STATE OF NEBRASKA, APPELLEE, V. RAYMOND V. WAHRMAN, APPELLANT.
No. 41257
Supreme Court of Nebraska
October 26, 1977
199 Neb. 337 | 258 N.W.2d 818
Paul L. Douglas, Attorney General, and Melvin K. Kammerlohr, for appellee.
Heard before WHITE, C. J., SPENCER, BOSLAUGH, McCOWN, CLINTON, BRODKEY, and WHITE, JJ.
CLINTON, J.
Defendant was charged in the county court of Red Willow County with having, on March 10, 1976, operated a motor vehicle on a public highway while having more than .10 of 1 percent by weight of alcohol in his body fluid in violation of the provisions of section
Having perfected his appeal to this court, defendant makes the following assignments of error: (1) The court erred in admitting and considering, under the provisions of section
Section
If an examination of the record disclosed that such refusal was made by the arresting officer, the test results would be inadmissible and the conviction
On the second assignment defendant argues that he was not offered a choice as to whether the sample to be given would be of his urine or his blood.
Section
The record discloses that the defendant voluntarily gave the urine sample. It does not show that he made any request that a blood sample be given instead. The statute does not by its terms require that the arrested person be informed of his choices. In
Since the results of the chemical test were admissible, the evidence is sufficient to support the conviction.
The defendant has made other assignments of error, but has not argued them in his brief. We have nonetheless examined them and found they are unmeritorious.
AFFIRMED.
WHITE, C. THOMAS, J., dissenting.
At the time of an arrest for driving while intoxicated, the defendant is required to submit to the taking of body fluids or a breath sample, under pain of loss of his operator‘s license for refusal to do so.
The defendant is usually requested to perform physical acts, and his reactions are testified to, generally by an officer, who has already made the determination of probable cause. The tests are used to reinforce that determination. The defendant is not entitled to the Miranda warnings during this procedure. Schmerber v. California, 384 U. S. 757, 86 S. Ct. 1826, 16 L. Ed. 2d 908 (1966).
In an attempt to place a disinterested person within the police station scenario, the Legislature in passing section
Doubtless operating under the fiction that “everyone may be presumed to know the law,” we have inappropriately held that the defendant need not be informed of that right. Zadina v. Weedlun, 187 Neb. 361, 190 N. W. 2d 857. The majority further restricts section
The least protection this section ought to provide, it seems to me, is the requirement that the State meet a positive assertion of request and denial, with an equally positive assertion that the request was not made. Anything less, and an already crippled statute will be rendered useless.
McCOWN, J., joins in this dissent.
