458 S.W.3d 418

STATE of Missouri, Respondent, v. Gary Preston BROWNING Jr., Appellant.

WD 76144

Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District.

OPINION FILED: January 6, 2015

Motion for Rehearing and/or Transfer to Supreme Court Denied March 3, 2015

Application for Transfer Denied April 28, 2Ó15

*419Richard A. Starnes, Jefferson City, MO, for respondent.

James R. Brown, Kearney, MO, for appellant.

Before Division Three: Karen King Mitchell, Presiding Judge, Cynthia L. Martin, Judge and Gary D. Witt, Judge

Cynthia L. Martin, Judge

Gary Browning (“Browning”) appeals his conviction of driving while intoxicated as an aggravated offender following a jury trial. He complains that there was insufficient foundation to permit the admission of Sergeant Joe Kantola’s (“Sgt. Kantola”) testimony about the results of administration of the horizontal gaze nystagmus (“HGN”) test. Browning also questions the adequacy of the approved verdict director for driving while intoxicated, MAI-CR 3d 331.02, though he concedes that the trial court committed no error in tendering the instruction. Because any error in the admission of the results of the HGN test is not prejudicial in light of other evidence supporting the verdict as to which Browning has no complaint, and because Browning asserts no error in the trial court’s use of MAI-CR 3d 331.02, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

Browning does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain his conviction. Viewed in the light most favorable to the conviction,1 the following evidence was presented to the jury:

On Sunday, April 22, 2007 at around 10:15 p.m., Sgt. Kantola of the Kearney Police Department was stopped in an unmarked patrol vehicle at a red light at the intersection of 92 Highway and Interstate 35. Sgt. Kantola was in the right lane, and a minivan was stopped next to him in the left lane. Sgt. Kantola observed a black Jeep approaching the minivan quickly from behind, without appearing to slow down. The Jeep then came to a sudden stop. When the light turned green, all three vehicles proceeded through the in*420tersection. The Jeep passed Sgt. Kantola, following the minivan too closely. The Jeep suddenly entered Sgt. Kantola’s lane without using its turn, signal. The Jeep accelerated past the minivan, then suddenly went back into the left lane without using its turn signal. At the time, the Jeep was traveling over the posted 35 mile-per-hour speed limit. The Jeep then turned east onto 33 Highway without using its turn signal.

Because Sgt. Kantola had witnessed multiple traffic offenses, he followed the Jeep, and activated his emergency lights. The Jeep slowed down, but did not stop immediately.

Sgt. Kantola approached' the Jeep. Browning was driving, and was the sole occupant. Before Browning spoke, Sgt. Kantola could smell an “overpowering” odor of alcohol from Browning’s breath. When Browning did speak, his speech was slurred. Browning’s eyes were glassy and bloodshot. His pupils were dilated. Sgt. Kantola asked Browning if he had been drinking. Browning responded that he “drank some earlier.” Browning was asked to get out of the car. As Browning did so, he stumbled and used the door to support himself.

Sgt. Kantola administered several field sobriety tests. He administered the HGN test, the walk-and-turn test, and the one-legged stand test. According to Kantola, Browning showed all six signs of intoxication during the HGN test, and also swayed while balancing during the test. Browning showed four of the eight signs of intoxication during the walk-and-turn test, with two being required to demonstrate intoxication. Browning showed all four signs of intoxication during the one-legged-stand test. Browning also submitted to a portable breath test, which was positive for the presence of alcohol. At that point, Browning was placed under arrest. He began pleading with Sgt. Kantola, “Please don’t do this to me.”

After being transported to the police station and advised of the implied consent law, Browning agreed to submit to a breath test. Browning’s blood alcohol content was .103.

Browning was convicted of driving while intoxicated following a jury trial. The court imposed a four-year sentence, but suspended the sentence and placed Browning on probation. Browning filed this timely appeal.

Analysis

Browning’s first point on appeal argues that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting Sgt. Kantola’s testimony regarding the results of the HGN test over Browning’s objection. Browning claims that an adequate foundation was not established to permit admission of the testimony. Browning raised this same issue in a pre-trial motion to suppress which was denied by the trial court following an evi-dentiary hearing.

We review a trial court’s decision regarding the admission of evidence for an abuse of discretion. State v. Prince, 311 S.W.3d 327, 335 (Mo.App.W.D.2010). We will not find an abuse of discretion unless a trial court’s ruling is clearly against the logic of the circumstances and is so arbitrary and unreasonable as to indicate a lack of careful consideration. State v. Brown, 939 S.W.2d 882, 883 (Mo. banc 1997). We will not reverse a conviction based on the erroneous admission of evidence unless prejudice is demonstrated, established by proof that the admission of the evidence was “outcome-determinative.” State v. Adams, 350 S.W.3d 864, 866 (Mo.App.E.D.2011) (citing State v. Johnson, 207 S.W.3d 24, 42 (Mo. banc 2006)). “ ‘A finding of outcome-determinative prejudice *421expresses a judicial conclusion that the erroneously admitted evidence so influenced the jury that, when considered with and balanced against all of the evidence properly admitted, there is a reasonable probability that the jury would have acquitted but for the erroneously admitted evidence.’” Adams, 350 S.W.3d at 866 (quoting Johnson, 207 S.W.3d at 42).

Here, Browning only challenges about the trial court’s admission of Sgt. Kantola’s testimony regarding the results of the HGN field sobriety test. Browning does not challenge the admission of Sgt. Kanto-la’s testimony regarding Browning’s erratic driving and about the physical signs of intoxication he observed immediately upon approaching Browning including the smell of alcohol, bloodshot and glassy eyes, dilated pupils, slurred speech, and problems with balance. Browning does not challenge the admission of Sgt. Kantola’s testimony that Browning acknowledged he had been drinking. Browning does not challenge the admission of Sgt. Kantola’s testimony regarding the results of the walk- and-turn and the one-legged stand tests, the results of the portable breath test, or the results of the breath test which demonstrated that Browning had a blood alcohol content of .103, well in excess of the presumptive level of intoxication set forth in section 577.037.1.2 Browning does not challenge the admission of Sgt. Kantola’s testimony about Browning’s plea that he not be arrested.

Given all of this unchallenged evidence, the sufficiency of which to support his conviction Browning admits, there is no reasonable probability that the jury would have acquitted Browning but for the trial court’s admission of Sgt. Kantola’s testimony about the results of the HGN test. Thus, even assuming the trial court committed error in the admission of this evidence, that error is not prejudicial as it is not outcome-determinative, and the error will not support the reversal of Browning’s conviction.3

*423Browning’s first point on appeal is denied.

Browning’s second point on appeal does not claim trial court error, but instead questions whether the time is ripe for the Supreme Court to re-evaluate the adequacy of MAI-CR 3d 331.02, the approved verdict director for driving while intoxicated. At trial, Browning tendered a modified verdict director that added an essential element,4 and a definition of “intoxicated condition,”5 neither of which appear in MAI-CR 3d 331.02. The tendered verdict director was refused. Browning’s point relied on acknowledges that the trial court did not commit error in refusing the tendered instruction.6

Browning queries, however, whether it would be “prudent” to define the term “intoxicated condition” in the approved verdict director,7 citing dicta to that effect in State v. Brightman, 388 S.W.3d 192 (Mo.App.W.D.2012). He asks in his Brief: “Has the time now come to reconsider this issue?” [Appellant’s Brief, p. 25] Browning acknowledges that binding precedent on this issue relegates his query to the exclusive province of the Supreme Court. [Appellant’s Brief, p. 3] See State v. Schroeder, 330 S.W.3d 468, 475 (Mo. banc 2011) (holding that “ordinary persons understand what is meant by the term[] ‘intoxicated condition,’ ” negating any need for a definition in MAI-CR 3d 331.02).

Because Browning claims no error in the trial court’s use of the approved verdict director for driving while intoxicated, there is nothing for this court to review. Rule 84.04(d)(1).

Browning’s second point on appeal is denied. ,

Mitchell, Presiding Judge, joins in the majority opinion.

Witt, Judge, joins in the majority’s result and concurs in separate opinion.

*424Gary D. Witt, Judge,

Concurring

I concur with the Majority opinion in its holding that there was no prejudice in this case so as to warrant reversal. I further fully concur in the Majority opinion’s assertion that the admission of the HGN test results in this case was error. I write separately, however, because the error in admitting the HGN test results in Browning’s case sharply illustrates rampant misunderstanding and weaknesses in the administration of the HGN test, calling into serious question the reliability of the results when not properly administered.

Additional Factual History

Browning raised the issue of the improper admission of the field sobriety tests, including the HGN, in a motion to suppress. At the suppression hearing, Sgt. Kantola, the arresting officer, indicated that he had been an officer for eighteen years and had worked for the Kearney Police Department for ten years. In 1993, he completed the course through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (“NHTSA”). Sgt. Kantola also completed the following training: advanced DWI detection in 1996; drug recognition expert “preschool” and drug recognition expert school, both in 2004; drug recognition expert recertification in 2005; drug expert recertification in March 2007. Then, after Browning’s April 2007 arrest and shortly before the hearing on the motion to suppress, in 2008, Sgt. Kantola completed another recertification. In spite of attending all of this training, it became clear throughout his testimony that Sgt. Kantola had very little grasp of the proper way to administer and score the field sobriety tests.

Sgt. Kantola testified that he understood that if any element of the standardized field sobriety test is changed, the validity of results is compromised. As mentioned in the Majority Opinion and as explained more below, one of the standardized field sobriety tests is the HGN. Sgt. Kantola understood that if a test is not administered in compliance with NHTSA guidelines, the results may be inaccurate. However, he acknowledged at the suppression hearing that he had never bothered to even read the NHTSA manual, which was admitted into evidence and which was the source of his training.

“DWI Detection & Standardized Field Sobriety Testing” Manual

As the Majority Opinion points out, in order for the HGN test to be admissible in court, (1) the officer must be properly trained and (2) the test must be properly administered. State v. Hill, 865 S.W.2d 702, 704 (Mo.App.W.D.1993) (overruled on other grounds by State v. Carson, 941 S.W.2d 518 (Mo. banc 1997)). The full title of the NHTSA manual that Sgt. Kantola admitted never reading is the “DWI (Driving While Intoxicated) Detection & Standardized Field Sobriety Testing” Manual (“NHTSA manual” or the “manual”). It is a product of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (“IACP”) and the NHTSA and is published by the U.S. Department of Transportation. Since the mid-1970s, the NHTSA, with the help of the law enforcement community (including the IACP), has conducted extensive research, resulting in the development of a battery of three standardized field sobriety tests to assist officers in detecting impaired drivers. DWI (Driving While Intoxicated) Detection & Standardized Field Sobriety Testing app. § B (2006 ed.). Those tests are the HGN, the walk- and-turn, and the one-leg stand. Together, the three tests are known as the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests (“SFSTs”). In 1992, the NHTSA and IACP, in conjunction with police officers, instructors, curriculum specialists, and training administrators from several states reached a *425consensus on minimum standards for the conduct of the three SFSTs. Id. Training on how to properly conduct the tests is included in the NHTSA course, DWI Detection and Standardized Field Sobriety Testing. Id.

The manual emphasizes the necessity of teaching officers everything in the manual:

All of the training objectives are considered appropriate and essential for police officers who wish to become proficient at detecting evidence of DWI and at describing that evidence in written reports and verbal testimony. All of the subject matter is considered necessary to achieve those objectives. All of the learning activities are necessary to ensure that the participants master the subject matter.

Mat 7 (Introductory material).

The manual also notes that the “course is ‘flexible’ in that it can easily be expanded since it does not cover all dimensions of DWI enforcement.” Id. The manual also states that “It is critical to note that the purpose of this training is to ensure that participants become proficient in administering and interpreting standardized field sobriety tests.” Id.

The core curriculum consists of sixteen sessions that span twenty-two hours and forty-five minutes over three to five days. Id. at 5-6. At the end of the training, a written examination over the SFSTs is administered, and participants must receive a grade of eighty percent or higher on the written examination to “successfully complete the training.” Id. at 15. In addition, participants also must demonstrate proficiency in administering and interpreting the SFSTs, which includes administering the complete test battery at least once, in an instructor’s presence, without deleting or erroneously performing any of the critical administrative elements of the tests before the participants are deemed to have successfully completed the training.1 Id. The three SFSTs are the only scientifically validated and reliable field sobriety tests. Id. at app. § A-5; § VIII-4.

HGN Testing

Sgt. Kantola’s misunderstanding of the HGN test, the only exclusively scientific test of the three in the battery, illustrates why it is perhaps the least understood of the field sobriety tests. By way of overview, “[njystagmus is the involuntary jerking of the eyes.” Hill, 865 S.W.2d at 704. Under the HGN test, a person’s eye movements are tested as a means of determining whether he or she is under the influence of alcohol. Id. When administered properly by someone with sufficient training, the HGN test has been deemed scientifically reliable under the Frye2 test. Hill, 865 S.W.2d at 704.

While Hill set forth the basic elements of the test, I write separately to set forth the scientific requirements for the proper1 administration of the HGN test and the pitfalls of its improper administration. Hill, 865 S.W.2d at 704.

According to the NHTSA manual, the involuntary jerking of nystagmus occurs as the eyes gaze to the side. DWI (Driving While Intoxicated) Detection & Standardized Field Sobriety Testing § VIII-5. In addition to being involuntary, the person is generally unaware that it is happening and *426is powerless to stop it or control it. Id. Alcohol and certain other drugs cause HGN. Id.

Independent of alcohol and other drugs, the manual addresses other circumstances under which the eyes will jerk involuntarily and can impact the reliability of this field sobriety test. There are three general categories of nystagmus: vestibular, neural, and pathological. Id. at § VIII-6 — VIII-11. Vestibular nystagmus is caused by movement or action in the vestibular system, which is a sense located in the inner ear that provides information to the brain and consequently to the eyes about position and movement of the head to maintain orientation and balance of the body.3 Id. Neural activity can result in nystagmus; HGN is included in this eate-gory.4 Id. Nystagmus also can be caused by certain pathological disorders, which include brain tumors and other brain damage or some diseases of the inner ear.5 Id.

The manual instructs an officer on what to observe in assessing possible medical *427impairment, including pupil size, resting nystagmus, and tracking ability. Id. at § VIII-11. Pupil size will be affected by some medical conditions or injuries. Id. If the two pupils are “distinctly different” in size, the subject may have a prosthetic eye or suffer from a head injury or neurological disorder. Id. A subject may have resting nystagmus, which is jerking as the eyes look straight ahead. Id. It is an infrequent condition and usually indicates “a pathology” or high doses of a drug such as a Dissociative Anesthetic like PCP. Id. The person administering the test is to check for “tracking ability,” which will be affected by certain medical conditions or injuries involving the brain. Id. at § VIII-12. If the two eyes do not track together, the possibility of a serious medical condition or injury is present. Id. Passing a stimulus6 across both eyes is how to check for this. Id. If the eyes do not track (i.e., if one eye tracks the stimulus but the other fails to move or lags behind the stimulus), there is a possibility of a neurological disorder. Id. If a person has sight in both eyes, but the eyes do not track together, there is also a possibility that the person is suffering from an injury or illness affecting the brain. Id.

After the section on “medical impairment,” the manual lists ten steps in administering the HGN test, followed by “three clues” with lengthy descriptions, and then instructions on administering the Vertical Gaze Nystagmus (“VGN”), which is the tenth step of the HGN test. Here is a summary of the ten steps for properly administering the HGN test:

Step I: Check for Eyeglasses. Eyeglasses may impede the suspect’s peripheral vision and may impede the officer’s ability to observe the eye carefully. It does not matter whether the suspect can see the stimulus with “perfect clarity” as long as the suspect can see the stimulus at all because nystagmus is not a vision test. Id. at § VIII-13.

Step II: Verbal Instructions. The officer is to give the suspect verbal instructions that include the following: a) put feet together, hands at side; b) keep head still; c) look at the stimulus; d) follow the movement of the stimulus with the eyes only; e) keep looking at the stimulus until told the test is over. These are the major points that “must be” conveyed. It is important that the subject keeps the head still and follows the stimulus with the eyes alone. Id.

Step III: Positioning the Stimulus. The officer is to position the stimulus approximately twelve to fifteen inches in front of the suspect’s nose and slightly above eye level. The stimulus should be in this position for each of the steps of the HGN test. Maintaining the stimulus slightly above eye level keeps the eyes open wide so the clues can be seen more easily. Id. at § VIII-14, § VIII-17.

Step IV: Equal Pupil Size and Resting Nystagmus. The officer is to check for both of these factors. At this point resting nystagmus or unequal-pupil size may be observed and the officer should note any display of resting nystagmus or unequal pupil size. These are not clues of intoxication, but are indicators of an injury or other physical condition which may call into question whether the HGN test should be administered to this subject. Id. at § VIII-12, § VIII-14.

Step V: Tracking. The officer is next to check for equal tracking. He or she should move the stimulus from center to *428far right, to far left, and back to' center (approximately two seconds). Both eyes should track, the stimulus at an equal rate. Once again the lack of equal tracking is not a clue of intoxication, but may call into question whether the HGN test should be administered to this subject. Id.

Step VI: Lack of Smooth Pursuit. The officer is next to check the left eye for lack of the “smooth pursuit” clue. The stimulus should be moved from the center all the way out to the right as a steady speed that takes approximately two seconds. Then the stimulus should be moved back to the center maintaining a steady speed of approximately two seconds. The eye should be moved out as far as it will go to the side. If the eye is observed to jerk while moving,7 that is one clue. The officer should next check the right eye in the same fashion, moving the stimulus from center all the way to the left. This is to be repeated for each eye and compared. The officer is to make at least two complete passes in front of the each eye to check this clue. If the jerking is observed in both eyes, this is two clues. Common mistakes are holding the stimulus too close or too far from the eye, moving the stimulus too slowly or too quickly, failing to move the stimulus far enough to the side to take the eye to maximum deviation and curving downward or around with the stimulus. Id. at § VTII-14, § VIII-20— VII-21.

Step VII: Distinct and Sustained Nys-tagmus at Maximum Deviation. The officer is next to check the left eye for distinct and sustained nystagmus at maximum deviation and then repeat with the right eye and compare. Once again, the stimulus should start at the center and then move to the side until no white is showing in the corner' of the eye. The stimulus should be held out at the side for a minimum of four seconds. The nystag-mus or jerking must be “definite, distinct and sustained in order to score this clue.” If the jerkiness is distinct and sustained for a minimum of four seconds in the left eye, that is one clue. The officer is to check each eye “at least twice” for this clue. If there is only slight nystagmus or if it is not sustained for at least four seconds, this clue is not present and cannot be counted. Common mistakes in judging this clue are failure to bring the eye to maximum deviation (no white showing) and failure to hold the stimulus steady for at least four seconds once maximum deviation is reached. If a subject’s eye is held at maximum deviation for more than thirty seconds, then fatigue nystagmus may begin. Fatigue nystagmus is not a clue of impairment. Id. at § VIII-14— § VIII-15, § VIII-22 — VIII-25.

Step VIII: Onset of Nystagmus Prior to 45 Degree. The officer is to check the left eye for the “onset of nystagmus prior to 45 degree” clue and then repeat for with the right eye and compare. The officer is to hold the stimulus at center and slowly and steadily move it toward the side. It should take about four seconds to move the stimulus from center to the edge of the subject’s shoulder. This must be done slowly to detect thevactual point of onset of nystagmus. If the jerking begins and continues prior to forty-five degrees, that is one clue. When the jerking is observed, the officer is to stop the stimulus at that point to see if the jerking continues. If the jerking is not clearly evident when the stimulus is held steady, the point of onset has not been properly detected. If the jerking stops when the stimulus stops, the *429officer is to continue moving the stimulus to the side until the jerking begins again. Once the point of onset is properly found, it is then necessary to determine if that point is before forty-five degrees. Forty-five degrees can be difficult to ascertain. There should be some white still showing at the corner of the eye and the stimulus should be approximately even with or slightly beyond the edge of the subjects shoulder. If nystagmus does not start before forty-five degrees or if it fails to continue jerking when the stimulus is stopped, this clue is not present. Again, each eye is to be checked at least twice for this clue. Common mistakes include failing to check for white in the corner of the eye once the point of onset is determined, failure to check the alignment with the subjects shoulder once the point of onset is determined, and tending to stop short of forty-five degrees. Id. at § VIII-15, § VIII-26 — VIII-30.

Step IX: Total the clues. Three is the maximum number of clues possible for each eye, such that six is the total maximum number of clues possible for both eyes. A suspect’s performance may not be “exactly identical” in both eyes. Id. at § VIII-15. “As BAC increases, many people first show inability of smooth pursuit, then show distinct jerkiness at maximum deviation, and finally show an onset within 45 degrees.” Id. “However, that may not be true in all cases: the clues may develop in virtually any sequence, in any particular suspect.” Id. A total of four out of the possible six clues is an indicator of intoxication. Id. at § VIII-83. “It is possible that all three clues definitely will be found in one eye, while only two (or sometimes only one) will show up in the other eye. It is always necessary to check both eyes, and to check them independently.” Id. at § VIII-15. “It is unlikely that someone under the influence of alcohol will behave totally different [sic]. Thus, if one eye shows all three clues distinctly while the other eye gives no evidence of nystag-mus, the person may be suffering from one of the pathological disorders covered previously.” Id. at § VIII-16. The HGN test should never be used to give an opinion as to a specific BAC level. Id. at § VIII-25.

Step X: Check for Vertical Gaze Nys-tagmus.

Although VGN was not examined in the research that led to the SFSTs and the results are not included in the score for the HGN test, testing for VGN is the final step in administering the HGN test. The officer is to start with the stimulus in the same position set forth above and raise it until the subject’s eyes are elevated as far as possible without moving the head. Then the officer is to hold the stimulus in that position for approximately four seconds. Next, the officer is to watch for jerking at maximum elevation. For VGN to be recorded, it “must be definite, distinct and sustained for a minimum of four seconds at maximum elevation.” Id. at § VIII-15 — § VIII-16.

The presence of HGN can indicate use of certain other drugs besides alcohol, including depressants, inhalants. Id. at § VIII-16. VGN can be associated with high doses of alcohol and certain other drugs. Id. at § VIII-85. If VGN is present and HGN is not present, it could be a medical condition and not a sign of alcohol or drug impairment. Id. at § VIII-10.

I fully concur with the Majority Opinion that the holding in State v. Burks, 373 S.W.3d 1, 6-7 (Mo.App.S.D.2012) is questionable and should not be followed. If not properly administered, the HGN test loses its scientific reliability and becomes irrelevant to the issues before the court.

*430Because of Sgt. Kantola’s failure to properly administer the HGN test, the State failed to lay a proper foundation, and this' evidence should have been excluded.

However, because Browning did not establish prejudice, I concur with the result reached by the Majority.

State v. Browning
458 S.W.3d 418

Case Details

Name
State v. Browning
Decision Date
Jan 6, 2015
Citations

458 S.W.3d 418

Jurisdiction
Missouri

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