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Berger v. Denver

Supreme Court of Colorado. En Banc
Feb 29, 1960
350 P.2d 192 (Colo. 1960)

Opinion

No. 18,406.

Decided February 29, 1960. Rehearing denied March 28, 1960.

Prosecution for violation of traffic ordinance. From the fines and penalties imposed the defendant brings error.

Affirmed in Part,

Reversed in Part.

1. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — Ordinance — Traffic Violation — Penalties. Where traffic ordinance authorized a schedule of fines to be prescribed by municipal judges for violation thereof, a general penalty ordinance providing maximum and minimum fines and jail sentences has no application to such traffic violations, and the penalty can be nothing more than such schedule provides for the violation.

2. Traffic Ordinance — Violation — Penalties — Schedule. If an ordinance establishing a convenient procedure for the entry of a plea of guilty and payment of a fine according to a certain schedule, is to be given validity, it can only be on the basis that the violator, by his own admission, stands convicted and has paid the prescribed fine; it follows that on the date of the commission of the offense the penalty for such violation is specifically determined by the schedule.

3. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW — Traffic Ordinance — Enforcement — Double Standard — Equal Protection of the Law. Enforcement of a traffic ordinance where the penalties prescribed for violation thereof are determined according to a schedule adopted pursuant to authority, amounts to a double standard when applied to one who admits his guilt and pays promptly, but subjects him to uncertain consequences if he invokes his right to a trial, and deprives him of his constitutional right to equal protection of the law.

4. AUTOMOBILES — Traffic Ordinance — Violation — Penalties — Coercion. An interpretation of a traffic ordinance which would tend to coerce persons accused of violation thereof to surrender their right to a trial regardless of guilt or innocence, cannot be approved.

5. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — Traffic Ordinance — Violation — Penalty — Schedule. Where no provision is made to deal with aggravated offenses in a schedule of fines adopted for specific offenses under a traffic ordinance, fines imposed in excess of such schedule are void.

Error to the Superior Court of the City and County of Denver, Hon. Mitchel B. Johns, Judge.

Mr. HARVEY P. WALLACE, Mr. DAVID BERGER, Pro se, for plaintiff in error.

Mr. JOHN C. BANKS, Mr. HAROLD J. HEAFER, for defendant in error.


ON January 22, 1957, sixty-four complaints were filed by the City and County of Denver against David Berger, alleging fifty-six violations of Revised Municipal Code 521.8 (relating to parking meter violations); seven violations of Code Section 521.17-1 (relating to overtime parking); and one violation Code Section 521.7-5 (relating to parking meter violations). In addition the complaints also charged sixty violations of Code Section 521-6-2 (relating to failure to respond with seven days of notice of violation), but since all of these were dismissed by the court, the validity of those charges against Berger is not before this court.

Upon trial in the municipal court, Berger was convicted of twenty-eight of the alleged violations, was fined $20 on each of eighteen thereof, and fined $20 and sentenced to one day jail on each of the remaining ten violations. The jail sentence was suspended on each of five violations. The sum total of the penalty imposed by this court on its judgment of conviction was $560 in fines and five days in jail. Berger appealed his convictions to the superior court of the City and County of Denver, where the trial court sustained twenty-four of the convictions and dismissed four. The penalty assessed on each of twenty-three violations was a $20 fine; on the remaining violation the court levied a fine of $20 and a sentence of five days in jail.

Berger is here writ of error, and in his summary of argument has designated eight points upon which he relies for reversal, only one of which we consider meritorious.

The sole question presented by the record is as follows:

Are the penalties imposed for each violation void in that they are in excess of the limitation prescribed in the schedule of fines established in the City and County of Denver?

This question is answered in the affirmative.

It is apparent that the court imposed the fines and imprisonment under the general penalty provisions of the Denver Municipal Code, Sec. 011.10, rather than in pursuance of the fines designated in the schedule. The general penalty provision reads in part as follows:

"Whenever in any section of this Code * * * the doing of any act is required, prohibited, or declared to be unlawful and no definite penalty is provided for a violation thereof, any person * * * who shall be convicted of a violation of such section shall, for each offense, be fined in a sum not more than three hundred dollars ($300.00) or imprisoned not to exceed 90 days, or both so fined and imprisoned." (Emphasis supplied.)

This section is not ambiguous and provides for its use only when no definite penalty is designated for a violation. Certain it is that the court has not the option to fine in accordance with the schedule or to resort to the quoted general penalty provision. The general penalty provision by its terms excludes its application to offenses having specified punishments.

Its inapplicability becomes evident in view of Sec. 521.1-2 of the Code. Provision is made for offenses under traffic ordinances of the city, providing for fines or court appearances in accordance with certain schedules "for first, second or subsequent offenses." A schedule of fines was thereafter established which in effect fixed a fine of $1.00 for a violation of either Section 521.8 or 521.17-1, relating respectively to the failure to observe the time limitations of a metered parking zone and a parking area.

Other pertinent ordinances to be found in the Municipal Code are the following:

522.2-1 — "Any person charged with an offense for which payment of a fine may be made to the traffic violations bureau shall have the option of paying such a fine within the time specified in the notice of arrest at the traffic violations bureau upon entering a plea of guilty and upon waiving appearance in court." (Emphasis supplied.)

522.2-2 — "The payment of a fine to said bureau shall be deemed an acknowledgment of the alleged offense, and the bureau, upon accepting the prescribed fine, shall issue a receipt to the violator acknowledging payment thereof and releasing the violator from further prosecution for the specific offense." (Emphasis supplied.)

523.8-1 — "If a violator of the restrictions of stopping, standing or parking under Main Division 5 of this Revised Municipal Code does not appear in response to a notice affixed to such motor vehicle within a period of 7 days, the Traffic Violations Bureau shall send another notice by mail to the owner of the motor vehicle to which the notice was affixed, informing him of the violation." (Emphasis supplied.)

523.8-2 — "In the event such mailed notice is disregarded for a period of 5 days, a complaint shall be filed and warrant of arrest issued."

[1-2] A reading of these ordinances, together with the schedule of fines, leads to the inescapable conclusion that a definite penalty has been provided for the violations of specific sections enumerated in the schedule. Notwithstanding an admitted custom of the lower court to recognize the specific penalties as applying only in the event the violator pleads guilty and pays his fine to what, in the vernacular, has been labeled "cafeteria court," the penalty, in law, can be for nothing more than the violation. It cannot be construed as a reward for prompt appearance and consent to non-appearance before a judge. One's appearance in the violation bureau is a court appearance. If the ordinance establishing a convenient procedure for the entry of a plea of guilty and payment of a fine is to be given validity at all, it can only be on the basis that the violator, by his own admission, stands convicted and has paid the prescribed fine for the violation. It would seem to follow, therefore, that on the date of the commission of the offense the penalty for each violation is specifically determined to be $1.00, with nothing more prescribed for subsequent violations.

Affirmance of the penalties assessed by the court in this case would be to sanction two sets of penalties — one applying to those who plead guilty and waive their right to appear and defend in court, the other in the nature of punitive action applicable to those who refuse to plead guilty. If the fine of $1.00 is not a specifically prescribed penalty for the commission of the offense, what is it, and by what authority may it be collected? The interpretation apparently indulged in by the trial courts amounts to a double standard where a citizen is assured of a definite penalty if he admits his guilt and pays promptly, but faces an uncertain fate if he dares invoke his right to trial. This we view to be a deprivation of the constitutional guaranty to each citizen of "equal protection of the law." Municipal powers and regulations are subject to both federal and state constitutions, and a municipality can neither defy nor abridge the guaranties of the constitution.

In Sturges Burn Mfg. Co. v. Pastel, 301 Ill. 253, 133 N.E. 762, the court held that a distinction between imprisonment and non-imprisonment of a defendant based upon whether the defendant pleaded guilty of non-payment of a fine or sought trial was arbitrary and unreasonable, and it was held that it offended against equal protection of the laws.

In the instant case Berger successfully challenged forty of the violations, and they were dismissed. He was also charged with sixty separate violations of Ordinance 521-6-2 — "the failure to respond within seven days to the notice of violation" — all of which were dismissed. Assuming but not deciding that it can be made by ordinance a separate "crime" to fail to use the seven-day violations bureau procedure, the court despite the dismissal assessed the fines and jail sentences with angry admonitions indicating the penalties were not for the violations but for the failure to respond each time within seven days to pay the scheduled fine. Approval of interpretation of the ordinances as urged upon us by the City would tend to coerce persons accused of traffic violations to surrender their right to use the courts regardless of their innocence or guilt.

This is not to say that the courts are not vested with discretionary powers to deal with severe offenders, nor do we hold that a court faced with the duty of prescribing punishment cannot consider either the mitigating or aggravating circumstances surrounding the offense and mete out punishment within the prescribed limits. What we do point out is that in the instance before us no provision is made to deal with aggravated offenses as in other types of violation, such as speeding wherein a second offense calls or a penalty different from that prescribed for a first offense and a third offense requires appearance in court.

Therefore, in harmony with the views herein expressed, the conviction of plaintiff in error Berger is on the several traffic violations affirmed, but since the sentence and the fines imposed are void as in excess of the penalty duly prescribed, the cause is remanded to the superior court with directions to vacate the sentence and fines heretofore imposed and to assess valid penalties.

MR. JUSTICE MOORE and MR. JUSTICE DOYLE dissent.

MR. JUSTICE KNAUSS does not participate.


Summaries of

Berger v. Denver

Supreme Court of Colorado. En Banc
Feb 29, 1960
350 P.2d 192 (Colo. 1960)
Case details for

Berger v. Denver

Case Details

Full title:DAVID BERGER v. CITY AND COUNTY OF DENVER

Court:Supreme Court of Colorado. En Banc

Date published: Feb 29, 1960

Citations

350 P.2d 192 (Colo. 1960)
350 P.2d 192

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