STATE DEPT. OF LICENSING v. Grewal
This text of 33 P.3d 94 (STATE DEPT. OF LICENSING v. Grewal) 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.
Opinion
STATE of Washington, DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING, Appellant/Cross-Respondent,
v.
Sukhjiwan GREWAL, Respondent/Cross-Appellant.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.
*95 Patricia Lee Allen, Bellingham, for Appellant.
Howard Stanton Stein, Bellevue, for Respondent.
WEBSTER, J.
When the results of a breath test confirm that a driver's blood alcohol content is in violation of the law, police officers are required to send a sworn report to the Department of Licensing. Upon receipt of this report, the Department revokes the driver's license. In this case, the trial court reversed the Department's license revocation, concluding that the Department did not have jurisdiction to initiate license revocation proceedings because the sworn report submitted by the arresting police officer did not state that the breath test was a "lawful" test or that the BAC Verifier Datamaster was the testing instrument used. Because the statute does not require the sworn report to contain this information, we reverse.
FACTS
In the early hours of the morning in November of 1999, a few weeks before Sukhjiwan Grewal's 21st birthday, a State trooper stopped him for speeding on Interstate-5, near Bellingham. The trooper suspected that Grewal was intoxicated and arrested him for driving under the influence and being under the age of 21, a misdemeanor. After transporting him to the Whatcom County jail, the trooper gave Grewal the required implied consent warnings for breath, which included informing him that he had the right to refuse a breath test and warning him of the consequences of doing so.
Grewal submitted to the breath test and the results were 0.052 and 0.055. The trooper completed a sworn report containing the test results and sent it to the Department of Licensing.
Upon receipt of the report, the Department began proceedings to revoke Grewal's driver's license. Grewal requested an administrative hearing, at which the license revocation was affirmed. Grewal appealed to Whatcom County Superior Court. The trial court reversed the license revocation, agreeing with Grewal's position that the sworn report was insufficient to confer jurisdiction on the Department because it did not specify the testing instrument used or assert that the test was "lawful".
SUFFICIENCY OF THE SWORN REPORT
RCW ch 46.20 governs drivers' license revocations. Within this chapter, the implied consent statute, RCW 46.20.308(1), provides that a person who drives in Washington is deemed to have consented to a test to determine the alcohol content of his or her blood or breath if arrested for suspicion of driving under the influence. Under the statute, if the breath test results indicate that the driver's alcohol concentration is 0.08 or more, or the driver is under 21 and the driver's alcohol concentration is 0.02 or more, the arresting officer is directed to submit a sworn report to the Department of Licensing within 72 hours.[1]
The statute also sets out specifications for the sworn report. The report must state:
(i) That the officer had reasonable grounds to believe the arrested person had been *96 driving or was in actual physical control of a motor vehicle within this state while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs, or both, or was under the age of twenty-one years and had been driving or was in actual physical control of a motor vehicle while having an alcohol concentration in violation of RCW 46.61.503;
(ii) That after receipt of the warnings required by subsection (2) of this section the person refused to submit to a test of his or her blood or breath, or a test was administered and the results indicated that the alcohol concentration of the person's breath or blood was 0.08 or more if the person is age twenty-one or over, or was in violation of RCW 46.61.502, 46.61.503, or 46.61.504 if the person is under the age of twenty-one; and
(iii) Any other information that the director may require by rule.[2]
Upon receipt of the sworn report, the Department suspends the driver's license and affords the driver the opportunity to request a hearing to contest revocation.[3]
In reviewing a license revocation decision, this court stands in the same position as the trial court.[4]
Here, the arresting officer submitted a standard form sworn report which stated that "a test was administered" and reported the results of Grewal's breath tests.[5] In its appeal, the Department challenges the trial court's conclusion that the sworn report must specify the testing method that was used.
Receipt of the sworn report from the arresting officer is the jurisdictional prerequisite to the Department of Licensing's power to institute license revocation proceedings.[6] A technical deficiency in the officer's report does not deprive the Department of jurisdiction to proceed.[7] As this court stated in Broom v. Department of Licensing:
[I]t is the existence of a certified report, not its contents, that confers jurisdiction on DOL and ... the use of summary language in a report is adequate, so long as it sets forth the information required by RCW 46.20.308(6). In holding that the contents of a report are not the basis of DOL's jurisdiction, we do not suggest that a report containing a significant variation from or an omission of the information required under RCW 46.20.308(6) would be adequate to confer jurisdiction. We hold only that the use of summary language will not defeat jurisdiction where the summary language accurately conveys the information required under the statute.[8]
Grewal argues that the omission in the sworn report of the type of test administered is a "significant variation or an omission of the information required under 46.20.308(6)" and thus, deprived the Department of jurisdiction to revoke his license.[9] The statute does not support this argument. RCW 46.20.308(6), as quoted above, provides explicit requirements for what the sworn report must contain. With respect to the breath test, the statute requires the report to state that a "test was administered" which is exactly the language in the standard form sworn report used here.[10]
Ignoring this clear provision, Grewal points to separate RCW and WAC provisions under which he argues that the Datamaster is the only instrument which may be used to establish blood alcohol content for evidentiary purposes in a criminal or civil proceeding.[11] Assuming this to be true, these provisions still do not implicate the *97 required contents of a sworn report. Grewal notes that the implied consent statute refers to RCW 46.61.506
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
33 P.3d 94, 108 Wash. App. 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-dept-of-licensing-v-grewal-washctapp-2001.