Thе director of revenue suspended Mark A. Verdoorn’s driving privileges for driving while intoxicated. Verdoorn brought this action to reinstate his license. The circuit court agreed with Verdoorn and ordered his driving privileges reinstated. The director appeals. The judgment is reversed because Verdoorn’s rebuttal evidence failed to overcome the director’s prima facie case.
Factual and Procedural Background
Verdoorn was pulled over by a deputy who noticed Verdoorn’s vehicle swerving. Upon approaching the vehicle, the deputy detected the odor of alcohol on Verdoorn and observed that Verdoorn’s eyes were bloodshоt and watery. Verdoorn admitted he had had a couple of beers. The deputy administered three field sobriety tests, all of which Verdoorn failed.
Verdoorn was arrested for driving while intoxicated. A breath tеst showed Ver-doorn’s blood alcohol concentration was .126%. The director suspended Verdoorn’s driver’s license pursuant to section 302.505.1 2 because his blood alcohol level exceeded the legal limit of ,10%. 3
Verdoorn filed a petition for trial de novo. At the hearing, the director presented evidence to establish that the deputy had probable cause to believe Verdoorn wаs driving while intoxicated and that Ver-doorn’s blood alcohol content exceeded .10%.
To rebut the director’s case, Verdoorn presented a “metabolic curve” defense supported by thе deposition testimony of Dr. William Watson, an expert witness on toxicology and pharmacology. Watson made an assessment of Verdoorn’s blood alcohol content in light of undisputed facts showing Vеrdoorn started drinking at approximately 1:15 a.m. and drank as rapidly as one beer every five minutes up until the time his vehicle was stopped at approximately 1:40 a.m. Based on the nature and timing of this “binge drinking,” Watson testified “to a reasonable degree of toxicological certainty” that Verdoorn’s blood alcohol content was “lower than .126 grams percent and, in fact, could have been еither above or below .10 grams percent” at the time he was stopped. Upon further questioning, Watson testified it was “equally likely [Verdoorn’s blood alcohol content] was above or below” the lеgal limit of .10%.
The director objected to the expert’s deposition testimony as “immaterial, irrelevant, and based on vast speculation of certain crucial variables.” The court overruled thе objection and admitted the deposition testimony. The director presented no additional evidence but argued, in closing, that Verdoorn “did not meet his burden.”
The circuit court entered judgment reinstating Verdоorn’s driver’s license.
Point on Appeal
The director’s sole point on appeal is that the circuit court erred in granting the
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license reinstatement because Verdoorn failed to adequately rebut the evidenсe that he drove while intoxicated. The director argues Verdoorn could only rebut with a “preponderance of the evidence” showing that his blood alcohol content was less than .10%.
Andersen v. Director of Revenue,
Standard of Review
This Court will affirm the trial court’s judgment unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, unless the decision is cоntrary to the weight of the evidence, or unless the trial court erroneously declares or applies the law.
Murphy v. Carron,
Statutory Framework
Section 302.505.1 permits the department of revenue to suspend or revoke the driver’s license of any person arrested upon probable cause of driving while intoxicated. An aggrieved driver can seek a trial dе novo. At the trial the court must determine whether the suspension or revocation is supported by evidence that: (1) the driver was arrested upon probable cause for violating an alcohol-related offense; and (2) the driver’s blood alcohol concentration exceeded the legal limit of .10%. Section 302.535.1. The “burden of proof’ is on the director of revenue to establish grounds for the suspension or rеvocation by a preponderance of the evidence. Section 302.535.1.
Applying this statutory scheme, the director must initially present evidence to establish probable cause for the arrest and the drivеr’s blood alcohol level of .10 % or greater.
Stuhr v. Director of Revenue,
There is no dispute in the instant case that the director presented a
prima facie
case. The director argues that once she
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established a
prima facie
case, the burden shifted to Verdoorn to prove by a preponderance of evidence that his blood alcohol content was lower than .10 %. The director relies on, among other cases,
Green v. Director of Revenue State of Mo.,
The trial de novo statute establishing the director’s burden of proof was enacted in 1983. None of the appellate cases decided under this statute from 1983 through 1996 required the shifting of this ultimate burden to the driver once the director presents a
prima facie
case.
See, e.g., Hieger v. Director of Revenue,
In
Andersen v. Director of Revenue,
In a trial de novo under section 302.535.1, once the director makes a prima facie showing оf probable cause of driving while intoxicated, the driver is entitled to present rebuttal evidence that raises a genuine issue of fact regarding the validity of the blood alcohol test results. The rebuttal еvidence should challenge the presumption of validity established by the director’s prima facie case; but the driver’s burden is one of production — not persuasion. The director retains the burden of proof throughout thе proceeding.
The cases set out in the appendix misstate the evidentiary rebuttal standards, and to that extent, they are overruled.
Sufficiency of Verdoorn’s Rebuttal Evidence
Verdoorn’s rebuttal of the director’s case was based on expert testimony asserting a “metabolic curve” defense. The expert, Dr. William Watson, made a toxicological assessment of Verdoorn’s *547 blood alcohol concentration in light of the fact that Verdoorn drank as many as six beers in the 25 minutes before his vehicle was stopped. Dr. Watson testified “to a reasonable degree of toxicological certainty” that Verdoorn’s blood alcohol level was below .126 at the time of the stop and that it was “equally likely” his level was “above or below” the legal limit of .10%.
Verdoorn presented no evidence that his blood alcohol concentration was in fact below the legal limit at the time he was stopped. The expert’s testimony showed only that Verdoorn could have been intoxicated or that his blood alcohol concentration might not have reached the limit of .10% by the time he was stopped. This inconclusive testimony was insufficient to rebut the presumption of intoxication established by the director’s prima facie case.
The judgment is reversed.
APPENDIX
Francis v. Director of Revenue,
Milligan v. Wilson,
Kennedy v. Director of Revenue,
Weiland v. Director of Revenue,
McCoy v. Director of Revenue,
Bain v. Wilson,
Duing v. Director of Revenue,
Smyth v. Director of Revenue,
Smith v. Director of Revenue,
Daniels v. Director of Revenue,
Phelps v. Director of Revenue,
Hollingshead v. Director of Revenue,
Meyer v. Director of Revenue,
Booth v. Director of Revenue,
Testerman v. Director of Revenue, State of Mo.,
Riggin v. Director of Revenue,
Hansen v. Director of Revenue,
Kobayshi v. Director of Revenue,
Hamm v. Director of Revenue,
Reynolds v. Director of Revenue,
Wilcutt v. Director of Revenue,
Lasley v. Director of Revenue,
Harper v. Director of Revenue,
Smith v. Director of Revenue,
Misener v. Director of Revenue,
Prozorowski v. Director of Revenue,
Douglass v. Wilson,
Endsley v. Director of Revenue,
Childs v. Director of Revenue,
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Rhodes v. Director of Revenue, State of Mo.,
Combs v. Director of Revenue,
Devereux v. Director of Revenue,
Guccione v. Director of Revenue,
White v. Director of Revenue,
Adkins v. Director of Revenue,
Kafoury v. Director of Revenue,
Plank v. Director of Revenue,
Bramer v. Director of Revenue,
Farin v. Director of Revenue,
Hurley v. Director of Revenue,
Haas v. Director of Revenue,
Anderson v. Director of Revenue,
Barrett v. Director of Revenue,
Green v. Director of Revenue State of Mo.,
Andersen v. Dir. of Revenue,
Notes
. This Court transferred this case aftеr an opinion by the Court of Appeals, Western District, authored by the Honorable Lisa White Hardwick. Mo. Const. article V, section 10. Portions of the court of appeals opinion are incorporated without further attribution.
. All statutory references are to RSMo 2000.
. Effeсtive September 29, 2001, section 302.505.1 was amended to reduce the minimum blood alcohol concentration from .10% to .08% to suspend the license of a person driving while intoxicated. Verdoom’s case is unаffected by this change in the law because his DWI offense occurred on March 29, 2001, prior to the amendment’s effective date.
. The
Andersen
decision, in the paragraph pri- or to the remand instructions, cites tо
Hieger,
