Slurry Pavers, Inc. v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 17, 2023
Docket0204223
StatusUnpublished

This text of Slurry Pavers, Inc. v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Slurry Pavers, Inc. v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slurry Pavers, Inc. v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Malveaux, Ortiz and Causey UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Lexington, Virginia

SLURRY PAVERS, INC. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0204-22-3 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX JANUARY 17, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SMYTH COUNTY Sage B. Johnson, Judge

W. Barry Montgomery (KPM Law, on brief), for appellant.

Jill Kinser Lawson, Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney (Kathryn K. Hagwood; Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office, on brief), for appellee.

A jury found Slurry Pavers, Inc. (“Slurry Pavers”) in violation of Code § 46.2-1126, which

defines the maximum gross weight permitted “on the highway by a vehicle.” The circuit court

assessed Slurry Pavers a total of $7,307 in penalties, fees, and liquidated damages. On appeal,

Slurry Pavers argues that the circuit court erred in failing to grant its motion to strike the evidence

when the Commonwealth failed to produce sufficient evidence that it had illegally operated a

“vehicle” as defined by Code § 46.2-100. For the following reasons, we affirm the decision of the

circuit court.

I. BACKGROUND

Slurry Pavers was hired to complete paving work for the Virginia Department of

Transportation. At issue in this appeal is its use of its paving machine, or “paver,” that traveled

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. on Route 11 in Smyth County. The paver was transported from its regular location to an area

near the work site on a tractor-trailer that “sits low to the ground.”

On May 19, 2021, when the tractor-trailer arrived near the work site, representatives of

Slurry Pavers realized that the tractor-trailer needed to cross over a set of railroad tracks to get to

the site. The railroad crossing had a sign warning tractor-trailers about “bottoming out,” or

“drag[ging],” if they used the crossing.1 Workers for Slurry Pavers decided to unload the paver

at a staging area where the company stored its equipment and trucks for the job.

After the paver was unloaded at the staging area, a Slurry Pavers employee drove the

paver onto Route 11 and across the train tracks onto Railway Drive. He eventually arrived at the

work site after driving the paver about two miles in total. The paver was loaded with 30 bags of

hydrated lime when traveling on Route 11. It was also carrying other Slurry Pavers employees.

Trooper Travis H. Pickel was on “weight detail” that day, using “a portable scales for

weighing vehicles.” He stopped the paver “somewhere close [to] or maybe at the work site” in

order to weigh it. Before stopping the paver, he saw it drive on Route 11 for “roughly . . . a

mile.”

Rebecca Cordle and Michael Hall, Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles (“DMV”)

employees, were with Pickel when he stopped the paver. Cordle and Hall weighed the paver to

see if it complied with Virginia’s statutory weight standards provided in Code § 46.2-1126.

Cordle testified that an overweight determination is made by first measuring the distance

between the first and last axles of a vehicle. Charts provided by DMV then “tell[] you how

much weight that vehicle can haul legally through the Commonwealth.” The distance between

1 A representative of Slurry Pavers testified that because a local bridge was closed the only way to access the work site was by using the railroad crossing. -2- axles on the paver was 19 feet.2 Per Code § 46.2-1126, the allowable weight for that distance is

50,000 pounds. Cordle then used scales to determine that the weight on the first axle was 14,400

pounds and the weight on the last axle was 53,700 pounds, for a combined gross weight of

68,100 pounds.3 Based on these calculations, Cordle determined that the paver was 18,100

pounds overweight.

Slurry Pavers was issued an overweight citation for violating Code § 46.2-1126. The

citation assessed a $25 civil penalty, $7,260 in liquidated damages, and $22 in fees, for a total of

$7,307.4

The case was heard in general district court, which entered judgment against Slurry

Pavers in the amount of $7,307. Slurry Pavers appealed the judgment to the circuit court.

At trial, the evidence established that the paver has steering wheels on both sides and an

operator can sit on either side to drive the paver. It does not have an enclosed cab, a seat belt, or

a license plate. The maximum speed of the paver is 15 to 17 miles per hour, depending on if the

paver is moving on flat land or downhill. The paver does not have a transmission or a drive

shaft; it has “two propulsion pumps attached to a planetary, which has four independent wheel

motors that move the machine.” It also has a hand throttle and a gas pedal and uses diesel gas.

The paver moves on its own and need not be pulled, pushed, or towed to move.

The actual distance was 18.5 feet, but Cordle testified that she rounded up to “the next 2

number” which would “give [Slurry Pavers] a couple of hundred pounds difference” in the company’s favor. 3 A calibration document was admitted into evidence reflecting that the scales were tested and found accurate on September 4, 2020. Cordle testified that the calibration testing certifies that the scales are accurate for one year. 4 Code § 46.2-1135(A) provides that “[a]ny person violating any weight limit as provided in this chapter . . . shall be assessed liquidated damages.” -3- Jason Byrd, an employee of Slurry Pavers, testified that the company could not get a

registration from DMV for the paver.5 Additionally, the court admitted an email showing that

several months after Slurry Pavers had been issued an overweight citation for the paver, a Slurry

Pavers employee had emailed DMV to see if the company could obtain an overweight permit6

for the paver. A DMV program manager had replied that she had “received a pic of the

machine” and was “questioning the ability to safely permit this thing when it doesn’t have an

enclosed cab like a vehicle does.”

After both parties presented evidence, Slurry Pavers moved to strike the evidence,

arguing that the evidence did not establish that the paver was a vehicle as defined by Code

§ 46.2-100. The circuit court denied the motion, stating that “under the definitional section of

[Code §] 46.2-100 that this can be considered a vehicle for purposes of enforcement and

regulation of the weights and overweight regulations.”

The jury found for the Commonwealth. Slurry Pavers moved the court to set aside the

verdict, which the court denied. The circuit court imposed a $25 civil penalty, $7,260 in

liquidated damages, and $22 in fees, a for a total of $7,307.

Slurry Pavers appealed to this Court.

II. ANALYSIS

On appeal, Slurry Pavers argues that the trial court erred in denying its motion to strike

the evidence because the Commonwealth failed to produce sufficient evidence that it had

operated a vehicle as defined by Code § 46.2-100.

5 Hall also testified that he did not think that the paver had a registration from DMV. 6 Code § 46.2-1139 allows DMV, “upon written application and good cause being shown,” to “issue a permit authorizing the applicant to operate on a highway a vehicle of a size or weight exceeding the maximum specified in this title.” -4- On appeal to this Court, “[w]e review issues of statutory interpretation and a circuit

court’s application of a statute to its factual findings, de novo.” Cole v. Smyth Cnty. Bd. of

Supervisors, 298 Va. 625, 635 (2020).

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Slurry Pavers, Inc. v. Commonwealth of Virginia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slurry-pavers-inc-v-commonwealth-of-virginia-vactapp-2023.