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1998 Kansas Attorney General Reports and Opinions 1 (1998)

handle is hein.sag/sagks0030 and id is 1 raw text is: January 5, 1998

ATTORNEY GENERAL OPINION NO. 98-1
Mack Smith, Executive Secretary
State Board of Mortuary Arts
700 S.W. Jackson St., Suite 904
Topeka, Kansas 66603-3758
Re:
Public Health--Uniform Vital Statistics Act--Copies of Death
Certificates
Synopsis:
K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 65-2422d(g) does not prohibit copying of birth or
death certificates as long as the copy contains a clear indication on its
face that it does not purport to be a reliable copy. Cited herein: K.S.A.
1996 Supp. 65-2422; K.S.A. 65-2434.
Dear Mr. Smith:
As Executive Secretary of the Kansas State Board of Mortuary Arts you request our
opinion whether, pursuant to K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 65-2422(g), it is legal for copies of an
original or certified copy of a death certificate to be made by a business (i.e. a funeral
home) for business purposes. You ask whether it would make any difference if the
copy were not represented as anything other than a copy.
K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 65-2422d(g) provides:
No person shall prepare or issue any certificate which purports to be an
original, certified copy or copy of a certificate of birth, death or fetal death,
except as authorized in this act or rules and regulations adopted under this
act.
We note that the Kansas Department of Health and Environment has not implemented
any rules and regulations authorizing copying such certificates.
K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 65-2422d(g) is part of a model uniform act, and has been adopted
by at least 12 other states. There are, however, no reported cases interpreting this
provision in any of the states. There are two attorneys' general opinions from other
states. In both Arizona Attorney General Opinion No. 190-33 (1990) and 1986-87
Virginia Attorney General Opinion No. 214 it was concluded that this provision, as
applied in the respective states, prevented photocopying of the certificates. The
Virginia Attorney General used his opinion to call on the Virginia Legislature to amend
the statute to permit reasonable copying of certificates.
The Virginia Attorney General relied, in part, upon the Virginia State Registrar's
interpretation of Virginia's statute in reaching the conclusion that copying is prohibited.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE), in a letter from Linda
Fund dated December 3, 1997, states that it is KDHE's interpretation that K.S.A. 1996
Supp. 65-2422d prohibits all photocopying of such certificates, even for retention as a
business record. While it is true that an administrative agency's interpretation of law is

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