bend wrote:
This is not a speeding ticket. With speeding, you are speeding or you're not. This is a ticket where the offense is largely based off the opinions of an officer. If you give them the chance to look over this ticket, take into account the vehicle involved, they may decide there isn't enough to proceed with the charge. Rather than dealing with this ticket for the next year, you could possibly be done with it in a couple weeks. It's possible they just let this one go.
Good point, you might be right, but based on what I have experienced with some prosecutors, that would not be the case.
I was fighting a ticket with no chance of conviction and prosecutor knew it, yet she tried to get me to plead guilty even though I had filed a motion.
She decided to withdraw at the last second just so I would not bring forward my charter motion.
bend wrote:
I couldn't find anything stating improper mudguards or anything related to fall under any portion of your standard insurance conviction definition bracket.
Recently I was checking out how insurance companies price their policies, they have added "other minor conviction" to the list, there is no clear explanation what it includes/excludes, so they could hike your rate for something like this, after all it would sort of fall under a moving violation since the car would have to be moving for a back spray to exist.
bend wrote:
You have to wait for your Notice of Trial either way, so there's no difference.
I don't know how the people I was reading their stories went about it, but basically they had not requested trial before early resolution meeting, so there was several months of wasted time, once they did not come to an agreement and asked for trial, the court date was set within a few months.
When they tried to file 11b the argument was that they did not ask for trial when they got the ticket, they only requested a trial after ER meeting which was several months later.
bend wrote:
Ignorance is not a defense.
True, but that is not the case here... He did not make changes to the car, therefor he was not required to look up HTA to make sure he is not violating it by the changes he is making. You can not expect every single consumer to go read the HTA cover to cover before buying a car to make sure he/she does not get in trouble on the road. The province and the MTO must bear some responsibility not allowing such cars to be sold.
bend wrote:
At the end of the day, you're responsible. Manufactures aren't building their cars to meet each individual provinces HTA or equivalent requirements, they build them according to Canadian safety standards, crash standards, etc which may or may not coincide with the HTA. Dealers sell cars every day with possible HTA violations and it's not their problem.
OK, so can you give an example of such a scenario where a new car being sold by the dealer is in violation of HTA? I am in the market for a new car and I really like to avoid cars that don't cut it. And I am not talking about the plastic license plate frames that the dealers add on, we all know about the issue with those, I am talking about violations that would be due to manufacturer design.