DWI / DUI
DWI Criminal Case vs. Implied Consent Case in Minnesota
A single Minnesota DWI arrest sets off two completely separate cases: a criminal case that decides the DWI charge, and a civil "implied consent" case that decides what happens to your driver's license. They have different courts, different rules, different burdens of proof, and different deadlines — and the license case moves fast, with a short, strict window to challenge it.
A single Minnesota DWI arrest sets off two completely separate cases: a criminal case that decides the DWI charge, and a civil "implied consent" case that decides what happens to your driver's license. They have different courts, different rules, different burdens of proof, and different deadlines — and the license case moves fast, with a short, strict window to challenge it. Here is how the two compare and why missing the difference can cost you your license.
Quick Comparison
| Feature | Criminal DWI Case | Implied Consent Case |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Criminal prosecution | Civil/administrative |
| What's at stake | Conviction, jail, fines, probation | Your driver's license |
| Who brings it | The prosecutor | Dept. of Public Safety |
| Burden of proof | Beyond a reasonable doubt | Lower civil standard |
| Key deadline | Normal case timeline | Short window to petition for review |
The Criminal Case
The criminal case is the DWI charge itself. The prosecutor must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and the consequences can include a conviction, jail, fines, and probation, depending on the degree and your history. It follows the normal criminal process — first appearance, discovery, the omnibus stage where evidence can be challenged, and resolution or trial. (See our pages on what a DWI is and DWI penalties and degrees.)
The Implied Consent Case
The implied-consent case is civil and runs through the Department of Public Safety. It is about your driver's license, not guilt or innocence of the crime. If you failed or refused a chemical test, the state can revoke your license administratively — and this can happen before the criminal case is resolved. The standard of proof is the lower civil standard, and the issues are narrower (focused on the stop, the testing, and the procedures). (See our pages on implied consent and license revocation and challenging implied-consent revocation.)
The Deadline That Catches People
The single most important practical difference: the implied-consent case has a short, firm deadline to file a petition for judicial review of the revocation. If you miss it, you generally lose the ability to challenge the license revocation — no matter what happens in the criminal case. People who focus only on the criminal charge often let this deadline pass and lose their license by default. (See our page on DWI license consequences.)
How the Two Cases Interact
Although separate, the cases overlap factually — both can turn on whether the stop was lawful, whether testing was done correctly, and whether your rights were honored. A win in one does not automatically resolve the other, but issues raised in the implied-consent case (like a bad stop or a testing problem) can be closely related to defenses in the criminal case. Coordinating both is part of a complete DWI defense.
Why This Matters for Your Strategy
Because the license case moves quickly and independently, you cannot afford to "wait and see" how the criminal case goes. Both need attention from the start — preserving the right to challenge the revocation, identifying testing and stop issues, and lining up the defenses that apply to each. Treating a DWI as one case instead of two is a common and costly mistake.
Key Terms
- Implied consent: The civil process governing license revocation in a DWI.
- Administrative revocation: The license loss imposed outside the criminal case.
- Judicial review: The court challenge to a revocation, with a strict deadline.
- Beyond a reasonable doubt: The criminal case's high burden of proof.
- Two-case structure: The fact that a DWI creates separate criminal and civil cases.
Questions people ask about dwi criminal case vs. implied consent case in minnesota
Does a Minnesota DWI create two cases?
Yes. A DWI sets off a criminal case (the charge itself) and a separate civil implied-consent case (about your license). They have different courts, rules, burdens of proof, and deadlines.
What is the implied consent case?
It is the civil, administrative process through the Department of Public Safety that decides whether your driver's license is revoked after a failed or refused test. It is not about guilt of the crime and uses a lower standard of proof.
Why does the deadline matter so much?
The implied-consent case has a short, strict deadline to petition for judicial review of the revocation. Miss it, and you generally lose the chance to challenge the license loss, regardless of the criminal outcome.
If I beat the criminal case, do I keep my license?
Not automatically. The cases are separate, so a criminal result does not by itself undo a license revocation. The implied-consent case must be addressed on its own terms and timeline.
Should I handle both cases at once?
Yes. Because the license case moves quickly and independently, both need attention from the start. Issues like a bad stop or testing problems can matter to each, and waiting can forfeit your rights.
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Read the guideThe information on this article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship.