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Justia Daily Opinion Summaries

Oklahoma Supreme Court
September 16, 2020

Table of Contents

Cole v. Oklahoma ex rel. Dept. of Public Safety

Government & Administrative Law

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Oklahoma Supreme Court Opinions

Cole v. Oklahoma ex rel. Dept. of Public Safety

Citation: 2020 OK 67

Opinion Date: September 15, 2020

Judge: James R. Winchester

Areas of Law: Government & Administrative Law

Plaintiff-appellant Michael Cole appealed a district court order remanding a driver's license revocation proceeding for hearing following his due process challenge. Cole violated Oklahoma's implied consent law after his arrest for suspicion of driving under the influence. Cole attempted to contest the revocation of his driver's license by requesting an administrative hearing from Defendant-appellee State of Oklahoma ex rel. Department of Public Safety (DPS). However, DPS determined that Cole's hearing request was insufficient and revoked Cole's license for one year. The issue presented for the Oklahoma Supreme Court's review was whether DPS violated Cole's procedural due process rights in declining to hold a hearing when Cole failed to follow DPS's rule in submitting his hearing request. To this, the Court held DPS could designate how it receives hearing requests by administrative rule and DPS did not violate Cole's procedural due process rights when Cole failed to properly request an administrative hearing pursuant to Okla. Admin. Code section 595:1-3-7 (2017).

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