Traffic Ticket




Traffic Ticket

A traffic ticket is a summons and quote issued by police officers to motorists and other road users who are unsuccessful to mind traffic laws. Traffic tickets generally come in two forms; cite a moving violation, such as more than the speed limit, or a non-moving violation, such as a parking ticket. Traffic tickets are generally heard in traffic court.

Generally, a ticket is a notice that one has committed a minor or sometimes major legal violation, for which a fine must be paid and postmarked and sent by the due date, and/or an appearance in court must be made (See: order). Typically, this means a parking ticket for parking in an unlawful way or allowing a parking meter to expire, or a traffic ticket for a moving violation such as speeding. The latter are usually issued after traffic stops.

A traffic ticket may go by the more proper name of violation ticket.

Characteristically, a traffic ticket is handed to a driver straight away after the offence has been observed by a police or traffic officer. Though, it can also be delivered by mail is the case with photo radar tickets.

The traffic ticket sets out the nature and detail of the alleged offence. Typical information includes:

  • An claim that you have broken a traffic act including the accurate section of the law being relied upon;
  • The name of the authority
  • The name of the traffic decree which has been supposedly broken or pursuant to which the ticket is issued;
  • The date, time and place of the alleged offence;
  • The name and address of the person to whom the ticket is issued;
  • Identification of the vehicle including license plate; and
  • Information on how to contest or dispute the allegation including the name and address of the place to either acknowledge the allegation or pay the fine, or to contest the ticket.

Speeding ticket

A ticket issue for driving above the speed bound Ticket - an order issued to a lawbreaker (especially to someone who violates a traffic regulation).

United State Traffic laws

In the United States, most traffic laws are codified in a variety of state, county and municipal ordinances, with most minor violations classified as civil infractions. Although what constitutes a "minor violation" varies, examples include: non-moving violations; defective or unauthorized vehicle equipment; seat belt and child-restraint safety violations; and insufficient proof of license, insurance or registration. A trend in the late 1970s and early 1980s also saw an increased tendency for jurisdictions to re-classify certain speeding violation as civil infractions.[1] In contrast, for more "serious" violations, traffic violators may be held criminally liable, guilty of a misdemeanor or even a felony. Serious violations tend to involve multiple prior offenses; willful disregard of public safety; death, serious bodily injury or damage to property. [1]

Each state's section of Motor Vehicles maintains a file of motorists, as well as their convicted traffic violations. Upon being ticketed, a motorist is given the option to mail in to the local court—the court for the town or city in which the violation took place—a plea of guilty or not guilty within a certain time frame (usually ten days, although courts generally provide leniency in this regard).[2]

If the motorist pleads not guilty, a trial date is set and both the motorist, or a lawyer/representative on behalf of the motorist, and the ticketing officer, are required to attend. The motorist may be given the chance to move the hearing for a reason such as "a work disagreement or travel", and rearrange the hearing for a time at which the ticketing officer is improbable to attend. [2] If the officer or representative fails to attend, the court judge will often find in good turn of the motorist and allow going the charge, [2] although sometimes the trial date is moved to give the officer another chance to attend. The court will also make supplies for the officer or prosecutor to attain a deal with the motorist, often in the form of a plea bargain that may reduce the impact from that which would be incurred from pleading guilty without attending court.[2][3] If no agreement is reached, and the prosecutor feels it is worth his time to charge the motorist, both motorist and officer, or their respective representatives, officially attempt to prove their case before the judge, who then decides the matter.[2] The motorist may, for example, put forward a reason the violation they are is accused of was justified, such as to "get out of the way of an ambulance or avoid a collision with another motorist", and call into doubt the level to which the officer recall the specific details of the state of affairs among the many tickets they have issued.[2] For relatively minor offences, this strategy is usually effective- the National Motorists Association, which provides a kit outlining how to fight a traffic ticket to its members, goes so far as to offer to pay fines for members who challenge their tickets in court and are found guilty.[3]

If the motorist pleads guilty, the result is equivalent to conviction after trial. Upon confidence, the motorist is generally fined a monetary amount and, for moving violations, is additionally given "point" demerits, under each state's point system. In the cases where the motorist is registered in a different state from where the violation took place, individual agreements between the two states decide if, and how, the motorist's home state applies the other state's confidence. If no agreement exists, then the conviction is local to the state where the violation took place. In some instances, failure to pay the fine may result in a suspension to drive in only the city or state to whom the fine is owed, and the motorist may continue to drive elsewhere in the same state.