Court Opinion

ID: 3173769
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-01-30 05:05:22.129435+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:00:56.729358
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE STATE OF DELAWARE
IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY

STATE OF DELAWARE, )
)
)
v. ) Cr.A. No. 1412007625
)
)
JOHN M. HANNON, )
)
Defendant. )
)
Submitted: December 3, 2015
Decided: January 19, 2016
Rebecca Song, Esquire James M. Stiller, J r., Esquire
Ofﬁce of the Attorney General Schwartz & Schwartz
820 North French Street 1140 South State Street
Wilmington, DE 19801 Dover, DE 19901
Attorney for the State of Delaware Attorney for Defendant

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION IN LIMINE
On December 12, 2014, following a police investigation of a two-car motor vehicle
accident, Defendant John M. Hannon (“Harmon”) was arrested for Driving Under the Inﬂuence
(“DUI”) in violation of 21 Del. C. § 4177(a)(1).1 On April 28, 2015, Hannon noticed the present
Motion in Limine (the “Motion”), challenging the admissibility of the results of a blood test
performed on Hannon. Defendant asserts that the results are “relevant and admissible only if the

sample of breath or blood is taken within four hours of driving.”2

1 21 Del C. § 4177 will be referred to as the DUI statute.
2 Def.’s Mot. p 2.

On December 3, 2015, the Court held a hearing on the Motion. During the hearing,
Hannon argued that the language of 21 Del. C. § 4177(g) is unconstitutionally vague, and that
allowing the State to admit into evidence the results of a blood test taken more than four hours
after a defendant is allegedly known to have driven a vehicle while under the inﬂuence of

alcohol violates a defendant’s due process rights and contradicts the prohibitory language of 21

Del. C. §§ 4177(a)(5) and (g). At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court reserved decision.3

Hannon’s constitutional arguments notwithstanding, a Motion in Limine is

distinguishable from a Motion to Suppress in that the latter is “grounded in constitutional right.”4

Therefore, the Court will only address Hannon’s arguments with respect to the admissibility of
the blood test as it relates to the Delaware Rules of Evidence (“D.R.E.”) and the DUI statute.5
This is the Court’s Decision on Hannon’s Motion in Limine.
FACTS

On December 12, 2014, Trooper A. Johnson (“Trooper Johnson”) of Troop 6 of the
Delaware State Police was dispatched to a reported motor vehicle accident in the vicinity of the
intersection of Limestone and Paper Mill Roads in New Castle County. Upon arrival, Trooper
Johnson made contact with Hannon, who informed Trooper Johnson that the driver of a second
vehicle drove onto the right shoulder of the road, and that when the second driver returned to the

right-hand lane, his vehicle clipped the front end of Hannon’s vehicle. During his initial

3 Although the Court gave the parties the opportunity to provide supplemental brieﬁng, the parties declined to
provide such brieﬁng.
4 State v. Grivas, 1997 WL 127005, at *2 (Del. Super.) (citing Gendron v. Pawtucket Mutual Insurance Co., 409
A.2d 656, 659 (1979); United States v. Raddatz, 447 U.S. 667 (1980).
5 Even if this Court were to address Hannon’s arguments as to the constitutionality of the DUI statute, it would not

change the outcome of this Motion. In State v. Baker the Delaware Supreme Court declared a previous form of
section 4177(a)(5) unconstitutional. 720 A.2d 1139, 1141 (Del. 1998). Subsequently, the State Legislature remedied
the constitutional violations. The Superior Court revisited these issues in DiSabatino v. State, when it held that the
subsequent amendments to section 4177 were constitutionally sound. 808 A.2d 1216, 1230 (Del. Super. Ct. 2002).
The Motion before the Court fails to raise any meritorious arguments as to the constitutionality of the DUI statute
that were not already addressed by the Baker or DiSabatino courts. Accordingly, the Court must conclude that no
meritorious arguments are raised on the issue.

5.2;.

DISCUSSION

Like the Anderson court, this Court must not ignore the General Assembly’s clear intent
in promulgating a rule addressing chemical test timing. By enacting section 4177(g), the General
Assembly chose to address this issue head-on. Section 4177(g) plainly states that chemical tests
are relevant and admissible, including “the results from tests . . . taken within 4 hours alter the
time of driving or at some later time.”58 By its plain language 4177(g) permits introduction into
evidence the results of chemical tests taken later than four hours aﬁer a defendant drove. Indeed,
even the DUI per se statute appears consistent with this interpretation of section 4177(g) in that it
requires the State to demonstrate what a defendant’s BAC levels were at any moment within the
four-hour window, and not that a chemical test was administered Within four hours of when the
defendant last drove.59

It is noteworthy that the General Assembly chose to incorporate a pliable four-hour
window, in lieu of a rigid four-hour rule into the DUI statute.60 The Baker and Anderson courts
both looked to the General Assembly when considering the interplay between this State’s rules
of evidence and statutes; the analysis before this Court proves no different. The General
Assembly, in section 4177(g) created a rule that chemical tests, whether taken within four hours
after a defendant drove or at some time later, would be relevant and admissible, leaving it up to
the trier of fact to determine how much weight to assign to the test results. Importantly, the

General Assembly explained that the DUI statute’s four-hour window accounted for the fact that

a defendant’s BAC level may not rise above .08 until after that defendant had stopped drinking

5" 21 Del. C. § 4177(g).

59 Section 4177(a)(5) requires the State to demonstrate that “a person’s alcohol concentration is within 4 hours after
the time of driving .08 or more,” and not that a chemical test was administered within four hours of driving.

60 21 Del. C. §4177(g).

ll

and taken to the road.61 Therefore, the Court ﬁnds that in a DUI prosecution for general
impairment, the result of a chemical test taken outside the four-hour window as set forth in
section 4177(g) is admissible and relevant, but that the extent and nature of the delay will bear on
the evidentiary weight assigned to such result. The Court is conﬁdent that this approach is
consistent with the General Assembly’s intent, the Delaware Supreme Court’s analysis in
Anderson, and that a contrary approach would be decidedly inconsistent with how foreign
jurisdictions have interpreted DUI statutes of similar construction.

In jurisdictions with similarly structured statutes chemical tests are typically admissible
to prove a general impairment DUI if administered within a reasonable time, albeit subject to
diminished evidentiary weight, when: (1) there is excessive delay; (2) a delay is caused by
circumstances reasonably within the investigating officer’s control; or (3) local rules or statutes
otherwise so require.62

Unlike the defendants in F iorz', F oskey, and Baker, the State is prosecuting Hannon for a
general impairment DUI in violation of section 4177(a)(1). This section only requires proof that
a defendant was driving while “under the inﬂuence of alcohol,” a burden which can be met
without evidence of a speciﬁc BAC level.63

Admitting the blood test results complies with the plain language of section 4177(g) as
applied to the general impairment statute since Hannon’s blood test was administered not within
four hours of driving but “at some later time.” Moreover, the thirty-nine minute delay in
Hannon’s blood testing was minor when compared to that of admissible chemical tests, some of

which were administered up to nine hours after driving. Additionally, the circumstances

surrounding the delay in obtaining the blood sample provide no indication that Trooper Johnson

 

61 Baker, 2009 WL 1639514 at *1 (citing Del. H.B. 44 syn, 140th Gen. Assem. (1999)).
62See Soli, 479 N.W.2d 872, supra; see also Miller, 530 N.W.2d 652, supra; see also Hala, 358 P.3d 917, supra.
63 21 Del. C. §4177(a).

l2

unreasonably caused the delay. Trooper Johnson was dispatched to the scene of an accident
where he ﬁrst made sure to conduct a proper and safe accident investigation. Once Trooper
Johnson cleared the accident scene, he began his investigation into the suspected DUI, during
which investigation he was required to obtain a warrant for the blood draw. The record fails to
show that Trooper Johnson was dilatory in his obtaining a warrant for Hannon’s blood draw.
CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, the Defendant’s Motion in Limine is DENIED with

prejudice.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

 
    

arl C. D ' berg,

13

interaction with Hannon, Trooper Johnson detected an odor of alcohol coming from Hannon’s
vehicle.

After clearing the accident scene, Trooper Johnson began investigating Hannon for a
suspected DUI. As part of the investigation, Hannon performed and failed various standardized
ﬁeld sobriety tests. Trooper Johnson also administered a portable breath test, which indicated
the presence of alcohol, at which point Trooper Johnson arrested Hannon for suspicion of DUI.
Initially, Hannon consented to a blood draw, but later withdrew his consent. Aﬁer Hannon
withdrew his consent, Trooper Johnson acquired a warrant so that he could obtain a blood
sample from Hannon. Ultimately, Trooper Johnson obtained a blood sample four hours and
thirty-nine minutes after Hannon had driven his vehicle.

LEGAL STANDARD

Pursuant to D.R.E. 401, relevant evidence is “evidence having any tendency to make the

existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or

956

less probable than it would be without the evidence. “All relevant evidence is admissible,

except as otherwise provided by statute or by these rules or by other rules applicable in the courts
of this State.”7

A. Delaware ’s DUI Statute

Pursuant to Section 4177(g) of Title 21 of the Delaware Code, in prosecutions for a

violation of section 4177(a):

[E]vidence establishing the presence and concentration of alcohol or drugs in the
person’s blood . . . shall be relevant and admissible. Such evidence may include
 resultﬁ; ﬁlm  i}? Sam-3R5 of fheﬁperson’s blood . . . taken within 4 hours
after the ﬁxing of driving or {gimme --!£23fe,é*' ti me.8

6 D.R.E. 401.
7 D.R.E. 402.
8 21 Del. C. § 4177(g) (emphasis added).

In part, Section 4177(a) states that no person shall drive a vehicle:9

(1) When the person is under the inﬂuence of alcohol; [or]

(5) When the person’s alcohol concentration is, within 4 hours after the time of

driving .08 or more[.] . . . [A] person is guilty under this subsection, without

regard to the person’s alcohol concentration at the time of driving, if the person’s

alcohol concentration is, within 4 hours after the time of driving .08 or more and

that alcohol concentration is the result of an amount of alcohol present in, or

consumed by the person when that person was driving. 10

Section 4177(a)(5) provides that proof of a BAC of .08 or greater within four hours of
driving is sufﬁcient evidence to establish that the driver was guilty of a DUI. This provision is
commonly referred to as a DUI per se provision. In contrast, section 4177(a)(1) allows the State
to pursue a DUI conviction on evidence other than a BAC of .08 or greater within four hours of
driving. This is commonly referenced as a DUI general impairment provision.

Since Hannon has been charged only with violating section 4177(a)(1) for general
impairment, the sole issue before the Court is whether the language of section 4177(g)—when
considered in conjunction with DUI per se section 4177(a)(5)’s language—prohibits the
admission into evidence, to prove general impairment, the results of a blood test obtained outside
the statutorily-created four-hour window. This issue is largely one of ﬁrst impression; therefore,
the Court will look to other jurisdictions with similar statutes for guidance.11

B. Foreign Jurisdictions ’ DUI Case Law
Pursuant to North Dakota’s DUI statute, a person “may not drive or be in actual physical

control of any vehicle”12 if: (a) that person has a .08 BAC within two hours of driving (the

“North Dakota DUI per se statute”); or (b) “that person is under the inﬂuence of intoxicating

 

9 The Court will refer to §§ 4177(a)(1) and (a)(5) as the general impairment and DUI per se statutes, respectively.

‘0 21 Del. C. §4177(a).

“ Although few Delaware cases address the admissibility of a chemical test obtained outside the four-hour window,
those that do are either non-binding, occur in the DUI per se as opposed to the general impairment context, or both.
The Court addresses these opinions inﬁa.

‘2 N.D. CENT. CODE ANN. § 39-81-01(l)(a), (b) (WEST 2015).

4 .

liquor” (the “North Dakota general impairment statute”).13 Courts in North Dakota have
consistently permitted the use of blood tests taken beyond the two—hour window set forth in
North Dakota’s DUI per se statute as evidence to prove a violation of North Dakota’s general
impairment statute.14

In City of Grand Forks v. Soli, a defendant appealed his DUI conviction for violation of
North Dakota’s general impairment statute, arguing that the trial court erred by admitting into
evidence, in contravention of the applicable DUI per se statute’s two-hour rule, the results of a
blood test taken more than two hours after the defendant drove.15 The defendant contended that
N.D. Cent. Code Ann. § 39-20-07(5) (the “North Dakota fair administration statute”), which
conditions chemical test admissibility on the prosecution demonstrating that chemical tests were
“properly obtained” and “fairly administered,” impliedly incorporates into its “fairly
administered” criterion a requirement of strict compliance with the two-hour rule.16 The
defendant reasoned that since the North Dakota DUI per se statute imposed a two-hour rule, the
North Dakota fair administration statute adopts that rule and incorporates it into North Dakota’s
general impairment statute.17 The Supreme Court of North Dakota disagreed, and afﬁrmed the
conviction, holding that the test results were admissible.18 Although the test was inadmissible to
prove a violation of the North Dakota DUI per se statute, the court found that the test results

“may be sufﬁcient evidence for the trier of fact to convict a defendant for violating [the North

13
Idaho
14 City ofGrand Forks v. Soli, 479 N.W.2d 872 (ND. 1992); North Dakota v. Miller, 530 N.W.2d 652 (ND. 1995).
‘5 479 N.W.2d 872, 873 (ND. 1992).
1" Id. at 875.
17 Id.
‘8 Id.

9:19

Dakota general impairment statute]. Furthermore, the court decided that it “will not

incorporate a time limit that the Legislature has not chosen to require.”20

Similarly, in North Dakota v. Miller, in an appeal from a general impairment conviction,
the Supreme Court of North Dakota deemed the results of a blood test taken approximately nine
hours aﬁer a defendant drove his vehicle to be relevant and admissible.21 The court afﬁrmed the
general impairment conviction, echoing its reasoning in Soli; the court noted that although
inadmissible to prove a violation of the North Dakota DUI per se statute, a blood test taken later
than the two hour time period after which a defendant drove still may be used “to convict a
defendant for violating [the North Dakota general impairment statute].”22

Generally, in assessing whether a delay in chemical testing was reasonable, courts will

3 In Montana v. Hala, a defendant who appealed his DUI

look to the causes of the delay.2
conviction argued that a blood draw conducted over eight hours after the act of driving was not
in accord with a statutorily imposed reasonableness requirement.24 The Montana DUI statute
provided that chemical test results will give rise to certain presumptions so long as a chemical
test is “taken within a reasonable time after the alleged act.”25 The Supreme Court of Montana
held that a blood test, taken approximately eight hours after a defendant allegedly drove his
vehicle under the inﬂuence of alcohol, was administered within a reasonable time and therefore

was admissible.26 In making this determination, the court considered it signiﬁcant that the

circumstances surrounding the accident (and not the investigating ofﬁcer) precipitated the nine-

‘9 Id.

2" Id.

21 Miller, 530 N.W.2d 652 (ND. 1995).

22 Idaho
23 See, e.g. Montana v. Hala, 358 P.3d 917 (Mont. 2015).
2“ Id. at 918.

25 MONT. CODE. ANN. § 61-8-401(4) (2015).

26 Hala, 358 P.3d 917.

hour delay.27 Other courts have also looked to speciﬁc facts of the accident or DUI investigation
when determining whether chemical test results are admissible.28 Indeed, courts have often held
that the results of chemical tests administered outside a statutorily mandated timeframe are
nonetheless admissible, albeit as evidence to be given diminished weight proportionate to the

degree of delay.29

After a diligent search of case law from foreign jurisdictions, this Court was unable to
locate an instance where, because of delay alone, a court has unqualiﬁedly ruled a chemical test
result inadmissible to prove a DUI in a general impairment-based prosecution. Where courts
have held untimely chemical test results as inadmissible, such evidence was either: (1)
inadmissible to prove a DUI per se violation; or (2) inadmissible due to a lack of sufﬁcient

extrapolation evidence correlating a defendant’s BAC level at the time of testing to BAC levels

when he or she allegedly drove under the inﬂuence of alcohol.30

27 Id. at 920.

28 The Village ofBull Valley v. Winterpacht, 968 N.E.2d 160, 163 (111. App. Ct. 2012) (“Matters of delay between
driving and testing go to weight of evidence and must be viewed in light of circumstances surrounding the arrest”);
Pennsylvania v. Dye, 2015 WL 7576104 at *3 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2015) (good cause to admit test results despite two
hour rule violation where Commonwealth establishes context for blood draw delay and where distance and
investigations explain delay).

29 North Carolina v. Patterson, 708 S.E.2d 133, 137 (NO. Ct. App. 2011) (time elapsed between operating motor
vehicle and blood test goes to weight given to results, not admissibility) (quoting State v. George, 336 S.E.2d 93, at
95 (NC. Ct. App. 1985)); Pennsylvania v. Williams, 871 A.2d 254, 265 (Pa. Super. Ct 2005) (amount of time
between driving and blood sample not dispositive of admissibility in prosecution for general impairment, only
affects the weight of the evidence); Texas v. Esparza, 355 S.W.3d 276, 283 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (breath test
results generally admissible at trial even if administered several hours after offense because positive result tends to
indicate a defendant drank alcohol on day in question).

30 See New Mexico v. Hughey, 119 P.3d 188 (NM. Ct. App. 2005) (afﬁrming trial court’s granting of defendant’s
motion to exclude. State’s expert’s testimony too vague for trier of fact to ﬁnd meaningful nexus between the test
results and BAC at the time of driving), rev ’d 163 P.3d 470 (NM. 2007); Ohio v. Ross, 2008 WL 1113365 (Ohio Ct.
App. 2008) (holding that breath test inadmissible under DUI per se theory, but may have been admissible to prove
DUI on general impairment theory); Holding v. Oklahoma, 685 P.2d 403 (Okla. Crim. App. 1984) (holding
breathalyzer test results inadmissible to prove DUI for purposes of misdemeanor manslaughter prosecution because
test not conducted within two hours of arrest); Stewart v. Texas, 103 S.W.3d 483 (Tex. App. 2003) (reversing trial
court’s decision to admit breath test unaccompanied by suitable expert testimony connecting BAC at the time of
driving to results of later breath test) rev ’a' en banc 129 S.W.3d 93 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (holding breath test
results relevant even without expert testimony).

C. Delaware ’s DUI Case Law

In his Motion Defendant relies primarily upon the holding in F iori v. State.31 In F iori, a
defendant was convicted of DUI per se in this Court and subsequently appealed his conviction to
Superior Court on the ground that the State failed to prove that the defendant drove within four
hours of the chemical test.32 The F iori defendant had been involved in a single car accident.33
When police arrived at the scene at approximately 5 am,34 the defendant admitted to drinking,
and the police found that the defendant had glassy, bloodshot eyes, and slurred speech.35 The
defendant was arrested for DUI at 6:37 am, and was given an intoxilyzer test which yielded a
result of .122.3 6 The Fiori court held that the test was admissible because the trial court had
sufﬁcient evidence to conclude that the defendant had driven his vehicle within four hours of the
test.37 In reaching this conclusion, the court reasoned that the relevancy of the test was
conditioned upon its being administered within four hours of the time the defendant last drove,

8

and that the circumstantial evidence supported the trial court’s ﬁnding.3 In dicta, the court

interpreted section 4177(g) as standing for the proposition that a chemical test is relevant and
admissible only if the test is taken within four hours of driving, thus creating the so-called four-
hour rule.39

Subsequently, this Court applied the four-hour rule in State v. Foskey. In Foskey, this
Court found that the results of a blood draw were inadmissible because the State failed to

establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the test was administered within four hours after a

31Def.’s Mot. p.2.
32 Id.
33Fion‘ v. State, 2004 WL 1284205 (Del. Super. May 26, 2004)..-
34 *
Id. at 1.
35 Idaho
36 Id.
37 Id. at *5.
38 Id. at *3.
39 Id. at *2.

defendant was driving.40 In Foskey, the defendant was transported to the hospital due to injuries
he sustained in a two-car accident.41 While at the hospital the defendant admitted to ofﬁcers that
he had been drinking.42 At that time, the investigating ofﬁcer noticed that the defendant
exhibited an odor of alcohol and bloodshot eyes, and requested that the nurse conduct a blood
draw.43 Subsequently, the defendant was charged with violating the DUI per se statute.44 In
suppressing the test results, the Foskey court cited to F iori, noting that a court may only admit a
test if the “State foundationally establishes” that the blood draw was taken within four hours
after the defendant was driving.45

The Superior Court revisited the DUI statute’s language in State v. Baker. In Baker, the
Superior Court denied a defendant’s motion to suppress in a Letter Memorandum.46 The court
held that an allegedly untimely blood test was admissible, reasoning that pursuant to section
4177(g), the test was “not objectionable simply because it might have been administered more

”47 In drawing this conclusion, the court

than four hours after [the] [d]efendant was driving.
reasoned that “nowhere does the statute expressly demand” that a defendant’s blood must be
tested within four hours,48 and surmised that “as long as the test, itself, is regular . . . it does not
matter how long after driving the blood is drawn.”49 The Baker court also considered the General

Assembly’s synopsis of section 4177(a)(5),50 which explained that the four-hour window is

“intended to protect the public from drivers who have consumed alcohol before driving, but

 

4° 2006 WL 1719977 at *5 (Del. Com. Pl. Jun. 23, 2006).-
“ Foskey at *1.

42 Idaho
43 Id.

4“ Id.

45 Id. at *4.

46 ResState v. Baker, 2009 WL 1639514 (Del. Super.) (Letter Op.).
47 Id. at *2 (emphasis added).

48 Id. at *1.

49 Id.

5° Id.

whose BAC levels have not yet met the proscribed level at the time of a stop.”5 1 The Baker court
concluded that the “four-hour [window] is a sword, [and] not a shield.”52
Building upon the Baker opinion, in T horoughgood v. State, the Superior Court afﬁrmed

I.53 The T horoughgood court based its holding

a jury verdict ﬁnding the defendant guilty of DU
on the fact that there was ample evidence to support the jury’s conclusion that the defendant
drove within four hours of when the breath test was administered.54 However, the
T horoughgood court added that the four-hour window is “not intended to be a defense for [a]

”55 The Thoroughgood court

defendant to avoid the results [of an untimely chemical test].
expressly discounted the notion of a four-hour rule and instead intimated that the policy-driven
four-hour window was in close alignment with the spirit of the DUI statute.

The Delaware Supreme Court recognized that the General Assembly may promulgate
rules affecting the admissibility of evidence. In Anderson v. State the Delaware Supreme Court
addressed the issue of frequency of intoxilyzer calibration in relation to the admissibility of
breath test results.56 The Court held that there is no “bright-line rule . . . requiring calibration
either monthly or every thirty days,” and that if there is to be one for admissibility purposes, the
“rule must, of necessity, come from the General Assembly.”57 The Anderson opinion implicitly

acknowledged the import of General Assembly decisions to create rules respecting the

admissibility of evidence.

 

5‘ Id.

52 Id. at *1 —2.

53 2010 WL 2355316 at *3 (Del. Super.); It is unclear from the Opinion which subsection of the DUI statute
defendant was found guilty of violating.

54 Idaho
55 Id. at *4 (citing State v. Baker 2009 WL 1639514, at *1 (Del. Super.)).

5" 675 A.2d 943 (Del. 1996).

57 Anderson, 675 A.2d at 944.

10