Judges: ROBERT M. MCKENNA, Attorney General
Filed Date: 8/31/2011
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Jeff Hall State Court Administrator Administrative Office of the Courts
1206 Quince Street SE Olympia, WA 98504-1170
Dear Administrator Hall:
By letter previously acknowledged, you have requested our opinion on the following question:
Does the doubling of monetary penalties pursuant to RCW
46.61.440 (3) apply to speeding in a school or playground crosswalk and speeding in a school or playground speed zone?
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(1) Subject to RCW
46.61.400 (1), and except in those instances where a lower maximum lawful speed is provided by this chapter or otherwise, it shall be unlawful for the operator of any vehicle to operate the same at a speed in excess of twenty miles per hour when operating any vehicle upon a highway either inside or outside an incorporated city or town when passing any marked school or playground crosswalk when such marked crosswalk is fully posted with standard school speed limit signs or standard playground speed limit signs. The speed zone at the crosswalk shall extend three hundred feet in either direction from the marked crosswalk.(2) A county or incorporated city or town may create a school or playground speed zone on a highway bordering a marked school or playground, in which zone it is unlawful for a person to operate a vehicle at a speed in excess of twenty miles per hour. The school or playground speed zone may extend three hundred feet from the border of the school or playground property; however, the speed zone may only include area consistent with active school or playground use.
(3) A person found to have committed any infraction relating to speed restrictions within a school or playground speed zone shall be assessed a monetary penalty equal to twice the penalty assessed under RCW
46.63.110 . This penalty may not be waived, reduced, or suspended.
RCW
Your question is one of statutory construction, and is thus governed by rules that courts apply in construing statutes. The fundamental object of statutory construction is to ascertain and carry out the legislature's intent. Dep't of Ecology v.Campbell Gwinn, L.L.C.,
If, after considering "all that the Legislature has said," the statute is not plain (but rather is ambiguous), then the court applies additional rules of statutory construction to resolve the ambiguity and determine what the statutory language means. Notably, however, a statute is not ambiguous merely because it is subject to more than one conceivable interpretation. Rather,
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ambiguity depends on the existence of more than one reasonable meaning. State v. Keller,
The statute at issue creates speed zones within 300 feet of a marked school or playground crosswalk in subsection (1), and authorizes counties, cities, and towns to create a "school or playground speed zone" up to 300 feet from a school or playground in subsection (2). The difference between the speed zones in the two subsections is that the speed zone in subsection (1) extends from a crosswalk associated with a school or playground, whereas the speed zone in subsection (2) extends from the property boundary of the school or playground. Thus, subsection (2) authorizes local governments to create speed zones in areas not otherwise covered by subsection (1).
Subsection (3) provides for doubling of monetary penalties assessed for violations of speed restrictions in a "school or playground speed zone," which gives rise to your question regarding whether subsection (3) applies to violations of the speed zones in subsection (1), which extend from crosswalks near schools or playgrounds, and violations of the "school or playground speed zone" in subsection (2), which extends from the boundary location of such sites. In other words, did the legislature consider the speed zones within 300 feet of a marked school or playground crosswalk in subsection (1) to be a "school or playground speed zone"? The question arises due to the fact that the doubling provision in subsection (3) uses the full descriptive phrase "school or playground speed zone," which phrase is set out identically in subsection (2), but which exact phrase is not used in subsection (1).
We first note that the descriptive phrase "school or playground speed zone" is not defined by statute. Examining the sequence of amendments to the statute, however, discloses that the legislature intended the speed zones created in subsection (1) to be included in the phrase "school or playground speed zone" in subsection (3). The provision amending RCW
In 2003, the legislature amended the statute again, adding what is now subsection (2). Laws of 2003, ch.
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where marked crosswalks were not provided. The stated purpose of the new subsection (2) was to authorize local authorities to create a "school or playground speed zone" bordering marked schools or playgrounds, which zones can extend 300 feet from the property border. Final Bill Report on H.B. 1114, 58th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash 2003). There is no indication in the session law or the Final Bill Report that the legislature intended to alter the prior law by excluding the doubling of monetary penalties for violations in speed zones associated with school or playground crosswalks set out in subsection (1). Laws of 2003, ch.
Given that the phrase "school or playground speed zone" in subsection (3) necessarily applied to the speed zones in subsection (1) prior to 2003, and given that the legislature did not change the substantive language in either of those subsections when it inserted subsection (2), we conclude the doubling of monetary penalties pursuant to RCW
We considered, but rejected, an alternative construction of RCW
We trust that the foregoing will be useful to you.
ROBERT M. MCKENNA Attorney General
PETER B. GONICK Deputy Solicitor General
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