John J. Bahen, Jr. v. County of Henrico , 30 Va. App. 227 ( 1999 )


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  •                       COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Benton, Bumgardner and Frank
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    JOHN J. BAHEN, JR.
    OPINION BY
    v.      Record No. 0500-98-2                JUDGE JAMES W. BENTON, JR.
    JULY 6, 1999
    COUNTY OF HENRICO
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY
    L. A. Harris, Jr., Judge
    John J. Bahen, Jr., pro se.
    (Roger W. Frydrychowski, Assistant
    Commonwealth's Attorney, on brief), for
    appellee.
    A police officer issued a summons to John J. Bahen, Jr., for
    driving thirty-five miles per hour in a zone with a posted speed
    limit of twenty-five miles per hour.       The summons cited Code
    § 46.2-874 and Henrico Code § 22-2.     On appeal from a conviction
    for speeding, Bahen contends the trial judge erred in ruling that
    the street on which he was driving was in a "residence district."
    We affirm the conviction.
    I.
    The facts concerning the event that gave rise to the issuance
    of the summons are undisputed.    Bahen was driving south on Charles
    Street where the speed limit was posted as twenty-five miles per
    hour.    When he was between Park Avenue and West Franklin Street, a
    radar device operated by a Henrico County police officer
    registered the speed of Bahen's vehicle at thirty-five miles per
    hour.    At trial, Bahen conceded he was driving in excess of the
    posted speed limit.    Instead, relying on Brooks v. Painter, 
    225 Va. 400
    , 
    302 S.E.2d 66
    (1983), and Thoms v. Dowdy, 
    201 Va. 581
    ,
    
    112 S.E.2d 868
    (1960), Bahen argued that the portion of Charles
    Street on which he was driving in excess of the twenty-five miles
    per hour posted speed limit was not a "residence district," see
    Code § 46.2-100, and, therefore, that the speed limit was
    improperly posted as twenty-five miles per hour.
    After the police officer testified concerning the events that
    caused him to issue the summons, Bahen sought to prove through
    cross-examination of the officer and testimony of various County
    traffic engineers that the character of the land contiguous to
    Charles Street did not meet the definition of "residence
    district."    At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial judge
    ruled that the contiguous land "meets the definition of the
    residence area, and is so properly speed limited at [twenty-five]
    miles per hour."    The trial judge also found that Bahen had
    conceded the accuracy of the radar and ruled that Bahen was
    driving at thirty-five miles per hour in violation of the posted
    limit.
    II.
    Generally, "[t]he maximum speed limit on . . . highways shall
    be fifty-five miles per hour if the vehicle is a passenger motor
    vehicle."    Code § 46.2-870.   That general rule is subject to many
    - 2 -
    statutory exceptions.   See e.g. Code §§ 46.2-870 through 46.2-883.
    For example, "[n]otwithstanding the other [statutory] provisions
    [governing speed], the Commonwealth Transportation Commissioner or
    other authority having jurisdiction over highways may decrease the
    speed limits set forth in [Code] § 46.2-870 and may increase or
    decrease the speed limits set forth in [Code] §§ 46.2-873 through
    46.2-875 on any highway under its jurisdiction."   Code § 46.2-878.
    Any speed limit that is increased or decreased pursuant to Code
    § 46.2-878 "shall be effective only when prescribed after a
    traffic engineering investigation," which is filed as prescribed
    in the statute, "and when indicated on the highway by signs."   
    Id. The statute further
    provides that "[w]henever the speed limit on
    any highway has been increased or decreased . . . and such speed
    limit is properly posted, there shall be a rebuttable presumption
    that the change in speed was properly established."   
    Id. 1 1 The
    full text of Code § 46.2-878 is as follows:
    Notwithstanding the other provisions of this
    article, the Commonwealth Transportation
    Commissioner or other authority having
    jurisdiction over highways may decrease the
    speed limits set forth in [Code] § 46.2-870
    and may increase or decrease the speed
    limits set forth in [Code] §§ 46.2-873
    through 46.2-875 on any highway under its
    jurisdiction; and may establish
    differentiated speed limits for daytime and
    nighttime by decreasing for nighttime
    driving the speed limits set forth in [Code]
    § 46.2-870 and by increasing for daytime or
    decreasing for nighttime the speed limits
    set forth in [Code] §§ 46.2-873 through
    46.2-875 on any highway under his [or her]
    - 3 -
    In addition, the legislature has empowered "[t]he governing
    bodies of counties, cities, and towns [to] adopt ordinances not in
    conflict with the [Motor Vehicle Code] to regulate the operation
    of vehicles on the highways in such counties, cities, and towns
    . . . and may erect appropriate signs . . . on the highway showing
    the general regulations applicable to the operation of vehicles on
    such highways."   Code § 46.2-1300(A). 2   See also Nelson v. County
    jurisdiction. Such increased or decreased
    speed limits and such differentiated speed
    limits for daytime and nighttime driving
    shall be effective only when prescribed
    after a traffic engineering investigation
    and when indicated on the highway by signs.
    It shall be unlawful to operate any motor
    vehicle in excess of speed limits
    established and posted as provided in this
    section. The increased or decreased speed
    limits over highways under the control of
    the Commonwealth Transportation Commissioner
    shall be effective only when prescribed in
    writing by the Transportation Commissioner
    and kept on file in the Central Office of
    the Department of Transportation. Whenever
    the speed limit on any highway has been
    increased or decreased or a differential
    speed limit has been established and such
    speed limit is properly posted, there shall
    be a rebuttable presumption that the change
    in speed was properly established in
    accordance with the provisions of this
    section.
    2
    The full text of Code § 46.2-1300 is as follows:
    A. The governing bodies of counties,
    cities, and towns may adopt ordinances not
    in conflict with the provisions of this
    title to regulate the operation of vehicles
    on the highways in such counties, cities,
    and towns. They may also repeal, amend, or
    modify such ordinances and may erect
    - 4 -
    appropriate signs or markers on the highway
    showing the general regulations applicable
    to the operation of vehicles on such
    highways. The governing body of any county,
    city, or town may by ordinance, or may by
    ordinance authorize its chief administrative
    officer to:
    1. Increase or decrease the speed limit
    within its boundaries, provided such
    increase or decrease in speed shall be based
    upon an engineering and traffic
    investigation by such county, city or town
    and provided such speed area or zone is
    clearly indicated by markers or signs;
    2. Authorize the city or town manager or
    such officer thereof as it may designate, to
    reduce for a temporary period not to exceed
    sixty days, without such engineering and
    traffic investigation, the speed limit on
    any portion of any highway of the city or
    town on which work is being done or where
    the highway is under construction or repair;
    3. Require vehicles to come to a full
    stop or yield the right-of-way at a street
    intersection if one or more of the
    intersecting streets has been designated as
    a part of the state highway system in a town
    which has a population of less than 3,500.
    B. No such ordinance shall be violated if
    at the time of the alleged violation the
    sign or marker placed in conformity with
    this section is missing, substantially
    defaced, or obscured so that an ordinary
    observant person under the same
    circumstances would not be aware of the
    existence of the ordinance.
    C. No governing body of a county, city, or
    town may provide penalties for violating a
    provision of an ordinance adopted pursuant
    to this section which is greater than the
    penalty imposed for a similar offense under
    the provisions of this title.
    - 5 -
    of Henrico, 
    10 Va. App. 558
    , 
    393 S.E.2d 644
    (1990) (decided under
    Code § 46.1-180, the precursor to Code § 46.2-1300).    This statute
    specifically authorizes the governing body or, when properly
    delegated, the chief administrative officer to "[i]ncrease or
    decrease the speed limit within its boundaries, provided such
    increase or decrease in speed shall be based upon an engineering
    and traffic investigation . . . and provided such speed area . . .
    is clearly indicated by . . . signs."   Code § 46.2-1300(A)(1).
    III.
    At trial and on this appeal, Bahen argued that the evidence
    proved he was driving on a highway that was not in a "residence
    district" as specified in Code § 46.2-874 and defined in Code
    § 46.2-100.   The record establishes that a substantial portion of
    the proof at trial concerned that issue and the application of the
    Brooks and Thoms decisions to the facts of this case.   Indeed, at
    one point during the taking of the evidence the trial judge
    indicated that "[we are] down to the very narrow issue of whether
    it's a residence district or not."
    We conclude, however, that we need not determine whether the
    County's interpretation of "residence district," which was
    D. No county whose roads are under the
    jurisdiction of the Department of
    Transportation shall designate, in terms of
    distance from a school, the placement of
    flashing warning lights unless the authority
    to do so has been expressly delegated to
    such county by the Department of
    Transportation, in its discretion.
    - 6 -
    accepted by the trial judge, comports with the Supreme Court's
    holding in Brooks concerning the proper way to view "land improved
    for dwelling purposes" as that term is used in the Code § 46.2-100
    definition of "residence district."     See 
    Brooks, 225 Va. at 404
    ,
    303 S.E.2d at 68-69. 3   The Commonwealth prosecuted Bahen for
    violating the posted speed limit.    Bahen raised as his defense the
    theory that the Commonwealth could not prevail absent proof that
    he was in a "residence district."    Although much of the evidence
    concerned the character of Charles Street and the definition of
    "residence district," the following colloquy occurred during the
    presentation of evidence:
    MR. BAHEN: I'm trying to establish that I
    was driving at a safe speed.
    THE COURT: Well, but again, you were not
    charged with driving unsafe. You're just
    charged with driving above the speed limit.
    So I really don't think that's relevant,
    unless you can tell me some reason that it
    would be, I'd be glad to hear it.
    I mean, you're not charged with reckless
    driving, and you're not charged -- you're
    just charged with a prohibited crime of
    driving above the posted speed limit, and
    that's it.
    MR. BAHEN: Your Honor, I would offer that
    I'm not charged with driving above the
    posted speed limit, I'm charged with
    3
    Although both Brooks and Thoms were negligence cases,
    clearly the interpretation of "residence district" found in
    those cases would be valid and applicable in a traffic violation
    prosecution. We note, however, that in both of those cases, no
    speed limit was posted. See 
    Brooks, 225 Va. at 402
    , 302 S.E.2d
    at 67; 
    Thoms, 201 Va. at 582-83
    , 112 S.E.2d at 869-70.
    - 7 -
    speeding in a residential district, Section
    874 of the Code of Virginia.
    THE COURT:   Yeah.
    MR. BAHEN:   Forty-six --
    THE COURT: Speed 35 miles per hour in a 25
    mile per hour zone is what the summons says.
    MR. BAHEN: The law section of the summons
    says 874, and 874 has -- there's nothing,
    nothing in 874 about the posted speed limit,
    Your Honor.
    THE COURT: The code section is merely
    advisory. The crime you're charged with is
    what is stated in the charge and that's
    speeding 35 miles per hour in a 25 mile per
    hour zone. They could put no code section
    or the wrong code section and that is not
    controlling. What is controlling is the
    stated word that gives you notice of what
    your charge is. So that's what I take it
    you're being charged with. All right? So
    is there any reason that it's relevant as to
    whether you were driving safely or unsafely?
    MR. BAHEN:   No further questions.
    THE COURT:   Thank you.
    MR. BAHEN: But I would like to further
    discuss the -- according to Your Honor that
    Commonwealth had every opportunity to amend
    the warrant if they thought they had a code
    section that I had violated . . . .
    The undisputed evidence at trial proved that the speed limit
    for the portion of the highway on which Bahen was driving was
    posted by a sign to be twenty-five miles per hour.   Bahen
    concedes that he was exceeding the posted speed limit.    The Motor
    Vehicle laws explicitly state that "[a]ll drivers of vehicles
    shall obey lawfully erected signs."    Code § 46.2-830.
    Furthermore, "[i]t shall be unlawful to operate any motor vehicle
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    in excess of speed limits established and posted as provided [by
    the Commissioner or other authority having jurisdiction over
    highways]."   Code § 46.2-878.   In applying these proscriptions in
    cases where "the speed limit on any highway has been increased or
    decreased . . . and such speed limit is properly posted, there
    shall be a rebuttable presumption that the change in speed was
    properly established in accordance with the provisions of this
    section."   Code § 46.2-878.
    The testimony of the traffic engineer for the County
    established that the records of the traffic engineering division
    "go back to 1976 and . . . do not show that there has been a
    change of speed limit since 1976."       He further testified that if
    the posted speed limit was not the original speed limit, he had
    no records to show a change.     No evidence in the record proved
    whether the speed limit sign was initially posted by the County
    or the Commissioner.   Accordingly, we hold that the evidence in
    the record failed to rebut the presumption that the speed limit
    was properly established.   Thus, we affirm the trial judge's
    ruling that Bahen was driving in excess of the posted speed
    limit.
    Affirmed.
    - 9 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0500982

Citation Numbers: 30 Va. App. 227, 516 S.E.2d 250, 1999 Va. App. LEXIS 428

Judges: Benton, Bumgardner, Frank

Filed Date: 7/6/1999

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024