Opinion by:
Dawn Stewart challenges her conviction for driving while intoxicated. On appeal, Stewart claims that the trial court erred by: (1) denying her requested jury instructions on the presumption of innocence and the law of intoxication; (2) admitting the results of an intoxilyzer test taken more than eighty minutes after she stopped driving; and (3) denying her challenge for cause of one of the venire members. Stewart also claims harmful error from the definition of intoxication given by the prosecutor during voir dire.
Because the trial court admitted the results of the breath test taken more than eighty minutes after Stewart stopped driving without also admitting corresponding extrapolation evidence, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings. Based upon our disposition of this issue, we need not reach Stewart’s remaining contentions.
*485 Factual and Procedural Background
At 11:30 p.m. on April 4, 1999, Officer Jeff Rodriguez observed Stewart driving on Highway 90. Rodriguez noticed that she was weaving in her lane and pulled her over after he witnessed various minor traffic infractions. He noticed that her eyes were glassy and that her breath smelled of alcohol, so he asked her to perform several field sobriety tests. The night was windy and the pair was forced to change locations when the wind and several trucks blew dirt and dust on them. After Stewart failed three of the seven field sobriety tests, Rodriguez arrested her.
At 12:51 and 12:58 a.m., Stewart submitted breath samples. Those samples showed an alcohol concentration of 0.160 and a 0.154, above the legal limit of 0.10. At trial, George McDougall, Bexar County’s Breath Test Technical Supervisor, testified that he did not have enough information to determine what Stewart’s alcohol concentration would have been at the time she drove. Although no retrograde extrapolation evidence was admitted to show what Stewart’s alcohol concentration would have been eighty minutes before she submitted the breath samples, the results of the breath test were admitted into evidence at trial.
Error Analysis
Stewart submitted two breath samples more than eighty minutes after she stopped driving. McDougall testified that he had no information other than the breath test results. He admitted that he could not determine whether Stewart’s alcohol concentration was higher, lower, or the same when she was driving because he did not know whether her body was absorbing or eliminating alcohol at the time of the test. He also admitted that he did not know Stewart’s weight, the length of her drinking spree, or the time of her last drink, all of which would help determine whether Stewart’s alcohol concentration level was rising or falling. Despite this lack of information, McDougall was allowed to testify that her alcohol concentration was 0.160 and 0.154 when she took the breath test.
The State argues that the Transportation Code requires admission of this evidence in every DWI case.
See
Tex. Transp. Code Ann. § 724.064 (Vernon 2000) (codifying that “evidence of the alcohol concentration ... as shown by analysis of a specimen of the person’s blood, breath, or urine or any other bodily substance taken at the request or order of a peace officer is admissible”). The State claims that because civil statutes trump the Rules of Evidence, the policy considerations of reliability, relevance, probative value, and prejudice codified in the Rules of Evidence do not apply.
See
Tex.R. Evm 101(c). Cases interpreting that provision of the Transportation Code have found no intent on the part of the Legislature to remove a trial judge from the position of gatekeeper in a DWI case.
See Beard v. State,
- S.W.3d -, -,
In order to find the results of an alcohol concentration test reliable, the trial court must find that: 1) the underlying scientific theory is valid; 2) the technique applying the theory is valid; and 3) the expert who applied the technique on the occasion in question did so properly.
Id.
The Texas Legislature, through the Transportation Code, and the Court of Criminal Appeals deem the scientific theory underlying breath tests of alcohol concentration
*486
valid.
See Beard
, — S.W.3d at -,
The trial court erred in admitting the results of Stewart’s breath test for three reasons. First, the results of this breath test were irrelevant.
See
Tex.R. Evid. 402;
see also Bagheri v. State,
Secondly, based on the testimony McDougall provided about the breath test results, those results present no evidence. McDougall testified that Stewart’s alcohol concentration could have been higher, lower, or the same at the time she drove. His testimony that no one result was more probable than another shows those results to be no evidence. Id. (citing to other jurisdictions where results of intoxilyzer test taken more than one hour after the stop present no evidence). Because those test results are no evidence of whether she was intoxicated when she drove, the trial court erred in admitting them.
Finally, the trial court encouraged the jury to decide the case based on facts not in evidence. Retrograde extrapolation is a complex computation and specialized knowledge is required to perform the requisite calculations.
See Mata,
Harm Analysis
Admitting scientific evidence does not affect a defendant’s constitutional rights.
See Bagheri,
We therefore reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings.
