Commonwealth v. Flanigan

62 Pa. D. & C.2d 86, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 256
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Warren County
DecidedMarch 27, 1973
Docketno. 70
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Pa. D. & C.2d 86 (Commonwealth v. Flanigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Warren County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Flanigan, 62 Pa. D. & C.2d 86, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 256 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

WOLFE, P.J.,

— This is an appeal for violation of section 1002(b)(8) of The Vehicle Code of April 29,1959, P.L. 58, 75 PS §1002.

Defendant was clocked by radar traveling 61 miles per hour in a 50 mile-per-hour speed zone on U. S. Route 6, an unlimited access highway. He does not seriously contest his rate of speed but argues he should be aquitted because the Secretary of Highways (Pennsylvania Department of Highways) lacks authority to establish the restricted speed zone through which defendant was clocked and, in the alternative, the official signs required by the act indicating the legal speed were not properly spaced.

Defendant, traveling west on said highway, had passed through a 40 müe-per-hour speed zone and had entered into the 50-mile-per-hour speed zone in question when he was stopped. At the termination of the 50-mile-per-hour zone is the commencement of a 60-mile-per-hour zone; hence, the zones permitted an increase of speed rather than a decrease in the direction of defendant’s travel.

Does the Secretary Have Authority to Establish the Restricted Speed Zone in Question?

Defendant argues section 1002(b)(6) establishes the general speed limit for all highways at 55 miles per hour for all vehicles except those otherwise restricted [88]*88by the act to lower speeds and section 1002(b)(8) was not intended by the legislature to authorize the secretary to lower the maximum speed below 55 miles per hour.

This section provides:

“The Secretary of Highways may, after due investigation, establish any speed limit on State highways where traffic conditions or other conditions of the highway make it safe to operate motor vehicles at the speeds other than as provided by this act.”

Defendant’s unique argument is founded in the rewriting of the Act of April 29,1959, P.L. 58, sec. 1002, in that subsection (b)(8), as established in this act, permitted the secretary to establish “further restricted speed zones on State highways outside of business and resident districts where traffic conditions or other conditions of the highway make it unsafe to operate motor vehicles at the maximum speeds as provided by this act.”

Defendant reasons the Act of August 23, 1961, P.L. 1118, changed the wording of paragraph (b)(8) so that it now reads the secretary is authorized to establish “any speed limit on State highways where traffic conditions or other conditions of the highway make it safe to operate motor vehicles at the speeds other than as provided by this act.” (Italics supplied.)

Defendant concludes, therefore, since the conditions imposed upon the secretary that the speeds be “safe” and the words “restricted” and “unsafe” were removed from the prior act, it was the intention of the legislature to authorize the secretary to increase the speed limit above those otherwise established by the act, but was given no authorization to decrease it.

Defendant maintains subsection (b)(9) of section 1002 supports this contention because the secretary may establish certain speed zones with a 60-mile-an-[89]*89hour speed limit on State highways outside the business and residential districts where traffic conditions and other conditions make it safe to do so.

Although we acknowledge this is a unique novel argument, we cannot arrive at the same conclusion.

Section 1002, in the court’s opinion, was intended by the legislature to first establish specific speed limits over which the secretary has no control to alter; and second, leaving within the discretion of the secretary to establish speeds where conditions of the highway make it safe to operate a motor vehicle at speeds other than provided by the act. This is the language used by subsection (b)(8) as well as subsection (b)(9); consequently, in exercising his discretion in the second instant the only restriction placed on the secretary, after due investigation, is to ascertain if traffic conditions or other conditions of the highway make it safe to operate at speeds “other than as provided by this act”: section (b)(8). (Italics supplied.) With no attempt to be facetious, we believe the secretary’s option is a two-way street, that is, he may establish under subsection (b)(8) a slower speed or higher speed if not specifically provided by the act whereunder he has no option. The language of subsection (b)(8) says the secretary “... may ... establish any speed limit. ..”

In our opinion, the legislature set certain maximum speeds and left other maximum speeds to the secretary’s discretion if conditions permitted but this is not to say the secretary is prohibited from establishing lesser speed limits than those provided by the act. We do not think the interpretation of subsection (b)(8) iends itself to a common-sense conclusion by any other application. There is no specific 50-mile-per-hour speed limit established by legislature under section 1002. To adopt defendant’s argument would mean the secretary has no authority to establish a 50-mile-per-[90]*90hour speed limit under any conditions. We appreciate that subsection (b)(8) must be read in relation to the other sections. However, this subsection should not be so read and interpreted that it lacks any efficiency per se. So too, we must consider subsection 1002(b) provides: “Subject to the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, speeds in excess of the maximum limits hereinafter provided shall be unlawful.” (Italics supplied.) To adopt defendant’s argument, this would mean the secretary could not establish any maximum speed in a particular area unless a direction in the act to authorize it.

We, therefore, conclude the language of subsection (b)(8) must be read in relation to the entire act but yet granting the secretary, at his option, the authority to establish any speed where traffic conditions on the highway make it safe to operate a motor vehicle provided that the speed so established does not countervene or violate the specific set speeds established by the legislature. In short, if the legislature has not preempted the maximum speeds, the secretary has an option to set the speed under subsection (b)(8). The legislature has placed the limitation on the maximum speeds only by subsection (b)(6) and has not spoken on lesser speeds.

WAS THE HIGHWAY IN QUESTION PROPERLY POSTED?

Defendant argues that since the Commonwealth’s evidence establishes the 50-mile-per-hour speed zone extends for a distance of one and three-fourths mile and there are only three signs erected for the extent of the entire distance, this concludes the Secretary has not complied with the mandate of section 1002(b)(8) that “Any such established speed limit shall be indicated by the erection of official signs, spaced not less [91]*91than one-eighth (Vs) of a mile apart, on the right-hand side of the highway facing the traffic to be controlled, and at the end of the speed zone there shall be an official sign indicating the end of such speed zone.”

Defendant contends that if the admitted 50-mile-per-hour speed distance is 1.75 miles, it was incumbent upon the secretary, as the legislature intended, that signs be spaced at intervals of no greater than one-eighth of a mile, meaning eight signs to each mile spaced not less than one-eighth of a mile apart.

Conversely, does the language, “spaced not less than one-eighth (Vs) of a mile apart” mean the signs cannot be spaced at a greater distance than one-eighth (Vs) of a mile apart?

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Bluebook (online)
62 Pa. D. & C.2d 86, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-flanigan-pactcomplwarren-1973.