Pertinent Case Law
In a case involving a challenge to the FMCSA regulations governing assignment of safety fitness ratings of motor carriers, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia held that violation of regulations pertaining to alcohol use, and by implication controlled substance use, were properly designated as “acute” by the Highway Administration. Am. Trucking Assoc. v. U.S. DOT, 166 F.3d 374, 334 U.S. App. D.C. 246 (1999). The court recognized the agency’s distinction between such “acute” violations, which involve “noncompliance which is so severe as to require immediate corrective actions by a motor carrier regardless of the overall safety posture of the motor carrier” and “critical” violations, which are those which “noncompliance relates to management and/or operational controls.” ATA at 381. The court noted, “An example [of an acute violation] is 49 C.F.R. 382.201 which prohibits knowing use of a driver with a blood alcohol concentration of .04% or greater.” Id. This distinction highlights the significance of a motor carrier’s breach of these regulations, and may be helpful in persuading a court to charge the jury, even where causation may be difficult to show by direct evidence. Certainly the distinction is helpful in supporting a claim for punitive damages.
A low level positive finding of marijuana metabolites was insufficient to survive defendant’s summary judgment motion on plaintiff’s claims for breach of 382.213 by the motor carrier driver. Chubb v. Ryder Integrated Logistics, Inc., 2009 WL 2968434 (D. Kan Sept. 10, 2009). A number of factors were referenced by the court in excluding the evidence and granting summary judgment on the claim. First, defendant’s expert (plaintiff had no expert) opined that that the levels were insufficient to cause intoxication. The driver, testified he last smoked a number of days before the accident- and certainly not while driving. The levels detected were below certain cut-off points established in the regulations pertaining to workplace drug and alcohol testing programs. See 49 C.F.R. 40.87. The police at the scene saw no signs of impairment, and the court noted that the regulations “do not prohibit its [marijuana’s] off-duty use.”