People v. Henderson Modified Upon Denial of Rehearing - replaces opinion filed 2/13/03 ( 2003 )


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  • No. 3--02--0005
    _________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    THIRD DISTRICT
    A.D., 2003
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                 )    Appeal from the Circuit Court
    OF ILLINOIS,                            )    of the 9th Judicial Circuit,
    )    McDonough County, Illinois
    Plaintiff-Appellee,               )
    )
    v.                                )    No. 99--DT--61
    )
    THOMAS C. HENDERSON,              )     Honorable
    ) William D. Henderson,
    Defendant-Appellant.        )     Judge, Presiding.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Modified Upon Denial of Rehearing
    JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE delivered the Opinion of the court:
    _________________________________________________________________
    A jury found the defendant, Thomas C. Henderson, guilty of driving
    under the influence of alcohol (DUI), which is a Class A misdemeanor (625
    ILCS 5/11--501(a)(2), (c) (West 1998)).  He was sentenced to 30 days'
    incarceration in the county jail.  The sentencing order also stated that he
    was to pay a $2,500 public defender fee (725 ILCS 5/113--3.1(b) (West
    2000)).  Under section 113--3.1(b), an order imposing a public defender fee
    may not exceed (1) $500 for a defendant charged with a misdemeanor; or (2)
    $2,500 if the defendant is appealing the conviction of any class offense.
    On appeal, the defendant argues that the trial court erred by (1) admitting
    doctor-ordered blood test results in evidence where the State failed to
    establish the blood sample's chain of custody; and (2) imposing a $2,500
    rather than a $500 public defender fee.  We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    At trial, Deputy Sheriff Justin R. Lundgren testified that at
    approximately 11:25 p.m. on March 12, 1999, he was called to the scene of a
    one-car accident on U.S. highway 67, just outside the town of Industry.  A
    car driven by the defendant had left the road at "Windmill Curve" and had
    "landed out in a field" more than 100 feet from the road.  When Lundgren
    arrived at the accident scene, emergency personnel were working to extract
    the defendant from the vehicle where he was "somewhat trapped."  Lundgren
    spoke with the defendant, who "smelled of alcoholic beverage" and slurred
    his speech.
    Eric Starbuck testified that on the night of the accident, he was a
    paramedic for the McDonough District Hospital (MDH) in Macomb.  Starbuck
    said that after he arrived at the crash site, he began to treat the
    defendant.  He detected "an odor of alcohol" coming from the defendant.
    Starbuck said that he drew a blood sample from the defendant in the
    ambulance under a standing order from the hospital's emergency room doctor.
    He testified that the ambulance arrived at the hospital with the defendant
    at 12:02 a.m. on March 13, 1999.
    Starbuck stated that it is standard procedure for a patient's blood
    sample drawn in the field to accompany the patient in the ambulance.  Once
    at the hospital, the blood sample is given to hospital staff, who label the
    sample to identify that it was collected from the patient.  The sample is
    then taken by a staff member to the hospital laboratory.
    Lundgren testified that he followed the ambulance to the hospital.
    While at the hospital, the defendant told Lundgren that "he had been
    drinking alcohol."  Lundgren opined that the defendant was under the
    influence of alcohol.  Lundgren asked the defendant if he would consent to
    have a blood sample taken.  The defendant agreed.  However, shortly
    thereafter, the hospital staff told Lundgren that the defendant needed to
    be transferred to another hospital because of a spinal injury.  Lundgren
    did not know whether the hospital staff drew the sample that Lundgren had
    requested before the defendant was transported to the other hospital.
    Dr. Arthur Thrasher testified that he was the emergency room doctor
    who treated the defendant at MDH.  He stated that under his standing
    orders, four tubes of blood are drawn from a patient prior to the patient's
    arrival at the emergency room.  Among other tests, a patient's blood sample
    is tested at the hospital lab for the presence of alcohol.  The results of
    the blood tests then are printed on a lab report.  The defendant's lab
    report was generated in the regular course of the hospital's business.  The
    defendant's lab report, which was admitted in evidence over the defendant's
    objection, shows that the defendant's blood alcohol content (BAC) was 0.19.
    The hospital's lab report indicates that the patient's name was
    "HENDERSON, THOMAS C" and that the emergency room doctor was "THRASHER,
    ARTHUR."  The report states that the blood sample used for the "ALCOHOL
    BLOOD" test was collected at 12:45 a.m. on March 13, 1999.  The report
    shows that a sample used for a "CHEM 7" test also was collected at 12:45
    a.m.  The report states that a sample was collected for a "CBC" test at
    8:37 a.m.  The form authorizing the defendant's transfer to another
    hospital, however, indicates that he was transferred at 2:50 a.m.  Thrasher
    could not explain how the blood sample for the "CBC" test could have been
    collected after the defendant was transferred to another hospital.
    The defendant previously had filed a motion in limine to bar the
    State from introducing in evidence the hospital's lab report concerning the
    defendant's BAC.  In the motion, the defendant argued that the blood sample
    was requested by Lundgren (under 625 ILCS 5/11--501.2 (West 1998)) rather
    than ordered by a doctor (under 625 ILCS 5/11--501.4 (West 1998)).  At the
    hearing on the motion, the defendant contended that the blood sample must
    have been requested by Lundgren at the hospital and could not have been the
    blood sample drawn by Starbuck before the defendant arrived at the
    hospital.  The defendant based this contention on the fact that the blood
    sample was collected at 12:45 a.m., which was after the defendant arrived
    at the hospital at 12:02 a.m.
    At the hearing, Thrasher testified that the collection time on the
    lab report could have been either when the blood sample was drawn from the
    defendant's body or when the sample was drawn from the tube at the
    laboratory.  He stated that the blood sample was ordered by him rather than
    requested by Lundgren because it was tested by the hospital's lab rather
    than being given to Lundgren and tested by a crime lab.  The court denied
    the defendant's motion in limine, ruling that the lab report was not a
    result of Lundgren's request under section 11--501.2.
    At the conclusion of the trial, the jury found the defendant guilty.
    The court imposed a 30-day jail sentence.  The sentencing order, dated
    November 27, 2001, states that the defendant is to pay a $2,500 public
    defender fee.  The record does not contain a transcript of the sentencing
    hearing or any other proceeding in which the trial judge determined the
    amount of the public defender fee.  The defendant filed his notice of
    appeal on December 26, 2001.
    ANALYSIS
    I. Chain of Custody
    The defendant argues that the trial court erred by admitting in
    evidence the lab report concerning the defendant's BAC when the State had
    not established a chain of custody for the blood sample on which the lab
    report was based.
    In Illinois, a blood sample tested to determine a defendant's BAC may
    be taken from a defendant as a result of a request from a law enforcement
    officer (625 ILCS 5/11--501.2 (West 1998)), or as a result of a doctor's
    order during the regular course of providing emergency medical treatment
    (625 ILCS 5/11--501.4 (West 1998)).  The results of tests conducted on
    blood under section 11--501.4 are admissible as a business record exception
    to the hearsay rule when each of the following criteria are met: (1) the
    tests were ordered in the regular course of providing emergency medical
    treatment and not at the request of a law enforcement officer; (2) the
    tests were performed by the laboratory routinely used by the hospital; and
    (3) the results of the tests are admissible regardless of the time the
    records were prepared.  625 ILCS 5/11--501.4 (West 1998).
    We are asked to determine whether the lab report was admissible in
    evidence.  We review a trial court's evidentiary ruling for abuse of
    discretion.  People v. Human, 
    331 Ill. App. 3d 809
    , 
    773 N.E.2d 4
     (2002).
    The defendant cites People v. Ethridge, 
    243 Ill. App. 3d 446
    , 
    610 N.E.2d 1305
     (1993), for the proposition that under section 11--501.4, the
    State is required to show that the defendant's blood was the blood used for
    the test to determine BAC.  The defendant and the dissent contend that
    under Ethridge, the State must establish a chain of custody for the blood
    sample that was used for the test.  In Ethridge, the court considered
    whether the State was required to admit the blood sample as part of the
    foundation for admitting the test results.  The court said,
    "Defendant cites no authority, and we find none, that requires
    the State to introduce the actual blood serum of defendant as part of
    the foundation for admissibility of the blood-test results under
    section 11-501.4.  Rather, the foundational question presented is
    whether it was in fact defendant's blood that was tested and produced
    the result sought to be admitted at trial.  Provided the State can
    show that it was defendant's blood that was used to determine
    defendant's BAC, then such BAC test results may be introduced under
    section 11-501.4 if the other criteria for admissibility set forth in
    that section are met."  Ethridge, 
    243 Ill. App. 3d at 464
    , 
    610 N.E.2d at 1316
    .
    We disagree with the defendant and the dissent that Ethridge requires
    the State to prove the chain of custody for the defendant's blood sample.
    In Ethridge, the defendant's argument concerned introducing the actual
    blood serum as a foundation to admitting the blood test results.  The
    Ethridge court held that the State was not required to introduce the actual
    blood serum as a foundational matter.  In dicta, the Ethridge court then
    stated that the usual foundation for evidence must be laid in contrast to
    the defendant's foundational argument.  The usual foundational rules
    dictate that if the results of a blood test are to be used as evidence of a
    defendant's guilt, the State must show that it was the defendant's blood
    that was tested.  The Ethridge court did not mention chain of custody
    considerations.
    Our State legislature has determined that lab reports of hospital
    blood tests conducted in the regular course of providing emergency medical
    treatment are admissible in prosecutions for DUI under the business records
    exception to the hearsay rule.  625 ILCS 5/11--501.4 (West 1998).  The
    foundation requirements for admission of a record under the business
    records exception are that (1) the record was made as a record of the
    event; (2) it was made in the regular course of business; and (3) it was
    the regular course of the business to make a record at the time of the
    event or within a reasonable time thereafter.  Also, this foundation must
    be established through testimony by someone familiar with the business and
    its mode of operation.  People v. Virgin, 
    302 Ill. App. 3d 438
    , 
    707 N.E.2d 97
     (1998).
    In this case, Thrasher was familiar with the hospital's business and
    its mode of operation.  He testified that (1) the lab report was made as a
    record of the collection and testing of the defendant's blood by the
    hospital; (2) the report was made during the regular course of the
    hospital's business; and (3) it was the hospital's regular course of
    business to make such lab reports.  The foundational requirements for a
    business record, as mentioned in the Ethridge dicta, were met.  See
    Ethridge, 
    243 Ill. App. 3d at 464
    , 
    610 N.E.2d at 1316
    .  Therefore, the lab
    report was admissible as a business record.
    Neither the defendant nor the dissent asserts that the hospital's lab
    report was inadmissible as a business record.  Instead, their argument is
    that to be admissible as a business record, the State must show the chain
    of custody of a blood sample which was in the hospital's custody and never
    in the State's custody.  Neither the defendant nor the dissent has cited
    any authority for the proposition that the State must establish a chain of
    custody for an object described in a document admitted under the business
    record exception to the hearsay rule.  This court's research has uncovered
    no authority for such a proposition.
    Under case law, the State only must establish a chain of custody when
    a blood sample is drawn under section 11--501.2 at a law enforcement
    officer's request and is then immediately taken into the officer's custody.
    See 625 ILCS 5/11--501.2 (West 1998); People v. Lach, 
    302 Ill. App. 3d 587
    , 
    707 N.E.2d 144
     (1998).  In Lach, the defendant argued that the State
    failed to establish a chain of custody under section 11--501.4.  The Lach
    court ruled that for BAC test results to be admissible, the State is only
    required to comply with the foundational provisions in the statute and that
    a chain of custody is not required.  Neither the defendant nor the dissent
    mentions the holding of Lach.
    An item described in a business record is, by definition, in the
    custody of the business that generated the record rather than in the
    State's custody.  On the one hand, it is logically consistent to require
    the State to prove chain of custody under section 11--501.2 for a blood
    sample that is drawn in the presence of an officer and is continuously in
    the State's custody once it is given to the officer by the physician.  On
    the other hand, it would be logically absurd for us to require the State to
    prove chain of custody under section 11--501.4 for a blood sample that was
    continuously in a hospital's custody and never in the State's custody.
    In the present case, the State complied with the provisions of
    section 11--501.4.  The defendant's blood test was ordered in the regular
    course of emergency medical treatment and not requested by Lundgren or any
    other law enforcement officer.  The test was performed at the hospital's
    own laboratory.  The defendant's lab report was admissible as a business
    record regardless of the time that it was prepared.  Therefore, the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the lab report in evidence
    without the State establishing a chain of custody for the defendant's blood
    sample.
    II. Public Defender Fee
    As part of the defendant's sentence, the trial court ordered the
    defendant to "reimburse McDonough County for Public Defender fees in the
    amount of $2,500."  The defendant submits that the trial court erred by
    ordering him to pay a $2,500 rather than a $500 public defender fee.  He
    contends that his public defender fee should be reduced to $500 because he
    was convicted of a misdemeanor.  He argues that the defendant was not
    appealing at the time the judge ordered the fee, and therefore, the judge
    was not authorized to order him to pay the $2,500 fee.  The State submits
    that the defendant has not provided us with a record adequate to support
    his contention.  We agree with the State.
    "Whenever *** the court appoints counsel to represent a defendant,
    the court may order the defendant to pay to the Clerk of the Circuit Court
    a reasonable sum to reimburse either the county or the State for such
    representation."  725 ILCS 5/113--3.1(a) (West 2000).  "Any sum ordered
    paid under this Section may not exceed $500 for a defendant charged with a
    misdemeanor, $5,000 for a defendant charged with a felony, or $2,500 for a
    defendant who is appealing a conviction of any class offense."  725 ILCS
    5/113--3.1(b) (West 2000).
    As the appellant, the defendant bears the responsibility of
    presenting us with the record.  People v. Thurmond, 
    317 Ill. App. 3d 1133
    ,
    
    741 N.E.2d 291
     (2000).  The lack of such a record from the trial court
    requires that we affirm issues which may depend on missing facts for their
    resolution.  People v. Scruggs, 
    161 Ill. App. 3d 468
    , 
    514 N.E.2d 807
    (1987).  Absent an affirmative showing of error in the record, a trial
    judge is presumed to know the law and to apply it properly.  People v.
    Askew, 
    273 Ill. App. 3d 798
    , 
    652 N.E.2d 1041
     (1995).
    In this case, the defendant was ordered to pay a $2,500 public
    defender fee "to McDonough County."  Under the plain language of the
    statute, the defendant could be ordered to pay the clerk of the McDonough
    County Circuit Court to reimburse the county or the State for the
    defendant's court-appointed representation.
    The defendant's notice of appeal was filed within 30 days following
    the sentencing order.  His notice of appeal is the first indication in the
    record that the defendant was appealing.  However, the defendant has not
    supplied us with a record of the sentencing hearing in which the $2,500
    public defender fee was imposed.  Without a record of that hearing, we must
    presume that the trial judge knew that the defendant was appealing when the
    judge imposed the $2,500 fee because the judge is presumed to know and
    apply the law.  See Askew, 
    273 Ill. App. 3d 798
    , 
    652 N.E.2d 1041
    .
    Furthermore, the defendant currently "is appealing," making the issue moot.
    See 725 ILCS 5/113--3.1(b) (West 2000).  Therefore, we cannot say that the
    trial judge erred by ordering the defendant to pay a $2,500 public defender
    fee.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the McDonough
    County circuit court.
    Affirmed.
    SLATER, J., concurs.
    MCDADE, P.J., dissents.
    PRESIDING JUSTICE McDADE dissents:
    _________________________________________________________________
    The majority appears to hold that as long as the three-pronged
    statutory requirement for admission of blood test results as a business
    record has been met, there is no requirement that the State prove that the
    blood which was tested was drawn from defendant.  With all due respect, I
    find that decision to be logically and legally insupportable, and I
    dissent.
    The record shows that McDonough District Hospital paramedic, Eric
    Starbuck, testified that, pursuant to a standing order from the hospital's
    emergency room doctor, he drew blood from defendant in the ambulance at the
    accident site.  The ambulance arrived at the hospital at 12:02 a.m., so
    that blood had to have been drawn sometime between 11:25 p.m., when the
    crash occurred, and 12:02 a.m.
    In his testimony, Dr. Arthur Thrasher, the emergency room doctor,
    confirmed his standing order that four tubes of blood be drawn prior to the
    patient's arrival at the emergency room.  Upon arrival at the hospital,
    that blood is marked and subjected to a variety of tests, including one for
    the presence of alcohol. Dr. Thrasher also testified that the blood which
    was the subject of the lab report had to have been taken pursuant to his
    order rather than Deputy Lundgren's request because it was tested by the
    hospital's lab.  Dr. Thrasher did not testify that he ever ordered other
    blood to be drawn from defendant.
    There is no lab test result purporting to be for blood collected or
    turned in and labeled prior to 12:45 a.m.  There is also no evidence either
    that the test blood was that drawn earlier or that blood was drawn from the
    defendant again.  This problem is compounded by the indication, in the
    report, that a CBC test sample was collected from defendant at 8:37 a.m. --
    five hours after his transfer to another hospital.  In this confusing
    situation, there is no way to establish that the blood tested was actually
    defendant's blood without something in the nature of chain-of-custody
    testimony.
    Defendant relies on People v Ethridge, 
    243 Ill. App. 3d 446
    , 
    610 N.E.2d 1305
     (1993), in which the court found that there is no requirement
    on the State to introduce the actual blood serum as part of the foundation
    for admissibility of the blood test results.  "Rather, the foundational
    question presented is whether it was in fact defendant's blood that was
    tested and produced the result sought to be admitted at trial.  Provided
    the State can show that it was defendant's blood that was used to determine
    defendant's BAC, then such BAC test results may be introduced under Section
    11-501.4 if the other criteria for admissibility set forth in that section
    are met."  People v Ethridge, 
    243 Ill. App. 3d at 464
    , 
    610 N.E.2d at 1316
    .
    (Emphasis added.)
    The majority holds that Ethridge's requirement that the State show
    defendant's blood was used for the test is only dicta.  Therefore, since
    the lab report says it is defendant's blood, that assertion should be
    accepted without any foundational showing of accuracy because the business
    record rule does not require it.
    One wonders how comforted the majority would be by such fine legal
    distinctions if we were being convicted of DUI on the basis of tests
    conducted on blood possibly drawn from someone else.
    Our responsibility is to determine, not whether it is possible that
    defendant committed the crime, but rather whether the State has proven him
    guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.  I do not believe it has.  I would
    reverse the conviction and I, therefore, dissent.