alifornia
court leaders voted unanimously Monday to bar courts from charging
drivers bail before they can challenge traffic tickets.
The
emergency rule, adopted by the Judicial Council, takes effect
immediately. Courts will have to change their notices to the public to
say that no one will be required to pay upfront as a condition of a
hearing on a ticket.
The Judicial Council, the policy-making body
of the courts, took the action in a telephone conference that could be
heard live on the court's website.
Chief Justice Tani
Cantil-Sakauye called Monday's action "historic." She proposed the
change three weeks ago, and in court time, the gathering of comment and
the vote were extremely fast.
She and other judges said the rule
was only a first step. It will not help the thousands of drivers who
have lost their licenses or have accumulated huge fines because of an
inability to pay.
A routine traffic ticket in California now costs about $500, and that amount escalates rapidly when deadlines are missed.
Several
courts throughout the state have been requiring drivers to post
bail--usually by paying the cost of the ticket upfront--before they
could have a trial to challenge it.
San Bernardino County Presiding Judge Marsha G. Slough called the new rule “one step that could be quickly taken for the good.”
“And others will be taken,” said Slough, a member of the council.
Lawyers
representing the poor have complained that judges in some counties have
been requiring drivers to pay the fines as a condition of contesting
them, a practice that Cantil-Sakauye called "pay to play" and
vowed to stop.
"The
traffic infraction penalty consists of a fine that is then quadrupled
by all the fees that have nothing to do with the person's culpability,"
said Christine Sun of the ACLU of Northern California. "Folks of color
are disproportionately stopped for traffic citations, and they are now
paying for things that the state general fund should cover."
Some
lawyers had complained that the rule passed by the Judicial Council,
the policy-making body for the courts, did not go far enough.
It
would prevent courts from requiring payment before a hearing only if the
driver showed up to the first court appearance, called an arraignment.
After receiving a ticket, drivers are supposed to be notified in the
mail of the amount of the fine and the date they must appear if they
want to challenge it.
But
the most immediate and pressing problem involves thousands of drivers
who already missed that first court appearance, either because they did
not get the notice, went to the wrong courthouse, could not pay the bail
or simply did not want to deal with the matter, said Michael Herald,
legislative advocate for the Western Center on Law & Poverty.
Nearly
5 million drivers have had their licenses suspended because of an
inability to pay, and "the bulk of them are people who didn't appear the
first time," he said. They have flocked to legal service programs for
help.
Some judges wrote to the Judicial Council with
concerns that the new rule could flood the courts with people seeking trials on tickets.
Without
requiring ticketed drivers to first post bail — usually the equivalent
of the cost of the ticket — they might not show up, wasting the time of
the court staff and the law enforcement officer who issued the ticket
and was ordered to appear, judges wrote.
Some
ticketed drivers also might ask for a trial as a gambit, hoping the law
enforcement officer will fail to show and the case will just be
dismissed, wrote Riverside County Superior Court Presiding Judge Harold
W. Hopp.
Aides to the Judicial Council said the problem is
complex, and the emergency rule may be only the first step. More legal
research must be done before the council can address other problems, and
the task may require the involvement of the Legislature and Gov. Jerry
Brown's administration, staff members said.
"This is just a start," Cantil-Sakauye said. "We are working with the other branches to fix the issues."
The
ACLU identified Del Norte, Fresno, Mendocino, Tuolumne, Mariposa,
Tulare, Madera, Shasta, Santa Barbara, Riverside and Imperial counties
as having "problematic policies" based on the information on their
websites.
The website for San Diego County Superior Court, for
example, said people must pay the cost of the ticket if they want to
request a trial without an arraignment. "Credit/debit card payments
cannot be accepted for this option," it said.
If
the driver checks in for the court appearance on the date of the
citation, "you may still be required to pay bail in order to schedule
your trial," the advisory said.
The advisories and mailed notices
are often confusing, lawyers said. "If you read the fine print, maybe
you can figure it out," Sun said, adding that some counties changed
their policies after the ACLU complained.
The Los Angeles County court's website contains no such advisory.
"But
we know the L.A. courts were requiring bail because an ACLU attorney
went in to contest a speeding ticket and was told by the clerk he had to
pay before seeing a judge," Sun said.
Several legal groups told
the Judicial Council that Los Angeles courts cite thousands of people
each week for failing to appear in traffic cases.
A state law passed during the recession may be partly to blame, lawyers
said. It permitted courts to charge bail for traffic offenders who
wanted to schedule a trial without appearing first for an arraignment.
Lawyers say many courts misinterpreted the law.
Retired Fresno
County Traffic Commissioner Robert J. Thompson said the rule is long
overdue. He spent years on the bench hearing from people too poor to pay
the fines, levied for violations ranging from rolling through a stop
sign to a cracked windshield that did not get fixed in time.
"For
someone on unemployment or a single parent on assistance, the fines in
my opinion are unrealistic," said Thompson, who left the bench two years
ago. "The 8th Amendment says there should not be excessive fines."
The
ACLU contends the requirement of bail before a hearing violates the
Constitution's guarantees of due process and equal protection. Bail is
supposed to be charged only if the person is a flight risk, lawyers
said.
Michael J. Kennedy, a criminal defense lawyer in Riverside
County, said he first learned that people were being "extorted" in
traffic court years ago when he went in to fight his own ticket. He
prevailed, but those who were not lawyers had to pay upfront, he said.about this," Kennedy said. "I
wrote the chief justice. I wrote the ACLU. I wrote the presiding judges.
Nobody gave a damn."