Saturday, June 16, 2012

Woodstock Adm. Adj. Court - Part 3

What did I say would happen? It's going to happen.

Thanks to the Woodstock Vehicle Impoundment Ordinance, enacted in January by the City Council, unanimously and without discussion, a Woodstock man will lose his car! I told you it would happen!

A defendant stated in court on Wednesday (that's Woodstock's own get-rich-quick Administrative Adjudication Court) that, with the damage to his vehicle in a crash plus a $500 ticket plus towing plus storage costs, he could not afford to get his car back.

So there it sits in the impoundment yard at a local tow yard, running up $40/day in storage costs. The ordinance provides that his vehicle can be deemed abandoned after 35 days. I guess that means the tow company can dispose of it as junk and hope the salvage value exceeds the towing charges and storage.

To add insult to injury, the City will still expect the owner to fork over the $500 fine. And, if he doesn't, you can expect the City to file a lawsuit against him and seek not only the $500 but also legal fees and court costs.

Great, just great. Did our esteemed City Council, in its infinite wisdom, foresee this possibility. Or perhaps probability? I didn't see anyone in court on Wednesday who looked like he could afford a $300/hour lawyer to defend him against the Great City of Woodstock.

Judge Eterno's hands were tied. As he stated more than once, he is bound to the law. The "law", in the form of this unnecessary and unfair ordinance, was silently passed in January.

Watch for discussion of more cases from Wednesday's court.

3 comments:

M.U.G. said...

Looks like the city stumbled upon a cash cow with this ordinance just like the school districts did when they discovered they could grab money from RE taxes. The next trick for the school districts is to get a law passed like the townships did where they don't need a referendum/vote to grab more money. Wonder what scheme the city will dream up next?

Anonymous said...

I would think his auto insurance would pay the impound fees, he would only be on the hook for the $500 fee.

Gus said...

Yes, I think so, if he had collision insurance. Might make a difference whether his vehicle was drivable after the crash that caused the police to show up. Thanks.