{
  "id": 11919957,
  "name": "STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Appellant, v. SHELIA ABDEREAZE, MACK ARTHUR BOOTH, WILLIAM MICHAEL BRINSON, MICHAEL WAYNE BUNN, KENNETH T. CARTER, TYRONNE ANTHONY CAUDLE, ALLENE COGSWELL, JAMES ED COOPER, ROBERT LEE CYRUS, RODNEY ROMBRA EVANS, MARGARET NORFLEET FAISON, ALLEN PERRIE GAY, JOSEPH A. GRIFFIN, CARLTON MOODY HARRIS, SR., CLINTON LEE HARMON, CALVIN LEE HILL, KELLY LORENZA HINES, MICHAEL LLOYD HOPKINS, PAUL RAY HUGHES, JAMES ALLEN HUNT, TYRONE CLEOPAS JAMES, JERRY JOHNSON, NICOLETTE JOHNSON, ROY JONES, TIMOTHY SCOTT JONES, CHARLES EARL LEWIS, CHARLIE JUNIOR LEWIS, SHELTON KELSEY LILES, JULIUS THOMAS LITTLE, DAVID TIMOTHY LOCKE, WILSON JUNIOUS LYNCH, MILTON AURLANDER LYONS, DANIEL E. McCOLLOUGH, SANDRA WEBB MCKINSEY, JERYL MCWILLIAMS, CAROLYN JEAN MILLS, DENNIS EARL MILLS, IVA NORVESTER PAYTON, DEXTER PITTMAN, JAMES QUINTON PITTMAN, PAUL PRICE III, RICKY LEE ROOK, JOHN BRENT SAPP, BENJAMIN SILVER, ENOCH SILVER, JR., CARLTON F. SMALL, RICKEY ALSTON SPRAGLEY, JOHN ALBERT STALLINGS, DEBRA JEAN STANLEY, JAMES LEROY STATON, JAMES LEROY STATON, ANDREW LEANDER TAYLOR, NATHANIEL THORPE, JR., ELLIS CRAIG VAUGHAN, BENJAMIN WEAVER, BRUCE GRAHAM WEST, JR., JIMMIE DEE WHITFIELD, MICHAEL DEARINE WIGGINS, DEBORAH ANN ZAZZARETTI, Defendant-Appellees",
  "name_abbreviation": "State v. Abdereaze",
  "decision_date": "1996-06-18",
  "docket_number": "No. COA95-1149",
  "first_page": "727",
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    "judges": [
      "Judges JOHNSON and LEWIS concur."
    ],
    "parties": [
      "STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Appellant, v. SHELIA ABDEREAZE, MACK ARTHUR BOOTH, WILLIAM MICHAEL BRINSON, MICHAEL WAYNE BUNN, KENNETH T. CARTER, TYRONNE ANTHONY CAUDLE, ALLENE COGSWELL, JAMES ED COOPER, ROBERT LEE CYRUS, RODNEY ROMBRA EVANS, MARGARET NORFLEET FAISON, ALLEN PERRIE GAY, JOSEPH A. GRIFFIN, CARLTON MOODY HARRIS, SR., CLINTON LEE HARMON, CALVIN LEE HILL, KELLY LORENZA HINES, MICHAEL LLOYD HOPKINS, PAUL RAY HUGHES, JAMES ALLEN HUNT, TYRONE CLEOPAS JAMES, JERRY JOHNSON, NICOLETTE JOHNSON, ROY JONES, TIMOTHY SCOTT JONES, CHARLES EARL LEWIS, CHARLIE JUNIOR LEWIS, SHELTON KELSEY LILES, JULIUS THOMAS LITTLE, DAVID TIMOTHY LOCKE, WILSON JUNIOUS LYNCH, MILTON AURLANDER LYONS, DANIEL E. McCOLLOUGH, SANDRA WEBB MCKINSEY, JERYL MCWILLIAMS, CAROLYN JEAN MILLS, DENNIS EARL MILLS, IVA NORVESTER PAYTON, DEXTER PITTMAN, JAMES QUINTON PITTMAN, PAUL PRICE III, RICKY LEE ROOK, JOHN BRENT SAPP, BENJAMIN SILVER, ENOCH SILVER, JR., CARLTON F. SMALL, RICKEY ALSTON SPRAGLEY, JOHN ALBERT STALLINGS, DEBRA JEAN STANLEY, JAMES LEROY STATON, JAMES LEROY STATON, ANDREW LEANDER TAYLOR, NATHANIEL THORPE, JR., ELLIS CRAIG VAUGHAN, BENJAMIN WEAVER, BRUCE GRAHAM WEST, JR., JIMMIE DEE WHITFIELD, MICHAEL DEARINE WIGGINS, DEBORAH ANN ZAZZARETTI, Defendant-Appellees"
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "MARTIN, Mark D., Judge.\nThe State of North Carolina appeals from the trial court\u2019s orders granting defendants\u2019 motions to suppress the results of their intoxi-lyzer tests, or their refusal to submit to chemical analysis.\nIn each of the cases the parties stipulated to the following pertinent facts:\n1. The charging officer . . . observed the defendant operating a motor vehicle on a public highway ....\n2. The charging officer had reasonable grounds to believe that defendant had committed an implied consent offense.\n3. Defendant was arrested ... by the charging officer for an implied consent offense.\n4. Charging officer transported defendant to a breathalyzer or intoxilyzer room for the purpose of requesting [defendant] to submit to a chemical analysis of his breath.\n5. The charging officer advised defendant of his rights enumerated in G.S. 20-16.2(a).\n6. The charging officer is a certified chemical analyst in accordance with G.S. 20-139.1.\n7. The charging officer requested defendant to submit to a chemical analysis of his breath.\nFifty defendants submitted to chemical analysis, while nine defendants refused chemical analysis. It is also stipulated that those defendants who submitted to chemical analysis were tested by the Intoxilyzer Model 5000.\nDefendants moved to suppress either the results of, or the refusal to submit to, chemical analysis on the grounds a chemical analyst, other than the charging officer, did not advise defendants of their statutory rights under N.C. Gen. Stat. \u00a7 20-16.2(a) (1993) (statutory rights). The trial court granted the motions to suppress.\nThe sole issue on appeal is whether N.C. Gen. Stat. \u00a7 20-16.2(a) requires an officer, other than the charging officer, to advise defendants of their statutory rights in order for the State to admit into evidence, at the criminal prosecution for driving while impaired (DWI), the results of, or refusal to submit to, chemical analysis.\nAt the outset we note defendants ground their motions to dismiss solely on an alleged procedural defect in the notification of their statutory rights. This alleged procedural defect occurred, if at all, prior to the time defendants elected whether or not to submit to chemical analysis. It follows therefore that the factual distinction between the defendants who submitted to chemical analysis and those who refused such analysis is without legal consequence to the resolution of the present issue.\nSection 20-16.2(a), as defendants contend, governs the procedures for notifying a person charged with an implied consent offense of their statutory rights with respect to chemical analysis. State v. Oliver, No. 378PA95, slip op. at 13 (N.C. Supreme Court May 10, 1996); Nicholson v. Killens, 116 N.C. App. 473, 478, 448 S.E.2d 542, 544-545 (1994), supersedeas and disc. review denied, 339 N.C. 614, 454 S.E.2d 256 (1995). Indeed, the Supreme Court recently considered whether section 20-16.2(a) mandates suppression of the results of a defendant\u2019s Intoxilyzer 5000 test where the arresting officer, rather than another officer, informed defendant of his statutory rights. See Oliver, No. 378PA95, slip op. at 11-16. See also Bivens v. Cottle, 120 N.C. App. 467, 468, 462 S.E.2d 829, 830 (1995) (judicial decision is presumed to apply retroactively, especially where it clarifies an area of the law), disc. review allowed, 342 N.C. 651, 467 S.E.2d 898 (1996).\nIn Oliver, the charging officer, a certified chemical analyst, advised defendant of his rights as provided under section 20-16.2(a). Oliver, No. 378PA95, slip op. at 2. Defendant submitted to chemical analysis of his breath by an Intoxilyzer 5000 which established his alcohol concentration was 0.08. Id. At trial, defendant filed a motion to suppress the result of the Intoxilyzer 5000 test on the ground the charging officer, rather than another officer, advised defendant of his rights under section 20-16.2(a). Oliver, No. 378PA95, slip op. at 2-3.\nThe Supreme Court, construing section 20-16.2(a), concluded \u201cthat the legislature intended to permit a qualified arresting officer to notify defendant of his rights, orally and in writing, regarding a chemical analysis of the breath . . . Oliver, No. 378PA95, slip op. at 15. \u201cIndeed, logic dictates that if an arresting officer is duly qualified and authorized to administer a chemical analysis of the breath, such arresting officer should also be duly qualified to notify defendant of his rights regarding that test, and a defendant\u2019s rights cannot be impaired by such notification.\u201d Id.\nLikewise, in the present case, the charging officers, each certified chemical analysts, advised the defendants of their statutory rights. Therefore, under Oliver, we find no procedural defect in the notification defendants received regarding their statutory rights. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court\u2019s orders granting defendants\u2019 motions to suppress and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.\nReversed and remanded.\nJudges JOHNSON and LEWIS concur.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "MARTIN, Mark D., Judge."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Attorney General Michael F. Easley, by Special Deputy Attorney General Isaac T. Avery, III, for the State.",
      "Hux, Livermon & Armstrong, L.L.P., by James S. Livermon, Jr., for defendant-appellees."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Appellant, v. SHELIA ABDEREAZE, MACK ARTHUR BOOTH, WILLIAM MICHAEL BRINSON, MICHAEL WAYNE BUNN, KENNETH T. CARTER, TYRONNE ANTHONY CAUDLE, ALLENE COGSWELL, JAMES ED COOPER, ROBERT LEE CYRUS, RODNEY ROMBRA EVANS, MARGARET NORFLEET FAISON, ALLEN PERRIE GAY, JOSEPH A. GRIFFIN, CARLTON MOODY HARRIS, SR., CLINTON LEE HARMON, CALVIN LEE HILL, KELLY LORENZA HINES, MICHAEL LLOYD HOPKINS, PAUL RAY HUGHES, JAMES ALLEN HUNT, TYRONE CLEOPAS JAMES, JERRY JOHNSON, NICOLETTE JOHNSON, ROY JONES, TIMOTHY SCOTT JONES, CHARLES EARL LEWIS, CHARLIE JUNIOR LEWIS, SHELTON KELSEY LILES, JULIUS THOMAS LITTLE, DAVID TIMOTHY LOCKE, WILSON JUNIOUS LYNCH, MILTON AURLANDER LYONS, DANIEL E. McCOLLOUGH, SANDRA WEBB MCKINSEY, JERYL MCWILLIAMS, CAROLYN JEAN MILLS, DENNIS EARL MILLS, IVA NORVESTER PAYTON, DEXTER PITTMAN, JAMES QUINTON PITTMAN, PAUL PRICE III, RICKY LEE ROOK, JOHN BRENT SAPP, BENJAMIN SILVER, ENOCH SILVER, JR., CARLTON F. SMALL, RICKEY ALSTON SPRAGLEY, JOHN ALBERT STALLINGS, DEBRA JEAN STANLEY, JAMES LEROY STATON, JAMES LEROY STATON, ANDREW LEANDER TAYLOR, NATHANIEL THORPE, JR., ELLIS CRAIG VAUGHAN, BENJAMIN WEAVER, BRUCE GRAHAM WEST, JR., JIMMIE DEE WHITFIELD, MICHAEL DEARINE WIGGINS, DEBORAH ANN ZAZZARETTI, Defendant-Appellees\nNo. COA95-1149\n(Filed 18 June 1996)\nEvidence and Witnesses \u00a7 1831 (NCI4th)\u2014 DWI defendant informed of rights by charging officer \u2014 results admissible\nN.C.G.S. \u00a7 20-16.2(a) does not require an officer other than the charging officer to advise defendants of their statutory rights in order for the State to admit into evidence at the criminal prosecution for DWI the results of, or refusal to submit to, chemical analysis.\nAm Jur 2d, Automobiles and Highway Traffic \u00a7 305.\nAdmissibility in criminal case of blood-alcohol test where blood was taken despite defendant\u2019s objection or refusal to submit to test. 14 ALR4th 690.\nAdmissibility in criminal case of evidence that accused refused to take test of intoxication. 26 ALR4th 1112.\nDriving while intoxicated: subsequent consent to sobriety test as affecting initial refusal. 28 ALR5th 459.\nAppeal by State from orders entered 22 May 1995 by Judge Richard B. Allsbrook in Halifax County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 16 May 1996.\nAttorney General Michael F. Easley, by Special Deputy Attorney General Isaac T. Avery, III, for the State.\nHux, Livermon & Armstrong, L.L.P., by James S. Livermon, Jr., for defendant-appellees."
  },
  "file_name": "0727-01",
  "first_page_order": 763,
  "last_page_order": 766
}
