Bill

Bill > S1450


NJ S1450

NJ S1450
Permits dismissal of certain motor vehicle violations if defendant corrects issue within allotted time frame and provides acceptable documentation.


summary

Introduced
02/10/2022
In Committee
02/10/2022
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/08/2024

Introduced Session

2022-2023 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill allows for the dismissal of certain motor vehicle violations contained in chapter 3 of Title 39. The fineable violations set forth in chapter 3 of Title 39 typically address correctable issues such as equipment failures, expired registrations and licenses, and failure to exhibit the documents required to operate a motor vehicle in the State. All moving violations are contained in chapter 4 of Title 39. When an officer, in the course of the officer's regular enforcement duties, observes a correctable violation and none of the extenuating circumstances specified in the bill exist, the officer is required to issue a ticket that contains the correctable violation and immediately inform the person cited that the person has the opportunity to fix the issue and have the violation dismissed. Under the bill, dismissal of an alleged violation requires a defendant to submit acceptable proof of correction to the court on or before the person's scheduled appearance date. If the defendant makes the required correction and provides acceptable verification to the court having jurisdiction over the violation, the original charge is required to be dismissed. If the defendant fails to provide acceptable verification that the issue was corrected to the court, the fine for the violation is required to be collected in full. Regardless of dismissal, court costs may be collected at the discretion of the court for each violation.

AI Summary

This bill allows for the dismissal of certain correctable motor vehicle violations in chapter 3 of Title 39, such as equipment failures, expired registrations/licenses, and failure to exhibit required documents. When an officer issues a ticket for such a violation, the defendant has the opportunity to correct the issue and provide acceptable documentation to the court before their scheduled appearance date. If the defendant does so, the original charge must be dismissed, though the court may still collect court costs up to $33 or 25% of the original fine. The bill specifies certain disqualifying conditions where this dismissal process does not apply, such as evidence of fraud or an immediate safety hazard. The bill also requires the officer to inform the defendant of the opportunity to correct the violation at the time the ticket is issued.

Committee Categories

Transportation and Infrastructure

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Transportation Committee (on 02/10/2022)

bill text


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