PER CURIAM.
Defendant Sema Kokan appeals from the October 2, 2013 order of the Law Division finding her guilty of refusal to submit to a breath test contrary to
We derive the following facts from the record. At 3:28 p.m. on January 30, 2011, Sergeant Paul responded to a report of a "suspicious person[.]" When he arrived at the scene, he found a 2007 Toyota "stuck in a snow bank on the front lawn" of a home. The car was "[a]pproximately 15 feet from the road." No one was in the car, but the person who reported the incident told Sergeant Paul that the individual who had been in the car was across the street inside a neighbor's house. The sergeant "r[a]n the registration for the vehicle" and learned that defendant owned it.
Sergeant Paul walked across the street to the neighbor's home
As Sergeant Paul transported defendant to the police station, defendant "insisted that she did not crash the car. . . she said she parked it." Defendant also "admitted she had been drinking" sometime earlier at a local bar. She did not tell the sergeant that "anyone else had been driving the vehicle."
At the station, Officer Senatore attempted to administer a breath test to defendant. The officer explained the test and told defendant he "was going to need her to blow into the machine and instructed her clearly that we need her to continue to blow into the machine until I would tell her to stop." Officer Senatore asked defendant "if she was willing to take the test ... [a]nd she responded that yes, she was going to take the test."
However, Officer Senatore stated that when he told defendant to "blow into the machine[,] ... she continued to stand there and not give a sample until the time had expired that had been given for that first sample." The officer again explained the test and, the second time, defendant was able to complete the test. However, when Officer Senatore asked defendant to repeat the test, she "stopped before she had given a sufficient volume of sample." On the fourth attempt, defendant again failed to provide a sufficient volume for the test to be completed. Officer Senatore "again asked her a [fifth and] final time that we need another sample and she just refused to do it after that." The police then charged defendant with refusal to submit to a breath test in violation of
Defendant's boyfriend at the time, A.G.,
On the way to defendant's house, A.G. testified that he argued with defendant. He stopped at a convenience store and met his friend, who then followed them in his car as A.G. drove defendant's car toward her home. A.G. claimed defendant got "very nasty, very belligerent" and was "[b]elittling me, belittling my manhood." Defendant then struck A.G., who stated he pulled the car over, "jumped out[,] [j]umped in my buddy's car and I left." A.G. asserted he was about a block away from defendant's house when he pulled over. He stated he did not "plan" to leave the car on the lawn of the neighbor's yard, but "the car kind of slid a little further than I had planned on."
Defendant testified on her own behalf. She stated she had been drinking the day before the incident and started again immediately after waking up on January 30, 2011. Defendant claimed that, following an argument at A.G.'s parents' home, he decided to drive her home. After stopping at the convenience store, defendant stated that A.G. continued to drive her car. When he stopped at the neighbor's house, defendant testified "part of" the car "was on the lawn[.]" After A.G. left with his friend, defendant got out of the car and went to her neighbor's house.
Defendant stated she remembered telling Sergeant Paul, "I didn't crash. I just parked [the car] there" when he asked her what happened. However, at trial, she claimed she did not park the car on the neighbor's lawn and that A.G. had done so. Defendant could not explain why she "didn't ... tell [the police] that [A.G.] had been driving the car[.]" She stated she also did not remember whether she gave "adequate samples" during the breath test.
The municipal court judge found that neither defendant nor A.G. were credible witnesses. Although the judge believed that defendant "operated that vehicle and ... [was] intoxicated when [she] did so[,]" he concluded the State had not "proven that case beyond a reasonable doubt." Therefore, he found defendant not guilty of DWI.
However, the judge determined that probable cause existed to arrest defendant for DWI based upon her admission she was drinking prior to the incident, her appearance, and her behavior. Therefore, he concluded that the police appropriately determined to administer a breath test to defendant. The judge further found that defendant refused to submit to the breath test because she only provided an adequate breath volume for one of the four tests and then refused to attempt to complete any further tests. Therefore, he found defendant guilty of refusal to submit to a breath test.
At the Law Division trial de novo, Judge Alberto Rivas also found defendant guilty of refusal. In a thorough written opinion, Judge Rivas found that defendant was fully "aware of her obligations" to complete the breath test, but "did not cooperate with the taking of the breath sample[,] which constitutes a refusal under the law." The judge imposed the same sentence as the municipal court: a ten-year driver's license suspension, forty-eight hours in the Intoxicated Driver's Resource Center, and various fines, assessments, and surcharges. This appeal followed.
On appeal, defendant raises the following contentions:
Having reviewed defendant's arguments in light of the facts and the applicable law, we affirm.
On appeal from a Law Division decision following a de novo municipal court appeal, the issue is whether there is "sufficient credible evidence present in the record" to uphold the findings of the Law Division, not the municipal court.
The refusal statute,
Although the statute sets forth a standard of preponderance of the evidence, "because a breathalyzer refusal case is properly a quasi-criminal matter, the constitutionally required burden of proof is the one applicable to criminal cases: proof beyond a reasonable doubt."
Refusal is "a separate and distinct offense from conviction of drunk driving."
While the State must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,
Probable cause for driving under the influence will be found where an officer "had reasonable grounds to believe that the driver was operating a motor vehicle in violation" of the DWI statute.
Judge Rivas' conclusion that probable cause existed for defendant's arrest for DWI was well supported by the record. When Sergeant Paul arrived at the scene, he found defendant's car on a neighbor's front lawn, approximately fifteen feet from the highway. When questioned, defendant told the sergeant she "crashed" and "parked" the vehicle. Defendant also admitted she had been drinking, and she smelled of alcohol. Defendant had bloodshot eyes, was not speaking clearly, and was very belligerent. Defendant did not claim that her boyfriend had been driving her car or had ever been present at the scene.
Under the totality of the circumstances, these facts established sufficient grounds for an objectively reasonable police officer to believe that defendant had operated a motor vehicle in violation of the DWI statute.
Defendant argues that the record does not support the judge's conclusion that she refused to complete the breath test. We disagree. It is well established that "anything short of an unconditional, unequivocal assent to an officer's request that the arrested motorist take the breathalyzer test constitutes refusal to do so."
Applying these principles here, we discern no basis for disturbing the judge's determination that defendant unequivocally refused to submit to the breath test following her arrest. Although defendant told Officer Senatore she would comply with the instructions he gave her for the breath test, she clearly failed to do so. Defendant did not attempt to complete the first test and, instead, just stood there until the time limit expired. Although she provided a sufficient breath volume on the second try, she did not do so on either the third or fourth tests. After that, defendant simply refused to undertake any further testing. Therefore, we reject defendant's contention on this point.
Finally, defendant argues that the police should not have required her to submit to a breath test because they already had ample evidence from her appearance and behavior at the scene to support a DWI conviction. Therefore, defendant asserts "[t]here was absolutely no rational basis for [Sergeant] Paul to request [her] to submit to a breathalyzer test as the evidence clearly proved her intoxicated state." This argument lacks merit.
Contrary to defendant's contention, there was nothing untoward about the officers' request that defendant submit to a breath test after she was arrested for DWI. A breathalyzer test provides police with "a method of reliably distinguishing those motorists who were drunk from motorists who displayed symptoms of drunken[n]ess that were actually attributable to other causes[,]" such as illness or injury sustained in an accident.
Affirmed.