Jul-19-2017 01:08 PM
Jun-10-2018 10:18 PM
udidwht wrote:
I occasionally will recite passages of (22658) to the hunky dory security rock watcher and they reluctantly walk off in frustration.
Jun-09-2018 10:27 PM
Jun-09-2018 08:45 PM
Rice wrote:udidwht wrote:
'The vehicle has been issued a notice of parking violation, and 96 hours have elapsed since the issuance of that notice.'
Catch word...and
No, I asked for language that says that the "notice and 96 hours" applies in situations where appropriate signage has been posted, and what you quote doesn't say that.
The "notice and 96 hours" is just one of the circumstances in which vehicles on private property can be towed. The Code says vehicles may be towed "under any of the following circumstances" and lists four distinct situations, which are independent of each other:
1. If appropriate signage exists
2. the one you keep citing about notice and 96 hours
3. If a vehicle is inoperable and the cops have been called and 24 hours has elapsed since the cops were called
4. The property where the vehicle is parked has been improved with a single family dwelling
So a vehicle can be towed if circumstance 1 exists OR if circumstance 2 exists OR if circumstance 3 exists OR if circumstance 4 exists.
It says "any of the following circumstances," not "all of the following circumstances," and definitely not "any of the following circumstances except #2 applies to some or all of the others."
If there is appropriate signage (circumstance 1), then the 96 hours (circumstance 2) doesn't apply.
That is what the words say, plus your insistence that the 96 hours applies to all the situations doesn't make sense when one of the situations has a 24-hour provision. In cases of internal inconsistencies or conflicts, laws will acknowledge them by saying something like "Notwithstanding the provisions in Section X ..." That the legislature didn't do that here shows that the 96 hours doesn't apply because otherwise they would have to explain away the conflict.
And really? A homeowner has to wait 96 hours to have a car towed out of his driveway? If you think the 96 hours applies to circumstance 1 (appropriate signage exists), then it also has to apply to circumstance 4 (parked in a driveway at somebody's house). That's a ridiculous conclusion.
The language clearly says that any one of the four circumstances listed will support towing, and having one of them apply to the other three leads to nonsense conclusions.
Also, you could spend a little time looking at various tow company and law firm websites, not to mention discussion forums, that address towing cars on private property in California, and you'll find that they don't agree with you. That's because the language is clear: vehicles can be towed if any one of those circumstances exists, and one of them is that the property owner has erected the proper signage. If the signs are there, the property owner doesn't have to give notice (actually, he's already given notice via the signs) and he doesn't have to wait 96 hours before having a vehicle towed; that requirement is in a separate provision, distinct from the one about proper signage.
I honestly don't know how to make it any clearer to you (and hopefully to anyone who believes they can park on whatever private property they want as long as they don't exceed 96 hours because you say so).
Jun-09-2018 07:46 PM
udidwht wrote:
'The vehicle has been issued a notice of parking violation, and 96 hours have elapsed since the issuance of that notice.'
Catch word...and
Jun-09-2018 04:39 PM
Rice wrote:udidwht wrote:
You'll be very hard pressed to have anyone tow you until the allotted amount of time has passed. Your misinterpreting the code. It is simply illegal to tow a vehicle immediately and without notice (ex. fire-lane violation)
I'm not interpreting anything--I'm simply reading the words of the "Bible" that you refer to.
Please quote the language in the Code that says that if the signage provided for in the Code is in place, a property owner must still wait 96 hours before towing a vehicle.
Jun-09-2018 04:32 PM
udidwht wrote:
You'll be very hard pressed to have anyone tow you until the allotted amount of time has passed. Your misinterpreting the code. It is simply illegal to tow a vehicle immediately and without notice (ex. fire-lane violation)
Jun-09-2018 03:38 PM
Chum lee wrote:udidwht wrote:Chum lee wrote:
Mission Bay RV Resort (private) in San Diego is adjacent to the water and Mission Bay Park but not directly on the water. 2 week limit. Full hookups, a little pricey, (Good Sam discount) walk into Pacific Beach for shopping. Bicycles are a good idea.
Any of the State Parks i.e. San Elijo, Carlsbad, Doheny Beach are nice and on the beach. Reservations suggested.
See google maps for park layouts.
Just a general suggestion for the SoCal area. Do not plan on parking your RV on any public street overnight in beach areas, especially if you sleep in it. San Diego used to have a city ordinance prohibiting sleeping in ANY vehicle at any time. That may have changed recently due to public outcry. If you must, you can park overnight at some Amtrak/trolley stations, if appropriately sized spaces are available or at some Park and Ride lots but don't make a habit out if it.
Chum lee
That was ruled unconstitutional by the 9th circuit court in California here awhile back.
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-la-homeless-legal-fees-20150819-story.html
Thanks for the update. I knew something was in the works legally but I didn't know the schedule. I have friends/family in the SoCal areas so when we visit, its always an issue finding a place to park a +30' 18,000lb. GVWR vehicle with out stirring the hornets nest.
Sometimes the highly restrictive CC&R's (which are everywhere) are worse than the law.
Chum lee
Jun-09-2018 03:32 PM
Rice wrote:udidwht wrote:
Parking lot will do. Vehicles can not be towed from a lot until:
1. Parking notice issued
2. 96 hours have passed
The only exception to this would be fire lane violation. That is from the California vehicle code 22658
That is simply not true. The Vehicle Code says that vehicles may be towed "under any of the following circumstances," and your 96 hours after a notice is issued is just one of them. The others are:
If appropriate signage is posted, or
If the vehicle can't safely be driven on the highways (and other conditions have been met), or
If the vehicle is on property that is improved by a single family dwelling.
Those "vehicles will be towed at owner's expense" signs are everywhere in California, and allow towing to take place immediately and without notice, contrary to what you claim.udidwht wrote:
Cities can not differentiate and/or make distinctions between surface streets/road/s and/or highways. The California vehicle code encompasses them all and is considered the 'Bible' in terms of what to refer to when an officer has a need to know.
I hope the officer does a better job of reading the code than you did.
But I think you are misunderstanding my point, partly because you're (wrongly) getting hung up on the word "oversized." Cities aren't legislating what an oversized vehicle is, or attempting to re-define what is considered an oversized vehicle in the Vehicle Code (and note that the Vehicle Code doesn't actually use that term). The cities are just using that term as a shorthand to describe the vehicles that aren't allowed to park on streets during certain hours, whether they're RVs, commercial buses, or a big van used as a daily driver by a family of 10.
There simply isn't a conflict between the city ordinances and the California Vehicle Code.
Jun-09-2018 12:11 PM
udidwht wrote:Chum lee wrote:
Mission Bay RV Resort (private) in San Diego is adjacent to the water and Mission Bay Park but not directly on the water. 2 week limit. Full hookups, a little pricey, (Good Sam discount) walk into Pacific Beach for shopping. Bicycles are a good idea.
Any of the State Parks i.e. San Elijo, Carlsbad, Doheny Beach are nice and on the beach. Reservations suggested.
See google maps for park layouts.
Just a general suggestion for the SoCal area. Do not plan on parking your RV on any public street overnight in beach areas, especially if you sleep in it. San Diego used to have a city ordinance prohibiting sleeping in ANY vehicle at any time. That may have changed recently due to public outcry. If you must, you can park overnight at some Amtrak/trolley stations, if appropriately sized spaces are available or at some Park and Ride lots but don't make a habit out if it.
Chum lee
That was ruled unconstitutional by the 9th circuit court in California here awhile back.
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-la-homeless-legal-fees-20150819-story.html
Jun-09-2018 09:18 AM
udidwht wrote:
Parking lot will do. Vehicles can not be towed from a lot until:
1. Parking notice issued
2. 96 hours have passed
The only exception to this would be fire lane violation. That is from the California vehicle code 22658
udidwht wrote:
Cities can not differentiate and/or make distinctions between surface streets/road/s and/or highways. The California vehicle code encompasses them all and is considered the 'Bible' in terms of what to refer to when an officer has a need to know.
Jun-09-2018 04:26 AM
Rice wrote:
But San Diego, as one example, has an ordinance preventing RVs from parking overnight on city streets. So you might be able to sleep in your RV because the "no sleeping in vehicles" law was overruled, but in order to do that you'll have to have a place to park it. I would hope. Safety first, you know.
Jun-07-2018 03:26 PM
Rice wrote:
I looked again and still don't see any reference in the California Vehicle Code to "oversized" vehicles.
But I don't think the cities are trying to trump the Vehicle Code anyway. They're saying that certain sized vehicles can't park on their streets; they're not declaring what size vehicles can drive on roads, which I presume is what the Vehicle Code does.
Jun-07-2018 03:22 PM
Jun-07-2018 02:30 PM
Rice wrote:udidwht wrote:
Fact is by California vehicle code does not specify an RV as an over-sized vehicle. If it were you'd be required to follow oversize vehicle procedures when traveling roads/highways. Cities can not trump the California vehicle code. Any officer will refer to the California vehicle code. City ordinances can not trump it.
I did a quick glance at the California Vehicle Code, and it doesn't talk about "oversized" vehicles--it talks about "overweight" vehicles. The city ordinances regulate parking of vehicles based on their physical size, not their weight, so there's no conflict between those ordinances and the California Vehicle Code, and the cities aren't trumping it.