SCHUMAN, P.J.
Petitioner filed an untimely request for a hearing with the Oregon Driver and Motor Vehicles Services Division (DMV) to contest the suspension of his driving privileges. DMV denied the request and petitioner seeks judicial review. As he did before DMV, he argues that his untimeliness resulted from "just cause" as defined by DMV rules and that therefore DMV erred in denying his request. ORS 813.440(l)(g). Further, he contends that DMV's order lacked "substantial reason," that is, it did not articulate a rational connection between the facts of his case and the legal conclusion. Because we agree with petitioner that DMV's order is not supported by substantial reason, we remand for further consideration.
We take the facts from DMV's findings, which petitioner does not challenge, supplemented by undisputed facts in the record. Petitioner, whose primary language is Russian, was arrested on October 28, 2008, for driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII). ORS 813.010. He refused to submit to a breath test, thereby exposing himself to the possibility of both criminal and civil administrative sanctions. ORS 813.010(3) (criminal); ORS 813.410 (civil). Following the arrest, DMV provided petitioner with a copy of the Implied Consent Combined Report and Notice of Intent to Suspend, which advised petitioner that his driving privileges would be administratively suspended effective the thirtieth day following the arrest. The notice also contained information regarding the opportunity for a hearing, and it specifically advised petitioner that, if he wanted to take advantage of that opportunity, a written hearing request had to be received by DMV Hearings Case Management Unit "by 5 p.m. on the tenth day following this arrest[.]" The information was presented only in English.
On the criminal side, petitioner was charged in Multnomah County Circuit Court with misdemeanor DUII, reckless driving, and refusal to take a breath test. He filed a motion to suppress all evidence discovered pursuant to his stop and arrest. The court granted the motion; the record in this case does not reveal the court's rationale. The misdemeanor DUII and reckless driving charges were subsequently dismissed on May 20, 2009. The citation for refusal to take a breath test, however, was not dismissed until March 10, 2010, apparently due to an error in the Oregon Judicial Information Network (OJIN) tracking system.
On May 25, 2010, long after the ordinary period for challenging DMV's administrative suspension of his license had ended, petitioner requested that DMV rescind the suspension or grant him a hearing to contest it. Under ORS 813.440(l)(g), DMV "may provide a [late] hearing to determine the validity of a suspension * * * only if the time requirements under ORS 813.410 could not be met because of * * * [o]ther just cause as defined by the department by administrative rule." OAR 735-090-0000(5)(a),
In his request, petitioner contended that "just cause" as defined by OAR 735-090-0000(5) warranted an untimely request for a hearing pursuant to ORS 813.440(1)(g) because petitioner's inability to understand written or spoken English made it difficult, if not impossible, for him to understand the warnings given to him by police at the time of his arrest and the notice of his right to
DMV denied petitioner's untimely request for a hearing. It found the facts essentially as we have related them: Petitioner was arrested for DUII. He refused to take the breath test, and was provided with a notice informing him that, as a result of that refusal, his license would be suspended as of 30 days following his arrest. He was also informed that he had the right to a hearing and that he would lose that right if he did not request the hearing within 10 days. The department made no findings regarding petitioner's ability to speak or understand English, it did not mention the criminal proceeding or its outcome, and it did not mention that petitioner had previously been arrested for a DUII in 2007 and completed a diversion program in 2008.
The department reached the following legal conclusions:
Regarding "just cause," the order stated, in total:
Petitioner now seeks judicial review of DMV's order. ORS 183.482.
We review DMV's order for, among other things, substantial reason, that is, to determine whether the agency has "demonstrate[d] in [its] opinion[ ] the reasoning that leads the agency from the facts that it has found to the conclusions that it draws from those facts." Drew v. PSRB, 322 Or. 491,
Drew, 322 Or. at 500, 909 P.2d 1211 (citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted; footnote omitted). Here, DMV did not connect its findings of fact to its conclusion that petitioner failed to establish just cause for a late hearing request. The department's findings connect the facts to the conclusion that petitioner's hearing request was untimely under ORS 813.410(3). That conclusion, however, has never been contested. The contested issue is whether petitioner had just cause for filing an untimely request, and nothing in the DMV order addressed or even acknowledged any of petitioner's arguments regarding that issue. Indeed, the department's conclusion is more aptly described as an announcement. "It gives us nothing to judicially review." Castro v. Board of Parole, 232 Or.App. 75, 85, 220 P.3d 772 (2009). Further, the department's attempt to supply an explanation on judicial review is unavailing; "[o]ur duty is to evaluate the board's logic, not to supply it." Id. at 85-86, 220 P.3d 772 (citing Drew, 322 Or. at 499-500, 909 P.2d 1211 (review for substantial reason is based on the order itself, not our independent review of the record)). We must therefore remand for further consideration.
Reversed and remanded.