โMar-06-2014 05:13 AM
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โMar-13-2014 05:58 PM
โMar-13-2014 05:56 PM
Francesca Knowles wrote:Greg The Hammer wrote:
This is my defense I will use in court in hopes that the judge tosses my ticket.
Florida Statute 322.031 (4)
A nonresident who is at least 21 years of age and who has in his or her immediate possession a valid commercial driverโs license issued in substantial compliance with the Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1986 may operate a motor vehicle of the type permitted by his or her license to be operated in this state.
That likely won't help you, since any ticket you'd get in a no-doubles State would be equipment-related, not a driver's license violation.
The language above is boilerplate reciprocal-agreement stuff that only affects driver licensing. States honor driver's licences issued by other states. It allows you to drive anything up to your endorsement so long as the equipment itself is legal in the State. You may not disregard equipment restrictions imposed by the State you're "visiting".
โMar-07-2014 10:14 AM
Greg The Hammer wrote:
I think Mississippi is the only state allowing two ball couplings when pulling doubles.
โMar-07-2014 07:20 AM
Greg The Hammer wrote:
This is my defense I will use in court in hopes that the judge tosses my ticket.
Florida Statute 322.031 (4)
A nonresident who is at least 21 years of age and who has in his or her immediate possession a valid commercial driverโs license issued in substantial compliance with the Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1986 may operate a motor vehicle of the type permitted by his or her license to be operated in this state.
โMar-07-2014 02:11 AM
โMar-06-2014 05:17 PM
โMar-06-2014 05:01 PM
โMar-06-2014 04:58 PM
Greg The Hammer wrote:
Thanks everyone who replied. Be advised I have scoured the statutes in both Alabama and Georgia, and can find no prohibition. This is why I asked for specific statutes in those states if anyone was aware of them. The references some suggested I use claim it is illegal in these two states, yet I find no prohibition in any if my research. Also, for the purposes of this discussion, even though the definition has been discussed to death, I refer to it in the same scope as the State of Michigan, where I am licensed and registered. In Michigan, it is referred to as towing 'Recreational Doubles'. Also, I have read about all those who tow doubles in Florida with no issues. Well, leave it to me to encounter an FHP trooper with trainee in tow, as he taught her how to 'write tickets'. I have calls and written requests in to both Alabama and Georgia DOT's for a determination, and am getting no where. I just thought there might be someone familiar with the specific laws in these states who could shed some light.
โMar-06-2014 04:49 PM