City Of Davenport Vs. Thomas J. Seymour

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 29, 2008
Docket33 / 06–1753
StatusPublished

This text of City Of Davenport Vs. Thomas J. Seymour (City Of Davenport Vs. Thomas J. Seymour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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City Of Davenport Vs. Thomas J. Seymour, (iowa 2008).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 33 / 06–1753

Filed August 29, 2008

CITY OF DAVENPORT,

Appellee,

vs.

THOMAS J. SEYMOUR,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Mary E.

Howes, District Associate Judge.

Defendant challenges the legality of the Davenport Automated

Traffic Enforcement ordinance. AFFIRMED.

Michael J. McCarthy of McCarthy, Lammers & Hines, Davenport,

and Randall C. Wilson of ACLU of Iowa Foundation, Inc., Des Moines, for

Christopher S. Jackson, Davenport, for appellee. 2

APPEL, Justice.

In this case, the court must decide whether traffic regulations and

enforcement mechanisms contained in Iowa Code chapter 321 and other

code provisions were intended by the legislature to prohibit a

municipality from establishing an automatic traffic enforcement system

through which the city levels civil penalties against the owners of

vehicles that fail to obey red light traffic signals or violate speed laws. Applying our well-established method of preemption analysis, we hold

that the legislature has not preempted this automatic traffic enforcement

ordinance through these statutory provisions.

I. Factual and Procedural Background.

If the twentieth century may be characterized as the Era of the

Automobile, it was also the Era of Automobile Regulation. In 1902,

officers in Westchester County, New York, concealed themselves in fake

tree trunks at specified intervals and, armed with stop watches and

telephones, attempted to detect and apprehend speeders. Not to be

outdone, innovative constables in Massachusetts in 1909 deployed a

method of detecting speeding motorists that used a combination of a

camera and a stop watch. See Commonwealth v. Buxton, 91 N.E. 128 (Mass. 1910). These comparatively simple approaches to traffic law

enforcement were subsequently replaced in the 1940s and 1950s by

“radar” detection systems. Attacked as Orwellian when first introduced,

the use of radar is now a standard tool of law enforcement.

Innovation in traffic management has not been limited to speed

control. As every motorist knows, automated stop lights have come to

replace the blue-suited patrolman with outstretched arms engaged in

perpetual motion with a whistle at the ready. Most municipal authorities 3

believe police officers have better things to do than to control traffic at

intersections.

Modern technological advances have also led to the development of

more sophisticated “automated traffic enforcement” (ATE) systems.

Using a combination of cameras and sensors, the ATEs allow municipal

governments to detect traffic violations without a law enforcement officer

present on the scene. Promoted by private vendors who have developed and operated the systems, ATE red light cameras were first deployed

abroad over thirty-five years ago and according to industry sources are

now operational in forty-five countries. Kevin P. Shannon, Speeding

Towards Disaster: How Cleveland’s Traffic Cameras Violate the Ohio

Constitution, 55 Clev. St. L. Rev. 607, 610 (2007). As of 2005, ATE speed

detection systems were in use in as many as seventy-five countries. Id.

In this country, speed cameras have been utilized on a limited

basis in several states, including Arizona, California, North Carolina,

Ohio, Oregon, and the District of Columbia. Red light systems have also

been utilized by a number of municipalities, including those in Arizona,

California, Virginia, and North Carolina. Id. at 611.

The advent of automatic traffic enforcement has prompted legislative action in a number of jurisdictions. Some state legislatures

have elected expressly to authorize local governments to establish ATE

systems provided that certain statutory requirements are met, including

posting notice to drivers that automated traffic devices are in use. See,

e.g., Colo. Rev. Stat. § 42–4–110.5 (2008); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A–300.1

(2007). Other states have authorized ATE ordinances only in the vicinity

of schools, residency zones, or railroad crossings. See, e.g., Ark. Code

§§ 27–52–110, 27–52–111 (2007); Md. Code Ann., Transp. § 21–809

(2008). Some states have explicitly prohibited their use. See, e.g., N.J. 4

Stat. Ann. § 39:4–103.1 (2008); W. Va. Code § 17C–6–7a (2008); Wis.

Stat. § 349.02(3) (2008). Most states, like Iowa, have no legislation

directly addressing the issue.

In 2004, the City of Davenport enacted an ordinance entitled

“Automatic Traffic Enforcement.” Davenport Mun. Code § 10.16.070

(2005). The Davenport ATE ordinance authorized the city to install

cameras and vehicle sensors at various locations in the city to make video images of vehicles that fail to obey red light traffic signals or

speeding regulations. The information obtained from these automated

devices is then forwarded to the Davenport Police Department for review.

The Davenport police then determine whether there has been a violation

of the city’s traffic control ordinances.

Under the Davenport ATE ordinance, a vehicle owner is issued a

notice and is liable for a civil fine as a result of any detected violation. A

vehicle owner may rebut the city’s claim by showing that a stolen vehicle

report was made on the vehicle which encompassed the time in which

the violation allegedly occurred. Citations issued pursuant to the

Davenport ATE ordinance are not reported to the Iowa Department of

Transportation (IDOT) for the purpose of the vehicle owner’s driving record.

A recipient of an automated traffic citation may dispute the citation

by requesting the issuance of a municipal infraction citation. If so

disputed, the recipient is entitled to a trial before a judge or magistrate.

In the event the disputing vehicle owner is found to have violated the

ordinance, state-mandated court costs are added to the amount of the

violation.

Thomas J. Seymour felt the sting of the Davenport ATE ordinance

on April 28, 2006. He received a citation alleging that his vehicle 5

traveled forty-nine miles per hour in a thirty-five mile-per-hour zone on

March 17, 2006. Seymour contested the citation.

Seymour’s case was tried to a magistrate on a stipulated record.

Seymour claimed that the ATE ordinance violated due process by shifting

the burden of proof to the defendant to disprove a citation, by depriving a

defendant of the presumption of innocence, by changing the burden of

proof from the reasonable doubt standard to the lesser standard of clear, satisfactory, and convincing evidence, and by shifting liability to vehicle

owners, not drivers. Seymour also claimed that the Davenport ATE

ordinance was invalid because it was preempted by traffic regulations

and enforcement mechanisms contained in Iowa Code chapter 321 and

sections 364.22(5)(b), 805.6, and 805.8A.

The magistrate rejected all of Seymour’s claims, found that he

violated the ordinance, and entered judgment against him. Seymour

appealed to the district court, which affirmed the judgment.

We granted Seymour’s application for discretionary review. While

Seymour raised constitutional challenges based on due process in the

lower courts, he has not pressed these claims on appeal and, as a result,

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