SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-4787-98T5
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
ROBERT DORIGUZZI,
Defendant-Appellant.
_____________________________________
Argued September 12, 2000 -- Decided October
20, 2000
Before Judges Pressler, Ciancia and Alley.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Bergen County.
Gerald R. Salerno argued the cause for
appellant (Aronsohn Weiner, attorneys; Mr.
Salerno, on the brief).
Sean Carpenter, Assistant Prosecutor, argued
the cause for respondent (William H. Schmidt,
Bergen County Prosecutor, attorney; Mr.
Carpenter of counsel and on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
CIANCIA, J.A.D.
Defendant Robert Doriguzzi was found guilty of driving under
the influence of alcohol, N.J.S.A. 39:4-50. The evidence against
him consisted of observations by police officers at the location
where defendant's vehicle was stopped and later at the police
station. Those observations were based in large part on
defendant's responses to field sobriety tests (FST) and a
horizontal gaze nystagmus test (HGN). A breathalyzer test was
administered but the results were not offered into evidence because
the machine was damaged after defendant used it and, therefore, no
"after test" of the machine's accuracy could be made. In finding
defendant guilty, both the municipal court judge and the Law
Division judge relied upon the totality of the evidence, including
defendant's alleged failure of the HGN test.
The controlling appellate issue is whether the trial courts
properly accepted evidence of the HGN test without foundation
testimony establishing its general acceptance in the scientific
community. The issue is presented because neither this court nor
our Supreme Court has yet endorsed HGN testing. A published trial
court opinion, decided subsequent to the Law Division's
determination in the present case, has held that HGN testing is
generally accepted in the relevant scientific community. State v.
Maida,
332 N.J. Super. 564 (Law Div. 2000). However, absent a
similar determination by this court or our Supreme Court, the trial
courts in this State are not at liberty to admit evidence of newly-
devised scientific technology unless the general acceptance thereof
is demonstrated by expert testimony, authoritative scientific and
legal writings or judicial opinions. See generally State v.
Harvey,
151 N.J. 117, 166-176 (1997). Here, none of these
foundational options were present or discussed in the trial courts.
Accordingly, we must decide whether this court should take judicial
notice of the general acceptance of HGN testing in the scientific
community based upon our independent review of authoritative,
scientific and legal writings and those judicial opinions from
other jurisdictions that have accepted HGN testing. For the
reasons we now set forth, we decline to do so.
The underlying facts are as follows. On May 16, 1998, shortly
before 1:00 a.m., defendant was driving his vehicle in an erratic
manner and was pulled over by Officer Schroeder of the Park Ridge
Police Department. Defendant was unable to produce a driver's
license and the officer observed that defendant's eyes were "watery
and bloodshot." There was a passenger in the vehicle with
defendant and an odor of alcohol emanated from the car. In
response to the officer's inquiry, defendant admitted having a
couple of beers. Defendant was later to admit drinking a beer
every half-hour from 7:00 p.m. to midnight at a social function.
A second patrolman, Officer DiBlasi, arrived on the scene and
defendant was asked to exit the vehicle so that certain sobriety
tests could be performed. Three tests were administered in all.
The first was the HGN test administered by Officer Schroeder. It
is undisputed that nystagmus is defined as the involuntary jerking
of the eye. Schroeder did not testify to the theory behind the
test in so many words, but it is generally understood that alcohol
use, among other things, will cause nystagmus. Schroeder had been
trained to administer the test and was certified in that regard.
His training is not seriously questioned on this appeal. Schroeder
explained that he first asked defendant if defendant was wearing
hard contact lenses or was under a doctor's supervision. Defendant
responded in the negative and Schroeder then began the HGN testing.
He held his finger about twelve to fifteen inches in front of
defendant's eyes and moved his finger side-to-side. Defendant was
asked to follow the finger with his eyes without moving his head
and he complied. Schroeder described the process:
The first thing I would test would be the left
eye for a lack of smooth pursuit. I then
tested the right eye for lack of smooth
pursuit. I observed the Defendant to have a
lack [of] smooth pursuit in both eyes. The
second part of the test was to test for
nystagmus at maximum deviation. I tested the
left eye first and then the right eye and I
did observe nystagmus at maximum deviation in
both eyes.
The third part is nystagmus prior to 45
degrees. I did not observe nystagmus prior to
45 degrees in either eye. I then concluded
that he failed the test because I have
observed four points on the horizontal gaze
nystagmus test.
Based on this test, the officer concluded defendant was under the
influence of alcohol.
The second test was a "walk and turn" test, which defendant
did not properly perform because he lost his balance and at least
once did not "touch heel to toe." The third and last test was the
"one-legged stand," which, among other things, requires that the
subject keep his arms at his side. In attempting to perform the
test, defendant lifted his arms, swayed while trying to balance and
put his foot down three times when it was supposed to remain
elevated. In Schroeder's opinion defendant was under the influence
of alcohol.
Officer DiBlasi's testimony was generally corroborative of
Schroeder's. DiBlasi had also been trained and certified in HGN
testing. He was able to view defendant's eyes as Schroeder
administered the HGN test.
Additional sobriety coordination tests were administered at
the police station and defendant's performance was imperfect in a
number of ways, although he apparently did somewhat better at that
time than he had at the scene of his arrest. For present purposes
we need not detail those tests and defendant's efforts to complete
them successfully.
At the conclusion of the municipal court testimony,
defendant's attorney again objected to admission of the HGN tests
because there had been no foundation concerning "what the test is,
what's it based upon and what its scientific reliability is, what
the principles behind it are . . . . " In rendering his decision,
the municipal court judge did not directly respond to defense
counsel's concerns, but he said:
He [Schroeder] also performed the -- he
also performed the HGN test. Nystagmus means
an involuntary jerking of the eyes. Although,
nystagmus refers to the involuntary jerking
that occurs, that the eye (indiscernible)
towards the side. In addition to being
involuntary, a person [who] experiences
nystagmus ordinarily is unaware of the jerking
[that] is happening. (indiscernible) is
powerless and cannot be controlled. Albeit
not judicially established, the HGN test is
the most accurate of all tests. I would
expect that at sometime [sic] in the near
future, our courts will render opinions
setting forth the -- their view of the HGN
test. This is not a court that has the
authority to -- right in establishing that.
However, it is one of the factors that are
included. The case is not decided on one
part.
Based upon the "totality of the circumstances," defendant was found
guilty of driving under the influence of alcohol.
At the conclusion of the de novo appeal on the record in the
Law Division, the judge again relied upon the totality of the
incriminating evidence to find defendant guilty. As to the HGN
test, the Law Division judge said:
While there is no written opinion regarding
the scientific reliability of the test we know
that the courts utilize that testimony on a
regular basis. Officers -- and we had two
officers testify here, that they were trained
in administering those tests. In fact both
were able to observe the eye movement of the
defendant and each come to a conclusion as to
whether or not the defendant failed or passed
the test.
He went on to indicate his belief that the HGN test was a simple
test not really any different from the other coordination tests
that were administered. The implication of that statement brings
us to the initial problem we must address on appeal.
The State contends that the HGN test is not a scientific test
at all but simply an observation made by the officer akin to what
is observed when coordination tests are administered. We disagree.
Because the record here is virtually devoid of all background
information on HGN testing, we have surveyed opinions from other
jurisdictions and read a selected number of articles in an effort
to garner the necessary information. Most of the relevant
decisions are collected in John P. Ludington, Annotation,
Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus Test: Use in Impaired Driving
Prosecution,
60 A.L.R.4th 1129 (1988).
The vast majority of states that have considered the question
have found HGN testing to be scientific. A minority view is that
the test is not sufficiently scientific to require expert evidence
establishing its acceptance in the scientific community. The test
itself has been described similarly by many courts. In a
thoughtful and detailed opinion, the intermediate appellate court
in Hawaii explained HGN testing as follows:
The HGN test is based on the observation of
three different physical manifestations which
occur when a person is under the influence of
alcohol: (1) the inability of a person to
follow, visually, in a smooth way, an object
that is moved laterally in front of the
person's eyes; (2) the inability to retain
focus and the likelihood of jerking of the
eyeball when a person has moved his or her eye
to the extreme range of peripheral vision; and
(3) the reported observation that this
"jerking" of the eyeball begins before the eye
has moved 45 degrees from forward gaze if the
individual's BAC [(Blood Alcohol Content)] is
.10 [percent] or higher.
Scientific Evidence in Civil and Criminal
Cases § 3.10, at 206 (footnote omitted).
The only equipment needed to administer the
HGN test is a stimulus, such as a pen,
penlight, or the officer's finger. The
stimulus is positioned about twelve to fifteen
inches in front of a suspect's eyes. 1984
NHTSA[See footnote 11] Instruction Manual, reprinted in 1
Defense of Drunk Driving § 10.99[2], app. at
10-93. As the officer gradually moves the
stimulus towards the suspect's ear and out of
the suspect's field of vision, the officer
observes the suspect's eyeballs to detect
three signs of intoxication: an angle of onset
of nystagmus (measured from the suspect's
nose) of forty-five degrees or less; distinct
or pronounced nystagmus at the eye's maximum
horizontal deviation; and the inability of the
eyes to smoothly pursue the stimulus. Note,
Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus: A Closer Look, 36
Jurimetrics Journal 383, 384 (1996) (Note, 36
Jurimetrics Journal). The officer scores one
point for each sign of intoxication per eye,
the maximum score being six points. A person
who takes the HGN test and receives a score of
four or more points is classified as having a
BAC of over 0.10 percent. Id.
[Hawai'i v. Ito,
978 P.2d 191, 197-198 (Haw.
Ct. App. 1999) (footnote omitted).]
The Hawaii Court of Appeals then went on to catalog the opinions
that have decided whether HGN testing is scientific:
A minority of jurisdictions have held that HGN
testing is based on a police officer's
personal observations of a driver's physical
characteristics and is not scientific in
nature. These jurisdictions view HGN tests as
no different from other FSTs, such as the
walk-and-turn or the one-leg-stand, and admit
HGN test results into evidence without
scientific foundation or expert
interpretation. See, e.g., City of Fargo v.
McLaughlin,
512 N.W.2d 700 (N.D. 1984); State
v. Bresson,
51 Ohio St.3d 123,
554 N.E.2d 1330 (1990); State v. Sullivan,
310 S.C. 311,
426 S.E.2d 766 (1993); Finley v. State,
809 S.W.2d 909 (Tex. App. 1991); Salt Lake City v.
Garcia,
912 P.2d 997 (Utah App. 1996), cert.
denied,
919 P.2d 1208 (Utah 1996).
A second group of courts have concluded that
unlike the walk-and-turn and the one-leg-stand
FST's, which are grounded in common knowledge
that excessive alcohol can cause coordination,
balance, and mental agility problems, HGN
testing is based on a scientific principle not
generally known by lay jurors. Due to this
scientific nature, HGN test results are not
admitted by these courts unless expert
testimony meeting the criteria set forth in
Frye v. United States,
293 F. 1013 (D.C. Cir.
1923); Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals,
Inc.,
509 U.S. 579,
113 S. Ct. 2786,
125 L.
Ed.2d 469 (1993); or a pertinent state rule
of evidence is adduced to demonstrate the
reliability and acceptability of the test.
See, e.g., Ex parte Malone v. City of
Silverhill,
575 So.2d 106 (Ala. 1990); People
v. Leahy,
8 Cal. 4th 587,
34 Cal. Rptr 2d
663,
882 P.2d 321 (1994); State v. Merritt,
36 Conn. App. 76,
647 A.2d 1021 (1994); State v.
Meador,
674 So.2d 826 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App.
1996), review denied,
686 So.2d 580 (Fla.
1996); State v. Witte,
251 Kan. 313,
836 P.2d 1110 (1992); Commonwealth v. Sands,
424 Mass. 184,
675 N.E.2d 370 (1997); State v. Wheeler,
764 S.W.2d 523 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989); State v.
Borchardt,
224 Neb. 47,
395 N.W.2d 551 (1986);
State v. Torres,
127 N.M. 20,
976 P.2d 20
(1999); People v. Heidelmark,
214 A.D.2d 767,
624 N.Y.S.2d 656 (N.Y. App. Div. 1995), appeal
denied,
85 N.Y.2d 973,
629 N.Y.S.2d 733,
653 N.E.2d 629 (1995); State v. Helms,
345 N.C. 578,
504 S.E.2d 293 (1998); Yell v. State,
856 P.2d 996 (Okla. Crim. App. 1993); State v.
O'Key,
321 Or. 285,
899 P.2d 663 (1995);
Commonwealth v. Moore,
430 Pa. Super. 575,
635 A.2d 625 (1993), appeal denied,
540 Pa. 612,
656 A.2d 118 (1995); State v. Murphy,
953 S.W.2d 200 (Ten. 1997); State v. Cissne,
72 Wash. App. 677,
865 P.2d 564 (1994), review
denied,
124 Wash.2d 1006,
877 P.2d 1288
(1994); State v. Barker,
179 W. Va. 194,
366 S.E.2d 642 (1988), overruled on other grounds
by Wilt v. Buracker,
191 W. Va. 39,
443 S.E.2d 196 (1993) (adopting the Daubert standard over
the Frye standard). "In effect, these cases
require HGN test results to be scientifically
validated in each individual case, or at least
recognized as scientifically valid once by an
appellate court within the jurisdiction."
City of Fargo v. McLaughlin, 512 N.W.
2d at
706.
A third group of courts, while agreeing that
HGN testing is scientific in nature, have
determined, based on a review of relevant case
law and scientific publications, that the HGN
test is a reliable and accepted indicator of
intoxication and, therefore, HGN test results
are admissible without further expert
testimony as to the scientific validity and
reliability of HGN testing, as long as proper
foundation as to the techniques used and the
police officer's training, experience, and
ability to administer the test has been laid.
See, e.g., Ballard v. State,
955 P.2d 931
(Alaska Ct. App. 1998), overruled on other
grounds by State v. Coon,
974 P.2d 386 (Alaska
1999) (adopting the Daubert standard over the
Frye standard); State ex rel. Hamilton v. City
Court,
165 Ariz. 514,
799 P.2d 855 (1990);
Zimmerman v. State,
693 A.2d 311 (Del. 1997);
Hawkins v. State,
223 Ga. App. 34,
476 S.E.2d 803 (1996); People v. Buening,
229 Ill. App.3d 538,
170 Ill. Dec. 542,
592 N.E.2d 1222
(1992), appeal denied,
146 Ill.2d 634,
176 Ill. Dec. 806,
602 N.E.2d 460 (1992); State v.
Murphy,
451 N.W.2d 154 (Iowa 1990); State v.
Armstrong,
561 So.2d 883 (La. Ct. App. 1990),
writ denied,
568 So.2d 1077 (La. 1990); State
v. Taylor,
694 A.2d 907 (Me. 1997); Schultz v.
State,
106 Md. App. 145,
664 A.2d 60 (1995);
People v. Berger,
217 Mich. App. 213,
551 N.W.2d 421 (1996); State v. Clark,
234 Mont. 222,
762 P.2d 853 (1988); Emerson v. State,
880 S.W.2d 759 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994), cert.
denied,
513 U.S. 931, 115 S. Ct. 323,
130 L.
Ed.2d 284 (1994). These courts have either
taken judicial notice of the validity and
reliability of the HGN test or concluded that
HGN test results are admissible as scientific
evidence as a matter of law.
[Id. at 199-200 (footnotes omitted).]
We are satisfied that the majority view on this question is
the view to be adopted in New Jersey. In this jurisdiction a
subject matter that is so esoteric that it is beyond the ken of the
average person typically qualifies as an appropriate subject for
expert testimony. State v. Kelly,
97 N.J. 178, 209 (1984);
N.J.R.E. 702. A factfinder should not be allowed to speculate
without the assistance of expert testimony in an area where the
average person could not be expected to have sufficient knowledge
or experience. Kelly v. Berlin,
300 N.J. Super. 256, 268 (App.
Div. 1997). Here, nystagmus is a scientific term probably not
familiar to most persons. The relationship of nystagmus to the
consumption of alcohol or drugs is a scientific principle. The
manifestation under different circumstances is also a scientific
theory that would not be known by the average person. Accordingly,
we find HGN testing to be scientific.
A novel scientific test not previously approved by this court
or our Supreme Court, in order to achieve admission into evidence,
must meet the test articulated in Frye v. United States, 293 F.
1013 (D.C. Cir. 1923). Although Frye has been replaced in the
federal court system in favor of the more lenient standards of
Federal Rule of Evidence 702 as set forth in Daubert v. Merrell Dow
Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
509 U.S. 579,
113 S. Ct. 2786,
125 L. Ed.2d 469 (1993), in New Jersey, with the exception of toxic tort
litigation, Frye remains the standard. Harvey, supra, 151 N.J. at
169-170. The Frye test asks whether the scientific test is
generally accepted in the relevant scientific community. That
acceptance may be demonstrated as follows:
A proponent of a newly-devised scientific
technology can prove its general acceptance in
three ways:
(1) by expert testimony as to the general
acceptance, among those in the
profession, of the premises on which the
proffered expert witness based his or her
analysis;
(2) by authoritative scientific and legal
writings indicating that the scientific
community accepts the premises underlying
the proffered testimony; and
(3) by judicial opinions that indicate
the expert's premises have gained general
acceptance.
The burden to "clearly establish" each of
these methods is on the proponent.
[Harvey, supra, at 170 (citations omitted).]
As indicated, in the present case no foundation evidence of
any sort, beyond the qualifications of Officer Schroeder to
administer the test, was presented in the trial courts. This court
has the discretion to survey relevant decisions from other
jurisdictions as well as pertinent, scientific and legal writings.
If we are persuaded to the general acceptance of the test within
the scientific community, we can approve the test's admissibility
for future trials. Harvey, supra, 151 N.J. at 167-168; State v.
Cavallo,
88 N.J. 508, 521 (1982). It is, nevertheless, unusual for
an appellate court to rely exclusively on judicial notice. See
Ferlise v. Eiler,
202 N.J. Super. 330, 335 (App. Div. 1985) (court
unwilling to take judicial notice that thermography enjoyed general
acceptance in the medical community absent appropriate record in
the trial court). In the present case, a survey of the relevant
decisions around the country does not provide us with the level of
certainty necessary to approve HGN testing for future cases. We
also note that our ability to comprehend the technical writings in
this field or the interpretations of them by other scientists is
hampered by the very problem that causes our inquiry -- i.e., we
are not scientists with technical backgrounds. While it may very
well be that HGN testing can meet the Frye test, we believe that
the case which decides the issue for all other cases in New Jersey
should be grounded in sufficient expert testimony to assure
defendants and the State alike that a conviction for driving under
the influence, when based in part on HGN testing, is a conviction
grounded in reliable scientific data. The consequences of a drunk
driving conviction are severe and may include incarceration.
Compare State v. Cary,
99 N.J. Super. 323, 333 (Law Div. 1968),
aff'd after remand,
56 N.J. 16 (1970) (high degree or reliability
needed to admit scientific evidence where the freedom or even the
life of an individual is at stake). Our additional reasons for
this conservative approach are as follows.
The clear majority of jurisdictions that have considered HGN
testing allow its admission into evidence for one or more purposes.
Some of those cases have less significance to our present inquiry
because they view HGN testing as non-scientific, or they apply
evidential tests different from and more generous than the Frye
test, or they admit HGN testing only for the limited purpose of
establishing probable cause to arrest or perhaps only to
corroborate chemical sobriety tests.
The seminal case in favor of admitting HGN test results is
State v. Superior Court of the County of Cochise,
718 P.2d 171
(Ariz. 1986). That opinion has been relied upon by every
jurisdiction that has accepted HGN testing as meeting the Frye
test. We are influenced though by some of the criticism that has
subsequently developed of the Arizona decision. Thus, six years
after Superior Court,See footnote 22 the Kansas Supreme Court issued what has
become the leading opinion against admitting HGN testing without a
proper record established in the trial court. We find it
appropriate to quote it at length:
Our research indicates that the reaction
within the scientific community is mixed.
Some articles endorse the HGN testing and its
accuracy. See, e.g., Good & Augsburger, Use
of Horizonal Gaze Nystagmus as a Part of
Roadside Sobriety Testing, 63 Am. J. of
Optometry & Physiological Optics, 467 (1986).
Other articles discuss concerns with the HGN
test. See, e.g., Carper & McCamey, 77 Ill.
B.J. at 149; Halperin & Yolton, Is the Driver
Drunk? Ocularmotor Sobriety Testing, 57 J. of
the Am. Optometric A., 654, 657 (1986).
Several commentators disagree with the Arizona
Supreme Court's conclusions, insisting the HGN
test has not been accepted generally within
the scientific community and questioning the
methodology of the NHTSA's research. See,
e.g., Cowan & Jaffee, Proof and Disproof of
Alcohol-Induced Driving Impairment Through
Evidence of Observable Intoxication and
Coordination Testing, 9 Am. Jur. Proof of
Facts 3d 459 § 12 (1990); Pangman, Horizontal
Gaze Nystagmus: Voodoo Science,
2 DWI Journal 1, 3-4 (1987); Rouleau, Unreliability of the
Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus Test, 4 Am. Jur.
Proof of Facts 3d 439 § 7, p. 452 (1989); 1
Erwin, Defense of Drunk Driving Cases, §§
8A:06, 8A:08 (3d ed. 1992); 2 Nichols,
Drinking/Driving Litigation, § 26.01 (1991 &
1992 Supp.). These articles or the particular
sections cited are not listed in the Arizona
opinion's appendices. Most of these articles
were published after the Arizona opinion was
issued April 7, 1986.
The defendant contends the scientific
community does not agree about the correlation
between the BAC level and the angle of onset
at which nystagmus occurs. The NHTSA declares
that "the extent of impairment is indicated by
the angle at which nystagmus begins."
Officers are instructed to have the suspect
move his or her eye sideways to an angle of 45
degrees from the nose and to watch whether
nystagmus occurs before the eye reaches the
45-degree angle. 1
984 NHTSA Study at 3-4.
"The expected angle of onset for the BAC of
0.10% is 40.2 degrees for the right eye and
40.1 degrees for the left eye." 1
981 NHTSA
Study at 25. The NHTSA maintains that, if
nystagmus is observed at the 45-degree angle,
a BAC of .10 can be estimated correctly 78
percent of the time. 1
981 NHTSA Study at 25-
30. Put another way, 22 percent of the time
it is wrong.
Other researchers disagree that 45 degrees is
the appropriate angle of onset. According to
one authority, 50-60 percent of sober
individuals who deviate their eyes more than
40 degrees to the side will exhibit nystagmus,
and this nystagmus cannot be distinguished
from alcohol gaze nystagmus. Pangman, 2 DWI
Journal at 2 (citing Toglia,
Electronystagmography: Technical Aspects and
Atlas [1976]). Another researcher suggests
the threshold appearance of HGN in most
individuals is observed at a 40-degree angle
with a BAC reading of .06 percent. Pangman, 2
DWI Journal at 2 (citing Aschan, Different
Types of Alcohol Nystagmus, Acta Oto-
Laryngologica Supp. 140:69 [1957]; Aschan,
Bergstedt, Goldberg & Laurell, Positional
Nystagmus in Man During and After Alcohol
Intoxication, 17 Q.J. of Studies on Alcohol
381 [1956]). Still another researcher
contends individuals with a BAC reading of .10
do not exhibit nystagmus until the eye is
deviated to a 51-degree angle. Pangman, 2 DWI
Journal at 2 (citing Lehti, The Effect of
Blood Alcohol Concentration on the Onset of
Gaze Nystagmus,
13 Blutalkohol 411 [1976]).
See Rouleau, 4 Am. Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 439
§§ 7, 8; 2 Nichols, Drinking/Driving
Litigation § 26:01.
Researchers have expressed concern that the
45-degree angle used by the NHTSA will create
false positive readings. The NHTSA Study also
has been criticized for "deliberately
screen[ing] out people at high risk for being
classified as false positives." 2 Nichols,
Drinking/Driving Litigation § 26:01, p. 2.
The NHTSA agrees the angle of lateral
deviation is critical. Despite the fact that
the NHTSA obtained its research results
through the use of mechanical devices that
"hold the head in a stable position and
precisely measure the angle of lateral
deviation of the eye," the NHTSA instructs
officers to estimate the 45-degree angle. A
visual estimation of the angle would seem to
cause inaccurate and inconsistent results. 2
Nichols, Drinking/Driving Litigation § 26:01,
p. 4. The stability of the suspect's head,
another critical factor, is also questionable
when the test is conducted at roadside.
Pangman, 2 DWI Journal at 3.
In addition to intoxication, many other
factors can cause nystagmus.
"Nystagmus can be caused by problems in
an individual's inner ear labyrinth. In
fact, irrigating the ears with warm or
cold water, not a far-fetched scenario
under particular weather conditions, is a
source of error. Physiological problems
such as certain kinds of diseases may
also result in gaze nystagmus.
Influenza, streptococcus infections,
vertigo, measles, syphilis,
arteriosclerosis, muscular dystrophy,
multiple sclerosis, Korsakoff's Syndrome,
brain hemorrhage, epilepsy, and other
psychogenic disorders all have been shown
to cause nystagmus. Furthermore,
conditions such as hypertension, motion
sickness, sunstroke, eyestrain, eye
muscle fatigue, glaucoma, and changes in
atmospheric pressure may result in gaze
nystagmus. The consumption of common
substances such as caffeine, nicotine, or
aspirin also lead to nystagmus almost
identical to that caused by alcohol
consumption." Pangman, 2 DWI Journal at
3.
See Rouleau, 4 Am. Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 439
§ 9. Temporary nystagmus can occur when
lighting conditions are poor. Rouleau, 4 Am.
Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 439 § 9, p. 456.
An individual's circadian rhythms
(biorhythms) can affect nystagmus readings --
the body reacts differently to alcohol at
different times of the day. One researcher
has suggested that because of this, the angle
of onset should be decreased five degrees
between midnight and 5 a.m. Rouleau, 4 Am.
Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 439 § 9, p. 456;
Pangman, 2 DWI Journal at 3. A number of
driving under the influence arrests occur
after midnight, which "would seem to indicate
that sensitivity of HGN to alcohol is enhanced
during the hours of the day when the greatest
number of drunk driving arrests occur."
Pangman, 2 DWI Journal at 3.
A prosecution-oriented group in
California conducted its own research:
"The study measured the correlation of
police officer estimations of the angle
of onset of nystagmus against chemical
tests involving breath and blood samples.
The data in the study revealed that there
was virtually no correlation between the
actual value of blood alcohol
concentration and the predicted value
based upon the angle of onset of
nystagmus. However, a correlation did
develop between the breath alcohol
reading and the level predicted by the
alcohol gaze nystagmus. Interestingly,
the study concluded that this was caused
by the very subjective nature of the test
itself:
Since the police officers are the
ones operating the breach testing
equipment, it appears that, at least
in some of the cases, an already
known breath alcohol value may have
influenced the determination of the
angle of onset.
"Simply put, the cops fudged the
horizontal gaze nystagmus determination
to correspond with the already known
correct answer determined by the breath
test result. However, since they did not
know what the correct answer was when the
blood sample was tested (since someone
else did the analysis), they could not
come close to the correct BAC. These
were highly trained California police
officers, experienced and familiar with
the test procedures and aware that their
results were being scrutinized for
accuracy and cross-checked against actual
BAC determinations. This study points
out the fact that horizontal gaze
nystagmus tests should never be intended
as a substitute for actual blood or
breath alcohol testing. The purpose of
the procedure, if any is strictly a field
screening function, like other
presumptive tests." Pangman, 2 DWI
Journal at 3.
The group conceded "the use of '(HGN) to
predict a person's blood alcohol level does
not appear to be warranted.'" Rouleau, 4 Am.
Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 439 § 8.
If the Arizona Supreme Court had had this
evidence before it, it may not have held that
HGN evidence satisfies the Frye admissibility
requirements. The reliability of the HGN test
is not currently a settled proposition in the
scientific community. This court holds that
HGN evidence requires a Frye foundation for
admissibility. If the Frye foundation is
established to this court's satisfaction, HGN
evidence will be admitted in other cases
without the need to satisfy the Frye test each
time. Before this court rules on whether HGN
evidence satisfies the Frye admissibility
requirements, a trial court first should have
an opportunity to examine, weigh, and decide
disputed facts to determine whether the test
is sufficiently reliable to be admissible for
any purpose in Kansas.
[State v. Witte,
836 P.2d 1110, 1119-1121
(Kan. 1992).]
It appears that the Witte decision remains good law in Kansas.
Kansas v. Canaan,
964 P.2d 681 (Kan. 1998). HGN testing has not
yet achieved general acceptance within the relevant scientific
community, at least not in such a manner that would allow the
Kansas Supreme Court to take judicial notice. Kansas v. Chastain,
960 P.2d 756 (Kan. 1998).
The California Supreme Court also has declined to take
judicial notice of various decisions and published studies that
have concluded HGN testing meets the Frye test. In People v.
Leahy,
882 P.2d 321 (Cal. 1994), the California Court stated:
The People urge, however, that we take
judicial notice of the various decisions and
published studies concluding that HGN testing
meets the Frye standard. But the conclusions
of those decisions and studies are by no means
unchallenged, for there appears to exist
substantial opposing authority. Cissne,[See footnote 33]
supra, 865 P.2d at p. 568.
Witte, decided in 1992, suggests that if
the Arizona Supreme Court in Blake had been
aware of the contrary authority and evidence,
it might not have held that HGN testing
satisfied Frye. (836 P.2d at p. 1121.) The
1994 Cissne decision likewise observed that
"[a]s Witte noted, research and articles
critical of HGN testing appeared after some
jurisdictions concluded that HGN testing
satisfied Frye standard[s]." (865 P.2d at p.
568.) Cissne concluded, "[w]e decline the
State's invitation to follow those few
jurisdictions that have concluded that HGN
testing meets the Frye standard. The trial
court must evaluate, weigh and consider the
conflicting evidence before determining
whether the test is novel, and, if it is
novel, whether it is reliable . . . . " (Id.
at p. 569.)
Additionally, we note that several
decisions from other states have refused to
resolve the Frye issue on appeal by reference
to scientific studies and articles not
introduced at the defendant's trial. Although
theoretically we could attempt to weigh and
evaluate the merits of the conflicting
authority, it seems more appropriate to remand
this issue to a trial court for an evidentiary
hearing, as several other decisions have
suggested.
As stated in Witte, "The reliability of
the HGN test is not currently a settled
proposition in the scientific community. . . .
Before this court rules on whether HGN
evidence satisfies the Frye admissibility
requirements, a trial court first should have
an opportunity to examine, weigh, and decide
disputed facts to determine whether the test
is sufficiently reliable to be admissible for
any purpose in Kansas." (836 P.2d at p.
1121.) We agree with that analysis and,
accordingly, we deny the People's application
for judicial notice.
[Id. at 334-335 (citations omitted).]
The Illinois case law is also of interest. Many of the
decisions around the country cite People v. Buening,
592 N.E.2d 1222 (Ill. App. Ct.), appeal denied,
602 N.E.2d 460 (Ill. 1992), as
authority for accepting HGN test evidence because other
jurisdictions have found it generally accepted in the scientific
community. Buening was decided in the Fifth District of Illinois.
In 1997 an intermediate appellate court in the Fourth District
declined to follow Buening. People v. Kirk,
681 N.E.2d 1073, (Ill.
App. Ct.), appeal denied,
686 N.E.2d 1168 (Ill. 1997). The Kirk
decision noted that the Buening opinion relied heavily on the
seminal case from Arizona, which Kirk referred to as the Blake
decision, as well as other decisions around the country that in
turn had relied on Blake. The Kirk court stated:
Reliance upon other courts' opinions can
be problematic: "Unless the question of
general acceptance has been thoroughly and
thoughtfully litigated in the previous cases,
. . . reliance on judicial practice is a
hollow ritual." McCormick § 203, at 870 n.
20. For example, McCormick cites Glover v.
State,
787 S.W.2d 544 (Tex. App. 1990), as a
case where the court held that DNA
fingerprinting enjoys general acceptance
following a hearing in which defendant
produced no expert testimony. In reaching its
decision, the Glover court relied upon other
cases in which no defense experts were
available. McCormick § 203, at 870 n. 20.
"'[J]udicial notice could become a yellow
brick road for judicial acceptance of bogus or
at least unvalidated scientific theories or
techniques.'" McCormick § 203, at 870 n. 20,
quoting J. Starrs, Frye v. United States
Restructured and Revitalized: A Proposal to
Amend Federal Evidence Rule 702,
115 F.R.D. 92, 97 (1987). The State's evidence in Blake
consisted of four witnesses: one research
psychologist and three police officers. The
defendant did not present any evidence. The
Blake court relied upon its own research of
relevant articles. While the Blake defendant
"won" the Frye hearing at the trial court
level, that decision was reversed by the
appellate court. Blake is questionable
authority for the proposition that the HGN
test meets the Frye standard in Illinois
courts.
The expert retained by the prosecution in
Blake, Dr. Burns, was the individual who
conducted the study that led to the NHTSA's
adoption of the HGN test. Police departments,
in turn, have adopted the NHTSA's
recommendations. In Blake, Dr. Burns
supported the proposition that the HGN test is
accepted and reliable, in part, by relying
upon the NHTSA's manual and the fact that the
test is used by different police departments.
By doing so, however, she in essence referred
back to her own conclusions, magnifying the
opportunity for error. We do not say that Dr.
Burns' conclusions on the subject are flawed,
only that the issue has not been fully and
thoroughly litigated. The proper place for
this litigation is in the trial court, and it
was error to admit the HGN test evidence
without a proper Frye hearing.
[Id. at 1078.]
In 1999 the Appellate Court of Illinois, sitting in the Fifth
District, again had the opportunity to revisit the HGN question.
It chose to follow Kirk rather than Buening. People v. Basler,
710 N.E.2d 431 (Ill. App. Ct.), appeal granted,
720 N.E.2d 1096 (Ill.
1999). ("We agree with Kirk that relying on other courts' opinions
to conclude that the HGN test meets the Frye standard may cause
problems." Id. at 434). Although the Illinois Supreme Court
granted the appeal in Basler, as of this writing it has not issued
an opinion.
We have set forth these decisions from other jurisdictions at
some length, not to demonstrate the unreliability of HGN testing,
but only to explain our reluctance to endorse it based upon a
survey of other judicial opinions. General acceptance within the
relevant scientific community consists of more than just counting
up how many cases go in a certain direction. General acceptance is
not an end in itself. It is the test used to ascertain whether a
sufficient level of reliability has been achieved to allow
consideration of the scientific test by the factfinder. See State
v. Marcus,
294 N.J. Super. 267, 274-275 (App. Div. 1996), certif.
denied,
157 N.J. 543 (1998); State v. Williams,
252 N.J. Super. 369, 374-376 (Law Div. 1991). We emphasize that what is being
sought here by the State is admission of HGN testing as an element
of proof to permit the factfinder to conclude that failure of the
HGN test, in combination with the failure of coordination tests,
sufficiently proves defendant's guilt of driving under the
influence of alcohol. This is qualitatively different from use of
the HGN test only to establish probable cause to arrest or only in
conjunction with breathalyzer results.
We recognize that if the HGN test results had been introduced
into evidence without the support of a scientific-reliability
foundation merely to corroborate a breathalyzer reading of .10 or
higher, the admission of that evidence would likely have been
harmless error because of its lack of capacity to have affected the
outcome of the trial. Since such a reading resulting from a
properly administered breathalyzer test performed on a properly
certified breathalyzer machine is virtually conclusive, the
harmless-error conclusion is apparently unavoidable. Here,
however, there were no breathalyzer test results admitted into
evidence and the HGN test results were an integral part of the
decisions finding defendant guilty. We note a recurrent theme in
the decisions from other jurisdictions that a jury may be
inappropriately influenced by the apparent scientific precision of
HGN testing or otherwise fail to properly understand it. In New
Jersey juries do not sit on DUI cases, but in this instance the
municipal court judge characterized the HGN test as "the most
accurate of all tests" and the Law Division judge questioned
whether HGN tests were "really any different" than coordination
tests. Accordingly, a determination of harmless error is not
available to us in the present matter.
Defendant's conviction is reversed and the matter is remanded
to the Law Division for a trial de novo on the record without
consideration of the HGN tests.
Footnote: 1 1 NHTSA stands for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. It is and has been the most aggressive proponent of HGN testing. Footnote: 2 2 Abbreviated reference to the Arizona case in other decisions is sometimes "Superior Court" and sometimes "Blake." The full caption of the case is State of Arizona v. Superior Court of the State of Arizona in and for the County of Cochise and the Hon. James L. Riley, Division III and Frederick Andrew Blake. Footnote: 3 3 State v. Cissne, 865 P.2d 564 (Wash. Ct. App.), review denied, 877 P.2d 1288 (Wash. 1994).