[Cite as State v. Allen, 2010-Ohio-1257.]




                       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
                           THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                SENECA COUNTY




STATE OF OHIO,

        PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE,                                CASE NO. 13-09-25

        v.

TIFFANY M. ALLEN,                                          OPINION

        DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.




                           Appeal from Tiffin Municipal Court
                           Trial Court No. 2009 TRC 1117 AB

                                       Judgment Affirmed

                             Date of Decision: March 29, 2010




APPEARANCES:

        Richard A. Kahler for Appellant

        Richard A. Palau for Appellee
Case No. 13-09-25


SHAW, J.

       {¶1} Although originally placed on our accelerated calendar, we elect,

pursuant to Local Rule 12(5), to issue a full opinion in lieu of a judgment entry.

       {¶2} Defendant-Appellant Tiffany Allen (“Allen”) appeals the July 6,

2009 Judgment Entry of the Tiffin Municipal Court denying her appeal and

request to invalidate the Administrative License Suspension and upholding the

seizure of her driver’s license in violation of R.C. 4511.19(A)(1)(a) and (h).

       {¶3} The facts pertinent to this appeal are as follows. On May 10, 2009,

at 3:26 a.m., Tiffin Police Sergeant Stevens was on patrol and stopped at a traffic

light when he noticed Allen’s car drive through the intersection without the

headlights or tail lights illuminated. Sergeant Stevens pulled behind her car and

activated the emergency overhead light on the police cruiser signaling her to stop.

He approached the vehicle and asked Allen for identification. At this time, he

observed Allen’s eyes to be red and bloodshot and noticed her movements were

lethargic. As he conversed with Allen, he also smelled a strong odor of alcohol

emitting from her breath.

       {¶4} Sergeant Stevens asked Allen to step out of the vehicle to perform a

variety of field sobriety tests.   Allen failed these tests and Sergeant Stevens

advised her that she was under arrest. He then had her vehicle towed and took her

to the Tiffin Police Department. Sergeant Stevens showed Allen the BMV form



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22551 and read it to her. He then asked if she would submit to a chemical test of

her breath and informed her of the consequences of refusal. Allen submitted to the

test which returned a reading of 0.204%— a prohibited concentration of alcohol.

The test findings resulted in the immediate suspension of Allen’s driving

privileges, also referred to as an Administrative License Suspension (“ALS”).

         {¶5} Prior to releasing her from police custody, Sergeant Stevens gave

Allen an unsworn copy of the BMV form 2255. However, he failed to notarize the

copies of the form that he sent to BMV Registrar and the trial court as required by

R.C. 4511.192(D)(1)(d) and (E).

         {¶6} Allen appealed the ALS and the trial court heard the matter on July

6, 2009. At the hearing, Sergeant Stevens testified that he sent unsworn copies of

the BMV form 2255 to the Registrar and the trial court. On the stand and under

oath, Sergeant Stevens testified to each of the statutory requirements contained in

the BMV form 2255. Allen orally requested the trial court to invalidate the ALS

claiming Sergeant Stevens’ failure to submit a sworn copy of the BMV form 2255

to the Registrar and the trial court rendered the ALS ineffective. The trial court

denied her request upholding the ALS.



1
  This form is required by R.C. 4511.191(C)(1) and is statutorily referred to as the “sworn report.” The
purpose of this document is to inform the arrestee of the consequences for refusing to submit to a chemical
test upon request, as well as the consequences of the arrestee submitting to chemical test if found to have a
prohibited concentration of alcohol in the blood, breath or urine. It is also in this form where the arresting
officer states the reasonable grounds, present at the time of arrest, to believe the arrestee was operating the
vehicle while under the influence.


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       {¶7} Allen now appeals asserting a single assignment of error.

       THE TRIAL COURT ERRED            IN AFFIRMING THE
       ADMINISTRATIVE LICENSE SUSPENSION AGAINST THE
       DEFENDANT-APPELLANT AND DENYING HER ATTEMPTS TO
       VACATE, DISMISS AND NEGATE HER ADMINSTRATIVE
       LICENSE SUSPENSION ISSUE MAY 10, 2009.

       {¶8} In her sole assignment of error, Allen argues that her ALS is

ineffective because Sergeant Stevens failed to send notarized copies of the BMV

form 2255 (the “report”) to the Registrar and the trial court. Specifically, she

maintains that submitting a sworn copy of the report is a mandatory prerequisite to

an effective ALS. Therefore because Sergeant Stevens did not notarize the report,

her ALS was never valid.

       {¶9} Upon arrest for operating a vehicle under the influence, R.C.

4511.192(B) requires the arresting officer to read specific language to the arrestee

prior to requesting the arrestee submit to a chemical test.      BMV form 2255

contains the same language found in the statute informing the arrestee of the

charge for which she is arrested and states in pertinent part: “[i]f you take any

chemical test required by law and are found to be at or over the prohibited amount

of alcohol * * * your Ohio driving privileges will be suspended immediately, and

you will have to pay a fee to have the privileges reinstated.” (Emphasis added). If

the arrestee submits to the chemical test and the test results indicate a prohibited

concentration of alcohol in the person’s breath the arresting officer shall, “[o]n



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behalf of the registrar of motor vehicles, notify that person that, independent of

any penalties or sanctions imposed on the person, the person’s Ohio driver’s

license or commercial driver’s license or permit or nonresident operative privilege

is suspended immediately.”           R.C. 4511.192(D)(1)(a) (Emphasis added).

Additionally, R.C. 4511.191(B)(1) provides record keeping instructions to the

registrar stating, “[u]pon receipt of the sworn report of a law enforcement officer *

* * the registrar shall enter the into the registrar’s records the fact that the person’s

driver’s or commercial driver’s license or permit or nonresident operating

privilege was suspended by the arresting officer[.] (Emphasis added).

       {¶10} It is clear from the statutory language above that the arrestee’s

suspension is effective immediately upon the chemical test results finding that the

arrestee’s breath contained a prohibited concentration of alcohol.            Therefore

contrary to Allen’s assertions, her license suspension was effective immediately

upon the alcohol concentration in her breath registering at 0.204% and thus was

not dependent on the registrar receiving a sworn copy of the BMV form 2255.

Moreover, the receipt of the sworn report merely operates as a record keeping

function. Upon receiving the sworn report, the Registrar makes a record of the

suspension already effectuated at the time of arrest.

       {¶11} Furthermore, to interpret the effectiveness of the ALS to be

dependent on the Registrar receiving a sworn report is not only contrary to the



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express statutory language but would also serve to make the suspension process

inefficient and impractical. If the ALS does not take effect immediately upon

refusal to submit to the chemical test or upon the chemical test indicating a

prohibited concentration of alcohol, then presumably a person’s driver’s license

would remain effective until the Registrar processed the form. Depending on the

jurisdiction, this could take a day or several days leading to a disparate result for

when the ALS becomes effective. On the other hand, effectuating the suspension

immediately at the time of a refusal or failure of the chemical test provides for a

uniformed application of the ALS process across jurisdictional lines.

        {¶12} Allen also argues that Sergeant Steven’s testimony at the ALS

appeal was an insufficient substitute for submitting the report sworn. In asserting

this argument, Allen relies on the language contained in R.C. 4511.192(D)(1)2

which states in pertinent part:

        (D)(1) If a law enforcement officer asks a person under arrest *
        * * to submit to a chemical test * * * the person submits to the
        test or tests and the test results indicate a prohibited
        concentration of alcohol, a controlled substance, or a metabolite
        of a controlled substance in the person's whole blood, blood
        serum or plasma, breath, or urine at the time of the alleged
        offense, the arresting officer shall do all of the following:
        ***



2
  It should be noted that in her brief Allen claims to cite to this section, however the actual language
included in the brief is from a prior version of the statute R.C. 4511.191(D)(1)(c) which was later
recodified under the current section R.C. 4511.192(D)(1)(d) in 2002 and subsequently amended several
times. While the actual language changed, the statutory law remained substantially the same.


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      (d) Send to the registrar, within forty-eight hours after the
      arrest of the person, a sworn report that includes all of the
      following statements:

      (i) That the officer had reasonable grounds to believe that, at
      the time of the arrest, the arrested person was operating a
      vehicle, streetcar, or trackless trolley in violation of division (A)
      or (B) of section 4511.19 of the Revised Code or a municipal OVI
      ordinance or for being in physical control of a stationary vehicle,
      streetcar, or trackless trolley in violation of section 4511.194 of
      the Revised Code or a substantially equivalent municipal
      ordinance;

      (ii) That the person was arrested and charged with a violation
      of division (A) or (B) of section 4511.19 of the Revised Code,
      section 4511.194 of the Revised Code or a substantially
      equivalent municipal ordinance, or a municipal OVI ordinance;
      ***
      (v) If the person was under arrest as described in division
      (A)(5) of section 4511.191 of the Revised Code and the chemical
      test or tests were performed in accordance with that division,
      that the person was under arrest as described in that division,
      that the chemical test or tests were performed in accordance
      with that division, and that test results indicated a prohibited
      concentration of alcohol, a controlled substance, or a metabolite
      of a controlled substance in the person's whole blood, blood
      serum or plasma, breath, or urine at the time of the alleged
      offense.
      ***
      (F) The sworn report of an arresting officer completed under
      this section is prima-facie proof of the information and
      statements that it contains. It shall be admitted and considered
      as prima-facie proof of the information and statements that it
      contains in any appeal under section 4511.197 of the Revised
      Code relative to any suspension of a person's driver's or
      commercial driver's license or permit or nonresident operating
      privilege that results from the arrest covered by the report.




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       {¶13} Upon reviewing this section in the context of the entire statute, it is

clear that Allen’s effort to relate this section to the effectiveness of her ALS

misconstrues the statutory language. R.C. 4511.192(D)(1)(d) and (F) govern the

evidentiary characteristic attributed to the sworn report when the ALS is appealed

but it does not, in any way, address the validity of the ALS. If the legislature had

intended an unsworn report to render the ALS invalid, it would have been a simple

matter to expressly say so in the statute.

       {¶14} Instead, R.C. 4511.192(D)(1)(d) requires specific information to be

contained in the report which serves as evidence in support of the ALS. Further,

R.C. 4511.192(F) only provides that when the officer submits the report sworn, the

report shall be admitted as prima-facie proof of its contents. Taken together these

provisions seem to indicate that if the report was unsworn it would be inadmissible

standing alone to prove its contents. Therefore, submitting the report unsworn

only strips it of the benefit of serving as prima-facie proof and thereby requiring

some other evidence to be admitted to support the ALS when challenged on

appeal. However, nowhere in the language of the statute does it state that an

unsworn report renders the ALS ineffective or invalid.

       {¶15} In the instant case, because the Sergeant Stevens’ report was

unsworn, it could not be offered as prima-facie proof of the information and

statements it contained. However, Sergeant Stevens testified to the statutorily



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required contents of the report pursuant to R.C. 4511.192(D)(1)(d)(i)(ii) and (v)3 at

the ALS appeal. Other jurisdictions have held that the testimony of the arresting

officer regarding the completion of all the requirements covered by the report is

sufficient to support the ALS on appeal. See State v. Clinger, 2005-Ohio-2277, ¶

21 (Ohio App. 4 Dist.) (holding that even if the report failed as a sworn report, the

officer’s testimony regarding the contents of the report was sufficient to prove the

officer complied with the statutory requirements); see also Triguba v. Registrar,

BMV (June 27, 1996, Franklin App. 95 APG11-1416, 1996 WL 36205, *2)

(stating that “[i]n the absence of a sworn report, the registrar could call upon the

arresting officer to testify in person as to the information which the report is

required to contain”).

        {¶16} Furthermore, in Langen v. Caltrider the court specifically addressed

this issue. That court stated that prima facie proof that the procedures mandated

by the statute have been satisfied can be established “either through the arresting

officer’s sworn report * * * or through the officer’s sworn testimony at a hearing

held during the appeal from the administrative license suspension.” Langen v.

Caltrider, (Aug. 20, 1999), Montgomery No. 17698, 1999 WL 957749, *4.

(Emphasis added). Further the Langen Court concluded, on facts similar to the


3
  These three requirements are: 1) Sergeant Stevens had reasonable grounds at the time of the arrest to
believe that Allen was operating her vehicle under the influence; 2) He arrested Allen and charged her; and
3) Allen submitted to the chemical test and the results indicated her breath contained a prohibited
concentration of alcohol.


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case sub judice, that submitting the report unsworn was “cured” during the ALS

hearing, when the arresting officer testified—under oath—to each of the statutory

requirements contained in the report.      Id.   We concur with the foregoing

authorities in concluding that when the arresting officer submits the report

unsworn, the testimony of the officer at the subsequent judicial proceedings may

serve as prime facie proof of the completion of the statutory requirements

contained in the report.

       {¶17} Finally, we note that the issues which can be raised on the appeal of

an ALS are statutorily limited. R.C. 4511.197(C) states:

       If a person appeals a suspension * * * the scope of the appeal is
       limited to determining whether one or more of the following
       conditions have not been met:

       (1) Whether the arresting law enforcement officer had
       reasonable ground to believe the arrested person was operating
       a vehicle, streetcar, or trackless trolley in violation of division
       (A) or (B) of section 4511.19 of the Revised Code or a municipal
       OVI ordinance or was in physical control of a vehicle, streetcar,
       or trackless trolley in violation of section 4511.194 of the Revised
       Code or a substantially equivalent municipal ordinance and
       whether the arrested person was in fact placed under arrest;

       (2) Whether the law enforcement officer requested the
       arrested person to submit to the chemical test or tests
       designated pursuant to division (A) of section 4511.191 of the
       Revised Code;

       (3) If the person was under arrest as described in division
       (A)(5) of section 4511.191 of the Revised Code, whether the
       arresting officer advised the person at the time of the arrest that
       if the person refused to take a chemical test, the officer could


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       employ whatever reasonable means were necessary to ensure
       that the person submitted to a chemical test of the person's
       whole blood or blood serum or plasma; or if the person was
       under arrest other than as described in division (A)(5) of section
       4511.191 of the Revised Code, whether the arresting officer
       informed the arrested person of the consequences of refusing to
       be tested or of submitting to the test or tests;

       (4) Whichever of the following is applicable:

       (a) If the suspension was imposed under division (B) of section
       4511.191 and section 4511.192 of the Revised Code, whether the
       arrested person refused to submit to the chemical test or tests
       requested by the officer;

       (b) If the suspension was imposed under division (C) of section
       4511.191 and section 4511.192 of the Revised Code, whether the
       arrest was for a violation of division (A) or (B) of section 4511.19
       of the Revised Code or a municipal OVI ordinance and, if it was,
       whether the chemical test results indicate that at the time of the
       alleged offense the arrested person's whole blood, blood serum
       or plasma, breath, or urine contained at least the concentration
       of alcohol specified in division (A)(1)(b), (c), (d), or (e) of section
       4511.19 of the Revised Code or at least the concentration of a
       listed controlled substance or a listed metabolite of a controlled
       substance specified in division (A)(1)(j) of section 4511.19 of the
       Revised Code.

The specific criteria set forth in R.C. 4511.197(C) limits the scope of the ALS

appeal to these four areas. Noticeably absent is any consideration of whether the

procedures mandated by the statute have been satisfied. See State v. Drake, 2002-

Ohio-817, *2 (Ohio App. 9 Dist.) (holding that an arresting officer’s failure to

follow the correct notarization procedure did not fall within the statutorily-limited

areas which could be the basis of an ALS appeal).



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       {¶18} In the instant case, Allen does not argue that any conditions found in

R.C. 4511.197(C) have not been met.            Rather she seeks to have her ALS

terminated based on a technical flaw which was later cured by the officer’s

testimony and falls outside the purview of her ALS appeal. For all these reasons,

we find no error in the trial court’s decision to uphold the ALS in this case.

Accordingly Allen’s assignment of error is overruled.

       {¶19} Based on the foregoing, the July 6, 2009 Judgment Entry of the

Tiffin Municipal Court, Seneca County, Ohio upholding Allen administrative

license suspension is affirmed.

                                                                 Judgment Affirmed

WILLAMOWSKI, P.J., concur.

/jlr



ROGERS, J., Dissenting.

       {¶20} I must dissent from the opinion of the majority which ignores the

clear and unequivocal language of the statute. R.C. 4511.192(D)(1) requires that

“the arresting officer shall do all of the following: * * * (d) Send to the registrar,

within forty-eight hours after the arrest of the person, a sworn report * * *.”

(Emphasis added.) The majority states that the only impact of an officer’s failure

to swear to the contents of the form is that it is not then “prima facie proof of the



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information and statements it contains.” I strongly disagree. I would hold that an

officer’s failure to swear to the contents of the BMV Form 2255 invalidates any

administrative license suspension that could have resulted from proper compliance

with the statute.

       {¶21} The majority also fails to recognize another portion of the statute

which requires notice to the person arrested:

       The arresting officer shall give the officer’s sworn report that is
       completed under this section to the arrested person at the time of
       the arrest, or the registrar of motor vehicles shall send the report
       to the person by regular first class mail as soon as possible after
       receipt of the report, but not later than fourteen days after
       receipt of it. An arresting officer may give an unsworn report to
       the arrested person at the time of the arrest provided the report is
       complete when given to the arrested person and subsequently is
       sworn to by the arresting officer. As soon as possible, but not
       later than forty-eight hours after the arrest of the person, the
       arresting officer shall send a copy of the sworn report to the court
       in which the arrested person is to appear on the charge for
       which the person was arrested.

(Emphasis added.) R.C. 4511.192(E). Are we to ignore this requirement as well?

See State v. Frame, 5th Dist. No. CA-881, 1999 WL 333249 (finding that “[t]he

sending of a copy of the sworn report to the court is a mandatory requirement.

The statute uses the term ‘shall’ and does not allow for an arresting officer’s

authentication of the BMV Form 2255 at an ALS appeal hearing as a substitute for

the actual sending of the document”).




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       {¶22} I submit that the requirement that BMV Form 2255 be sworn to by

the arresting officer is no less important than the swearing to a criminal complaint,

and without which the complaint would be a nullity. Because the effect of an

administrative license suspension is intended to be immediate and without prior

due process, perfect compliance must be demanded.

       {¶23} The majority rationalizes that the legislature could have added

language that the suspension will not be effective unless the form is properly

sworn, had that been its intention. However, the statute clearly states what the

arresting officer must do to effect the suspension; to then state the negative would

be superfluous.     Accordingly, I would find that the administrative license

suspension was a nullity and reverse the judgment of the trial court.

       {¶24} Finally, I note that the majority opinion finds that R.C. 4511.197(C)

limits the scope of appeals from administrative license suspensions, and that scope

does not include considerations of whether the statutorily mandated procedures

were satisfied. Assuming, arguendo, that I concur with this finding, perhaps the

appropriate procedure to obtain relief would be the filing of a special writ against

the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.

/jlr




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