied consent notice in an accurate and timely fashion, that notice was valid irrespective of Stewart’s claimed inability to understand it. As a result, even if Stewart’s subsequent refusal to provide a breath sample resulted from a failure to comprehend the consequences of his conduct, it is *546 nevertheless admissible against him. We therefore reverse the order of the trial court granting Stewart’s motion to suppress.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Stewart declined, to file an appellate brief, even after being granted an extension of time in which to do so, and his arguments referenced herein are those found in the transcript of the hearing on the motion to suppress.
