               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
                              No. 09–0338

                           Filed July 23, 2010


STATE OF IOWA,

      Appellant,

vs.

JEFFREY ALAN FISCHER,

      Appellee.


      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Hancock County, John S.

Mackey, Judge.



      Interlocutory appeal from a decision by the district court granting

a motion to suppress the results of a breath test.     REVERSED AND

REMANDED.



      Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Karen Doland, Assistant

Attorney General (until withdrawal), and then Bridget A. Chambers,
Assistant Attorney General, and Karen R. Kaufman Salic, County

Attorney, for appellant.



      R.A. Bartolomei of Bartolomei & Lange, PLC, Des Moines, for

appellee.
                                           2

CADY, Justice.

       In this appeal, we must decide if a law enforcement officer can use

a computer screen to make a “written request” to withdraw a bodily

substance for testing from a driver suspected of operating while

intoxicated.     We conclude a computer screen satisfies the statutory

requirement of a “written request.” We reverse the decision of the district

court and remand the case for further proceedings.

       I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

       On October 6, 2008, at approximately 7:40 a.m., State Trooper

Joseph Scott stopped a vehicle driven by Jeffrey Alan Fischer in Crystal

Lake, Iowa, because Fischer was not wearing his seat belt. After coming

into contact with Fischer, Trooper Scott made several observations

leading him to conclude that Fischer had been drinking alcohol prior to

driving. Trooper Scott placed Fischer under arrest and transported him

to the Hancock County Sheriff’s Office.

       At the sheriff’s office, Trooper Scott used the laptop from his car to

complete the processing of the arrest using the Traffic and Criminal

Software (TraCS) program. 1          The laptop monitor displayed the form

Trooper Scott was completing, entitled “Request and Notice Under Iowa
Code Chapter 321J/Section 321.208,” also referred to as “Form MOWI.”

The laptop was also connected to the DataMaster breath test machine

located at the sheriff’s office. Trooper Scott sat in front of the computer

screen while Fischer sat to Trooper Scott’s right approximately three to


       1TraCS  is a program that is on the computers used in patrol cars in the state of
Iowa. The program contains different types of forms necessary for patrol officers,
including tickets, warnings, commercial motor vehicle inspections, and OWI paperwork.
Trooper Scott testified that he received extensive training on the system and uses it
every day. Trooper Scott also testified that the OWI report form on the TraCS system
containing the request for specimen at issue in this case is the same as the printed
forms.
                                          3

four feet from the computer screen. The computer screen faced Trooper

Scott.    He testified at the hearing that the screen was not hidden or

shielded     from   Fischer   as     he   implemented   the    implied-consent

procedures. In implementing the procedures, Trooper Scott read Fischer

the “Implied Consent Advisory” from the computer screen. He next read

Fischer the “Request for Specimen,” also displayed on the computer

screen. The request contained the following language: “Having read to

you the appropriate implied consent advisory, I hereby request a

specimen of your Breath for chemical testing to determine the alcohol or

drug content.” The trooper had checked the box on the computer screen

indicating he was requesting a breath sample rather than a blood or

urine sample and had inputted the date and time.              The trooper then

prompted the appearance of a pop-up window of text on the screen of the

laptop in front of him.

         The pop-up window did not consume the entire computer screen

and contained an enlargement of the text following the “Request for

Specimen” language from the form the trooper was completing. The form

remained in the background of the screen while the pop-up window was

active.    The text in the window read:       “Having been read the Implied
Consent Advisory, I . . . to submit to the withdrawal of the specimen(s)

requested.” Two boxes and a signature line also appeared in the window

following the text. The first box was labeled “consent,” and the second

box was labeled “refuse.”          Using a stylus, Fischer checked the box

marked “consent” on the touch screen laptop monitor and signed his

name. After checking the box, the word “consent” appeared to fill in the

textual space between “I” and “to submit.” Fischer’s decision to consent

to a breath test and his signature were instantly recorded and appeared

within the form after the pop-up window disappeared.
                                    4

      After Fischer checked the box next to “consent” and signed his

name, Trooper Scott took a sample of Fischer’s breath using the

DataMaster. The test reported a blood-alcohol level of .157. The trooper

completed the form by signing and dating the form on the screen to

certify the form’s truth and accuracy. Trooper Scott testified a driver is

able to withdraw consent to a breath test prior to administration of the

test, but after the breath test is complete the information entered in the

form on the computer becomes permanent.         Fischer was not given a

printed version of the “Request for Specimen” before the breath test was

administered.

      Fischer was charged with operating while intoxicated, second

offense. He filed a motion to suppress his breath-test results, alleging

the TraCS system’s electronic version of the form containing the “Request

for Specimen” did not meet the “written request” requirement of Iowa

Code section 321J.6(1) (2007). The district court granted the motion to

suppress Fischer’s breath-test results.   The court determined Trooper

Scott did not comply with the “written request” requirement because

neither the computer screen he used to read the pertinent request nor a

paper copy of the form was shown to Fischer prior to the administration

of the test. The State sought, and we granted, discretionary review of the

district court ruling.

      II. Standard of Review.

      The district court granted Fischer’s motion to suppress based on

its interpretation of Iowa Code section 321J.6(1).   We review a district

court’s decision to grant a motion to suppress based on its interpretation

of a statute for errors at law. State v. Stratmeier, 672 N.W.2d 817, 820

(Iowa 2003).
                                          5

        III. Overview of Iowa Implied-Consent Law.

        It has been a crime to operate a motor vehicle while intoxicated in

Iowa since 1911. See 1911 Iowa Acts ch. 72, § 24 (codified at Iowa Code

§ 1571–m23 (Supp. 1913)).             Since that time, the operating-while-

intoxicated laws have evolved in a number of ways, including the

adoption of the implied-consent procedure based on the premise that

persons who drive vehicles are deemed to consent to a chemical test to

determine the alcohol or drug content of their blood when reasonable

grounds exist to believe they were driving while intoxicated.                  Rachel

Hjelmaas, Legislative Services Agency, Legislative Guide to Operating

While    Intoxicated    (OWI)     Law    in    Iowa    1    (2007),     available   at

http://www.legis.state.ia.us/Central/Guides/OWI.pdf.                  The underlying

rationale of the law is that the operation of a motor vehicle on public

streets is a privilege, not a right, subject to reasonable regulation.

Tina Wescott Cafaro, Fixing the Fatal Flaws in OUI Implied Consent Laws,

34 J. Legis. 99, 102 (2008) [hereinafter Cafaro].                 Thus, under the

implied-consent law, drivers impliedly consent to submit to chemical

testing “in return for the privilege of using the public highways.” State v.

Hitchens, 294 N.W.2d 686, 687 (Iowa 1980).

        In 1953, New York became the first state in the nation to enact an

implied-consent law. 2 Cafaro at 103 & n.25 (referring to codified version

of New York’s implied-consent law, N.Y. Veh. & Traf. Law § 1194

(McKinney 2001) (originally enacted by L. 1953, c. 854)). The concept


        2Theconcept of implied consent was conceived after prosecutors began using
chemical-test evidence in the 1940s to convict impaired drivers and scientific
instruments to measure blood alcohol content started to emerge as an alternative to the
withdrawal of blood as a method to scientifically detect the presence of alcohol in the
body. Cafaro at 102. The first stable instrument for measuring blood alcohol from a
breath sample, the Drunkometer, was invented in 1938. Id. at 103 n.24. The
Breathalyzer brand was invented in 1954. Id.
                                          6

was first proposed in Iowa in 1957 when a bill modeled after the

New York statute was introduced in the House of Representatives. H.F.

257, 57th G.A., Reg. Sess., Explanation of House File 257 (Iowa 1957)

(stating the bill is “patterned after the New York statute, which was

enacted a few years ago, but is an improvement on this earlier

legislation”).

        The procedures were subsequently introduced in the Senate and

enacted by the General Assembly in 1963. 3 See S.F. 437, 60th G.A., Reg.

Sess. § 34 (Iowa 1963); 1963 Iowa Acts ch. 114, §§ 36–50 (codified at

Iowa Code ch. 321B (1966)).             The implied-consent procedures were

originally enacted as a part of an overall administrative effort to regulate

the control, sale, and use of alcohol and were not included as an organic

part of the 1966 criminal operating while intoxicated (OWI) laws.                 See

1963 Iowa Acts ch. 114 (entitled “Liquor Control, Sale and Use”). The

General Assembly declared its policy in enacting chapter 321B was “to

control alcoholic beverages and aid the enforcement of laws prohibiting

operation of a motor vehicle while in an intoxicated condition.”                 Iowa

Code § 321B.1 (1966). Thus, although enacted and codified separately

from the criminal OWI chapter, the legislature intended for the section to

have an administrative effect as well as aid in the enforcement of OWI

laws.    In 1986, the implied-consent statutes from chapter 321B were

combined with the criminal OWI laws. 1986 Iowa Acts ch. 1220 (codified

at Iowa Code ch. 321J (1987)). The chemical test results and refusals




        3In1967, the Secretary of Transportation began to issue national uniform
standards for highway safety programs throughout the country. See Cafaro at 104.
The programs were aimed at reducing traffic accidents due to persons driving while
under the influence of alcohol and included an implied-consent law. Id. By 1992,
implied-consent laws were enacted in all fifty states and the District of Columbia. Id.
                                    7

are used today both for license revocation and for OWI criminal

prosecutions. See Iowa Code §§ 321J.2, .12 (2009).

      Although the implied-consent law is based on the premise that all

drivers consent to the withdrawal of a body substance for testing if

suspected of driving while intoxicated, the law is tempered by giving

drivers the right to withdraw this implied consent and refuse the test.

State v. Massengale, 745 N.W.2d 499, 501 (Iowa 2008); see also Iowa

Code § 321J.9 (prohibiting a chemical test after a driver has refused the

officer’s request). Thus, the consent for a chemical test must ultimately

be “freely made, uncoerced, reasoned, and informed.”       State v. Garcia,

756 N.W.2d 216, 220 (Iowa 2009).        This voluntariness requirement is

captured by Iowa Code section 321J.8, which requires law enforcement

officers to advise suspects of all the consequences of a decision to submit

or refuse testing.    See id. (recognizing section 321J.8 sets out a

voluntariness requirement and that consent is involuntary and invalid if

a driver is not reasonably informed of the consequences of refusal).

Viewing the advisory as an informational component in the procedure,

we adopted a reasonableness standard for the methods to be used by law

enforcement officers to convey the advisory. Id. at 222.

      Pursuant to the implied-consent procedure, an officer who has

reasonable grounds to believe a driver is operating a vehicle while

intoxicated must first make a written request to withdraw the driver’s

blood, urine, or breath to determine the specific concentration of alcohol.

Iowa Code § 321J.6(1). Although not contained in the New York statute

used as a model for Iowa’s implied-consent law, the current “written

request” requirement was a part of Iowa’s original statute, Iowa Code

§ 321B.3 (1966), and requires that “[t]he withdrawal of the body

substances and the test or tests . . . be administered at the written
                                      8

request of a peace officer having reasonable grounds to believe that the

person was operating a motor vehicle” while intoxicated, Iowa Code

§ 321J.6(1) (2007) (emphasis added).

      Our earlier decisions in Gottschalk v. Sueppel, 258 Iowa 1173, 140

N.W.2d 866 (1966); State v. Richards, 229 N.W.2d 229 (Iowa 1975); and

State v. Meissner, 315 N.W.2d 738 (Iowa 1982), stand today as our

primary interpretations of the statutory “written request” requirement.

We have held that an oral request by an officer, followed by a written

request after the test has been administered, is not sufficient. Richards,

229 N.W.2d at 233. We have also held that “written request” does not

require the driver be in physical possession of the writing itself and that

the writing serves as a record of the request. Meissner, 315 N.W.2d at

740–41; Gottschalk, 258 Iowa at 1183, 140 N.W.2d at 872. Furthermore,

after a written request is properly given to the driver, a finding that the

test has been refused is premised on the statements and conduct of the

arrestee and police officer, as well         as on all     the   surrounding

circumstances. Ginsberg v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 508 N.W.2d 663, 664

(Iowa 1993).

      If a driver refuses the chemical testing under the implied-consent

procedure, the officer sends the department of transportation a certified,

sworn report that the officer had reasonable grounds to believe the

person was driving while intoxicated and that conditions existed to

perform a chemical test under section 321J.6. Iowa Code § 321J.9(1).

The refusal to submit to an officer’s request for a specimen sample will

then result in automatic revocation of the driver’s license for one year if it

is the driver’s first offense. Id. § 321J.9(1)(a). If the driver submits to the

chemical testing and the test shows a concentration of alcohol in excess

of the legal limit, the driver’s license will be revoked for 180 days if it is
                                       9

the driver’s first offense. Id. § 321J.12(1)(a). Of course, the driver may

appeal the revocation by challenging the process on a number of

statutory      grounds   at   a   hearing   before   the   department.     Id.

§ 321J.13(2)(a)-(c).

      IV. Interpretation of Written-Request Requirement.

      The broad issue presented in this appeal is whether the use of a

computer screen, rather than a paper document, to make the request for

withdrawal of a bodily substance for testing satisfies the statutory

“written request” requirement of the implied-consent statute. We begin

our resolution of this issue with the simple recognition that our

legislature has specifically defined “written” in the chapter on general

rules of statutory construction. We recognize the legislature “may act as

its own lexicographer.” Henrich v. Lorenz, 448 N.W.2d 327, 332 (Iowa

1989). When it does so, we are normally bound by the legislature’s own

definitions.    Inter-State Nurseries, Inc. v. Iowa Dep’t of Revenue, 164

N.W.2d 858, 861 (Iowa 1969).

      In relevant part, the legislature’s rules of construction provide:

      In the construction of the statutes, the following rules shall
      be observed, unless such construction would be inconsistent
      with the manifest intent of the general assembly, or repugnant
      to the context of the statute:
               ....
      39. Written—in writing—signature. The words “written” and
      “in writing” may include any mode of representing words or
      letters in general use, and include an electronic record as
      defined in section 554D.103.

Iowa Code § 4.1(39) (first emphasis added).

      In turn, “electronic record” is defined as any record “created,

generated, sent, communicated, received, or stored by electronic means.”

Id. § 554D.103(7). Although section 554D.103 was enacted as part of the

laws affecting commerce, its reference in the general definition section of
                                      10

the Code reflects a clear intention of our legislature for the meaning of

“writing” to continue to evolve to recognize the realities of our information

age. In a rare articulation of legislative purpose, the General Assembly

wrote, in relevant part:

           It is the intent of the general assembly in enacting this
      chapter to effectuate all of the following purposes:
             ....
            3. Facilitate electronic filing of documents with state
      and local government agencies and promote efficient delivery
      of government services by means of reliable electronic
      records.
             ....
             5. Promote public confidence in the                integrity,
      reliability, and legality of electronic records . . . .

2000 Iowa Acts ch. 1189, § 2 (codified at Iowa Code § 554D.102 (2003)).

The section was later repealed without explanation in 2004, 2004 Iowa

Acts ch. 1067, § 10, but the legislature retained the provisions from 2000

relating to discretionary governmental use of electronic records, 2000

Iowa Acts ch. 1189, §§ 19, 20 (codified at Iowa Code §§ 554D.119, .120
(2007)).   Additionally, the fiscal note prepared for the 2000 legislation

indicates part of the purpose behind the enactment of the statute was to

reflect current government spending on technology from the general

fund. See H.F. 2205 Fiscal Note, 78th G.A., Reg. Sess. (Iowa 2000).

      Consequently, the statutory definition of the word “written” is an

important consideration in our resolution of whether a computer screen

can be used to satisfy the statutory “written request” requirement.

Clearly, the word “written” means any mode of representing words and

includes a record “communicated . . . or stored by electronic means.”

Iowa Code § 554D.103(7). The word “written” plainly includes words on

a computer screen under the definition provided by the legislature.

Nevertheless, our inquiry does not end with the statutory definition. As
                                    11

directed by our legislature, the rules and definitions set out in section

4.6 do not apply if “inconsistent with the manifest intent of the general

assembly, or repugnant to the context of the statute . . . .” Iowa Code

§ 4.1; see also State v. Hopkins, 465 N.W.2d 894, 896 (Iowa 1991)

(“Second, we look beyond the ordinary meaning of the statutory language

when a statute’s literal terms are in conflict with its general purpose.”).

We must, therefore, consider whether a construction of “written request”

that includes a computer screen would be inconsistent with the intent of

the legislature or repugnant to the context of the statute.

      The legislature did not specifically articulate a purpose for the

“written request” requirement under the implied-consent law. We have,

however, explored the role of the “written request” requirement within the

Act as a whole in our prior cases. See State v. Charlson, 261 Iowa 497,

502, 154 N.W.2d 829, 831 (1967) (“[I]t is fundamental that in arriving at

the correct interpretation of any particular provisions of the [implied-

consent] Act and the intention of the legislature as expressed therein

courts should consider the entire Act and, so far as possible, interpret its

various provisions in the light of their relation to the whole.”). Several

helpful considerations can be derived from these cases.

      We have found the written request requirement for the withdrawal

of a bodily substance for testing to be “procedural, rather than

substantive in character.”   Charlson, 261 Iowa at 505, 154 N.W.2d at

833 (referring to section 321J.6 at its previous designation in section

321B.3 in the 1966 Code).      The written-request requirement is one of

numerous procedural requirements found in section 321J.6. See Iowa

Code § 321J.6(1)(a)-(g).   Each requirement has separate, but related,

purposes.   In State v. Schlemme, we found the broad purpose of the

procedural requirements of the Act were “to protect the health of the
                                    12

person submitting to the test and to guarantee the accuracy of the test

for use in judicial proceedings.” 301 N.W.2d 721, 723 (Iowa 1981). More

specifically, we have indicated “[t]he primary purpose of the request

[requirement] is ‘to provide a record of the relevant communication for

subsequent review.’ ” State v. McCoy, 603 N.W.2d 629, 630 (Iowa 1999)

(quoting Henry v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 426 N.W.2d 383, 387 (Iowa

1988)) (holding the procedural requirement of a written request was

sufficient, even when an officer asked for a breath sample and

inadvertently checked the box next to blood sample on the form, and the

record clearly shows the driver understood the real sample being

requested was breath); see also Meissner, 315 N.W.2d at 741 (“[T]he

writing provides a record of the relevant communication. This promotes

accuracy and furnishes a record for subsequent review.”). This written

“record” is important for trial because an involuntary chemical test is not

admissible in criminal proceedings. See Charlson, 261 Iowa at 506, 154

N.W.2d at 834 (highlighting importance of properly obtaining consent

prior to test).   Moreover, the record must show the request was

administered prior to the test, not contemporaneously with or following

the test as a formality. See State v. Richards, 229 N.W.2d 229, 233 (Iowa

1975) (rejecting State’s argument that the written request may follow the

test and “ratif[y] what had been done”).

      In past cases, the purpose of the “written request” requirement in

section 321J.6(1) was often tied to the advisory given to inform a

suspected drunk driver of the consequences of submitting to or refusing

a chemical test to enable the driver to make an educated decision under

section 321J.8.   However, this integration of the two sections was a

result of law enforcement practice, not legislative policy. For example,

the “written request” in Meissner also contained language of advisory,
                                      13

stating “ ‘I have been informed that my driver’s license for privilege to

operate a motor vehicle will be revoked for failing to provide a specimen of

a specified body substance for chemical testing,’ ” Meissner, 315 N.W.2d

at 740 (quoting text of request given to defendant) (emphasis added), and

the advisory in Gottschalk “plainly stated that a refusal to submit to a

chemical test would result in a revocation of plaintiff’s driver’s license for

a period of 120 days to a year.” 258 Iowa at 1175, 140 N.W.2d at 867.

Although it may seem intuitive to make a more detailed record of the

transaction by documenting the advisory within the signed request, this

is not statutorily required. Only the request needs to be in writing. As a

result, the policies behind the two separate procedural requirements can

be more clearly articulated: the advisory is meant to inform the driver of

the consequences to enable fair opportunity for decision making while

the written request requirement ensures an accurate and reliable record

that a pretest request was made.

      Having identified the purpose of the “written request” requirement,

we turn to consider whether the use of a computer screen as the writing

would contravene the intent of the legislature in making the requirement

a part of the implied-consent law. As a general proposition, we recognize

our society is in the midst of a transformation to paperless commerce

and interaction between people. This transformation is even observable

in Iowa’s court system, which has begun the process of becoming a

totally paperless system.     Additionally, many of our rules have been

modified   to   accommodate     the   use   of   computers    to   store   and

communicate information.      The paper-laden world of yesterday will be

much different tomorrow.      This transformation is largely based on the

ability of computers to maintain accurate and reliable records, perhaps

better in many ways than paper.
                                     14

      In particular, the “TraCS system” used by Trooper Scott is “a

sophisticated data collection and reporting tool for the public safety

community to streamline and automate the capture of incident data in

the field and transfer the data from the local agency to a statewide

enterprise system.” Iowa Dep’t of Transp., TraCS, History of the National

Model, http://www.iowatracs.us/About/NationalModel.aspx (last visited

July 16, 2010). Moreover, some of the cited benefits of recording data at

the point of origination are improvements in accuracy, completeness, and

timeliness, in part because the system eliminates the need for duplicate

entries in local and state databases. Id. The system also facilitates a

greater electronic network within the State of Iowa:         TraCS enables

electronic filings with and data transfers to the courts. Id. Thus, the

system used in this case is not only consistent with the legislature’s

purpose for written requests in OWI cases, it also appears to affirmatively

support it. Because using an electronic form of the written request for a

breath sample does not conflict with the legislative purpose behind the

requirement in section 321J.6(1), we apply the definition of “writing” in

section 4.1(39) and allow the use of the electronic form to meet the

statutory requirement.

      Notwithstanding, Fischer more specifically argues that the purpose

of the “written request” requirement is broader than to merely maintain

accurate and reliable records. He asserts the requirement also exists to

allow a driver to view the request before making the decision to consent

to give a sample or refuse to give a sample and that the manner in which

the computer screen was used in this case, in conjunction with the way

the program operated, did not allow him to view the entire “written

request.”   In particular, Fischer asserts the use of a computer screen

does not allow a driver to view the entire electronic record prior to signing
                                     15

the signature line on the pop-up window. In this way, he claims the use

of the computer as a writing frustrates the purpose of the “written

request” requirement of the rule.

      The record in this case revealed the written request portion of the

implied-consent procedures existed on the computer screen, but in small

font and at an angle from Fischer. The form on the screen was a work in

progress, requiring Fischer’s signature and selection of “consent” or

“refuse” on the “Request for Specimen” section of the form, along with

several unrelated inputs by the officer, before the form was “locked” in its

final version. Yet, the only portion of the “Notice and Consent” form at

issue in the case is the specific section requesting a specimen of the

driver’s breath. The request itself is the only portion that is statutorily

required to be in writing and signed by the driver prior to administration

of the test. See Iowa Code ch. 321J. It is undisputed that the relevant

request existed in writing on the computer screen at the time Fischer

signed the form.      Moreover, the purpose of the “written request”

requirement is not as broad as claimed by Fischer. It is irrelevant that a

driver does not see the entire “Request and Notice” form because the

statute does not require the entire form to be given to or observed by a

driver prior to the test. The only component of the overall form required

to be “in writing,” as it pertains to a driver, is the “Request for Specimen.”

      Fischer narrows his argument even further by asserting the statute

required the law enforcement officer in this case to make an affirmative

effort to draw his attention to the form that appeared on the computer

screen, so he could have reviewed it for himself to provide a better

opportunity for his decision making.         However, the written-request

requirement of section 321J.6(1) is not concerned with providing

information to a driver to assist in assessing the available options under
                                          16

the implied-consent law.          Additionally, the language of the request

provides no alternative options for the driver to assess.               Instead, the

relevant text simply recites a summary of the request that was made by

the   officer.     The   policy    behind      Fischer’s   concern    for   adequate

mechanisms to enable informed decision making is reflected within the

other procedural requirements of the implied-consent law that clearly

express this intention.       See, e.g., Iowa Code §§ 321J.6(1) (reasonable

suspicion prerequisite), 321J.8 (statement of consequences of implied

consent); see also Garcia, 756 N.W.2d at 222 (reasonable methods must

be used to convey the advisory to “provid[e] the accused driver a basis for

evaluation and decision-making”); Voss v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 621

N.W.2d 208, 211–12 (Iowa 2001) (stating the clearly articulated purpose

of the implied-consent advisory is to benefit the driver). 4

       We do not read a requirement into a statutory scheme when none

exists because “[i]t is not our province to write such a requirement into

the [implied consent] statute.”          Gottschalk, 258 Iowa at 1183, 140

N.W.2d at 872. Further, the written request need not be given to the

driver for an opportunity to read it because the purpose is to create a

record of the relevant communication; such a record can be created with
the driver’s participation, but the driver’s permission to create or finalize

the record is not contained in section 321J.6(1). See id. (“[T]he statute

does not provide that the written request of the officer for a chemical test

be handed or given to the arrested motorist or served upon him in the


       4Fischer does not argue the officer failed to make a request for a breath test
prior to administration of the test, a requirement that is implicit in the statute and
made explicit in our prior cases. See Richards, 229 N.W.2d at 233 (“The statute
requires the request to precede submission to the test.”). He also does not claim he
gave an equivocal response that constituted a refusal to the test, but was subjected to
the test anyway. Such allegations would produce concerns over the accuracy of the
written record and would be resolved by reference to other relevant extrinsic evidence.
                                    17

manner of an original notice commencing a civil action.”). The request

must certainly exist in writing prior to the administration of the test, but

the purpose of section 321J.6(1) is to record the request, not to provide

notice of what was orally requested or an opportunity to alter the

document. We hold an electronic version of the written request satisfies

the requirement of section 321J.6(1). The request need not be printed

for the driver in order for the request to be adequately “written.”     The

written-request requirement of section 321J.6(1) is satisfied by the use of

a computer screen. Additionally, we hold the officer does not need to call

the driver’s attention to the request that appears on the screen for the

request on the screen to satisfy the definition of “written.” The use of a

document appearing on a computer screen is consistent with the

legislative intent of the requirement and conforms to the context of the

statute.

      We also recognize that electronic forms may be altered until they

are permanently saved. This is an improvement over the prior practice of

discarding paper in mass quantities when a mistake or change of heart

occurs in order to start over on a fresh page. The nature of computerized

documents allows for changes in documents without the consequence of

producing additional waste. This technological reality does not affect our

decision that, although alterable on the same screen, documents on a

computer constitute a “writing” for purposes of section 321J.6(1).

      V. Conclusion.

      We have considered all the claims raised on appeal. We reverse

the decision of the district court and remand the case for further

proceedings.

      REVERSED AND REMANDED.
