Department of Highway Safety v. Stenmark, 2D06-2263.
Decision Date | 17 November 2006 |
Docket Number | No. 2D06-2263.,2D06-2263. |
Citation | 941 So.2d 1247 |
Parties | DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAY SAFETY AND MOTOR VEHICLES, Petitioner, v. Deborah STENMARK, Respondent. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Judson Chapman, General Counsel, and Jason Helfant, Assistant General Counsel, Department of Highway Safety & Motor Vehicles, Miami, for Petitioner.
Scot E. Samis and Jennifer J. Card of Abbey, Adams, Byelick, Kiernan, Mueller & Lancaster, L.L.P., St. Petersburg, for Respondent.
The Department of Highway Safety & Motor Vehicles seeks second-tier certiorari review of a circuit court decision that quashed the suspension of Deborah Stenmark's driver's license. We grant the petition.
Stenmark was stopped and ultimately arrested for driving under the influence. She requested a formal review of the Department's suspension of her driver's license. See § 322.2615, Fla. Stat. (2004). At the hearing, Stenmark challenged the suspension and asserted that the stop was not based on a reasonable suspicion. See § 322.2615(7)(a)(2) ( ). The hearing officer considered the following evidence.
Stenmark was arrested at about 2:00 in the morning, shortly after she had stopped her car at a red light. According to Stenmark, she had just come from a fast food restaurant and had spilled food in her lap. She testified that while she waited for the light to change, she tried to clean up the mess. As she did so, she kept looking up to see if the light had turned green. According to the report by a Largo police officer, he saw Stenmark stopped at the intersection and observed her head bobbing up and down. Thinking that Stenmark might have passed out, he approached the car.
The witnesses gave conflicting accounts of what occurred next. Stenmark testified that the light turned green and she began to drive off when someone approached and yelled for her to stop. When she realized that the man yelling at her was a police officer, she stopped her car. At that point, she said, the officer reached into the car and grabbed her keys.
The officer gave the following version:
I exited my vehicle and made my way to the driver's side of the vehicle where I made contact with the driver, who was still passed out. I reached in and attempted to turn the vehicle off. At this time, the driver woke up and the vehicle began drifting into the middle of the intersection. I was able to instruct the driver of the vehicle to place the vehicle into park in order to stop it.
In his order, the hearing officer found: Based on the findings of fact, the hearing officer ruled that the stop was lawful.
On certiorari review, the circuit court disagreed. Although it quoted the hearing officer's findings verbatim, the circuit court found that Stenmark's innocent explanation for her head bobbing refuted the officer's concern that she was passed out. Thus, the circuit court reasoned, the officer lacked a reasonable basis for conducting a traffic stop. Although we do not disagree with the circuit court's analysis of the law regarding traffic stops, we conclude that the circuit...
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