The law specifies that, in order to win a Michigan driver\u2019s license restoration case, a person must submit proof that meets the \u201cclear and convincing evidence\u201d legal standard. Every license appeal case is decided by a hearing officer, each of whom is a trained professional tasked with evaluating the evidence submitted, listening to what is said, and then concluding whether or not it meets that standard. This installment will tie in to the previous article<\/a> about how any notion of \u201cyou tell me what I need to say\u201d is almost proof-positive that a person is NOT sober, and in no position to win a license appeal.<\/p>\n
So what does all this mean?<\/p>\n
That sentence is critical, because it contains 2 very clear instructions:<\/p>\n
Put another way, the hearing officer<\/a> is basically supposed to begin every case with \u201cno\u201d as the answer, and only change his or her mind if the person who filed it proves what the rule requires by \u201cclear and convincing evidence.\u201d<\/p>\n
In a number of past articles, and in one very recently, I explained what \u201cclear and convincing<\/a>\u201d means, so we don\u2019t need to get into that here, other than to point out that, as a legal standard of proof, it\u2019s very near the \u201cbeyond a reasonable doubt\u201d standard needed to convict someone of a criminal offense.<\/p>\n
Although Rule 13<\/a> sets out several legal issues, there are 2 that are mandatory in every case, and they are spelled out in subsection \u201ci.\u201d This is where we\u2019ll do a little analysis before we summarize things. Just to repeat, subsection \u201ci\u201d provides as follows:<\/p>\n
The reason the \u201cif any\u201d language doesn\u2019t matter is both a matter of law, and a matter of practice. Here\u2019s why: In Michigan, anyone convicted of 2 DUI\u2019s within 7 years, or 3 or more DUI\u2019s within 10 years, is legally categorizes as a \u201chabitual alcohol offender<\/a>.\u201d<\/p>\n
This means that when someone files a license appeal<\/a> after having his or her license revoked for multiple DUI\u2019s, he or she is automatically assumed to have an alcohol problem. No matter what anyone may think or feel about it, the fact is, that\u2019s the starting point<\/em>\u00a0for every Michigan driver\u2019s license restoration and clearance case.<\/p>\n
Accordingly, the key to winning<\/a> a Michigan driver\u2019s license or clearance case is proving the following 2 things<\/a>:<\/p>\n
Now, let\u2019s look at what all that really means\u2026<\/p>\n
A key component of that is the intention to remain clean and sober for life<\/em>.<\/p>\n
Personally, I am amazed at the sheer number of people who think they can appear before the Michigan Secretary of State for a license appeal and BS the hearing officer<\/a> about this. That’s just not going to happen…<\/p>\n
The Michigan Secretary of State<\/a> hearing officers are professionals; they are lawyers who, in the role of administrative law examiners, spend pretty much every moment of their working lives evaluating evidence and deciding whether or not a person has submitted \u201cclear and convincing\u201d proof that his or her alcohol problem is both under control, and likely to remain under control.<\/p>\n
Unfortunately, though, that doesn\u2019t stop some people from trying.<\/p>\n
To be clear, my team and I want NO part of any of that. We screen potential clients to make sure they\u2019ve quit drinking, because when we take a case, we guarantee to win it<\/a>, and the last thing we would ever want to do is get stuck having to do \u201cwarranty work\u201d for someone who actually hasn\u2019t quit drinking.<\/p>\n
In fact, it is an exception<\/strong> to our guarantee for a person to misrepresent his or her abstinence or sobriety. Even if someone offered to pay us our full fee<\/a> and was willing to skip the guarantee altogether, we wouldn\u2019t do it because we simply do NOT want to handle a case for anyone who is not genuinely sober.<\/p>\n
At the end of the day, winning<\/a> a driver\u2019s license appeal – or not – comes down to proving to the hearing officer, by clear and convincing evidence, that one\u2019s alcohol (and\/or substance abuse) problem is under control, and that it is likely to remain under control.<\/p>\n
For us, as Michigan driver\u2019s license restoration attorneys<\/a>, as long as we have a sober client, we can take care of the rest, and we guarantee the results.<\/p>\n