Barbara Kanta v. Washington State Department of Licensing

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 14, 2025
Docket58434-4
StatusPublished

This text of Barbara Kanta v. Washington State Department of Licensing (Barbara Kanta v. Washington State Department of Licensing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbara Kanta v. Washington State Department of Licensing, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

January 14, 2025

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II BARBARA KANTA, No. 58434-4-II

Petitioner,

v.

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO OF LICENSING, PUBLISH

Respondent.

The State of Washington, as the respondent, and the Pierce County Prosecuting Attorney’s

Office, as a third party, both move for publication of this Court’s opinion filed on October 1, 2024.

filed a motion for publication in this court’s opinion filed on July 18, 2023. After consideration,

the court grants the motion. It is now

ORDERED that the opinion will be published.

PANEL: Jj. Maxa, Glasgow, Cruser

FOR THE COURT:

CHIEF JUDGE

FOR THE COURT: Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

October 1, 2024

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT UNPUBLISHED OPINION OF LICENSING,

CRUSER, C.J. — Barbara Kanta was arrested for driving under the influence in July 2021.

Shortly after her arrest, a phlebotomist drew a sample of Kanta’s blood which was sent to a

laboratory for analysis. The laboratory tested Kanta’s blood for alcohol in May 2022, and issued a

report in September 2022 stating that Kanta’s blood sample contained 0.18% alcohol. In November

2022, the Department of Licensing (the department) suspended Kanta’s driving license. Kanta

contested the suspension, arguing that because the vial used to store her blood expired in November

2021 (according to the manufacturer’s certificate of compliance), the blood was not properly

preserved and therefore did not comply with the Washington Administrative Code (WAC). A

hearing examiner rejected Kanta’s argument and affirmed the suspension. Kanta appealed to the

superior court. The superior court found that substantial evidence supported the hearing examiner’s No. 58434-4-II

conclusion that the blood test complied with the necessary criteria, and was therefore properly

admitted.

Kanta appeals to this court, arguing that the hearing examiner erred in admitting the results

of her blood test into evidence because the vials were expired at the time of testing. As such, Kanta

argues, the superior court erred in affirming the suspension of her license. The department

responds that the blood test complied with all necessary criteria as designated by the state

toxicologist and the administrative code, and therefore, the hearing examiner did not err in

admitting the test. We agree with the department.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND INCIDENT

In July 2021, Barbara Kanta was arrested for driving under the influence. According to a

witness, Kanta’s vehicle veered off the road and overturned once or twice before landing in a ditch.

Kitsap County Sheriff’s Deputy D.R. Corn responded to the collision. Corn advised Kanta that she

was under arrest for driving under the influence. After reading Kanta her Fifth Amendment rights,

Corn used a preliminary breath test (PBT) to test Kanta’s breath for alcohol content. According to

the PBT, Kanta’s breath alcohol content registered at 0.173%.

Kanta voluntarily consented to her blood being drawn for testing. Shortly after she was

arrested, she was transported to a nearby medical center, where Gillian Stockwell, a phlebotomist,

drew samples of Kanta’s blood. Stockwell used Deputy Corn’s WSP blood draw kit to obtain the

samples. Corn stated in the incident report that “[p]rior to providing this blood kit to the

phlebotomist [he] checked to make sure that the tubes were in good condition, were not expired,

and that the white preservative anticoagulant powder was present in the tubes.” Clerk’s Papers

2 No. 58434-4-II

(CP) at 48. After Stockwell obtained the blood samples, Corn kept the sample in his possession

until entering them as evidence in the Sheriff’s office in Silverdale.

Kanta’s blood samples were then sent to the Seattle Toxicology Laboratory. The blood

samples were tested on May 19 and May 20, 2022. In September 2022, the laboratory issued a

toxicology test report, finding that Kanta’s blood alcohol content registered at 0.18%.

The blood collection tube used to sample Kanta’s blood was manufactured by BD

Diagnostics. BD Diagnostics issued a certificate of compliance, certifying that the blood collection

tube used complied with the manufacturing specifications governing the ratios of additives, as well

as manufacturing and sterility regulations. According to the certificate of compliance, the tube was

manufactured on December 11, 2019, and was set to expire on November 30, 2021, and it was

manufactured specifically for blood alcohol determination. The certificate of compliance further

provided that “[t]he chemicals added to this tube will not disturb the integrity of the blood sample

relative to the alcohol content.” Id. at 54.

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In October 2022, the department notified Kanta that her license would be suspended from

November 13, 2022 until February 11, 2023. Kanta moved to rescind the suspension of her license,

arguing that the blood test was not valid. An administrative hearing on the matter was held on

November 2, 2022.

Elena Mack, a representative of BD Diagnostics, the test tube manufacturer, provided a

declaration to Kanta. In regard to the expiration of the test tubes, Mack made the following

declarations:

4. . . . The use of BD Vacutainer® Tubes extends beyond the date of the original blood collection. That use includes, but may not be limited to, storage of

3 No. 58434-4-II

the blood within the Tube, in addition to the processing (or extraction) of the blood from the Tube for testing. BD does not make any representation or claim regarding any use of any BD Vacutainer® Tubes for any purpose post-date of any Tubes’ expiration date.

5. BD Vacutainer® Tubes are manufactured and guaranteed to function to accurately determine blood alcohol content up to their date of expiration. BD cannot provide any guarantee or representation regarding the function and efficacy of BD Vacutainer® Tubes after the date of their expiration, including drawing the sample post-expiration, . . . Such conclusion(s) would constitute expert testimony which I am not qualified to opine on. . . .

6. The expiration date included on BD Vacutainer® Tubes is included to ensure the product is working properly from the date of manufacture up to the certain date of expiration as predetermined at the time of manufacture. Although scientific, in general terms, the expiration of BD Vacutainer® Tubes is determined according to a specific blood: additive ratio. Specific lab testing and/or expert analysis would be necessary to determine the efficacy of any BD Vacutainer® Tubes post-expiration date, as the Tubes’ expiration date, alone, likely cannot be the only factor to their efficacy.

Id. at 21-22.

The hearing examiner sustained the suspension of Kanta’s driving license, after concluding

that the collection and testing of her blood sample complied with RCW 46.61.506. The hearing

examiner noted that the arresting officer “reported that the blood vials were not expired when they

were used to collect the sample of Ms. Kanta’s blood.” Id. at 5-6 n.3. The hearing examiner found

that “[t]he facts of the case do not show the validity of Ms. Kanta’s blood test result was

compromised.” Id.

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