A speeding traffic ticket is subject to section 128 of the Highway Traffic Act.
TA462
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What's The Proper Procedure To Pass A Car On A 2 Lane Road?

by: TA462 on

I was traveling north on Hwy 28 with my cruise set at 85. I slowly caught up to a car that was traveling between 79-82. I followed him for around 3 kilometers and his speed fluctuated between 79-82. He pulled to the right as if to let me pass so I did in a safe manner, excelerating to 102 k as I passed, signaled to pull back in and reset my cruise to 85. The car then proceeded to speed up and to my surprise turn on his lights. Yep, I just passed a unmarked police car. :roll: :shock: :cry: I was very polite to the officer as he gave me the ticket but I said to him that you pulled to the right to allow me to pass. He said he didn't and told me speeders are a dime a dozen. Is this something I could take to court and fight? Should I just suck it up and pay the ticket? I'm not a aggresive driver and I feel the officer kind of baited me to pass him by pulling to the right.

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hwybear
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by: hwybear on

Please clarify to all viewers what you mean by "pull to the right"

Above is merely a suggestion/thought and in no way constitutes legal advice or views of my employer. www.OHTA.ca
TA462
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by: TA462 on

The officer moved his car to the far right side of the paved road.

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by: Bookm on

I know exactly what you mean. If I see a car approaching me from behind, I assume he will intend to pass me when the way is clear. If I "sense" he wants to pass (you can tell), I lean way to the right of my lane so my mirror won't cause a blind spot for him to see ahead. Just simply being courteous.


Yah, this cop suckered you. Unfortunately, there's no excuse for speeding when passing. I did it once the DANGEROUS way, but got no ticket. Same scenario except it was a marked cruiser. I turned out to pass but only sped up to about 85. It took me almost a full minute to get by him LOL. He just stared me down as I ever-so-slowly inched by him. Of course, on came the cherries. I thought, "The nerve of this guy. He's going to write me a ticket for 5-over!". Well, he didn't write a ticket, but he yelled at me so intensely, I thought the blood vessel in his forehead was going to burst! LOL.


So you did it the safe way and got busted for it. Pretty screwed up Province, eh?


A possible line of defense might be something like it appeared the officer may have been directing you to pass by placing his vehicle to the right of the lane like that. Everyone knows you are to obey the direction of an officer. The car wasn't marked, but was he in uniform?

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hwybear
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by: hwybear on

Yep, the officer made the vehicle catch up, made the vehicle increase speed even more to overtake, just to be "in front". Yeah, really suckered him in :roll: :roll:


I have a 2 lane area as well. We have more crashes on this hwy, compared to the 401 due to intersections and people thinking they need to go faster. The difference of 80-100km is 4 minutes between the 2 towns.....certainly does not make a much of a difference to justify the increase in speed.

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by: Reflections on

hwybear wrote:due to intersections

And the undivided road. Traffic moving in opposite directions closer together then 401. Also, vehicles using the opposing lane to pass......many, many factors.

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by: Bookm on

hwybear wrote:I have a 2 lane area as well. We have more crashes on this hwy, compared to the 401 due to intersections and people thinking they need to go faster. The difference of 80-100km is 4 minutes between the 2 towns.....certainly does not make a much of a difference to justify the increase in speed.

ABSOLUTELY CORRECT! Far more drivers are between 90-100kph than those at 80. It's that 2 or 3% that stick to the speed limit (no matter what the conditions) that CAUSE the road rage and risky behavior behind them.


There's nothing BUT 2-lane highways in my area. The vast majority of my 30 years of driving has been spent on them and I KNOW it's a joke to suggest ANY program, initiative, or police blitz is ever going to get the majority of the motoring public to adhere to a speed limit that is not comfortable for them.


The 85th percentile is alive and kicking, and it aint matchin' that speed limit sign. A brief 100kph pass IS more dangerous than NOT passing at all. I agree with that. But folks wouldn't pass if the limits reflected the 85th percentile. I drive back and forth from Stratford to London all the time and rarely pass because the lines are moving at a decent 90-100kph all the time.

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by: TA462 on

HWYBEAR, the officer didn't speed up until after I passed him. He didn't make me speed up. I thought the driver of the car wanted me to pass him by pulling to the far right side of the road while he was going 79 to 82 k's. Out where I live in farm country a lot of people do that. The Drivers Handbook even says that. I did 102 for probably less then 5 seconds and then went back to my normal speed on that road, 85 k's. All I'm asking for is advice on what I should do.

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by: Reflections on

The problem is you did do 102 and that is "technically" against the law. I think if you had passed at say 90-95 KMH we wouldn't be talking to you. Unfortunately, you still got the raw end of the deal.

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by: Radar Identified on

TA462 wrote: All I'm asking for is advice on what I should do.

In cases where people pass a police cruiser, marked or unmarked, it usually is difficult to get it beaten in court. If the officer ticketed you for 102 in an 80 zone (I'm assuming that's what you did), you could try to plea-bargain to 95 in save demerit points and a little bit of cash.


A paralegal may be able to help get it wiped out but usually with this sort of situation they'll likely just go for the 15-over ticket. But you could try calling X-Copper and see what they say.


Generally the way to proceed and set up a plea-bargain is to at least look like you're trying to fight it all the way; send the ticket in pleading not guilty, make a disclosure request and see if the officer caught you with a speed measuring device (rear-ward looking radar for example) or simply paced you. If you do want to take it all the way to court, it becomes more challenging without professional help.


And unfortunately, as has been said, if you exceed the posted speed limit while passing another vehicle, it is illegal. Even if it is much safer to quickly speed up and pass, and get back onto your side of the road than hang out in the oncoming traffic lane for three minutes, it is still against the law.

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by: ticketcombat on

Just a couple of additional points. You were likely caught on the forward antenna (radar) as you would not have reached "take off" speed until you were at least beside him. Radar does not work sideways so your vehicle would have to be in front of his antenna to pick you up.



I WAS SPEEDING

The defence of necessity may apply (oncoming vehicle and you were past the point of no return). And somewhere along this point is where his radar would have started to track you.


I would also try and exploit the moving over to the right as an invitation to pass angle.


I WAS NOT SPEEDING THAT FAST

You have to consider the road (curved, hill, narrow, etc.) which is a contributing factor. There may have been another vehicle beyond his immediate attention that could have generated the radar signal. (OK that one is stretching things a lot but it's all about creating plausible doubt.)


And of course, there's our ongoing discussion about whether any of these "modern" devices are even being tested and used properly.


The problem is that the officer was right beside you and would know that he was traveling at the speed limit. The issue will be how fast you were really going and whether his reading is right.

Last edited by ticketcombat on Mon Jun 08, 2009 4:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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by: tdrive2 on

Never pass a crown vic with black wheels.


From experiences and others it is never usually a good idea to pass a police officer and need to exceed the speed limit to do it.


Always check a car, if it has extra antennas, black steel wheels, or anything else that might be a give away such as extra electronic devices in the car a bad idea to pass it.

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by: Squishy on

There's the proper way and then there's the legal way. Legal way is passing at or below the speed limit, taking your sweet time and hoping that there are no oncoming cars. The proper way, in my opinion, would be to get past as quickly as possible and then reduce your speed back to what you are comfortable with. Totally against the law, though, and if you want to avoid tickets, I would just suck it up and not pass cars unless they are more than 15 km/h under the limit (as if that will ever happen!).


A few years ago I would have floored it past the car and then used engine braking to get back to my original speed. Lately, I've aged about 50 years in my driving habits and drive almost completely within the HTA as much as I can. I tend to just reduce my cruise control when coming up to a slightly slower vehicle, but I would usually still pass someone going 10 km/h slower than I am. And I would still floor it, as the growl of my engine is way too tempting plus I want out of opposing lanes as quickly as possible. But then I'm knowingly breaking the law and that makes me fair game for a ticket.


Always check a car, if it has extra antennas, black steel wheels, or anything else that might be a give away such as extra electronic devices in the car a bad idea to pass it.

Catch me October to April and I have all that! 8)

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by: hwybear on

tdrive2 wrote:Never pass a crown vic with black wheels.


From experiences and others it is never usually a good idea to pass a police officer and need to exceed the speed limit to do it.


Always check a car, if it has extra antennas, black steel wheels, or anything else that might be a give away such as extra electronic devices in the car a bad idea to pass it.


Hockey pucks on the roof! Clear light bar sitting in the back window. OPP is 2 antennas on the trunk, 1 4ft, the other 1ft, silver 2inch high base, black ring grommet on the mount.......but might be following too close if you see that

Above is merely a suggestion/thought and in no way constitutes legal advice or views of my employer. www.OHTA.ca
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