Filed
8/20/09
SEE CONCURRING OPINION
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
|
MARTIN DEAN
MIYAMOTO,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF
MOTOR VEHICLES,
Defendant and Appellant.
|
H032987
(Santa Cruz
County
Super. Ct.
No. CV157927)
|
The Department of Motor Vehicles
(DMV) appeals a judgment granting Martin Miyamoto’s petition for writ
of administrative mandamus and ordering the DMV to set aside its order
suspending Miyamoto’s driver’s license after he was arrested for
driving under the influence of alcohol. The trial court ruled that
the forensic laboratory report (Lab Report) of Miyamoto’s blood test
results was inadmissible hearsay and that the Lab
Report failed to meet the requirements of the public employee
records exception to the hearsay rule (Evid. Code, § 1280)
because the DMV did not establish that the Lab Report was prepared at
or near the time of the analysis of Miyamoto’s blood sample.
The DMV argues that the trial court
erred when it concluded that the Lab Report was inadmissible hearsay
and asserts that, as a matter of law, the Lab Report was admissible
under section 1280 because the Lab Report states that the test results
were recorded at the time of the analysis. The DMV also contends that
the court erred in finding in favor of Miyamoto because Miyamoto, not
the DMV, had the burden of proof in the trial court. We conclude that
the Lab Report was admissible under the public employee records
exception to the hearsay rule and reverse the judgment of the trial
court. Consequently, we need not reach the DMV’s contention regarding
the burden of proof.
Facts
On March 16, 2007, Morgan Hill Police
Officer R. Krewson observed Miyamoto’s car speeding and using a left
turn lane as a passing lane. When Officer Krewson stopped Miyamoto,
he observed signs of intoxication. Miyamoto said that he had consumed
two beers. After Miyamoto performed poorly on field sobriety tests,
Officer Krewson arrested him for driving under the influence (Veh.
Code, § 23512, subd. (a)) and transported him to the Morgan Hill
Police Department, where Miyamoto submitted to a blood test. Officer
Krewson suspended Miyamoto’s driving privilege and Miyamoto
surrendered his driver’s license.
A police department phlebotomy
technician obtained two blood samples from Miyamoto and sent them to
the Santa Clara County Crime Laboratory (Lab) for analysis. The Lab
analyzed one of the samples on Friday, March 23, 2007. According to
the Lab Report, Miyamoto’s blood alcohol content was 0.16 percent,
twice the legal limit (Veh. Code, § 23152, subd. (b)).
The Lab Report contained the
following certification: “I, the undersigned certify under penalty of
perjury that the above blood . . . analysis reported herein was
performed during the regular course of my duties and is a true and
correct representation of the results of my analysis. I further
certify that I am a qualified . . . Forensic Alcohol Analyst (FAA) . .
. employed by the Santa Clara County Crime Laboratory. The equipment
used to perform the analysis was in proper working order at the time
the analysis was performed and the recording of the analysis results
was done at the time of the analysis. I further certify that the
transfer of data for reporting purposes was performed electronically
in accord with the laboratory’s policies and procedures.” The Lab
Report was signed by “R. Desai, FAA.” The signature line, which
included a line for the analyst to enter the “Date of review/report,”
contained a handwritten date: “3/26/07.” The Lab Report contained
the name of the “reviewer,” “Joyner.” A box in the middle of the
report indicated that the “Date Printed” was “4/26/2007.”
Procedural History
I. Administrative Per Se Hearing and Hearing Officer’s Decision
Miyamoto’s administrative hearing was
conducted on June 11, 2007. Miyamoto was represented by counsel, but
did not personally attend the hearing. Neither party presented
witnesses and there was no live testimony. At the hearing, Miyamoto’s
counsel stipulated that the arresting officer had reasonable cause to
believe that Miyamoto was driving under the influence of alcohol and
that Miyamoto was lawfully arrested. The only contested issue was
whether Miyamoto was driving with a blood alcohol content of 0.08
percent or more.
Without objection, the hearing
officer received five documents into evidence on behalf of the DMV:
(1) Officer Krewson’s sworn report on a DMV DS 367 form, (2) Officer
Krewson’s unsworn report on Morgan Hill Police Department forms, (3)
the suspension order, (4) the declaration of the phlebotomist who drew
the blood samples, and (5) Miyamoto’s driving record.
The DMV also moved the Lab Report
into evidence. However, Miyamoto objected to the admission of the Lab
Report on two grounds. First, he acknowledged that the Lab Report,
although hearsay, would generally be admissible if it appears to be
trustworthy and meets the requirements of sections 1280, the public
employee records exception to the hearsay rule. Miyamoto asserted
that the Lab Report was untrustworthy (§ 1280, subd. (c)) because it
was certified on March 26, 2007, “32” days before it was printed on
April 26, 2007. Second, Miyamoto argued that the Lab Report was
inadmissible because the Lab did not forward the report to the DMV
within 15 days of the arrest as required by Vehicle Code section
23612, subdivision (g)(1).
At the administrative hearing,
Miyamoto introduced and then objected to the admission of a separate
report of the blood test results, which his counsel referred to as the
“Query Lab Case Report” (QLCR), on the ground that it was inadmissible
hearsay because it was not prepared “at or near the time of” the
testing (§ 1280, subd. (b)). As Miyamoto acknowledges on appeal,
although the QLCR was marked for identification and there was argument
regarding the QLCR at the administrative hearing, Miyamoto’s counsel
stated that she was not moving the QLRC into evidence.
The DMV hearing officer overruled
Miyamoto’s objections to the Lab Report, determined that the Lab
Report was admissible, found that Miyamoto was driving with a blood
alcohol level of 0.08 percent or more, and upheld the suspension of
Miyamoto’s license. The hearing officer held that the Lab Report met
the requirements of section 1280 because the “results clearly state
the recording of the analysis results was done at the time of the
analysis.”
III. Petition for Writ of Mandate in the Superior Court
Miyamoto petitioned the superior
court for a writ of mandate to set aside the suspension order.
Miyamoto argued that the Lab Report was not admissible under the
public employee records exception to the hearsay rule for two
reasons. First, he asserted that the document was untrustworthy (§
1280, subd. (c)) because although it was certified on March 26, 2007,
it was not printed until April 26, 2007. Miyamoto argued that “[i]t
is physically impossible for a person to sign a document which is not
yet in existence.” Second, Miyamoto argued that even if the Lab
Report was prepared on March 26, 2007, it was not admissible under the
public employee records exception because it was not prepared “at or
near the time” of the testing (§ 1280, subd. (b)), which occurred on
March 23, 2007.
He argued that since the Lab Report contained the only evidence of his
blood alcohol content and should have been excluded, there was
insufficient evidence to support the hearing officer’s finding that he
was driving with a blood alcohol content in excess of 0.08 percent.
The DMV opposed the petition, arguing
that Miyamoto’s contentions were “without merit because the lab report
expressly states that the recording of the analysis results was done
at the time the analysis was performed.” The DMV argued that
Miyamoto’s contentions were based on a mistaken interpretation of the
report and that March 26, 2007, was not the date the lab results were
reported but the date they were reviewed by the “reviewer.”
At the hearing, the court focused on
the handwritten date on the Lab Report and stated that one way of
interpreting the date is to find that the analyst prepared and signed
the report on that date and that another way of interpreting the date
is to conclude, as the DMV had argued, that the “reviewer” reviewed
the report on that date. The court held that the Lab Report was
“insufficient to meet the requirements of Evidence Code Section 1280,
[subdivision] (b) because it does not establish that it was prepared
at or near the time of the analysis and the entry of the data” and
granted the writ petition. The court explained: “the fact that I
have a report that’s printed April 26, a month after the analysis is
done, and I have . . . the analyst indicating the date of 3/26/07 as
the date of his report, which is equally probable to the Department’s
position that the date was a date that indicated that the report was
reviewed by Mr. Joiner [sic], or the data was reviewed by Mr.
Joiner [sic]. I think given these are two equally probable
propositions and that the department had the burden of proving the
admissibility of this document, the document’s not inherently
trustworthy. It’s insufficient to meet the requirements of Evidence
Code Section 1280(b) because it does not establish that it was
prepared at or near the time of the analysis and the entry of the
data.” The court granted the writ, ordered the DMV to set aside its
order suspending Miyamoto’s license, and awarded Miyamoto his costs of
suit. The DMV appeals.
Discussion
The DMV argues that the trial court
erred when it concluded that the Lab Report was inadmissible hearsay
and asserts that, as a matter of law, the Lab Report was admissible
under section 1280, because the test results were recorded at the time
that the test was done. The DMV also contends that after the court
found two equally probable interpretations of the March 26, 2007 date
on the Lab Report, the court erred in finding in favor of Miyamoto
because Miyamoto, not the DMV, had the burden of proof in the trial
court.
I.
General Rules Governing Evidence in DMV Proceedings
The rules governing the evidence
available for use in DMV administrative per se hearings “are set forth
in . . . the Vehicle Code, commencing with section 14100. (§ 14100,
subd. (a).) Two provisions are especially relevant. First, [Vehicle
Code] section 14104.7 states in pertinent part: ‘At any hearing, the
department shall consider its official records and may receive
sworn testimony.’ (Italics added.) Second, for all matters not
specifically covered by . . . the Vehicle Code [provisions, Vehicle
Code] section 14112 incorporates the provisions of the Administrative
Procedures Act governing administrative hearings generally. (Gov.
Code, § 11500 et seq.; . . . .)” (Lake v. Reed (1997)
16 Cal.4th 448, 458 (Lake).)
Government Code section 11513
addresses the admissibility of evidence generally in administrative
hearings. (Lake, supra, 16 Cal.4th at p. 458.) It
provides in relevant part: “(c) The hearing need not be conducted
according to technical rules relating to evidence and witnesses,
except as hereinafter provided. Any relevant evidence shall be
admitted if it is the sort of evidence on which responsible persons
are accustomed to rely in the conduct of serious affairs, regardless
of the existence of any common law or statutory rule which might make
improper the admission of the evidence over objection in civil
actions. [¶] (d) Hearsay evidence may be used for the purpose of
supplementing or explaining other evidence but . . . shall not be
sufficient in itself to support a finding unless it would be
admissible over objection in civil actions.” (Gov. Code, § 11513,
subds. (c) & (d).) “Under subdivision (d) of the statute, a forensic
lab report, although hearsay, may be used to supplement or explain
other evidence. But it shall not be sufficient in itself to support a
finding unless it would be admissible over a hearsay objection in a
civil action.” (Molenda v. Department of Motor Vehicles
(2009) 172 Cal.App.4th 974, 987 (Molenda).) Thus, to support
the DMV’s finding that Miyamoto was driving with a blood alcohol
content in excess of 0.08 percent, the Lab Report must fall within an
exception to the hearsay rule.
“In Lake, the California
Supreme Court held that despite their hearsay nature, blood and urine
test reports prepared by government forensic laboratories are
admissible in DMV administrative review hearings under the public
employee records exception to the hearsay rule, provided they meet the
requirements of Evidence Code section 1280, which sets forth the
exception.” (Molenda, supra, 172 Cal.App.4th at pp.
987-988, citing Lake, supra, 16 Cal.4th at p. 467.)
Section 1280 provides: “Evidence of
a writing made as a record of an act, condition, or event is not made
inadmissible by the hearsay rule when offered in any civil or criminal
proceeding to prove the act, condition, or event if all of the
following applies: [¶] (a) The writing was made by and within the
scope of duty of a public employee. [¶] (b) The writing was made at
or near the time of the act, condition, or event. [¶] (c) The
sources of information and method and time of preparation were such as
to indicate its trustworthiness.”
II.
Standard of Review
Generally, when ruling on a petition
for a writ of mandate challenging an order suspending a driver’s
license, a trial court exercises its independent judgment to determine
“ ‘ “whether the weight of the evidence supported the administrative
decision.” ’ ” (Lake, supra, 16 Cal.4th at pp. 456-457.) On
appeal, we review the record to determine whether the trial court’s
findings are supported by substantial evidence. (Id. at p.
457.)
However, when the appellant
challenges a trial court’s evidentiary ruling, a different standard of
review applies. We review the trial court’s rulings regarding the
admissibility of evidence under the deferential abuse of discretion
standard. (City of Ripon v. Sweetin (2002) 100 Cal.App.4th
887, 900.) “Specifically, we review the trial court’s ruling that the
Lab [R]eport did not meet the requirements of . . . section 1280 for
an abuse of discretion. ‘A trial court has broad discretion in
determining whether a party has established [the] foundational
requirements [of section 1280]. [Citation.] Its ruling on
admissibility “implies whatever finding of fact is prerequisite
thereto; a separate or formal finding is, with exceptions not
applicable here, unnecessary. (Evid. Code § 402, subd. (c).)”
[Citation.] A reviewing court may overturn the trial court’s exercise
of discretion “ ‘only upon a clear showing of abuse.’ ” ’ ” (Molenda,
supra, 172 Cal.App.4th at p. 986, citing People v. Martinez
(2000) 22 Cal.4th 106, 120 (Martinez) and People v. Williams
(1997) 16 Cal.4th 153, 196; Glatman v. Valverde (2006) 146
Cal.App.4th 700, 703 (Glatman).)
Case law has set forth various
principles describing the abuse of discretion standard. In In re
Marriage of Connolly (1979) 23 Cal.3d 590, 598 the California
Supreme Court stated: “[T]he appropriate test of abuse of discretion
is whether or not the trial court exceeded the bounds of reason, all
of the circumstances before it being considered.” In Blank v.
Kirwan (1985) 39 Cal.3d 311, 331 the court stated that appellate
courts should disturb discretionary trial court rulings only upon a
showing of “ ‘ “a clear case of abuse” ’ ” and “ ‘ “a miscarriage of
justice.” ’ ” Other cases suggest that a court abuses its discretion
only when it ruling is arbitrary, whimsical, or capricious. (People
v. Branch (2001) 91 Cal.App.4th 274, 282; People v.
Linkenauger (1995) 32 Cal.App.4th 1603, 1614.) But as the
court stated in City of Sacramento v. Drew (1989) 207
Cal.App.3d 1287, 1297 (Drew), “[t]his pejorative boilerplate is
misleading” since it implies that the trial court’s action was
“utterly irrational” in every case in which a court is reversed for an
abuse of discretion.
Drew quoted Westside
Community for Independent Living, Inc. v. Obledo (1983) 33 Cal.3d
348, 355, in which our State Supreme Court stated: “[T]rial court
discretion is not unlimited. ‘The discretion of a trial judge is not
a whimsical, uncontrolled power, but a legal discretion, which is
subject to the limitations of legal principles governing the subject
of its action, and to reversal on appeal where no reasonable basis for
the action is shown.” “Abuse of discretion has at least two
components: a factual component . . . and a legal component.
[Citation.] This legal component of discretion was best explained
long ago in Bailey v. Taaffe (1866) 29 Cal. 422, 424: ‘The
discretion intended, however, is not a capricious or arbitrary
discretion, but an impartial discretion, guided and controlled in its
exercise by fixed legal principles. It is not a mental discretion, to
be exercised ex gratia, but a legal discretion, to be exercised
in conformity with the spirit of the law and in a manner to subserve
and not to impede or defeat the ends of substantial justice.’ ” (Concord
Communities v. City of Concord (2001) 91 Cal.App.4th 1407, 1417.)
“ ‘The scope of discretion always resides in the particular law being
applied, i.e., “in the legal principles governing the subject of [the]
action . . . . ” Action that transgresses the confines of the
applicable principles of law is outside the scope of discretion and we
call such action an “abuse” of discretion.’ ” (Department of Parks
& Recreation v. State Personnel Bd. (1991) 233 Cal.App.3d 813,
831.) Applying these concepts here leads us to conclude that the
court abused its discretion when it excluded the Lab Report because it
applied the wrong legal standard when evaluating the foundational
requirements of section 1280.
III.
Analysis
In this case, the trial court
concluded that the Lab Report did not meet the timeliness requirement
of subdivision (b) of section 1280 because it did not establish that
it was prepared at or near the time of the analysis of the blood
sample. “ ‘How soon a writing must be made after the act or event is
a matter of degree and calls for the exercise of reasonable judgment
on the part of the trial judge.’ ” (Martinez, supra,
22 Cal.4th at p. 128, fn. 7.) “[T]he timeliness requirement ‘is not
to be judged . . . by arbitrary or artificial time limits, measured by
hours or days or even weeks.’ [Citation.] Rather, ‘account must be
taken of practical considerations,’ including ‘the nature of the
information recorded’ and ‘the immutable reliability of the sources
from which [the information was] drawn.’ [Citation.] ‘Whether an
entry made subsequent to the transaction has been made within a
sufficient time to render it within the [hearsay] exception depends
upon whether the time span between the transaction and the entry was
so great as to suggest a danger of inaccuracy by lapse of memory.’
” (Id. at p. 128, italics added.)
Section 1280 applies to “Evidence of
a writing made as a record of an act, condition, or
event . . . .” (§ 1280, italics added.) The Evidence Code defines
the word “writing” broadly to include “handwriting, typewriting,
printing, photostating, photographing, photocopying, transmitting by
electronic mail or facsimile, and every other means of recording upon
any tangible thing, any form of communication or representation,
including letters, words, pictures, sounds, or symbols, or
combinations thereof, and any record thereby created, regardless of
the manner in which the record has been stored.” (§ 250.) The
“writing” at issue here is the recordation of the blood test results
in the Lab’s electronic database. Since we are presented with records
from an electronic database, the critical date for the purpose of the
public employee records exception to the hearsay rule is the date that
the test results were first recorded in the laboratory’s electronic
database, which was March 23, 2007. (Martinez, supra,
22 Cal.4th at p. 126 [in applying the timeliness requirement from
section 1280 “to computer printouts from a database, we consider the
length of time between the act, condition, or event and the date of
its recording, not the date of its eventual retrieval by computer
printout”].)
The appellate court examined the
admissibility of forensic lab reports
in DMV proceedings under section 1280 in Glatman, supra,
146 Cal.App.4th 700 and Molenda, supra, 172 Cal.App.4th
974. In Glatman, the motorist’s blood sample was analyzed on
July 25, 2005, and analyzed a second time, by another analyst, a day
later. (Glatman, supra, 146 Cal.App.4th at p. 702.)
Both analysts signed the report, which was dated one week after the
first test was done. (Ibid.) The DMV argued that the analysts
entered the test results into the lab’s computer database shortly
after completing each test and that the preparation of the report one
week later simply involved retrieving the data from the database. (Id.
at p. 703.) The appellate court disagreed and observed that the
record was silent regarding the procedures that the analysts used to
record their test results and that there was no evidence that the test
results were recorded in a computer database or anywhere else before
the report was prepared. (Id. at p. 704.) The court held that
the case presented a “ ‘danger of inaccuracy by lapse of memory,’ ”
observed that “memory is subject to erosion with every day that
passes,” and held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion
when it found that the forensic report was not prepared at or near the
time of the recorded event. (Id. at pp. 704, 705, 706.)
Recently, in Molenda, this
court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it
held that a forensic lab report was inadmissible because it was not
prepared at or near the time of the recorded event. In Molenda,
“there [was] no evidence the test result was entered into a computer
database or recorded in any manner prior to the preparation of the
written report, which was done one week after the analysis was
completed. The report state[d] that ‘[i]nformation regarding the
examination and conclusions are entered into and are maintained within
the DOJ Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) database.’
However, it [did] not state when the test results were entered into
the database. Moreover, the record [was] silent regarding the lab’s
policies and procedures for recording test results.” (Molenda,
supra, 172 Cal.App.4th at p. 991.)
This case is distinguishable from
Glatman and Molenda, because the record here is not silent
with regard to the procedures used to record the test results. In
Glatman and Molenda, there was no evidence regarding the
date that the test results were first recorded. The only evidence was
that the reports were prepared six and seven days after the analyses
were completed. Here, we have direct evidence
that the test result was recorded at the time of the analysis. The
certification states that the report “is a true and correct
representation of the results of [the] analysis,” that “the recording
of the analysis results was done at the time of the analysis” and that
“the transfer of data for reporting purposes was performed
electronically in accord with the laboratory’s policies and
procedures.” Since the test results were transferred to the written
report electronically, it appears they were recorded electronically at
the time of the analysis. Moreover, because the results were recorded
electronically at the time of the analysis, there was no danger of
inaccuracy by lapse of memory since the preparation of the Lab Report
did not depend on memory, but simply involved the transfer of
information from the Lab’s electronic database to the written report.
(Martinez, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 128.)
In our view, the trial court abused
its discretion because it did not apply the correct legal standard
when it evaluated the timeliness of the Lab Report for the purpose of
section 1280. The trial court focused on alleged ambiguities in the
Lab Report regarding the March 26, 2007 date on the analyst’s
certification, finding it equally probable that it was either the date
that the analyst signed the certification or the date that the
“reviewer” reviewed the report. Even if the March 26, 2007 date was
ambiguous, the Lab Report unambiguously states that the test results
were recorded “at the time of the analysis.” The court did not find
any ambiguity with regard to the time the test results were first
entered into the database and acknowledged that the data was entered
at the time of the analysis. That the results were later retrieved
and incorporated into a formal written report, that the report was
later reviewed by a second employee of the lab, that the report was
later certified by the analyst who ran the test, and that the report
of all these events was printed at some later date for use at the DMV
hearing does not alter the fact that the test results were recorded at
the time the test was performed.
Recordation of the test results at the time of testing met the
timeliness requirement of section 1280.
Because the trial court focused on
the date on the certification, rather than the date that the test
results were recorded, it applied the wrong legal standard in
assessing the admissibility of the Lab Report under the public
employee records exception to the hearsay rule. Since the court did
not adhere to the legal principles that govern the admissibility of
this evidence, we conclude that the court abused its discretion when
it excluded the Lab Report. (Concord Communities v. City of
Concord, supra, 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 1417; Department of
Parks & Recreation v. State Personnel Bd., supra, 233
Cal.App.3d at p. 831.)
Because the Lab Report was admissible
under the public employee records exception to the hearsay rule, it
was sufficient in itself to support the DMV’s finding that Miyamoto
was driving a motor vehicle with a blood alcohol level in excess of
0.08 percent. We shall therefore reverse the judgment of the trial
court.
In light of our conclusion, we shall
not reach the DMV’s contention that, after finding that the date on
the certification was ambiguous, the court applied the wrong burden of
proof.
Disposition
The judgment is reversed. The case
is remanded to the trial court with directions to enter an order
denying Miyamoto’s petition for writ of mandate and reinstating the
DMV’s suspension order.
McAdams, J.
I CONCUR:
Duffy, J.
Miyamoto v. Department of Motor Vehicles
H032987
I write separately to memorialize my
perception that this case exemplifies the unfortunate cloud of confusion
that surrounds the “abuse of discretion” standard of review. Properly
viewed, the trial court’s ruling here was not an exercise of discretion
but an application of a rule of law. The trial court had no discretion
to decide what the applicable law was or to determine its logical effect
in light of the facts found. Its legal analysis was either correct or
incorrect. Since this court’s power to decide questions of law is
paramount to that of the trial court, we are entitled and indeed obliged
to reverse any ruling that we find rests upon an error of law, provided
of course the error was prejudicial.
The second function of a discretionary
standard of review may be best characterized as granting the trial court
a kind of arbitral power, not unlike that of a baseball umpire, in the
name of judicial economy. This function recognizes that on certain
issues, the trial court’s ruling should stand simply because the social
cost of questioning it outweighs the private benefit of having a
reviewing court substitute its views for those of the trial court. This
will most obviously be true where the normative and policy
considerations bearing on the issue stand in equipoise, such that
reasonable minds obviously could and would differ over the correct
result. Basically these are situations in which the law says that a
litigant need only be allowed one shot at a favorable
adjudication—before the trial judge—and unless that adjudication can be
shown to be clearly wrong, it should stand. A deferential standard of
review encourages parties to make their best case in the trial court and
not to appeal merely on the chance that the reviewing court will feel
differently about the dispositive issue.
It may be impossible to generalize
about the kinds of issues that will fall within a trial court’s
discretion. They are probably best viewed as a family of customs that
have grown out of the judicial experience of the ages. Obvious examples
may be found in the area of equitable remedies, where such questions as
the balance of harms may be dependent on such a complex and debatable
set of competing considerations that there is no social utility in
second-guessing a decision, once it is properly made. In such
situations the trial court is empowered, umpire-like, to simply call ’em
like it sees ’em, without fear that an appellate court will overrule his
“call” simply because, to it, the runner looked safe.
Every zone of discretionary latitude
not resting on superior competence represents a grey area within which
the correct outcome is doubtful or debatable and so the trial court
possesses an arbitral power by a kind of default. A discretionary
standard vests in the trial court a zone of autonomy, the dimensions of
which may be rendered somewhat more definite by characterizing it as
“broad” or “narrow.” Although the phrase “abuse of discretion” connotes
a sense of moral opprobrium somewhat reminiscent of “miscarriage of
justice,” it really means only that in making the ruling under scrutiny,
the court strayed outside the allowed zone.
In no case is a discretionary standard
a license to commit error. Whether the zone in a given setting be broad
or narrow, it never extends to getting the law wrong. The law may be
obscure; it may be uncertain in the sense that its application to a
given situation is not squarely governed by precedent or statute; but it
is not the kind of grey area in which the trial court enjoys the
autonomy of an umpire. Indeed it is the job of courts, particularly
appellate courts, to make it as black and white as they reasonably can,
so that citizens may shape their conduct to conform to it. The
governing law can therefore never be a question entrusted to trial court
discretion. Nor, properly understood, can the application of law to a
given set of facts. The trial court has the primary authority to decide
what the facts are, and in some cases may have the primary
authority to make a normative judgment about them, but it never has
primary authority to decide what rule of law applies.
The trial court’s ruling here, as I
understand it, rested on the premise that the Department of Motor
Vehicles (Department) had failed to establish that the lab report was
prepared at or near the time of the blood alcohol analysis it was
offered to prove. This analysis rests on an erroneous legal premise,
i.e., that the official records exception to the hearsay rule, on which
the Department relied, required that the written report have been
made at the time of the entry. The actual statutory requirement is that
the “writing made as a record” of the blood analysis have been
“made at or near the time” of the blood analysis. The “writing made as
a record” of the blood analysis was not the printed lab report offered
in evidence, but the computer entry of which that printed report was a
secondary or derivative record. The report was not objected to on the
ground that it did not comply with the rules governing secondary
evidence of writings. (See Evid. Code, §§ 1520-1567, & especially 1530
[official writings], 1552 [printed representations of computer data].)
It was objected to on grounds of hearsay. In that context it
constituted one of two layers of hearsay. The earlier layer was the
computer entry “made as a record” of the blood analysis. That entry
satisfied the contemporaneity requirement; the technician’s uncontested
certification recited that “the recording of the lab results was done at
the time of the analysis.”
The trial court might have had
discretion, at least in theory, to find that some of these facts were
otherwise. Conceivably it could have refused to credit the technician’s
averments. But it had no discretion to accept the averments and then
sustain a hearsay objection. That was an error of law. It did not
depend on any fact the trial court was peculiarly competent to find. It
did not fall within any “grey area.” It is therefore not shielded by a
deferential standard of review. I do not understand the lead opinion to
actually hold otherwise, but my colleagues feel constrained to reiterate
hoary judicial recitals that the issue was entrusted to the trial
court’s discretion. In my view such recitals can only perpetuate the
confusion and perplexity already attending this subject.
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RUSHING, P.J.