Court Opinion

ID: 4676568
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-04-12 20:03:28.265209+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:03:33.329706
License: Public Domain

Filed 4/12/21 Fail v. Department of Motor Vehicles CA4/1
                 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

                COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION ONE

                                         STATE OF CALIFORNIA

 JAMES C. FAIL,                                                       D076364

           Plaintiff and Appellant,

           v.                                                         (Super. Ct. No. ECU000781)

 DEPARTMENT OF MOTOR
 VEHICLES,

           Defendant and Respondent.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Imperial County,
L. Brooks Anderholt, Judge. Affirmed.
         Law Offices of Robert A. Espinosa, Espinosa Espinosa & Farias, Robert
A. Espinosa, and Daniel R. Espinosa for Plaintiff and Appellant.
         Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Chris A. Knudsen, Assistant
Attorney General, Jodi L. Cleesattle and Celine M. Cooper, Deputy Attorneys
General, for Defendant and Respondent.
                                        I.
                               INTRODUCTION
      After being arrested for driving under the influence and driving with a
blood alcohol content of .08 percent or more (Veh. Code, § 23152, subds. (a),
(b)),1 James C. Fail filed a petition for writ of mandate in the trial court
seeking to overturn the suspension of his driver’s license by the Department
of Motor Vehicles (Department). The trial court denied the petition, ruling
that the Department properly suspended Fail’s driver’s license pursuant to
the administrative per se law (§ 13353.2 et seq.).2 On appeal, Fail claims
that there is “no substantial, competent evidence to support the necessary
facts for a suspension.” (Boldface & capitalization omitted.) We affirm the
judgment.

1     Unless otherwise specified, all subsequent statutory references are to
the Vehicle Code.
      Section 23152 provides in relevant part:
         “(a) It is unlawful for a person who is under the influence of
         any alcoholic beverage to drive a vehicle.
         “(b) It is unlawful for a person who has 0.08 percent or
         more, by weight, of alcohol in his or her blood to drive a
         vehicle.”

2      As described in greater detail in part III.A.1, post, “Under California’s
‘administrative per se’ law, the [Department] must suspend the driving
privilege of a person who was driving a motor vehicle with a blood-alcohol
level of 0.08 percent or more.” (Delgado v. Department of Motor Vehicles
(2020) 50 Cal.App.5th 572, 576.)
                                        2
                                       II.
               FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Fail’s arrest
      At approximately 10:50 p.m. on February 3, 2018, California Highway
Patrol Officer E. Soltero Jr. was on patrol in his vehicle when he noticed a
sedan with its tail lights not functioning properly traveling near him. Officer
Soltero initiated a traffic stop. After stopping the vehicle, Officer Soltero
approached the vehicle and spoke with the driver, later identified as Fail.
      While speaking with Fail, Officer Soltero observed that Fail’s eyes were
red and watery and that he smelled of alcohol. Fail admitted to having
consumed three or four Heineken Lights before driving.
      Officer Soltero directed Fail to exit his vehicle and asked him a series of
field sobriety test questions. When Officer Soltero asked Fail when he had
stopped drinking, Fail responded that he did not know. Officer Soltero also
had Fail perform a series of field sobriety tests. Fail performed
unsatisfactorily on the tests. Fail also refused to take a preliminary alcohol
screening test.
      At 11:14 p.m., Officer Soltero placed Fail under arrest for driving under
the influence. (§ 23152, subd. (a).) After arresting Fail, Officer Soltero
administered two blood alcohol breath tests. The first sample, taken from
Fail at 11:18 p.m., gave a reading of 0.08 percent blood alcohol content. The
second sample, taken three minutes after the first sample, provided an
identical reading.
      Officer Soltero arrested Fail for the additional offense of driving with a
blood alcohol level of .08 or more (§ 23152, subd. (b)), and issued a notice
suspending Fail’s driver’s license pursuant to the administrative per se law
(§ 13353.2 et seq.).

                                        3
B. The administrative per se hearing
      Fail requested an administrative hearing to contest the suspension of
his driver’s license. At the hearing, a hearing officer admitted documentary
evidence pertaining to Fail’s arrest, including Officer Soltero’s sworn
statement and investigative report.
      Fail offered the expert opinion testimony of Okorie Okorocha, a forensic
toxicologist. Okorocha stated that in his opinion, Fail’s blood alcohol level at
the time he was driving and at the time of the test was below .08 percent and
that it was at “a maximum of a .07 [percent].” Okorocha stated that this was
so because Fail was in the “absorptive phase” of alcohol consumption and
because the device used to measure Fail’s breath was “reading high.” Fail
also introduced in evidence a document that contained a record of various
“accuracy checks” that were performed on the device used to measure Fail’s
blood alcohol content on certain days over a period of approximately two
months around the time of Fail’s arrest.3
      In rebuttal, the Department presented expert testimony from Jennifer
Dernoncourt, a Senior Criminologist at the Department of Justice Crime Lab
in Riverside. As discussed in greater detail in III.D.3.a.i, post, Dernoncourt
testified concerning the device used to test Fail’s breath.
      The Department hearing officer issued a decision upholding the
suspension of Fail’s driver’s license. The hearing officer found that Officer
Soltero had reasonable cause to believe that Fail was driving a motor vehicle
while under the influence of alcohol; Fail was lawfully arrested; and Fail was
driving with .08 percent or more blood alcohol level.

3     We discuss in detail the results of those tests in part III.D, post.
                                        4
C. Fail’s writ petition
      Fail filed a petition for writ of administrative mandate in the trial court
in which he argued that there was no reasonable cause for Officer Soltero to
believe that Fail had been driving in violation of section 23152, that Fail was
unlawfully arrested and that there was not substantial evidence that Fail’s
blood alcohol content was “over a .08 at the time of the stop or at the time of
the test.”
      After briefing and a hearing, the trial court denied Fail’s petition. In
its statement of decision, the trial court found that Fail’s stop and arrest were
lawful and that Fail had driven with a prohibited blood alcohol content of
.08 percent or more. The court entered a judgment denying the petition.
D. The appeal
      Fail appeals the judgment.
                                      III.
                                 DISCUSSION
There is substantial evidence in the record to support the trial court’s findings
    with respect to the Department’s suspension of Fail’s driver’s license

      Fail contends that there is no substantial and competent evidence in
the record sufficient to support the Department’s suspension of his driver’s
license pursuant to the administrative per se law (§ 13353.2 et seq.).
A. Governing law and standard of review
      1. Administrative per se proceedings
      In Coffey v. Shiomoto (2015) 60 Cal.4th 1198, 1207–1208 (Coffey), the
Supreme Court summarized California’s administrative per se law (§ 13353.2
et seq.), “ ‘under which a person arrested for driving under the influence of
alcohol, and who is determined to have a prohibited amount of alcohol in his

                                       5
or her blood, must have driving privileges suspended prior to an actual
conviction for a criminal offense’ ” (Coffey, supra, at p. 1207), as follows:
         “Pursuant to the administrative per se law, ‘[a]fter either
         the arresting officer or the [Department] serves a person
         with a “notice of an order of suspension or revocation of the
         person’s [driver’s license],” the [Department] automatically
         reviews the merits of the suspension or revocation.
         [Citation.] The standard of review is preponderance of the
         evidence [citation], and the department bears the burden of
         proof [citations].’ [Citation.] A driver served with such a
         suspension notice is entitled to a hearing on request
         [citation], at which the only issues to be decided . . . are
         whether the arresting officer had reasonable cause to
         believe she was driving, whether she was arrested for an
         enumerated offense,[4] and whether she was driving with
         0.08 percent [blood alcohol content] or higher [citation]. If
         the [Department] hearing officer finds these three statutory
         prerequisites proved by a preponderance of the evidence,
         the accused’s driver’s license will be suspended . . . .” (Id.
         at pp. 1207–1208.)

      2. Writ proceedings challenging the Department’s suspension decision
      The Coffey court explained that a driver whose license is suspended
pursuant to the administrative per se law may file a petition for writ of
mandate seeking to overturn the suspension:
         “A driver whose license has been suspended under the
         administrative per se law can seek review of the
         [Department’s] decision by seeking a writ of mandate in the
         trial court. ‘In ruling on an application for a writ of
         mandate following an order of suspension or revocation, a

4      Although not expressly stated in the Coffey court’s summary of the
administrative per se law, it is well established that it is the Department’s
burden to prove that the officer had reasonable cause to believe that the
driver was driving in violation of certain Vehicle Code sections, including,
section 23152, and that the officer lawfully arrested the driver. (See, e.g.,
Gananian v. Zolin (1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 634, 638; see § 13557, subd.
(b)(3)(A), (B), & (C).)
                                         6
         trial court is required to determine, based on its
         independent judgment, “ ‘whether the weight of the
         evidence supported the administrative decision.’ ” ’
         [Citation.]” (Coffey, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 1217.)

      3. Standard of review
      The Coffey court also explained the limited scope of appellate review
that applies to substantial evidence challenges following the denial of a
petition for writ of mandate seeking to overturn the Department
administrative hearing officer’s decision:
         “Following the trial court’s denial of the writ, the scope of
         our review on appeal is limited: ‘[W]e “need only review the
         record to determine whether the trial court’s findings are
         supported by substantial evidence.” [Citation.] “ ‘We must
         resolve all evidentiary conflicts and draw all legitimate and
         reasonable inferences in favor of the trial court’s decision.
         [Citations.] Where the evidence supports more than one
         inference, we may not substitute our deductions for the
         trial court’s. [Citation.] We may overturn the trial court’s
         factual findings only if the evidence before the trial court is
         insufficient as a matter of law to sustain those findings.’ ” ’
         [Citation.]” (Coffey, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 1217.)5

5      While Fail contends that this court “examine[s] the findings made by
the agency itself to determine whether they were supported by substantial
evidence, rather than limiting [itself] to a review of the trial court’s findings,”
the law is clear and settled that this court reviews the trial court’s factual
findings. (See, e.g., Coffey, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 1217; Lake v. Reed (1997)
16 Cal.4th 448, 457 [“On appeal, we ‘need only review the record to determine
whether the trial court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence’ ”
(italics added)]; Murphey v. Shiomoto (2017) 13 Cal.App.5th 1052, 1069
[same].)
                                        7
B. There is substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding that
   Officer Soltero had reasonable cause to believe that Fail had driven in
   violation of section 23152

      Fail contends that Officer Soltero did not have reasonable cause to
believe that Fail had violated section 23152.
      “ ‘Reasonable cause . . . [is] such a state of facts as would lead a man of
ordinary care and prudence to believe and conscientiously entertain an
honest and strong suspicion that the person is guilty of a crime.’ ” (Cantrell
v. Zolin (1994) 23 Cal.App.4th 128, 133 [discussing “reasonable cause”
element in administrative per se hearing].)
      Fail argues that Officer Soltero did not have reasonable cause to
believe that he had violated section 23152 because, according to Fail, Officer
Soltero formed his opinion that Fail was intoxicated solely on the basis of
Fail’s bloodshot and watery eyes and the odor of alcohol on Fail’s breath and
emanating from the interior of Fail’s vehicle. Specifically, Fail argues:
         “At the time [Officer] Soltero arrested Fail, he had no
         reasonable cause to believe [Fail] was [driving under the
         influence] in violation of section 23152 . . . . Even though
         [Officer] Soltero had observed Fail walking, driving,
         parking, speaking; had detected the odor of alcohol; and,
         even though [Fail] refused to submit to a voluntary PAS
         [preliminary alcohol screening] test [Officer Soltero] could
         not have not formed an opinion about [Fail’s] sobriety
         strictly by [Fail’s] alleged bloodshot watery eyes and odor of
         alcohol, as [Officer Soltero] did here.” (Italics added.)

      Fail’s argument is without merit. In his investigation report, Officer
Soltero noted that, at approximately 10:50 p.m., he observed a vehicle
traveling with its “tail lights not functioning properly.” After stopping the
vehicle, Officer Soltero approached the driver, Fail, and spoke with him.

                                        8
      According to Officer Soltero, while speaking with Fail, he “observed
objective signs and symptoms of impairment and detected a strong odor of an
alcoholic beverage emitting from both within [Fail’s vehicle] and [Fail’s]
breath.” Officer Soltero further stated that Fail admitted having “consumed
3 or 4 Heineken [L]ights.” In addition, Officer Soltero stated that Fail “was
unable to perform” a series of field sobriety tests and Soltero outlined Fail’s
performance on those tests. Finally, Officer Soltero stated:
         “Based on Fail’s objective signs and symptoms of alcohol
         consumption, his driving, his statements, his [field sobriety
         tests] and my training and experience, I placed Fail under
         arrest for [violating section] 23152[, subdivision](a) . . . .”

      The trial court relied on this evidence in finding that Officer Soltero
had “probable cause[6] . . . to arrest [Fail].”
      It is clear from the record that Officer Soltero did not form his opinion
that Fail was intoxicated solely on the basis of Fail’s bloodshot and watery
eyes and the odor of alcohol on Fail’s breath and inside his vehicle. Rather,
he formed that opinion on the basis of all of the evidence described above,
including Fail’s admission to having consumed three or four beers and his
failing a series of field sobriety tests. This evidence constitutes substantial
evidence to support the trial court’s finding that Officer Soltero had

6   Reasonable cause and probable cause are synonymous. (See People v.
Mower (2002) 28 Cal.4th 457, 473.)

                                          9
reasonable/probable cause7 to believe that Fail had driven in violation of
section 23152.8
C. There is substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding that
   Officer Soltero lawfully arrested Fail

      Fail contends that his arrest was not lawful. Although the precise
basis of Fail’s claim is not entirely clear from his brief, Fail references his
unsatisfactory performance on the field sobriety tests, and argues “[a] search
is not made legal by what it turns up.” Fail thus appears to contend that his
arrest was unlawful because Officer Soltero illegally administered the field
sobriety tests.
      An officer may conduct a brief investigation into a driver’s sobriety
based upon reasonable suspicion of his intoxication. (See Brierton v.
Department of Motor Vehicles (2005) 130 Cal.App.4th 499, 509 (Brierton).)
“Reasonable suspicion that criminal conduct has occurred does not require
that an officer observe all elements of criminal conduct; rather, it requires

7      We discuss the distinct legal concept of reasonable suspicion in part
III.C, post.

8      In contending that Officer Soltero did not have reasonable cause to
believe that Fail had violated section 23152, Fail argues that, in conducting
the field sobriety tests, Officer Soltero violated “GO [California Highway
Patrol General Order] 100.61 to place a citizen out of view of the MVARS
[mobile video audio recording system].” Fail does not make any argument as
to how this alleged failure impacts the application of the administrative per
se law. Accordingly, we disregard the contention. (See, e.g., Benach v.
County of Los Angeles (2007) 149 Cal.App.4th 836, 852 (Benach) [“ ‘Issues do
not have a life of their own: If they are not raised or supported by argument
or citation to authority, [they are] . . . waived.’ [Citation.] It is not our place
to construct theories or arguments to undermine the judgment and defeat the
presumption of correctness. When an appellant fails to raise a point, or
asserts it but fails to support it with reasoned argument and citations to
authority, we treat the point as waived”].)
                                        10
that officer to be able to ‘point to specific articulable facts that, considered in
light of the totality of the circumstances, provide some objective
manifestation that the person detained may be involved in criminal
activity.’ ” (Ibid.)
      As noted in part III.B, ante, Officer Soltero stated in his investigation
report, “While speaking with Fail, I observed objective signs and symptoms of
impairment and detected a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage emitting from
both within [Fail’s vehicle] and [Fail’s] exhaled breath.” Officer Soltero also
stated that Fail admitted having consumed three or four beers and that,
based on these observations and Fail’s admission, he decided to administer a
series of field sobriety tests. The trial court found that Officer Soltero’s
“observation of red, watery eyes, the smell of alcohol, and [Fail’s] admission
that [he] had been drinking are enough for a reasonable officer to find
reasonable suspicion to conduct field sobriety tests.”
      Evidence that Officer Soltero observed Fail’s bloodshot and watery
eyes, smelled alcohol on Fail’s breath, and heard Fail’s admission to drinking
constitutes substantial evidence supporting the trial court’s finding that
Officer Soltero had a reasonable suspicion that Fail might be driving under
the influence. (Brierton, supra, 130 Cal.App.4th at p. 509.) Therefore, to the
extent Fail’s claim of an unlawful arrest is based on Officer Soltero having
illegally conducted field sobriety tests, we reject his claim.
      In addition to contending that Officer Soltero acted illegally in
subjecting him to field sobriety tests, Fail contends, “The arrest was strictly
made because [Officer Soltero] observed (1) bloodshot, watery eyes and
(2) [Fail] had an odor of alcoholic beverage, neither of which are illegal.”9

9    To the extent that Fail’s brief may be read as arguing that his arrest
was unlawful because Officer Soltero arrested him before administering field
                                        11
Fail argues further, “The arrest predicated upon the aforementioned
conditions was illegal and without probable cause.” We are unpersuaded. As
explained above, there is substantial evidence in the record to support a
finding that Officer Soltero had reasonable suspicion to investigate Fail’s
sobriety by administering the field sobriety tests. Further, as we stated in
part III.B, ante, the results of those tests, together with Officer Soltero’s
other observations on the night of the incident and Fail’s admission to having
consumed three or four beers, amounted to probable cause to arrest Fail for
driving under the influence in violation of section 23152, subdivision (a).10
      Accordingly, we conclude that there was substantial evidence to
support the trial court’s finding that Officer Soltero lawfully arrested Fail.
D. There is substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding that Fail
   drove with a blood alcohol content of .08 percent or more

      Fail contends that, notwithstanding that he registered a .08 percent
blood alcohol content on two chemical breath tests, defense expert Okorocha’s

sobriety tests, we disagree. Officer Soltero’s investigative report expressly
states that he arrested Fail after Fail’s unsatisfactory performance of field
sobriety tests. In addition, Fail does not appear to challenge the lawfulness
of Officer Soltero’s initial stop, which the officer stated in his investigative
report was premised on his observation that Fail’s vehicle’s “tail lights [were]
not functioning properly, a violation of [section] 24252[, subdivision] (a).”
Further, as stated in the text, Fail’s detention after the stop, but prior to his
arrest, was based on the officer’s reasonable suspicion that Fail was driving
under the influence. In other words, Officer Soltero legally detained Fail in
order to conduct field sobriety tests, and Soltero’s administration of those
tests did not transform Fail’s detention into an arrest.

10    As noted in part II.A, ante, after arresting Fail, Officer Soltero
administered blood alcohol breath tests. The results of those tests provided
Officer Soltero with probable cause to arrest Fail for the additional offense of
driving with a blood alcohol content of .08 percent or more in violation of
section 23152, subdivision (b).
                                        12
testimony established that Fail had a blood alcohol content of less than
.08 percent while driving. Fail offers two arguments in support of this
contention. First, he notes that Okorocha testified that the scientific
literature establishes that breath blood alcohol tests provide an inflated
reading of a subject’s blood alcohol content during the “absorptive phase” of
alcohol consumption. Fail argues further that Okorocha testified that Fail
was in the absorptive phase at the time Fail registered the .08 percent blood
alcohol content readings and that his true blood alcohol content was
necessarily lower. Second, Fail contends that Okorocha’s testimony, when
considered together with a testing report for the device used to measure Fail’s
breath, established that the device inaccurately registered Fail’s blood alcohol
content and that his true blood alcohol content at the time of the test was
below .08 percent.
      We first discuss the evidence in the record supporting the trial court’s
finding that Fail had driven with a blood alcohol content of .08 percent or
more. Next, we consider each of Fail’s arguments in support of his claim that
Okorocha’s testimony established that Fail had not driven with a blood
alcohol content of .08 percent or more.
      1. Evidence that Fail drove with a blood alcohol content of .08 percent
         or more

            a. Governing law
      Section 23152, subdivision (b) provides:
         “In any prosecution under this subdivision, it is a
         rebuttable presumption that the person had 0.08 percent or
         more, by weight, of alcohol in his or her blood at the time of
         driving the vehicle if the person had 0.08 percent or more,
         by weight, of alcohol in his or her blood at the time of the
         performance of a chemical test within three hours after the
         driving.”

                                      13
      “Although the statutory language speaks in terms of a ‘prosecution,’
several Courts of Appeal have held this presumption is not limited to
criminal prosecutions but also applies in administrative license suspension
proceedings.” (Coffey, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 1208.) This court is among the
courts that have so held. (See Jackson v. Department of Motor Vehicles
(1994) 22 Cal.App.4th 730, 740.)
      While the Supreme Court has not definitively determined whether the
presumption applies in administrative per se hearings (Coffey, supra,
60 Cal.4th at p. 1209), the law is clear that, if a defendant offers evidence
sufficient to rebut the presumption, the Department is required to prove a
driver’s blood alcohol content at the time she was driving without resort to
the statutory presumption. (Id. at p. 1211.)
      In attempting to carrying that burden, the Department may rely on
evidence that gave rise to the statutory presumption in the first place (Coffey,
supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 1209)11—namely, chemical test evidence—as well as

11    The Coffey court explained the operation of the rebuttable presumption
contained in section 23152, subdivision (b) as follows:
         “A rebuttable presumption requires the trier of fact, given a
         showing of the preliminary fact (here, that a chemical test
         result showed plaintiff had a [blood alcohol content] of 0.08
         percent or more within three hours of driving), to assume
         the existence of the presumed fact (here, that plaintiff had
         been driving with a prohibited [blood alcohol content])
         ‘unless and until evidence is introduced which would
         support a finding of its nonexistence, in which case the trier
         of fact shall determine the existence or nonexistence of the
         presumed fact from the evidence and without regard to the
         presumption.’ [Citation.] In other words, if evidence
         sufficient to negate the presumed fact is presented, the
         ‘presumption disappears’ [citation] and ‘has no further
         effect’ [citation], although ‘inferences may nevertheless be
         drawn from the same circumstances that gave rise to the
                                       14
other circumstantial evidence of a defendant’s intoxication, including an
officer’s observations of a driver and the driver’s performance on field sobriety
tests. (Id. at pp. 1217–1218, disapproving Brenner v. Department of Motor
Vehicles (2010) 189 Cal.App.4th 365 (Brenner).)
      b. Application
      The record contains evidence of the results of two chemical breath tests
that Officer Soltero administered on Fail within approximately 30 minutes of
the traffic stop. Both tests registered a .08 percent blood alcohol content.
Even assuming that Fail rebutted the statutory presumption pertaining to
driving with a prohibited blood alcohol content contained in section 23152,
subdivision (b) by presenting expert testimony that Fail’s true blood alcohol
content was lower than that registered by the tests,12 the trial court could
still find that Fail had driven with a prohibited blood alcohol content based
on the results of the chemical breath tests administered by Officer Soltero.
(Coffey, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 1209 [even in cases in which the defendant
rebuts a statutory presumption “ ‘inferences may nevertheless be drawn from

         presumption in the first place’ [citations].” (Coffey, supra,
         60 Cal.4th at pp. 1209–1210.)

12     Even assuming that Fail presented evidence that was legally sufficient
to rebut the section 23152, subdivision (b) presumption, the trial court was
not required to find that evidence to be credible. (See Coffey, supra,
60 Cal.4th at p. 1211 [stating that driver provided expert testimony that
sufficiently rebutted assumed section 23152, subdivision (b) presumption
because “if believed, [expert] evidence would have justified a conclusion that
plaintiff’s [blood alcohol content] was rising at the time of her chemical tests
and was thus quite possibly below the 0.08 percent threshold at the time she
had been driving” (italics added)].)
       We discuss the grounds on which the trial court could have reasonably
refused to credit expert testimony offered by the defense that Fail had not
driven with a blood alcohol content of .08 percent or more in addressing Fail’s
contentions in parts III.D.2 and III.D.3, post.
                                       15
the same circumstances that gave rise to the presumption in the first
place’ ”].)
       In addition, the Department presented circumstantial evidence of Fail’s
intoxication that supported the trial court’s finding that Fail had driven with
a prohibited blood alcohol content. That evidence included Officer Soltero’s
observations of Fail as having bloodshot and watery eyes and smelling of
alcohol, Fail’s admission to have consumed three or four beers, and Fail’s
inadequate performance on the field sobriety tests. (See Coffey, supra,
60 Cal.4th at pp. 1212–1216.)
       2. The trial court was not required to credit Okorocha’s testimony that
          Fail was in the absorptive phase of alcohol consumption at the time
          that he was driving and that his true blood alcohol content was
          therefore less than .08 percent

       Fail contends that Okorocha’s testimony demonstrated that Fail was in
the absorptive phase of alcohol consumption at the time that he was driving,
and that his true blood alcohol content was therefore less than .08 percent.
              a. Factual and procedural background
                   i. Evidence at the administrative per se hearing
       As noted in part II.B, ante, at the administrative per se hearing, the
Department introduced in evidence Officer Soltero’s investigative report. In
the report, Officer Soltero indicated that Fail had admitted drinking four
Heineken Lights13 and that Fail stated that he had started drinking at
6:00 p.m. In a box labeled, “Time Stopped,” pertaining to the time the subject
had stopped drinking, Officer Soltero wrote that Fail had stated, “I don’t
know.”

13   In the narrative portion of the report, Officer Soltero stated that Fail
admitted drinking “3 or 4” Heineken Lights.
                                       16
      At the hearing, Fail’s counsel asked Okorocha whether he could “tell us
a little bit about breath testing . . . and what the reliability is as it relates to a
breath test that is done in the absorptive phase.” Okorocha responded:
         “When you’re absorbing alcohol, the breath test reads
         falsely high, which is because when alcohol is absorbed into
         the bloodstream, it first goes into the arterial system.
         However, . . . we measure impairment based on what’s in
         the veins or the venous system. The breath that comes out
         of the mouth and into the device comes from . . . the
         airways, and the blood that lines the airways is arterial. So
         while you’re absorbing, the arterial is always higher.

         “And so when you’re absorbing, you’re always going to read
         higher on the breath than you normally would on the blood.
         And the scientific literature indicates that you can read
         falsely high by two to three times or even higher.”

      Fail’s counsel then asked Okorocha about whether Fail “was
absorptive.” Okorocha stated:
         “[W]e can’t go by the timing because he said he didn’t know
         when he finished drinking, but the police report indicates
         that [Fail] had the odor of an alcoholic beverage. If he had
         the odor of an alcoholic beverage, that means the alcohol is
         still in your stomach because that’s where breath odors
         come from. Kind of like if somebody has a garlic dinner
         and burps, you can smell it because it’s coming up from the
         stomach.

         “If it’s fully absorbed, it would be all in his blood stream
         and there would be nothing to smell. So if we know he has
         the odor of an alcoholic beverage, the alcohol is still in his
         stomach. And if the alcohol is still in your stomach, you’re
         still absorbing.”

      Fail’s counsel also asked Okorocha the following question concerning
the timing of Fail’s drinking and his blood alcohol content:

                                         17
            “If [Fail] had a last drink within a half hour of his stopping,
            would you say that his blood-alcohol was rising?”

         Okorocha responded, “Absolutely.”
         Okorocha also stated that eating generally causes the absorption phase
to last longer.
         The hearing officer also asked several questions concerning Okorocha’s
absorption theory, including the following:
            “So my question I guess would be with an unknown if there
            is indeed an unknown drinking pattern as far as the last --
            the time of the last drink, can you formulate an opinion of
            how much alcohol remained in Mr. Fail’s system at that
            time?”

         Okorocha responded, “I can’t say how much was in his stomach at the
time.”
                     ii. The trial court’s statement of decision
         In its statement of decision, the trial court found that Okorocha’s
testimony concerning the absorptive phase of alcohol consumption was
unpersuasive. The court noted that Officer Soltero’s investigative report
indicated “that [Fail’s] answer to when he stopped drinking was ‘I don’t
know’ . . . .” The trial court also noted that “[n]o testimony was given at [the]
hearing about when [Fail] stopped drinking . . . .” The court reasoned,
“Without evidence showing [Fail] was in the absorptive phase at the time of
the test, any evidence regarding falsely high readings during the absorptive
phase is irrelevant.”
               b. Application
         The law is clear that a trial court is not required to accept a defense
expert’s testimony at an administrative per se hearing “at face value.”
(Coffey, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 1218; see also Morgenstern v. Department of

                                          18
Motor Vehicles (2003) 111 Cal.App.4th 366, 372 [stating that in writ
proceedings reviewing administrative per se hearings the trial court “makes
its own determination about the credibility of the witnesses”].)
      The Department presented evidence that Fail acknowledged having
started drinking at 6:00 p.m., approximately five hours prior to being stopped
by Officer Soltero. The Department also presented evidence that Fail stated
on the night of the incident that he did not know when he had stopped
drinking. In addition, Fail did not present any evidence at the
administrative per se hearing as to either when he had stopped drinking or
his pattern of drinking on the evening in question. Further, the trial court
could have reasonably found that Okorocha’s testimony that the odor of
alcohol on Fail’s breath demonstrated that Fail was in the absorptive phase
of alcohol consumption was speculative. The trial court could therefore have
also reasonably refused to credit Okorocha’s testimony that Fail’s blood
alcohol tests did not reflect his true blood alcohol content because he was in
the absorptive phase of alcohol consumption.
      3. Fail is not entitled to reversal on the ground that the trial court
         erred in failing to find that the device used to measure his blood
         alcohol content was inaccurate

      Fail maintains that Okorocha’s testimony, when considered in
connection with the accuracy testing report for the device used to measure
Fail’s breath, demonstrated that Fail was driving with a blood alcohol
content of less than .08 percent.
            a. Factual and procedural background
                  i. The administrative per se hearing
      At the administrative per se hearing, Fail offered in evidence a
document titled “Breath Alcohol Subject Report.” The report recorded
“Accuracy Check” results performed on the device used to measure Fail’s

                                       19
blood alcohol content from Fail’s breath.14 Specifically, the report contained
the results of nine accuracy tests performed on the device on various days
between January 4, 2018 and March 5, 2018.15 The results demonstrated
that the device measured .003 percent higher than the expected value on two
of nine tests; .002 percent higher than the expected value on one of the tests;
.001 percent higher on three of the tests; and exactly at the expected value on
three of the tests.16
      At the hearing, Okorocha noted that the accuracy test performed

nearest in time to Fail’s February 3, 2018 arrest,17 registered a result
.002 percent higher than the expected value. Okorocha testified that Fail’s
blood alcohol content would have been lower than .08 percent “if we account
for the fact . . . that [the device] was reading high by a .001, .002.”
      After Okorocha testified, and over Fail’s objection, the hearing officer
continued the hearing to obtain testimony from a witness from the
Department of Justice.18

14    The report identified the device by both model number (“Device Type”)
and serial number (“Device Serial”).

15    As noted in part II.A, ante, Fail was arrested on February 3, 2018.

16     The device was tested by having the device measure a “gas value” of
.100 percent of alcohol. Thus, the expected value was “.100” percent for each
of the tests, and the device measured between .100 and .103 percent.

17   The accuracy test to which Okorocha was referring was performed on
February 6, 2018.

18     On appeal Fail states, “No grounds for a continuance existed and is
[sic] the very reason why these hearings allowing HO’s [hearing officers] to
rule on their own motions and evidence is a fundamental due process
violation.” However, Fail does not present any citation or reasoned argument
                                        20
      At the continued hearing, criminologist Jennifer Dernoncourt testified
that when used in “evidential test mode,” the device used to measure Fail’s
blood alcohol content reports blood alcohol content in “two digits,” and it
“truncates or cuts off the third digit.”19 On cross-examination, Dernoncourt
discussed the accuracy test results to which Okorocha had previously
testified. Dernoncourt explained that in “screening mode,” the device used to
measure Fail’s blood alcohol content “is capable of going to the third digit.”
Dernoncourt agreed that, during an accuracy check on February 6, 2018, the
device measured two one-hundredths of a percent higher than the expected
value. However, Dernoncourt explained that “[we] do not know,” whether
Fail’s blood alcohol content was lower than .08 percent because “[i]t really
would depend upon that third digit that’s unknown.”
            ii. The trial court’s statement of decision
      The trial court rejected Fail’s contention that he was entitled to
reversal of the suspension of his driver’s license on the ground that the device
used to measure his blood alcohol content was inaccurate. The trial court
reasoned:

in support of this assertion. Thus, to the extent that Fail intends to claim
that the hearing officer erred in continuing the hearing, we conclude that he
has forfeited the argument. (See, e.g., Benach, supra, 149 Cal.App.4th at
p. 852 [issues that are not properly raised on appeal are forfeited].)

19     Stated differently, in evidential mode, the device reports blood alcohol
content to the second decimal point, as in “.08.”
       Dernoncourt explained that such truncation is in accordance with
California law, stating, “Title 17 has stated that you have to report to the two
digits.” (See Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 1220.4, subd. (b) [“Analytical results
shall be reported to the second or third decimal place. When reporting to the
second decimal place, the digit in the third decimal place shall be deleted”
(italics added).])
                                       21
         “[Fail] argues that the . . . device was reading slightly high
         on the [a]ccuracy [t]ests at the time of the stop, so the
         0.08 [percent] really should have been considered a
         0.07 [percent]. At hearing on the writ, [Fail] cited
         Brenner . . . for the idea that a device showing high in
         calibration tests means that the 0.08 [percent] reading is
         inaccurate, (Brenner[, supra,] 189 Cal.App.4th 365).
         However, in that case the records indicated that the
         machine was consistently reading higher than the true
         values tested and the [Department] did not present any
         evidence to rebut the argument. The appellate court was
         bound to uphold the trial court’s decision if supported by
         substantial evidence. Here, the accuracy tests do not show
         the same consistent higher reading as in Brenner. The
         [a]ccuracy tests show that the device readings did fluctuate
         between .100 and .103 between 1/8/2018 and 3/5/2018,
         though the readings went up and down within that range.
         Also, the [Department] offered evidence of their own expert
         and the evidence given in the officer’s report to rebut the
         conclusion that [Fail’s blood alcohol content] was below
         0.08 [percent]. The Supreme Court of California has
         overruled Brenner, stating[,] ‘To the extent the court’s
         statement in Brenner . . . , supra, 189 Cal.App.4th 365, . . .
         may be taken to preclude consideration of non-chemical-
         test evidence to bolster or corroborate chemical test results,
         we disapprove it.’ (Coffey[, supra,] 60 Cal.4th [at p.] 1217).
         This court finds that the evidence in the record bolsters and
         corroborates the chemical test results showing [Fail’s blood
         alcohol content] was 0.08 [percent].”

            b. Application
      Citing Brenner, supra, 189 Cal.App.4th 365, Fail argues that because
the device used to measure his blood alcohol content was “reading high,” it
cannot be shown that his blood alcohol content was .08 percent or more. We
are unpersuaded—chiefly because, as the trial court noted in its statement of

                                      22
decision, in Coffey, the Supreme Court disapproved Brenner on a critical
point relevant to Fail’s claim.20
      As discussed in part III.D.1.a, ante, in Coffey the Supreme Court held
that circumstantial evidence of a defendant’s intoxication is admissible in an
administrative per se hearing to either “bolster the results of the chemical
tests or . . . to rebut plaintiff’s defense of a rising [blood alcohol content].”
(Coffey, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 1216.) In reaching this conclusion, the Coffey
court discussed Brenner and specifically disapproved that decision insofar as
Brenner could be understood to preclude the consideration of non-chemical-
test evidence to bolster or corroborate chemical test results:
         “Brenner[, supra, 189 Cal.App.4th 365], cited by plaintiff,
         does not warrant a contrary result. In that case, an expert
         examined the maintenance records for the device used to
         measure the driver’s breath and opined that it produced
         slightly elevated results. As the driver’s test results
         showed a [blood alcohol content] of 0.08 percent exactly, the
         expert opined the driver’s actual [blood alcohol content] was
         slightly below the legal limit. Because the trial court in
         Brenner had granted the driver’s petition for a writ, the
         Court of Appeal was required to uphold that decision if
         supported by substantial evidence. By contrast, the instant
         case comes to us in the opposite procedural posture: The
         trial court here denied relief to plaintiff and we are bound
         to uphold that decision if supported by substantial
         evidence. To the extent the appellate court in Brenner
         asserted that ‘the impressions of the officer may have a
         bearing on plaintiff’s level of impairment, [but] they have
         no bearing on the precise level of his [blood alcohol content]’
         (id. at p. 373), the statement must be read in the context of
         the case: Because the chemical tests in Brenner were done
         on a miscalibrated device used to measure the [blood

20     In his briefing in this court, Fail did not discuss Coffey or acknowledge
that the Supreme Court has disapproved Brenner, notwithstanding that the
trial court expressly noted the disapproval of Brenner in its statement of
decision.
                                         23
         alcohol content] in a breath sample, no accurate chemical
         test results were presented. No such problem exists in the
         instant case; the [Department] presented the results of four
         chemical tests and, although plaintiff’s expert would have
         interpreted those results to conclude her [blood alcohol
         content] was rising, he did not testify they inaccurately
         measured her [blood alcohol content] at the time the tests
         were run. To the extent the court’s statement in
         Brenner[, supra, 189 Cal.App.4th 365], may be taken to
         preclude consideration of non-chemical-test evidence to
         bolster or corroborate chemical test results, we disapprove
         it.” (Coffey, supra, at pp. 1216–1217.)

      In this case, as in Coffey, the trial court denied Fail’s petition for writ of
mandate and we are bound to uphold that decision if supported by
substantial evidence. Further, under Coffey, the trial court could reasonably
rely on evidence that corroborated Fail’s two .08 percent blood alcohol content
test results, including Officer Soltero’s observations of Fail as having
bloodshot, watery eyes and smelling of alcohol, Fail’s admission to have
consumed three or four beers, and Fail’s poor performance on the field
sobriety tests.
      In addition, accuracy checks of the device used to measure Fail’s breath
showed only slightly elevated readings on some, but not all, of the checks.
Further, as Dernoncourt explained, in accordance with California law, the
device used to measure Fail’s breath truncates the third decimal place when
used in “evidential mode.” Thus, even assuming that the device was
providing slightly elevated results (i.e., .001 to .003 percent high) on the night
in question, the trial court could reasonably reject Okorocha’s implicit
assumption that Fail’s blood alcohol level was less than .082 percent such
that the elevated reading would have falsely indicated that Fail was driving
with a blood alcohol content of .08 percent or more.

                                        24
      In light of this evidence, the trial court could also reasonably reject
Fail’s contention that the alleged inaccuracy of the device used to measure
his blood alcohol content demonstrated that his blood alcohol level was less
than .08 percent. Accordingly, we conclude that Fail is not entitled to
reversal on the ground that the trial court erred in failing to find that the
device used to measure Fail’s blood alcohol content was inaccurate.
                                       IV.
                                 DISPOSITION
      The judgment is affirmed.

                                                               AARON, J.

WE CONCUR:

HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.

HALLER, J.

                                       25