license plates?
#17
^^congrats on getting it dismissed.
I've been ticketed for being an idiot and having my front license plate in the trunk of my car, the old excuse of "I just got my frame yesterday" does not work. I took a pic of my car with the plate mounted on the bumper and got it dismissed. That was all before I knew about this Texas Administrative Code. Now I have my plate on my windshield and if I get pulled over again, I'm going to fight it in court.
If I get pulled over for having my license plate on my windshield and I get a ticket I won't fight the officer. (fighting with him will only make him behave like more of an A-hole) 9 times out of 10 the officer will just think I'm being a smart a$$ and give me a ticket anyway. So I'll be polite and take the ticket without a fuss.
I would prove myself in court where I have a much better chance of winning. Read this:
Texas Transportation Code section 502.404(a) requires that a motor vehicle "display two license plates, at the 'front' and rear of the vehicle." Tex. Transp. Code Ann. § 502.404(a). The code does not define the "front" of a vehicle.
In State v. Losoya, 128 S.W.3d 413 (Tex. App. - Austin 2004, pet. ref'd) the Court of Appeals decided an issue very similar to that of my callers. In Losoya, the police testified they had noticed a pickup did not have a license plate mounted on the front bumper. Instead, the plate was wedged between the dashboard and windshield. As a result, the police stopped the vehicle believing a traffic violation had occurred. At the suppression hearing the police officer added he could see the license plate in the truck's front window.
The court found the term "front" ambiguous and looked to other factors to determine the meaning of the code section. The court said:
"While a place to display the license plate is usually found on the front bumper, the statute does not expressly require the use of this location. The display of the plate in some other place or manner is not inconsistent with the language or purpose of the statute. The officers testified that they could see the license plate in the windshield. We conclude that Losoya's display of his front license plate in the manner shown here did not violate section 502.404(a) as to give the officers grounds to reasonably suspect a violation of that statute."
This link should clear things up pay close attention to section F
http://secure.sos.state.tx.us/pls/pu...=1&ch=15&rl=54
I've been ticketed for being an idiot and having my front license plate in the trunk of my car, the old excuse of "I just got my frame yesterday" does not work. I took a pic of my car with the plate mounted on the bumper and got it dismissed. That was all before I knew about this Texas Administrative Code. Now I have my plate on my windshield and if I get pulled over again, I'm going to fight it in court.
If I get pulled over for having my license plate on my windshield and I get a ticket I won't fight the officer. (fighting with him will only make him behave like more of an A-hole) 9 times out of 10 the officer will just think I'm being a smart a$$ and give me a ticket anyway. So I'll be polite and take the ticket without a fuss.
I would prove myself in court where I have a much better chance of winning. Read this:
Texas Transportation Code section 502.404(a) requires that a motor vehicle "display two license plates, at the 'front' and rear of the vehicle." Tex. Transp. Code Ann. § 502.404(a). The code does not define the "front" of a vehicle.
In State v. Losoya, 128 S.W.3d 413 (Tex. App. - Austin 2004, pet. ref'd) the Court of Appeals decided an issue very similar to that of my callers. In Losoya, the police testified they had noticed a pickup did not have a license plate mounted on the front bumper. Instead, the plate was wedged between the dashboard and windshield. As a result, the police stopped the vehicle believing a traffic violation had occurred. At the suppression hearing the police officer added he could see the license plate in the truck's front window.
The court found the term "front" ambiguous and looked to other factors to determine the meaning of the code section. The court said:
"While a place to display the license plate is usually found on the front bumper, the statute does not expressly require the use of this location. The display of the plate in some other place or manner is not inconsistent with the language or purpose of the statute. The officers testified that they could see the license plate in the windshield. We conclude that Losoya's display of his front license plate in the manner shown here did not violate section 502.404(a) as to give the officers grounds to reasonably suspect a violation of that statute."
This link should clear things up pay close attention to section F
http://secure.sos.state.tx.us/pls/pu...=1&ch=15&rl=54
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