Court Opinion

ID: 9380958
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-21 18:02:45.743726+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:28.651795
License: Public Domain

Filed 3/21/23 Vernoy v. Department of Motor Vehicles CA4/1
                   NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
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                 COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                      DIVISION ONE

                                              STATE OF CALIFORNIA

 MADISON ANNE VERNOY,                                                         D080909

            Plaintiff and Appellant,

            v.                                                                (Super. Ct. No. CVRI2100843)

 DEPARTMENT OF MOTOR
 VEHICLES et al.,

            Defendants and Respondents.

          APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Riverside,
Harold W. Hopp, Judge. Affirmed.
          Law Office of A.P. Zmurkiewicz and A.P. Zmurkiewicz for Plaintiff and
Appellant.
          Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Chris A. Knudsen, Assistant Attorney
General, Celine M. Cooper and Paul Batcher, Deputy Attorneys General, for
Defendants and Respondents.
                                        I
                               INTRODUCTION
      Madison Anne Vernoy appeals from the denial of her petition for review
of a Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) order suspending her driving
privileges after she was arrested for driving while under the influence of
alcohol (DUI). She argues the DMV failed to prove one of the facts necessary
to sustain the suspension of her driving privileges—namely, the fact she was
driving a motor vehicle while she had a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of
0.08 percent or more. We reject this contention and affirm the judgment.
                                       II
                                BACKGROUND
   A. Factual Background
      One evening, California Highway Patrol (CHP) officers received a
report of a solo vehicle collision on the Interstate 8 freeway in San Diego.
Upon arrival at the scene of the accident, the officers found Vernoy’s vehicle
resting against the side of a ditch next to the freeway. They also smelled an
odor of alcohol emanating from the vehicle. Paramedics were treating
Vernoy, who was unconscious and seated in the driver’s seat. Vernoy was
transported by ambulance to a nearby hospital, where she was sedated and
intubated.
      A motorist who witnessed the accident reported that Vernoy’s vehicle
was weaving in and out of traffic lanes on the freeway. According to the
motorist, Vernoy’s vehicle tried to exit the freeway, but veered into the ditch
instead. The motorist stopped at the scene of the accident and found Vernoy
unconscious in the driver’s seat. Like the CHP officers, the motorist smelled
an odor of alcohol emanating from Vernoy’s vehicle.

                                       2
      At the hospital, a CHP officer placed the still-unconscious Vernoy

under arrest for DUI in violation of Vehicle Code section 23152.1 The officer
issued Vernoy a DMV form titled, “Age 21 and Older Administrative Per Se
Suspension/Revocation Order and Temporary Driver License,” which stated
Vernoy’s driving privileges would be suspended, effective in 30 days, unless
she requested a hearing to challenge the proposed suspension.
      The arresting officer obtained a non-consensual blood draw warrant.
Thereafter, certified phlebotomist technician (CPT) Tamara Daugherty drew
two vials of blood from Vernoy’s hand. The blood samples were transmitted
to the sheriff’s department crime laboratory, which analyzed the samples and
determined Vernoy had a BAC of 0.167 ± 009—more than twice the legal
driving limit—at the time of the blood draw, which took place about two and
a half hours after the accident.
    B. Administrative Per Se Hearing
      Vernoy timely requested an administrative per se (APS) hearing for the
purpose of challenging the proposed suspension of her driving privileges. At
an APS hearing, the DMV bears the burden of proving, among other things,
the fact that the licensee in question operated a vehicle when he or she had a
BAC of 0.08 percent or higher. (Lake v. Reed (1997) 16 Cal.4th 448, 455.)
One way the DMV can prove its prima facie case is by relying on Evidence
Code section 664, which states, “It is presumed that official duty has been
regularly performed.” In the context of an APS hearing, this statute creates a
rebuttable presumption that blood alcohol tests recorded on official forms
were obtained by complying with the requirements of section 23158 and
California Code of Regulations, title 17, section 1215 et seq. (hereafter,

1     Subsequent undesignated statutory references are to the Vehicle Code.
                                    3
title 17), including certain standards giving rise to an inference the recorded
blood alcohol test results are reliable.
      At Vernoy’s APS hearing, the DMV sought to admit several documents
into evidence: (1) a sworn officer’s statement (DMV form DS-367), which
included the officer’s narrative of the incident and a traffic collision report
(CHP form 555); (2) a laboratory service report from the sheriff’s department
crime laboratory, which showed the results of Vernoy’s blood alcohol test;
(3) a DUI arrest-investigation report (CHP form 202), which included the
officer’s preliminary synopsis of the incident and the time and location of the
blood draw; (4) a CHP incident detail report; and (5) a printout of Vernoy’s
driving record. The hearing officer admitted these documents into evidence
over hearsay, authentication, and foundation objections.
      Vernoy sought to admit into evidence documents produced by Specimen
Specialists of America, Inc. (SSI), which dispatched CPT Daugherty to
conduct Vernoy’s blood draw for the CHP. These documents included: (1) a
declaration from SSI’s custodian of records; (2) a call slip signed by
Daugherty stating the time, place, and purpose of the blood draw she
performed on Vernoy; (3) an independent contractor agreement between SSI
and Daugherty; (4) documentation showing Daugherty was a state-licensed
phlebotomist; and (5) an SSI policy manual dictating the procedures that SSI-
contracted phlebotomists must follow when responding to a request for

collection of a blood sample.2 The hearing officer admitted these documents

2     The laboratory service report included an attestation from three
members of the sheriff’s department crime laboratory stating the attestors
were qualified to engage in forensic alcohol analysis pursuant to title 17, and
the instrumentation used to perform the blood alcohol analysis was in proper
working order at the time the analysis was performed.
                                           4
into evidence over hearsay, authentication, foundation, and relevance
objections.
      The DMV called one witness to testify at the APS hearing—the
motorist who witnessed the accident. The motorist testified he saw Vernoy
driving erratically on the freeway, speeding up and slowing down, and
crossing multiple lanes of traffic without signaling before she ultimately
drove into the ditch. He stated he stopped at the accident site, observed
Vernoy unconscious inside the vehicle, and smelled “a lot” of alcohol coming
from the vehicle.
      Vernoy also called one witness to testify—Sophia Martinez, SSI’s
Director of Operations and CPT Daugherty’s supervisor. Vernoy called
Martinez for the purpose of establishing that SSI violated regulatory

requirements relating to the collection and handling of blood samples.3
Under questioning from Vernoy, Martinez testified that no supervisor
reviewed Daugherty’s competency before she was sent to perform
unsupervised blood draws; no supervisor reviewed Daugherty’s work each
month to ensure compliance with venipuncture policies, procedures, and
regulations; and no supervisor reviewed Daugherty’s competency on an
annual basis. Martinez stated she was not a physician or other licensed
professional specified in section 23158, and she was not present for Vernoy’s
blood draw, though she was accessible to Daugherty by phone to assist or
consult if necessary. Further, Martinez testified that, to her knowledge, no
licensed physician or surgeon approved the SSI policy manual that was
admitted into evidence.

3      For ease of reference, we refer to any applicable statutory requirements
and title 17 requirements collectively as regulatory requirements, and we
refer to violations of those regulatory requirements as regulatory violations.
                                       5
      For purposes of this case, it is uncontested these SSI practices ran afoul
of the following regulatory requirements: (1) a licensed supervisor must
review the competency of a phlebotomist before the phlebotomist may
perform blood draws without direct supervision; (2) a licensed supervisor
must review the work of the phlebotomist at least once a month to ensure
compliance with venipuncture policies, procedures, and regulations; (3) a
licensed supervisor must annually review the competency of the
phlebotomist; (4) the phlebotomist must follow physician- or surgeon-
approved procedures when drawing blood; and (5) a licensed supervisor, or
other qualified individual, must be accessible to the phlebotomist for onsite,
telephone, or electronic consultation within 30 minutes when needed.
(§ 23158, subds. (e) & (g); Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 1219.1, subd. (a).)
      During closing arguments, Vernoy did not dispute that the DMV
proved its prima facie case by introducing the sworn officer’s statement and
the laboratory service report, and then invoking the evidentiary presumption.
However, she claimed her evidence established the regulatory violations just
discussed, which in turn rebutted the evidentiary presumption and shifted
the burden of proof back to the DMV. According to Vernoy, the DMV failed to
satisfy its burden of proof because it did not lay an independent foundation
for the admission of the laboratory service report, which was an essential
piece of evidence necessary to prove she drove a vehicle while she had a BAC
of 0.08 percent or higher.
      A few weeks after the APS hearing, the hearing officer issued a
decision upholding the suspension of Vernoy’s driving privileges. Of
relevance here, the hearing officer expressly found Vernoy submitted to a
chemical test of her blood, which showed she had a BAC of 0.16%. The
hearing officer rejected Vernoy’s claim that the DMV failed to lay a proper

                                         6
foundation for the admission of the blood alcohol test results, reasoning that
any regulatory violations went “to the weight of the evidence and not the
admissibility of the evidence.” The hearing officer added that there was “no
evidence that the violations compromised the blood test results” in any way.
   C. Superior Court Proceedings
      Vernoy filed a timely petition for review of the hearing officer’s
decision, which was treated as a petition for writ of administrative
mandamus. (§ 13559, subd. (a); Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5.) The petition
reiterated Vernoy’s assertion that the evidence adduced at the APS hearing
proved regulatory violations, which rebutted the evidentiary presumption on
which the DMV sought to rely. The petition requested a judgment setting
aside the hearing officer’s decision, an order directing the DMV to return or
reissue Vernoy’s driver’s license, and an award of damages.
      After a hearing, the trial court denied Vernoy’s petition for review. The
court found the DMV made a prima facie showing by presenting the sworn
officer’s statements and the blood alcohol test results recorded on official
forms, thus giving rise to the evidentiary presumption. Then, relying on
Gerwig v. Gordon (2021) 61 Cal.App.5th 59 (Gerwig), the court found Vernoy
did not rebut the evidentiary presumption. The court reasoned Vernoy did
not rebut the evidentiary presumption because any regulatory violations did
not give rise to a reasonable inference that Vernoy’s blood alcohol test results
were unreliable. Further, the court noted that Vernoy did not present any
evidence “call[ing] the efficacy of the test into question,” or showing “the
blood test results were in any way questionable.”

                                        7
                                       III
                                 DISCUSSION
      On appeal, Vernoy reiterates her claim that the DMV could not rely on
the evidentiary presumption to justify its suspension of her driving privileges
because the evidence adduced at the APS hearing proved regulatory
violations, which rebutted the evidentiary presumption.
      To assess this argument, we begin by providing an overview of the
procedures governing the suspension of a licensee’s driving privileges. Then,
we discuss our court’s recent decision in Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th 59,
which directly addressed the showing a licensee must make in order to rebut
the evidentiary presumption. Finally, we consider whether Vernoy made the
requisite showing to rebut the evidentiary presumption.
   A. Statutory Overview
      “The DMV has authority to suspend the license of a motorist over the
age of 21 who drives with a blood alcohol percentage of 0.08 or more under a
statutory scheme commonly known as the ‘ “administrative per se” ’ law.”
(Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 65; see § 13353.2, subd. (a)(1).) “The
purpose of the statute is to promote highway safety by quickly suspending
the license of persons driving under the influence, while also providing
prompt administrative review to anyone whose license is suspended.” (Evans
v. Gordon (2019) 41 Cal.App.5th 1094, 1101 (Evans).)
      “When a driver is arrested for driving under the influence and is
determined to have a prohibited blood-alcohol content … the arresting officer
or the DMV serves the driver with a ‘notice of [an] order of suspension or
revocation’ of his or her driver’s license, advising that the suspension will
become effective 30 days from the date of service.” (Brown v. Valverde (2010)
183 Cal.App.4th 1531, 1536–1537.) After service of the notice, the driver may

                                        8
request an administrative hearing, known as an APS hearing, which takes
place prior to the effective date of the proposed suspension or revocation.
(§§ 13353.2, subd. (c), 13558, subd. (a).) At the APS hearing, a hearing officer
“determine[s] whether the arresting officer had reasonable cause to believe
the person was driving, the driver was arrested, and the person was driving
with a BAC of 0.08 percent or higher.” (Brown, at p. 1537; see §§ 13557,
subd. (b)(3), 13558, subd. (c)(2).) “If the hearing officer determines that the
evidence establishes these three facts by a preponderance of the evidence, the
license will be suspended.” (Brown, at pp. 1537–1538.)
      As noted, the DMV bears the initial burden of proving the driver was
driving while he or she had a BAC of 0.08 percent or higher. (Delgado v.
Dept. of Motor Vehicles (2020) 50 Cal.App.5th 572, 577 (Delgado).) But the
DMV “can usually prove up a prima facie case with relative ease when a
blood sample was taken from the licensee by submitting two documents: ‘the
sworn statement of the arresting officer and a forensic lab report
documenting the results of a chemical test of the driver’s blood.’ [Citations.]
This expedited process, which circumvents the authentication, foundation,
and hearsay concerns that often accompany evidentiary submissions, is
possible because the DMV routinely invokes Evidence Code section 664,
which ‘ “creates a rebuttable presumption that blood-alcohol test results
recorded on official forms were obtained by following the regulations and
guidelines of title 17,” including regulations giving rise to an inference the
blood alcohol test results are reliable. (Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at
pp. 65–66.) Thus, as a technical matter, the officer’s statement and blood
alcohol test results establish a rebuttable presumption relating to the
performance of an official duty. However, as a practical matter, they create a
rebuttable presumption that the blood alcohol test results “are valid, reliable,

                                        9
and admissible.” (Evans, supra, 41 Cal.App.5th at p. 1103; accord Davenport
v. Dept. of Motor Vehicles (1992) 6 Cal.App.4th 133, 144 (Davenport) [the
presumption of compliance with regulations “gives rise to an inference of
reliability.”].) “Once the DMV meets [its] initial burden to establish a prima
facie case, the driver may rebut the presumption with ‘affirmative evidence of
the nonexistence of the presumed facts sufficient to shift the burden of proof
back to the DMV.’ ” (Delgado, at p. 755; see Evid. Code, § 604.)
      If the APS hearing results in the suspension or revocation of a person’s
driving privileges, the person may seek judicial review of the decision in the
superior court. (§ 13559, subd. (a).) The judicial proceeding is limited to the
administrative record from the APS hearing and additional evidence may not
be introduced. (Ibid.) “The trial court exercises its independent judgment to
determine whether the administrative decision was supported by the weight
of the evidence.” (Delgado, supra, 50 Cal.App.5th at p. 577.)
      In an appeal challenging the trial court’s conclusions as to the weight of
the evidence, an appellate court “ ‘ “need only review the record to determine
whether the trial court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence.” ’ ”
(Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 66.) “To the extent the question is one of
statutory or regulatory interpretation, we exercise our independent
judgment.” (Delgado, supra, 50 Cal.App.5th at p. 577.)
   B. The Gerwig Decision
      Recently, in Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th 59, this court considered the
type of showing a licensee must make during an APS hearing in order to
rebut the evidentiary presumption. We undertook this inquiry when
presented with facts virtually identical to the facts of the present case.
      In Gerwig, a motorist involved in a traffic accident was placed under
arrest on suspicion of DUI. (Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 63.) He

                                       10
submitted to a blood draw conducted by a state-certified, SSI-contracted
phlebotomist, and testing performed on the blood samples showed he had a
BAC exceeding 0.08 percent. (Ibid.) The motorist requested an APS hearing
to challenge the consequent proposed suspension of his driving privileges.
(Ibid.) At the APS hearing, the arresting officer’s report and the laboratory
report reflecting the blood alcohol test results were admitted into evidence,
thus allowing the DMV to invoke the evidentiary presumption. (Ibid.)
      Like Vernoy, the motorist called an SSI employee to testify at the APS
hearing. (Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 63.) The employee provided
testimony proving all but one of the regulatory violations implicated in the
present case. Specifically, he testified the phlebotomist did not operate under
physician- or surgeon-approved policies and procedures; a licensed supervisor
did not review the phlebotomist’s work or competency on a monthly or annual
basis; and a licensed supervisor or other qualified individual was not
available to consult the phlebotomist within 30 minutes. (Ibid.) The hearing
officer found there were regulatory violations, but nonetheless relied on the
blood alcohol test results to sustain the suspension. (Id. at p. 64.) In doing
so, she found there was no reason to doubt the accuracy of the test results or
the qualifications of the phlebotomist who drew the motorist’s blood.
      On appeal, our court was called to decide whether a licensee may rebut
the evidentiary presumption by establishing any violation of a regulation
governing blood collection or testing, or whether a licensee may only rebut
the presumption by proving a regulatory violation generating doubt about the

                                       11
integrity of the test result.4 (Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 65.) After
conducting an extensive review of the caselaw, we concluded a licensee may
rebut the evidentiary presumption only if the violation bears a relationship to
the reliability of the test result. (Id. at pp. 66–71.) Indeed, we observed that
in each case in which an appellate court has found the evidentiary
presumption rebutted, it has done so only when the licensee established one
or more regulatory violations casting “doubt [on] the reliability of the test.”
(Id. at pp. 70–71.) Further, we noted that the “caselaw [was] … scattered
with comments that emphasize[d] substantive reliability in analyzing the
import of regulatory violations.” (Id. at p. 71, fn. 7 [collecting cases].)
      As part of our caselaw analysis, we examined one decision especially
closely—Davenport, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th 133. The motorist in Gerwig relied
heavily on a passage from Davenport to support his assertion that a licensee
may rebut the evidentiary presumption by proving any regulatory violation,

4      As we explained in Gerwig, not “every requirement in title 17 relates
directly to the reliability of a chemical blood test. The regulations span a
broad range, and some provisions—such as those mandating that the blood
draw site and the outside of the collection vial never be cleaned with alcoholic
swabs—are patently connected to the test’s reliability. [Citation.] Others are
not. For example, part of the Vehicle Code incorporated into title 17 requires
phlebotomists to always carry an identification card (ID). [Citation.] If a
certified technician left her ID at home inadvertently while answering a
midnight call, that violation cannot be seriously contended to have affected
the blood draw. Another section on proper training for those who administer
breath tests mandates that successful students receive a certificate with their
name, ID or badge number, their agency, and their instructor. [Citation.] If
a clerical error resulted in the certificate misreporting some of this
information for an otherwise properly trained operator, we cannot imagine
how that would bear on the reliability of the tests the operator conducts.”
(Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 68, fn. 5.) Vernoy does not dispute our
conclusion that some title 17 requirements relate directly to the reliability of
blood alcohol tests, while others do not.
                                         12
no matter how loosely related the regulatory violation may be to the
reliability of the blood alcohol test result. (Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at
pp. 66–70.) In the passage at issue, the Davenport court stated, “If the
licensee shows, through cross-examination of the officer or by the
introduction of affirmative evidence, that official standards were in any
respect not observed, the burden shifts to the [DMV] to prove that the test
was reliable despite the violation.” (Davenport, at p. 144, italics added.)
      We determined the “official standards” passage from Davenport did not
support the motorist’s argument for several reasons. (Gerwig, supra, 61
Cal.App.5th at pp. 66–70.) Preliminarily, “the question before the court in
Davenport was not the threshold showing required to rebut the Evidence
Code presumption” and, therefore, the “official standards” language was
“explanatory dicta.” (Gerwig, at p. 67.) Further, immediately prior to the
“official standards” language, the Davenport court characterized the
evidentiary presumption in the following terms: “[W]hat is actually
presumed under Evidence Code [section] 664 is compliance with statutory
and regulatory standards, which in turn gives rise to an inference of
reliability.” (Davenport, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at p. 144.) “Given that the
[Davenport] court had in mind this ‘inference of reliability,’ ” we found it
highly “unlikely that in its very next pen strokes it meant to do away with
any nexus between reliability and how the presumption can be rebutted.”
(Gerwig, at p. 67.) Finally, we analyzed the caselaw cited by the Davenport
court to support the “official standards” language, and we found it too
“emphasi[zed] … the nexus between the regulatory violation and the test’s
reliability.” (Gerwig, at p. 70.)
      Having concluded a licensee may rebut the evidentiary presumption
only by proving a regulatory violation bearing a reasonable relation to the

                                       13
reliability of the blood alcohol test results, we turned to whether the
violations in Gerwig rebutted the presumption. We found they did not rebut
the presumption. The supervisory and approved procedure violations were
“too tenuous to cast doubt on the reliability of the blood test results.”
(Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 69.) Notwithstanding the violations, the
state-certified phlebotomist who performed the blood draws was still “a
person who presumably conduct[ed] blood draws, which he [was] trained to
do, in the same way regardless of the general supervision he receive[d].
While an unsupervised phlebotomist could make a mistake, so too could a
properly supervised one. There [was] nothing [t]here to suggest a mistake
was made, nor [was] there any indication that the particular circumstance of
[the motorist’s] blood draw presented a problem the lackluster supervision
structure at SSI left [the phlebotomist] ill equipped to address.” (Id. at p. 71.)
Thus, we concluded the violations “ ‘show[ed] no more than a mere possibility
that the integrity of the sample was not maintained. Such speculation [was]
insufficient to support a reasonable inference that the integrity of the sample
was, in fact, compromised.’ ” (Id. at p. 72.)
   C. Vernoy Did Not Rebut the Evidentiary Presumption
      The DMV posits that Gerwig is “nearly identical” to the present case
and, therefore, “the result should be the same” here as it was in Gerwig—an
affirmance of the DUI suspect’s driving privilege suspension. Vernoy argues
Gerwig is not controlling because it is factually distinguishable and, in any
event, it was wrongly-decided. We agree with the DMV.
      As an initial matter, we reject Vernoy’s attempt to distinguish Gerwig
on the facts. As we have already stated, the facts of Gerwig are virtually
identical to the facts of the current case. The motorist in Gerwig tried to
rebut the evidentiary presumption by proving violations of general

                                        14
supervision regulations and regulations governing the method by which blood
draw policies are approved. At Vernoy’s APS hearing, she relied on precisely
the same regulatory violations from the very same company (SSI) to try to
rebut the evidentiary presumption. It is true Vernoy relied on one additional
regulatory violation that was not present in Gerwig—a violation of a
provision mandating an ex ante review of a phlebotomist’s competency before
the phlebotomist may conduct an unsupervised blood draw. (§ 23158,
subd. (g); Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 1219.1, subd. (a).) However, that
regulatory violation is simply another violation of a general supervision
standard. It is materially the same as the general supervisory violations that
were at issue in Gerwig and, just like those general supervisory violations, it
bears no reasonable relation to the reliability of the blood alcohol test results.
      We also find no merit in Vernoy’s argument that the Gerwig decision
was wrongly-decided. As previously stated, this court issued the Gerwig
decision. In fact, the jurists sitting on this panel are the same three jurists
who decided Gerwig. “Absent a compelling reason, the Courts of Appeal are
normally loath to overrule prior decisions from another panel of the same
undivided district or from the same division.” (Estate of Sapp (2019) 36
Cal.App.5th 86, 109, fn. 9; accord County of Kern v. State Dept. of Health Care
Servs. (2009) 180 Cal.App.4th 1504, 1510 [“we generally follow the decisions
of other appellate courts unless there is good reason to disagree”].) “Mere
disagreement with the result or reasoning of an earlier decision does not …
constitute a compelling reason” to overrule a prior decision of this court.
(Opsal v. United Services Auto. Assn. (1991) 2 Cal.App.4th 1197, 1204.)
Vernoy has not presented us with a convincing reason, let alone a compelling
one, that would convince us to overrule Gerwig.

                                        15
       Vernoy claims the Gerwig decision was erroneous because it flouts
“established case law,” namely the “official standards” language contained in
the Davenport decision. The Gerwig decision did no such thing. On the
contrary, it carefully examined the caselaw, including Davenport, and
persuasively articulated how that caselaw demonstrated the need for a nexus
between the regulatory violation at issue and the reliability of the blood
alcohol test results. (Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at pp. 66–71.) We need
not rehash Gerwig decision’s exhaustive caselaw analysis here. For present
purposes, it suffices to say we agree with Gerwig’s caselaw analysis, as well
as its overarching conclusion that a driver may rebut the evidentiary
presumption under Evidence Code section 664 only with proof of regulatory
violations bearing a relation to the reliability of the blood alcohol test results.
(Id. at p. 72.)
       Next, Vernoy contends we should overrule Gerwig on grounds that it
permits courts (and presumably litigants) to “ignore” the regulatory
requirements set forth in section 23158 and title 17, effectively usurping the
functions of the legislative and executive branches that promulgated the
regulations. Vernoy’s argument is not persuasive. The Gerwig decision does
not alter, or any way affect, the obligations of law enforcement departments
or their agents to comply with the mandatory regulatory requirements
governing the collection and handling of blood samples for blood alcohol
testing. Nor does it prescribe new regulatory requirements that must be
followed. Instead, Gerwig clarifies the evidentiary consequences that result,
in the context of an APS hearing, where there has been a proven violation of
a regulation bearing no reasonable relationship to the reliability of a blood
alcohol test result. This clarification does not impinge upon the essential
functions of the legislative or executive branches.

                                        16
      Finally, Vernoy argues we should reject Gerwig to the extent it held
that the general supervisory and approved procedure violations established
in that case were not reasonably related to the reliability of blood alcohol test
results. According to Vernoy, those regulations “matter,” i.e., they relate to
the reliability of blood alcohol test results, because “supervision makes it
more likely that blood draws performed … for forensic alcohol analysis
purposes will be performed properly, again and again.” Stated differently,
Vernoy claims the particular regulations at issue in Gerwig (and in the
current case) make it more likely the blood test results are both accurate and
precise.
      We considered—and rejected—a version of this argument in Gerwig.
As we explained, there is an “indirect” nexus between general supervision
and approved procedures, on the one hand, and the reliability of blood alcohol
test results, on the other hand, “just as one could say that good nutrition and
adequate rest are important to a phlebotomist’s job performance. But such
factors, without more, are too tenuous to cast doubt on the reliability of the
blood test results.” (Gerwig, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at pp. 68–69; id. at p. 62
[the regulatory violations at issue had “only an indirect and speculative
relationship to the manner in which the blood test was conducted, and thus

                                       17
the reliability of the test results”].) Vernoy provides no compelling argument,

or evidentiary showing, suggesting our conclusion was incorrect.5
      For all these reasons, we conclude Gerwig is controlling. As in Gerwig,
there was no nexus between the regulatory violations established at the APS
hearing and the reliability of the blood alcohol test results. The blood alcohol
test results were recorded on official forms and showed Vernoy had a BAC
roughly double the legal driving limit at the time of her blood draw. Further,
as the hearing officer and the trial court both noted, Vernoy presented no
evidence casting doubt on the reliability of the blood alcohol test results. On
this record, Vernoy failed to elicit sufficient evidence to rebut the evidentiary
presumption on which the DMV relied. Because Vernoy did not rebut the
evidentiary presumption, the DMV satisfied its burden of proving that
Vernoy operated a vehicle while she had a BAC of 0.08 percent or higher.

5      Vernoy claims Gerwig was flawed because it focused exclusively on
whether a nexus exists between a regulatory violation and the accuracy of a
blood alcohol test, without considering the nexus between the regulatory
violation and the predictability (i.e., reliability) of the test. We disagree.
Gerwig broadly considered the nexus between a regulatory violation and the
overall reliability of a blood alcohol test, whether that reliability is measured
in terms of accuracy, predictability, or both. (See, e.g., Gerwig, supra, 61
Cal.App.5th at p. 66 [the question presented was whether the evidentiary
presumption could be rebutted by a regulatory violation “that does not bear
directly on the reliability of a test result”], italics added; id. at p. 70 [caselaw
on the evidentiary presumption is “concerned with whether the licensee
demonstrated there was a reason to doubt the reliability of the test”], italics
added; id. at p. 72 [“The licensee must present some evidence that the
demonstrated violation gives rise to a reasonable inference that the test
results are unreliable.”], italics added.)
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                                    IV
                              DISPOSITION
     The judgment is affirmed. Vernoy will bear costs on appeal.

                                                        McCONNELL, P. J.

WE CONCUR:

IRION, J.

DATO, J.

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