DUI Lawyers Directory. Search for a dui lawyer near you. Operating a vehicle while drinking could cause judicial actions.
 Zip Code Search for DUI Lawyers
Defending Alleged Drunk Driving Criminal Acts Read about successful dui defense cases from member dui lawyers Read about successful dui defense cases from member dui lawyers Membership at DUI Defenders Discuss issues related to dui/dwi/owi Contact Us about a DUI Lawyer
facebook.com/MyDUI

  to fill out a simple form to connect to DUI Lawyers in your area.

Brodie v. Motor Vehicle Administration of Maryland

12/3/2001

Thomas Michael Brodie, a resident of Montgomery County, Maryland, is seeking appellate review of a judgment by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County upholding the revocation by the Motor Vehicle Administration ("MVA") of Brodie's license to drive.


The MVA initially revoked Brodie's license on April 21, 1998, for points that he had accumulated on his driving record following a 1997 conviction for driving while intoxicated and convictions for other motor vehicle offenses. On December 24, 1998, Brodie was again arrested for driving while intoxicated, and on September 17, 1999, he was convicted of this offense. The MVA subsequently assessed 12 points against Brodie on his Maryland driving record for this 1999 drunk driving conviction, and on November 2, 1999, it revoked Brodie's license a second time on the following grounds: (1) Brodie had accumulated 12 new points; (2) Brodie had continued to drive his automobile after the initial revocation of his license in 1998; (3) Brodie was an unfit and unsafe driver in light of his 1997 and 1999 convictions, as well as three drunk driving convictions prior to 1997.


Brodie requested a hearing before the Office of Administrative Hearings, and the hearing was held in March 2000 before an administrative law judge. At the hearing, Brodie argued that he had overcome his previous history of substance abuse and that, therefore, the MVA should not revoke his license a second time. The administrative law judge upheld the MVA's second revocation of Brodie's license on the grounds (1) that under Maryland Code (1977, 1999 Repl. Vol., 2001 Supp.), § 16-404(a)(3)(ii) of the Transportation Article, revocation of an individual's driver's license is required if the individual accumulates 12 points, and (2) that § 16-205(a)(1) of the Transportation Article authorizes the MVA to revoke the license of an individual who, inter alia, is convicted "of driving . . . a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol." The decision of the administrative law judge became the final administrative decision of the MVA. See § 12-104(e)(2) of the Transportation Article.


Brodie filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County an action for judicial review of the administrative decision. In the Circuit Court, Brodie did not challenge the grounds for the administrative decision, and he did not reiterate his argument that he had overcome his alcohol abuse problems. Instead, Brodie argued that the MVA may not revoke a driver's license when that license has already been revoked. The Circuit Court addressed the merits of this argument, rejected the argument, and affirmed the administrative decision.


Brodie filed in this Court a petition for a writ of certiorari which presented the single question of whether the MVA was authorized to revoke a driver's license when "the petitioner's license and privilege to drive were already revoked." (Petition for a writ of certiorari at 2). Believing that this was an important legal issue under the Maryland vehicle laws, Title 11 et seq. of the Transportation Article, we granted the petition. Brodie v. Motor Vehicle Administration, 362 Md. 187, 763 A.2d 734 (2000). We shall not, however, be able to reach the issue.


The petitioner Brodie concedes that the single legal question presented in his certiorari petition was never raised during the administrative proceedings. The issue of whether the MVA is statutorily authorized to revoke a driver's license which has already been revoked was raised for the first time in the Circuit Court.


As Chief Judge Bell for the Court recently emphasized in Dept. of Health v. Campbell, 364 Md. 108, 123, 771 A.2d 1051, 1060 (2001), in an action for judicial review of an a

Page 1 2 

Maryland DUI Attorneys    DUI Lawyers


  to fill out a simple form to connect to DUI Lawyers in your area.

DUI Driving Defined Highway Defined
Under Influence Defined DUI/3 Strikes DUI & Manslaughter
DUI & Murder DUI Punishment Sobriety Checkpoints
DMV's Role in DUI Revocation vs. Suspension Field Sobriety Testing
Speed Measurement Prior DUI Convictions Drawing Blood & Consent
Refusal to Test DUI Lawyers Testimonials by Member DUI Lawyers
DUI Articles Ignition Interlock Implied Consent
Summary DUI License Suspension In-home Arrest Vehicle Defined
FDP  |   RSS Feeds  |  Articles  |  Jobs  |  Leads  |  Partner Websites  |  Draeger FAQ
SiteMap | DUI Blog | DUI Lawyers | DUI Attorneys | Trading Partners | Member Agreement | Terms of Service
Attorneys Click Here | DUI Case Laws | FAQ | DUI Forum | Directory of DUI Attorneys | Success Stories  | Press Releases
Copyright © 2004. “DUI Defenders”. All rights reserved.