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Cornelison v. Commonwealth8/23/2001
TO BE PUBLISHED
AFFIRMING CASE NO. 2000-SC-0646-DG and REVERSlNG CASE NO. 2000-SC-0813-TG
Inasmuch as these two cases were argued before the Court on the same day and involve an identical issue, this Court will resolve both cases in this single opinion.
Case No. OO-SC-0646-DG
On April 26, 1999, Appellant, Gilbert Cornelison, was stopped for suspicion of operating a vehicle while his license was suspended. The officer observed that Cornelison emitted a strong odor of alcohol, and Cornelison agreed to submit to a field sobriety test, which he failed. He was placed under arrest and, more than an hour later, was administered a Breathalyzer test which indicated that his blood alcohol content was 0.274. Subsequently, Cornelison was indicted for operating a motor vehicle while under the influence, third offense, a class D felony, and for operating a motor vehicle while license is suspended for DUI, second offense, a class A misdemeanor.
Cornelison initially entered a plea of not guilty to both offenses and moved the : Madison Circuit Court to declare KRS 189A.O10(4)(c) unconstitutional. After the trial court denied the motion, Cornelison pled guilty to the misdemeanor charge and entered a conditional guilty plea to the felony DUI charge. The trial court sentenced Cornelison to three months in jail for driving on a suspended license, and to one year imprisonment for the DUI conviction, with the sentences to run concurrently. The trial court noted that after Cornelison had served the 120-day mandatory minimum sentence on the felony conviction it would consider a request for probation so that Cornelison could attend an alcohol rehabilitation program.
Cornelison thereafter appealed the DUI conviction to the Court of Appeals, contending that the 1998 amendment to KRS 189A.O10(4)(c) was unconstitutional. The Court of Appeals held that the statute was neither arbitrary nor a violation of Cornelison's equal protection rights. This Court granted discretionary review. Additional facts will be developed in the course of this opinion.
KRS 189A.O10(4)(c), was amended in 1998 to provide:
Any person who violates the provisions of paragraph (a), (b), (c) or (d) of subsection (1) of this section shall:
(c) If the alcohol concentration is below 0.18, for a third offense within a five (5) year period, be fined not less than five hundred dollars ($500) nor more than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and shall be imprisoned in the county jail for not less than thirty (30) days nor more than twelve (12) months and may, in addition to fine and imprisonment, be sentenced to community labor for not less than ten (IO) days nor more than twelve (12) months. If the alcohol concentration is 0.18 or above, he or she shall be guilty of a Class D felony.
KRS 189A.01 O(4) provides a comprehensive scheme of escalating penalties to be imposed on individuals who engage in the inherently dangerous activity of driving while under the influence of alcohol. Prior to the 1998 amendments, the sanctions progressed in severity based solely on the number of offenses within a five-year period. The Legislature amended the statute in 1998 and chose, in the case of first-time and third-time offenders, to further classify offenders according to their degree of intoxication, enhancing the penalty for those driving with a blood-alcohol content of 0.18 or higher.
A first-time offender with a blood alcohol level of less than 0.18 could be given a fine of between $200 and $500, and be imprisoned "for not less than forty-eight (48) hours nor more than thirty (30) days," or could receive both a fine and a sentence of imprisonment.
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