Commonwealth v. Peters

4 Pa. D. & C.4th 33, 1989 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 97
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Crawford County
DecidedNovember 2, 1989
Docketno. 1989-566
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Pa. D. & C.4th 33 (Commonwealth v. Peters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Crawford County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Peters, 4 Pa. D. & C.4th 33, 1989 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 97 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1989).

Opinion

THOMAS, P.J.,

This matter before us is an appeal of a summary speeding conviction in violation of 75 P.S. § 3362(a)(2), for driving in excess of the posted speed limit. Defendant was “clocked” at 77.5 mph in a 55-mph zone by using a measured distance and an approved stopwatch.^

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The commonwealth established the following facts through the testimony of its witness, Frank Baranyai, chief of police of the Cochranton Police Department.

Sometime in the early part of 1989, the Cochran-ton Police Department purchased a hand-operated Acutrak Speek Chronometer stopwatch manufactured by Acutrak. The instructions accompanying the stopwatch required lines to be drawn upon the road so the watch operator could determine when to start and stop the watch.

[34]*34The instructions used, as an example, a distance of 132 feet or 0.025 miles to demonstrate the mathematical calculations to determine the speed. However, any distance could be entered into the electronic component of the watch, which would then automatically convert seconds elapsed, in traversing a specific measured distance, to a speed in miles per hour. For some unexplained reason Chief Baranyai used 132 feet for his pre-measured course.

The Acutrak stopwatch was certified accurate pursuant to Department of Transporation regulations — 67 Pa. Code § 105.71 et seq. — and was timely tested at Rebold’s Service in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, «which was an approvéd testing station.

On June 23, 1989, Chief Baranyai parked his vehicle near the intersection of Route 322 and Hart Road in Cochranton, Pa. The chief had at some previous time set white lines exactly 132 feet apart on Route 322 to provide him sight markers to start and stop the Chronometer as the vehicles crossed each line.

At approximately 1:54 p.m., while monitoring the speeds of various vehicles on Route 322, defendant’s white Chevrolet drove toward Chief Baranyai in a northerly direction. An elapsed time of 1.16 seconds was recorded on the hand-held chronometer when the vehicle crossed the two lines. This was automatically computed by the chronometer to be a speed of 77.5 mph, well in excess of the posted speed limit of 55 mph. The chief subsequently stopped defendant’s vehicle and issued him a citation for violating the posted speed limit. He was convicted at the district justice level, filed an appeal and competently represented himself at a de novo hearing.

Defendant argues that in such a short distance human reaction time in observing the exact time [35]*35the car crossed both lines and in twice pressing the chronometer timing button invites inaccuracy and doubt.

ISSUE

Is a pre-measured course of 132 feet, for the purpose of timing traffic to determine the speed of a vehicle, a proper distance under the Vehicle Code or Department of Transportation regulations, or do the code and/or regulations require a course in excess of 132 feet due to the potential for human error in operation of the chronometer?

DISCUSSION

Title 75 Pa.C.S. §3368(c) provides that the rate of speed of a vehicle may be timed by a police officer using a mechanical or electrical speed-timing device. Section 3368(d) requires the approval and testing of such devices by the Department of Transportation for accuracy at designated testing sites. 67 Pa. Code §105.71 et. seq. permits department-approved and certified stopwatches to time the rate of speed of vehicles and prescribes the procedures for approval and certification. The present code and present transporation regulations do not set a minimum distance for the timing of a vehicle; whereas, the previous statute required a distance of no less than one-eighth or one-quarter of a mile. See former at 75 P.S. §1002 (d)(1), P.L. 58, April 29, 1959.

Defendant postulates that the fallibility of humanity as well as the scientific truism that human reflexes are less than instantaneous, makes his speeding conviction measured over a 132-foot stretch of road and involving only 1.16 seconds grossly suspect. He cites Commonwealth v. Alexion, 33 Chester L. Rep. 37 (1984), which held that there [36]*36was an inherent potential for human error in a VASCAR-Plus speed timing device because of “an inevitable lag between the time the operator [of the device] thinks he sees the driver and actually trips and untrips the device.” Id. at 38. In light of this potential of human error, the Chester County court found it necessary to establish a minimum distance requirement and turned to 67 Pa. Code § 105.95(a)(4) for guidance. This regulation was for the testing and calibration of the speed-timing device and utilizes a distance of one-tenth of a mile, or 528 feet, and the Chester County court set this as the miniumum timing distance.

However, in Commonwealth v. Vishneski, 380 Pa. Super. 495, 552 A.2d 297 (1980), the Pennsylvania Superior Court specifically overruled Alexion, stating that in Alexion the Chester County court improperly created a distance requirement where none existed. Vishneski, supra.

The Superior Court in Commonwealth v. Ness and Smith, 341 Pa. Super. 225, 491 A.2d 234 (1985), held in a case very similar to this one that there was no minimum distance requirement for the use of an approved stopwatch, and there was no impropriety when the officer used a pre-measured course of only 200 feet for the Ness timing and 600 feet for Smith.

The Statutory Construction Act of 1972, P.L. 1339, 1 Pa.C.S. §1501-1991, states with regard to re-enactments:

“Whenever a statute re-enacts a former statute the provisions common to both statutes shall date from their first adoption. Such provisions only of the former statute as are omitted from the re-enactment shall be deemed abrogated, and only the new or changed provisions shall be deemed by the law in [37]*37the effective date of the re-enactment .” 1 Pa.C.S. §1961. (emphasis supplied)

The court in Vishneski went on to conclude that the omitted provisions were intended to be abrogated and held that the one-eighth of a mile distance requirement was not intended to be maintained by the legislature.

Thus, we are faced with statutory and decisional law which seemingly attributes infallibility to a police officer using a hand-held chronometer or stopwatch when measuring the speed of a car over a measured distance of his choice. In this regard, we note that section 3368(c)(4) of the Vehicle Code has a built-in “safety factor” when arrests for speeding are made by radar or electronic devices using sensor tapes laid across the highway or speed-timing devices as used here. For all speed-timing devices there is a six-mph “safety factor” before a conviction may be had. For highway sensor devices and hand-held devices there is a 10 mph “safety factor,” where the speed limit is less than 55 mph — except in a school zone. Thus, the legislature recognized the possibility of human error when dealing with split-second timing. Unfortunately, the legislature has not prescribed a minimum measured distance requirement before authorized timing devices may be used.

We recently addressed this problem in the unreported case of Commonwealth v. St. John,

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Related

Commonwealth v. Vishneski
552 A.2d 297 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1989)
Commonwealth v. Ness
491 A.2d 234 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Pa. D. & C.4th 33, 1989 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-peters-pactcomplcrawfo-1989.