Court Opinion

ID: 4312704
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-09-14 20:10:18.67705+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:44:39.467175
License: Public Domain

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 1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

 2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

 3          Plaintiff-Appellee,

 4 v.                                                                    No. A-1-CA-36938

 5 NORMA CANDIA,

 6          Defendant-Appellant.

 7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF OTERO COUNTY
 8 Angie K. Schneider, District Judge

 9 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
10 Santa Fe, NM

11 for Appellee

12 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender
13 Allison H. Jaramillo, Assistant Public Defender
14 Santa Fe, NM

15 for Appellant

16                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

17 HANISEE, Judge.
 1   {1}   Defendant Norma Candia appeals from the district court’s judgment and

 2 sentence, convicting her for fourth offense DWI. Unpersuaded by the docketing

 3 statement, we issued a notice of proposed summary disposition, proposing to affirm.

 4 Defendant responded to our notice with a memorandum in opposition. We have

 5 considered Defendant’s response and remain unpersuaded. We affirm.

 6   {2}   On appeal, Defendant maintains that the district court erred by admitting her

 7 blood test results under the Scientific Laboratory Division (SLD) regulations because

 8 there was an unexplained, six-month delay between the blood draw and the samples

 9 arriving at SLD. [DS 3; MIO 2-4] Defendant also argues the district court erred by

10 permitting an SLD analyst to testify as a lay witness. [DS 3; MIO 5-9]

11 Admission of Blood Test Results

12   {3}   Our notice proposed to affirm the admission of the blood test results despite the

13 six-month delay in testing, because there is no time requirement in the SLD regulation

14 for the delivery of blood samples to SLD, as opposed to the time requirement in the

15 collection of blood samples, which the regulations expressly state should be done

16 within three hours of arrest. Compare NMAC 7.33.2.15(A)(4), with NMAC

17 7.33.2.15(A)(2). We refused to read into the regulation some time requirement and

18 hold that the unidentified time requirement is an accuracy-ensuring regulation. See

19 State v. Tom, 2010-NMCA-062, ¶ 12, 148 N.M. 348, 236 P.3d 660 (“Compliance with

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 1 accuracy-ensuring regulations of the [SLD] is a condition precedent to admission of

 2 [blood alcohol test] results.”), overruled on other grounds by State v. Tollardo,

 3 2012-NMSC-008, 275 P.3d 110. Without an express time requirement, we proposed

 4 to hold that Defendant failed to show non-compliance with an accuracy-ensuring

 5 regulation that would render the results unreliable and warrant exclusion. See State v.

 6 Bowden, 2010-NMCA-070, ¶ 7, 148 N.M. 850, 242 P.3d 417 (“By limiting the time

 7 period for the testing after the arrest of a suspect, the regulation addresses the accuracy

 8 of the testing.”).

 9   {4}   In response, Defendant contends that it should be clear that the regulation

10 requires the sample to be delivered to the lab within a reasonable time, and that six

11 months is not a reasonable time. [MIO 3] In arguing that six months is not a

12 reasonable time, Defendant relies on a 1983 article from a medical journal. [MIO 4]

13 There is no indication, however, that Defendant challenged admission of the blood

14 tests results based on this article in district court to demonstrate the unreliability of the

15 test results. As we stated in our notice, in the absence of a regulation-based,

16 foundational reason for exclusion, it is incumbent upon Defendant to demonstrate the

17 unreliability of the test results under Rule 11-104(A) NMRA. See State v. Anaya,

18 2012-NMCA-094, ¶ 20, 287 P.3d 956 (observing that the admissibility of breath tests

19 depends on the circumstances surrounding each test and compliance with the SLD

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 1 regulations and that the State need not prove scientific reliability of the test in its

 2 prima facie case); State v. Martinez, 2007-NMSC-025, ¶¶ 19, 21, 24, 141 N.M. 713,

 3 160 P.3d 894 (observing that once the State has met the foundational requirements for

 4 admitting a blood alcohol report, the defendant has the burden to show by a

 5 preponderance of the evidence that the report should be excluded for lack of

 6 trustworthiness under Rule 11-104(A)). Defendant gives us no indication that she

 7 presented any evidence to suggest that her blood results were less reliable as a result

 8 of the delay. Therefore, we hold that Defendant did not demonstrate that the district

 9 court erred by denying exclusion of her blood test results.

10 Admission of the SLD Analyst’s Testimony

11   {5}   We expressed confusion about Defendant’s complaints surrounding the SLD

12 analyst’s testimony, [DS 3] and stated that we understood the issue to contend that

13 because the State did not designate the SLD analyst as an expert witness, the district

14 court ruled that it could not call the SLD analyst as an expert; thus, it was error for the

15 district court to permit the SLD analyst to introduce the blood test results because it

16 required specialized knowledge. Our notice sought to examine the district court’s

17 ruling that Defendant wanted to enforce to preclude the SLD analyst from testifying,

18 because we would affirm the district court’s ultimate admission of the SLD analyst’s

19 testimony if it was right for any reason. See State v. Astorga, 2015-NMSC-007, ¶ 44,

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 1 343 P.3d 1245 (“The trial record does not clearly reveal the trial court’s specific

 2 reason for admitting the statements, but we may uphold the judge’s decision if it was

 3 right for any reason.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).

 4   {6}   We explained that, based on the vague assertions in the docketing statement, the

 5 district court’s ruling that the SLD analyst could not testify as an expert appeared to

 6 relate to the designation of the witness as an expert and therefore raised issues of

 7 notice and prejudice. See, e.g., State v. Lopez, 2018-NMCA-002, ¶ 24, 410 P.3d 226

 8 (addressing a defendant’s argument that the State’s witness list was insufficient under

 9 standards that examine notice, prejudice, and culpability). We further explained that

10 Defendant did not provide us with sufficient information relevant to the district court’s

11 ruling; namely, the name of the SLD analyst who testified, whether the person

12 identified in the State’s witness list was the same SLD analyst who testified, whether

13 the State violated any discovery order, the reasons for the discovery violation or

14 degree of culpability by the State in the violation, and how Defendant demonstrated

15 that she was prejudiced by any late disclosure of an SLD analyst. See Rule 12-

16 208(D)(3) NMRA. Thus, Defendant did not provide us with any information that

17 would warrant the exclusion of the SLD analyst based on the stated basis for

18 exclusion—the State’s failure to designate the witness as an expert. See State v. Le

                                               5
 1 Mier, 2017-NMSC-017, ¶ 20, 394 P.3d 959; State v. Harper, 2011-NMSC-044, ¶ 15,

 2 150 N.M. 745, 266 P.3d 25.

 3   {7}   We noted that Defendant did not contend that the witness was undisclosed or

 4 that the contact information for the witness was inaccurate or that the failure to

 5 designate the SLD analyst as an expert in some other way affected Defendant’s ability

 6 to interview the witness or otherwise communicate with the witness, [MIO 8] which

 7 would have revealed that witness to be a designated expert. We further observed that

 8 the State’s amended witness list shows that the State identified Ron-Jen Hwang as a

 9 designee from SLD in Albuquerque. [RP 42] Thus, in our view Defendant did not

10 show that she lacked notice or was prejudiced by the failure of the State to specifically

11 identify the SLD analyst as an expert, to the extent the State actually failed to

12 designate the analyst as an expert. Rather, it appeared to us that at the heart of

13 Defendant’s argument was a formalistic challenge to a titling problem that did not

14 result in prejudice, and that the district court’s admission of the SLD analyst’s

15 testimony should be affirmed as right for any reason. See Astorga, 2015-NMSC-007,

16 ¶ 44. The record shows that the witness was disclosed, the content of his testimony

17 was readily discoverable, and any concerns about the content of the SLD analyst’s

18 testimony after the ruling that the analyst could not testify as an expert should have

19 been developed and clarified in district court and then explained to us on appeal.

                                               6
 1   {8}    In her response to our notice, Defendant does not provide us with any of the

 2 information we listed as necessary to demonstrate error. Instead, Defendant asserts

 3 that based on the information in the docketing statement, the district court refused to

 4 qualify the analyst as an expert because the State had not disclosed any experts. [MIO

 5 8] Defendant’s continued reliance on the information in the docketing statement

 6 without supplying the additional information we stated that we needed does not

 7 demonstrate error. Defendant’s memorandum in opposition simply maintains that the

 8 SLD analyst should not have been permitted to testify to the lab test results as a lay

 9 witness and that it was not harmless because Defendant was convicted based on her

10 blood-alcohol content. [MIO 5-9] This is not responsive to our notice and does not

11 demonstrate error in admitting the testimony.

12   {9}    For the reasons stated in our notice and in this opinion, we affirm the district

13 court’s judgment and sentence.

14   {10}   IT IS SO ORDERED.

15                                           _______________________________
16                                           J. MILES HANISEE, Judge

17 WE CONCUR:

18 ____________________________

                                                7
1 JULIE J. VARGAS, Judge

2 ____________________________
3 HENRY M. BOHNHOFF, Judge

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