Brungardt v. Kansas Dept. of Revenue

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJune 12, 2020
Docket120409
StatusPublished

This text of Brungardt v. Kansas Dept. of Revenue (Brungardt v. Kansas Dept. of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brungardt v. Kansas Dept. of Revenue, (kanctapp 2020).

Opinion

No. 120,409

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

KYLE T. BRUNGARDT, Appellee,

v.

KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. Whether a court has jurisdiction under the Kansas Judicial Review Act presents a question of law over which our review is unlimited.

2. A petitioner seeking review of an administrative agency's decision under the Kansas Judicial Review Act must set forth his or her reasons for believing relief should be granted. When a petition gives notice to the court and the parties that the petitioner is challenging the validity of the "Officer's Certification and Notice of Suspension" form, the district court has jurisdiction to consider and resolve that question.

3. The "Officer's Certification and Notice of Suspension"—commonly called the DC-27 form—memorializes that the officer provided the driver all required legal notices under K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 8-1001. In signing that form, an officer certifies the requirements of K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 8-1002(a) have been fulfilled. If these notice and certification requirements are not met, the Division of Motor Vehicles must dismiss the administrative proceeding and return any suspended license.

1 4. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 8-1002(b) indicates that an officer's certification of a DC-27 form "shall be complete upon signing, and no additional acts of oath, affirmation, acknowledgment or proof of execution shall be required." This language was enacted to avoid an argument that additional foundational requirements were necessary before the Division of Vehicles could suspend a licensee's driving privileges.

5. "Signing" a document can encompass more than the physical act of manually writing a person's name. Instead, a signature is an indication by any distinctive mark— including a previously created image of an electronic signature—for the purpose of communicating and recording a person's authorization, certification, agreement, or identity. "Signing" is merely the act of affixing that signature.

Appeal from Finney District Court; ROBERT J. FREDERICK, judge. Opinion filed June 12, 2020. Reversed and remanded.

John D. Shultz, of Legal Services Bureau, Kansas Department of Revenue, for appellant.

John M. Lindner, of Lindner, Marquez & Koksal, of Garden City, for appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., GREEN and WARNER, JJ.

WARNER, J.: A person's signature may take many forms. Caselaw and statutes have recognized that a person may affix his or her signature by an "X" or other marking, by manually writing his or her name by hand, or even by having an amanuensis sign in a person's stead. Regardless of the form used, courts have emphasized that it is the person's intent in signing—to communicate and memorialize his or her authorization or agreement—that matters.

2 The case before us presents another wrinkle in this ever-evolving discussion. Kyle Brungardt's license was suspended for driving under the influence of alcohol when he failed a breath test. He challenged the suspension, claiming the notice-and-certification form the officer provided was invalid because it used an electronic, not handwritten, signature. When presented with this claim, the district court found the process used by the breath-test machine for creating and affixing the officer's electronic signature violated Kansas implied-consent statutes. In particular, the court found the officer signed the form when he initially created the image of his electronic signature, not when that signature was affixed to the challenged form. But "signing" is broader than the physical act of handwriting a person's name. Thus, we reverse the district court's decision.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Corporal Michael Kerley of the Garden City Police Department arrested Brungardt for driving under the influence of alcohol. The circumstances leading to his arrest are uncontested in this appeal and largely irrelevant to the issues we consider here.

After arresting Brungardt, Corporal Kerley administered a breath test, and Brungardt registered a blood-alcohol concentration well beyond the legal limit of .08. Corporal Kerley completed this breath test and the accompanying mandatory procedures using an Intoxilyzer 9000 machine. This machine allows officers to fill out required forms—including the "Officer's Certification and Notice of Suspension," commonly called a DC-27 form—electronically, instead of completing multiple paper forms once testing is complete.

The DC-27 form performs two primary functions. First, it memorializes that an officer provided the driver all the required advisories under K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 8-1001 before administering a breath test. Second, in signing that form after a driver fails a

3 breath test, an officer certifies that various legal requirements for requesting a test were present, that the driver failed the test, and that the officer followed mandatory testing protocols. At the hearing before the district court in this case, Corporal Kerley explained that the Intoxilyzer 9000 digitizes the entire testing process, from the test itself to certifying the required notice forms:

"When it starts, we press the green button. It goes through its testing process. Its—does its—all its calibrations. After that it asks for the officer's information. I swipe my card. I verify my name, the business address, my operator ID number, and then I sign as well saying that I'm either the arresting officer or I'm just the [I]ntoxilyzer operator, or both. That signature is then used for every form subsequent from there. "After the suspect renders a breath sample and it's valid, then it will ask me, do I want to fill out any other forms, the DC-27, CDL-5, or DC-28. I can do all those forms, and it uses the same signature as the beginning, as I go through each form. So I don’t have to sign multiple times. It just uses the same signature."

An officer filling out the DC-27 form on the Intoxilyzer 9000 must check boxes and initial each line on the form regarding the various legal certification requirements. But the electronic signature used on the form (and all other forms the officer fills out) is a copy of the same electronic-signature image the officer provided initially.

Brungardt's driver's license was administratively suspended by the Kansas Department of Revenue (the Department) because his blood-alcohol concentration exceeded the legal limit. He requested an administrative hearing, challenging the corporal's grounds to arrest him and administer the breath test. He also claimed the DC- 27 form was invalid because it lacked an "original" signature—that is, he asserted Corporal Kerley's electronic signature on the form was ineffective. The hearing officer disagreed and affirmed the suspension. Brungardt then filed a petition for judicial review with the Finney County District Court, raising multiple arguments including his claim that the DC-27 form required an "original" (nonelectronic) signature.

4 The district court rejected Brungardt's arguments that Corporal Kerley lacked reasonable grounds to request the breath test and probable cause to arrest him. The court agreed with Brungardt, however, that the DC-27 form was invalid, albeit for slightly different reasons.

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Related

Dewey v. Kansas Department of Revenue
713 P.2d 490 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1986)
Enslow v. Kansas Department of Revenue
996 P.2d 361 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2000)
Guthrie v. Anderson
49 Kan. 416 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1892)
Hamlin v. Kansas Department of Revenue
204 P.3d 562 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2009)
Rebel v. Kansas Department of Revenue
204 P.3d 551 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2009)

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Brungardt v. Kansas Dept. of Revenue, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brungardt-v-kansas-dept-of-revenue-kanctapp-2020.