A08881 Summary:

BILL NOA08881A
 
SAME ASSAME AS S07894
 
SPONSORQuart
 
COSPNSRNolan
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd §§1212, 509-e, 510-a, 516-b, 530, 1696, 1699 & 1810, V & T L; amd §§2335 & 3425, Ins L; amd §§120.04-a, 125.14 & 270.25, Pen L; amd §§2408 & 2411, UDCA; amd §19-506, NYC Ad Cd
 
Redefines reckless driving to be dangerous driving; imposes stronger penalties where physical injury occurs and provides that a driver may be convicted without a showing of multiple violations or an awareness of the risk of harm.
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A08881 Actions:

BILL NOA08881A
 
12/18/2019referred to transportation
01/08/2020referred to transportation
03/04/2020amend (t) and recommit to transportation
03/04/2020print number 8881a
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A08881 Committee Votes:

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A08881 Floor Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
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A08881 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         8881--A
 
                               2019-2020 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                    December 18, 2019
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A. QUART, NOLAN -- read once and referred to the
          Committee on Transportation -- recommitted to the Committee on  Trans-
          portation  in  accordance  with  Assembly  Rule 3, sec. 2 -- committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to said committee

        AN ACT to amend the vehicle and traffic  law,  the  insurance  law,  the
          penal law, the uniform district court act, and the administrative code
          of the city of New York, in relation to redefining reckless driving as
          dangerous driving
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Legislative intent. The Legislature recognizes the  height-
     2  ened  responsibility of operating a multi-ton car or truck and that such
     3  motor vehicle is a dangerous instrument under  state  law  that,  in  an
     4  instant,  can  cause lethal physical harm. For example, when operating a
     5  car at 30 miles per hour the average risk of  a  pedestrian  dying  upon
     6  impact  with  such car is 40%, at 40 miles per hour the risk of death is
     7  80%, and at speeds greater than 50 miles  per  hour  the  likelihood  of
     8  death is near certain at nearly 100%.
     9    When  deaths resulting from alcohol-impaired driving were reduced from
    10  approximately 30,000 annually in  the  early  1980s  across  the  United
    11  States to approximately 10,000 annually in recent years, that remarkable
    12  reduction  was  achieved in part by the certainty experienced by drivers
    13  that they would suffer legal consequences for driving impaired and risk-
    14  ing the lives of themselves and others, resulting from changes  in  laws
    15  prohibiting impaired driving. However, that certainty does not exist for
    16  other  types  of dangerous driving. A 2016 survey by the National Safety
    17  Council showed that "[a]lthough 83% of drivers surveyed believe  driving
    18  is  a safety concern, a startling number say they are comfortable speed-
    19  ing (64%) [and]  texting  either  manually  or  through  voice  controls
    20  (47%),"  whereas  far fewer (10%) say they are comfortable driving after
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD13864-03-0

        A. 8881--A                          2
 
     1  they feel they've had too much alcohol. This  shows  that,  while  drunk
     2  driving  has become socially unacceptable, most other forms of dangerous
     3  driving have not, and New Yorkers are paying the price with  lives  lost
     4  and  bodies  and families shattered. Moreover, the New York City Depart-
     5  ment of Transportation estimated in 2010 that the  annual  cost  of  all
     6  traffic  crashes  just  in  New  York City to be $4.29 billion annually,
     7  about 1% of the Gross City Product.
     8    As evidenced by our country's  experience  combatting  drunk  driving,
     9  research  has  shown  that  perceived certainty of legal consequences is
    10  necessary to deter or prevent harmful acts, including dangerous driving.
    11  The original statutory language of the New York vehicle and traffic  law
    12  section  1212 (VTL 1212), in and of itself, is favorable to a reasonable
    13  standard for reckless or dangerous driving, specifying that driving in a
    14  manner that "unreasonably interferes with"  or  "unreasonably  endangers
    15  [others]" constitutes a violation of that section and is an unclassified
    16  misdemeanor. However, that reasonableness standard has subsequently been
    17  heightened,  to  an  extreme  level by New York judicial interpretations
    18  that require factors such as a finding of seriously blameworthy  conduct
    19  (People  v.  Boutin  and People v. Cabrera), an "affirmative act" by the
    20  driver (People v. Cabrera), a "gross deviation"  from  the  standard  of
    21  conduct  a  reasonable person would observe, and additional "aggravating
    22  factors" on behalf of the driver --  all  judicial  interpretations  and
    23  elevated  mens  rea  requirements not required by the original statutory
    24  text for vehicle and traffic law section  1212  Reckless  Driving.  This
    25  judicially  imposed  higher  mens rea requirement fails to recognize the
    26  awesome responsibility that operating a multi-ton car or truck is and as
    27  a consequence, evidenced in part by the staggering injuries  and  deaths
    28  in  our  state, the statute has failed to achieve what it intended. Cars
    29  and trucks are dangerous instruments  under  state  law  and  should  be
    30  recognized  as  such when applying vehicle and traffic law section 1212.
    31  For these reasons the Legislature is disapproving of the  holdings  with
    32  regards  to  a motor vehicle operator's culpability and state of mind in
    33  People v.  Boutin, 75 N.Y.2d 692 (N.Y. 1990); People v. Grogan, 260 N.Y.
    34  138, 183 N.E. 273 (N.Y. 1932); People v. Cabrera, 10  N.Y.3d  370  (N.Y.
    35  2008)  and  People  v.  Goldblatt, 98 A.D.3.d 817 N.Y.S.2d 210 (3d Dept.
    36  2012); and this legislation would correct the misapplication of  vehicle
    37  and traffic law section 1212 in these rulings and restore the statute to
    38  its  original intent, namely to deter and prevent dangerous operation of
    39  heavy motor vehicles that pose a daily threat to public health and  risk
    40  the lives of New Yorkers throughout our state.
    41    §  2. Section 1212 of the vehicle and traffic law, as added by chapter
    42  47 of the laws of 1988, is amended to read as follows:
    43    § 1212. [Reckless] Dangerous  driving.  [Reckless]  Dangerous  driving
    44  shall mean [driving] operating or using any motor vehicle, motorcycle or
    45  any  other  vehicle  capable  only of being propelled by any power other
    46  than muscular power or any appliance or accessory thereof  in  a  manner
    47  which unreasonably interferes with the free and [proper] safe use of the
    48  public highway, [or] unreasonably endangers users of the public highway,
    49  or  fails to exercise ordinary due care. [Reckless] Dangerous driving is
    50  prohibited. Every person violating this provision shall be guilty  of  a
    51  misdemeanor.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter or the
    52  penal  law,  every person violating this section and who causes physical
    53  injury to another person shall be found  to  have  acted  with  criminal
    54  negligence under section 15.05 of the penal law and shall be guilty of a
    55  class  A  misdemeanor.  A  violation  of this section does not require a
    56  finding of a minimum number of violations of law or  a  finding  that  a

        A. 8881--A                          3
 
     1  person  was  aware of, had perceived, or had created the risk of harm to
     2  another person.
     3    § 3. Section 509-e of the vehicle and traffic law, as amended by chap-
     4  ter 853 of the laws of 1975, is amended to read as follows:
     5    § 509-e. Annual review of driving record. Each motor carrier shall, at
     6  least  once  every  twelve months, review the driving record of each bus
     7  driver it  employs  to  determine  whether  that  driver  meets  minimum
     8  requirements  for  safe driving and is qualified to drive a bus pursuant
     9  to section five hundred nine-b of this article. In reviewing  a  driving
    10  record, the motor carrier must consider any evidence that the bus driver
    11  has  violated  applicable provisions of the vehicle and traffic law. The
    12  motor carrier must also consider the driver's accident  record  and  any
    13  evidence  that  the  driver has violated laws governing the operation of
    14  motor vehicles, such as  speeding,  [reckless]  dangerous  driving,  and
    15  operating  while  under the influence of alcohol or drugs, that indicate
    16  that the driver has exhibited a disregard for the safety of the  public.
    17  Such information shall be recorded in the employer's record.
    18    §  4.  Subparagraph  (ii) of paragraph (a) of subdivision 4 of section
    19  510-a of the vehicle and traffic law, as amended by section 1 of part  C
    20  of chapter 58 of the laws of 2013, is amended to read as follows:
    21    (ii) is defined as reckless or dangerous driving by state or local law
    22  or regulation;
    23    §  5.  Paragraph 10 of subdivision (c) of section 516-b of the vehicle
    24  and traffic law, as added by chapter 731 of the  laws  of  1986  and  as
    25  renumbered  by  chapter  298  of the laws of 1991, is amended to read as
    26  follows:
    27    (10) [Reckless] Dangerous driving; and
    28    § 6. Subdivision 2 of section 530 of the vehicle and traffic  law,  as
    29  separately  amended  by  chapters  571  and  732 of the laws of 2006, is
    30  amended to read as follows:
    31    (2) Such license or privilege shall not be issued  to  a  person  who,
    32  within  the  four year period immediately preceding the date of applica-
    33  tion, has been convicted within or without  the  state  of  homicide  or
    34  assault  arising  out of the operation of a motor vehicle, of criminally
    35  negligent homicide or criminal negligence in the operation  of  a  motor
    36  vehicle  resulting in death, or has been convicted within the state of a
    37  violation of subdivision two of section six hundred of this  chapter  or
    38  of  [reckless] dangerous driving. Such license or privilege shall not be
    39  issued to a person whose license or privilege, at the time  of  applica-
    40  tion,  is revoked pursuant to the provisions of subparagraph (x) or (xi)
    41  of paragraph a of subdivision two of section five hundred  ten  of  this
    42  chapter. Such license or privilege shall not be issued to a person whose
    43  license  or privilege is suspended or revoked because of a conviction of
    44  a violation of subdivision one, two, two-a, three,  four  or  four-a  of
    45  section  eleven  hundred ninety-two of this chapter or a similar offense
    46  in another jurisdiction, or whose license or privilege is revoked by the
    47  commissioner for refusal to submit to a chemical test pursuant to subdi-
    48  vision two of section eleven hundred ninety-four of this  chapter.  Such
    49  license or privilege shall not be issued to a person who within the five
    50  year  period  immediately  preceding  the  date  of application for such
    51  license or privilege has been convicted of a  violation  of  subdivision
    52  one,  two,  two-a, three, four or four-a of section eleven hundred nine-
    53  ty-two of this chapter or a similar alcohol-related offense  in  another
    54  jurisdiction,  or  whose  license  or  privilege has been revoked by the
    55  commissioner for refusal to submit to a chemical test pursuant to subdi-
    56  vision two of section eleven hundred ninety-four of this chapter, except

        A. 8881--A                          4
 
     1  that such a license or privilege may be issued  to  such  a  person  if,
     2  after  such conviction or revocation, such person successfully completed
     3  an alcohol and drug rehabilitation program established pursuant to arti-
     4  cle  thirty-one  of  this chapter in conjunction with such conviction or
     5  revocation. Provided, however, that nothing herein shall be construed as
     6  prohibiting an operator from  being  issued  a  limited  or  conditional
     7  license  or  privilege  pursuant  to  any alcohol rehabilitation program
     8  established pursuant to this chapter.
     9    § 7. Item (B) of subparagraph (i) of paragraph (d) of subdivision 1 of
    10  section 1696 of the vehicle and traffic law, as added by  section  2  of
    11  part  AAA  of  chapter  59  of  the  laws of 2017, is amended to read as
    12  follows:
    13    (B) [reckless] dangerous driving in violation of section one  thousand
    14  two hundred twelve of this chapter;
    15    §  8.  Subparagraph  (i)  of paragraph (b) of subdivision 2 of section
    16  1699 of the vehicle and traffic law, as amended by  chapter  60  of  the
    17  laws of 2017, is amended to read as follows:
    18    (i)  stands  convicted  in the last three years of: unlawful fleeing a
    19  police officer in a motor  vehicle  in  violation  of  sections  270.35,
    20  270.30  or  270.25  of  the  penal  law, [reckless] dangerous driving in
    21  violation of section twelve hundred twelve of  this  chapter,  operating
    22  while  license  or  privilege  is  suspended  or revoked in violation of
    23  section five hundred eleven of this chapter, excluding subdivision seven
    24  of such section, a misdemeanor offense  of  operating  a  motor  vehicle
    25  while  under  the  influence of alcohol or drugs in violation of section
    26  eleven hundred ninety-two of this chapter, or leaving the  scene  of  an
    27  accident  in violation of subdivision two of section six hundred of this
    28  chapter. In calculating the three year period under  this  subparagraph,
    29  any  period  of  time during which the person was incarcerated after the
    30  commission of such offense shall be excluded and such three year  period
    31  shall  be extended by a period or periods equal to the time spent incar-
    32  cerated;
    33    § 9. Section 1810 of the vehicle and traffic law, as added by  chapter
    34  47 of the laws of 1988, is amended to read as follows:
    35    § 1810. Compensation of officers shall not depend upon apprehension or
    36  arrests.  (a)  No  city  or  village  shall employ any officer, agent or
    37  person whose compensation shall in any way depend upon the  apprehension
    38  or  arrest  of any person or persons for violating any ordinance adopted
    39  pursuant to section sixteen hundred four of this chapter or  for  [reck-
    40  less]  dangerous  driving as defined in section twelve hundred twelve of
    41  this chapter. If any person be apprehended or arrested or haled before a
    42  magistrate for a violation of a  local  ordinance  adopted  pursuant  to
    43  section  sixteen  hundred  four  or  for [reckless] dangerous driving as
    44  defined by section twelve hundred twelve of this chapter by any officer,
    45  agent or employee of any city or village who is so employed, the fact of
    46  such employment at the time shall be a defense to any  charge  made  for
    47  violation of such ordinance or for [reckless] dangerous driving.
    48    (b)  No  county  or  town  shall  employ any officer, agent or person,
    49  whether such employee be elected or appointed, whose compensation  shall
    50  in  any  way  depend  upon  the apprehension or arrest of any person for
    51  [reckless] dangerous driving as defined in section twelve hundred twelve
    52  of this chapter. If any person  be  apprehended  or  arrested  or  haled
    53  before  a  magistrate for [reckless] dangerous driving as so defined, by
    54  any officer, agent or employee of any county or town who is so employed,
    55  the fact of such employment at the time shall be a defense to any charge

        A. 8881--A                          5
 
     1  made for [reckless] dangerous  driving  as  defined  in  section  twelve
     2  hundred twelve of this chapter.
     3    §  10.  Paragraph 3 of subsection (b) of section 2335 of the insurance
     4  law, as amended by chapter 277 of the laws of 2010, is amended  to  read
     5  as follows:
     6    (3)  operating a motor vehicle in excess of the speed limit, or [reck-
     7  less] dangerous driving, or any combination thereof, on  three  or  more
     8  occasions;
     9    § 11. Item (v) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph 3 of subsection (m) of
    10  section 3425 of the insurance law is amended to read as follows:
    11    (v)  operating a motor vehicle in excess of the speed limit, or [reck-
    12  less] dangerous driving, or any combination thereof, on  three  or  more
    13  occasions; or
    14    §  12.  The opening paragraph of section 120.04-a of the penal law, as
    15  amended by chapter 496 of the laws  of  2009,  is  amended  to  read  as
    16  follows:
    17    A  person  is  guilty  of  aggravated vehicular assault when he or she
    18  engages in [reckless] dangerous driving as  defined  by  section  twelve
    19  hundred  twelve of the vehicle and traffic law, and commits the crime of
    20  vehicular assault in the second degree as defined in section  120.03  of
    21  this article, and either:
    22    §  13.  The  opening  paragraph of section 125.14 of the penal law, as
    23  amended by chapter 496 of the laws  of  2009,  is  amended  to  read  as
    24  follows:
    25    A  person  is  guilty  of aggravated vehicular homicide when he or she
    26  engages in [reckless] dangerous driving as  defined  by  section  twelve
    27  hundred  twelve of the vehicle and traffic law, and commits the crime of
    28  vehicular manslaughter in the second degree as defined in section 125.12
    29  of this article, and either:
    30    § 14. Section 270.25 of the penal law, as added by chapter 738 of  the
    31  laws of 2006, is amended to read as follows:
    32  § 270.25 Unlawful  fleeing  a  police  officer in a motor vehicle in the
    33             third degree.
    34    A person is guilty of unlawful fleeing a police  officer  in  a  motor
    35  vehicle  in  the  third  degree  when,  knowing  that he or she has been
    36  directed to stop his or her motor vehicle by a uniformed police  officer
    37  or a marked police vehicle by the activation of either the lights or the
    38  lights  and siren of such vehicle, he or she thereafter attempts to flee
    39  such officer or such vehicle by driving at speeds which equal or  exceed
    40  twenty-five  miles  per hour above the speed limit or engaging in [reck-
    41  less] dangerous driving as defined by section twelve hundred  twelve  of
    42  the vehicle and traffic law.
    43    Unlawful  fleeing  a  police  officer  in a motor vehicle in the third
    44  degree is a class A misdemeanor.
    45    § 15. Subdivision 1 of section 2408 of the uniform district court act,
    46  as added by chapter 276 of the laws of  1952,  is  amended  to  read  as
    47  follows:
    48    1.  The  board of judges shall have power to provide, by resolution, a
    49  procedure to govern the payment  of  fines  by  any  person  accused  of
    50  violating any provision of any law, ordinance, rule or regulation relat-
    51  ing  to  vehicular  or  pedestrian traffic, without appearing in person,
    52  except in cases of speeding, [reckless] dangerous driving, leaving scene
    53  of an accident or any charge of a misdemeanor or felony  or  any  charge
    54  which  may  for reasons of public policy require the personal appearance
    55  of the accused, for such period of time as shall be deemed in the public
    56  interest; to fix the fine to be paid in each class of  case  within  the

        A. 8881--A                          6

     1  minimum and maximum amount set by law, ordinance, rule or regulation; to
     2  designate the place or places where such fines may be paid; to prescribe
     3  the form of the summonses to be used and the manner in which the plea of
     4  guilty shall be made; and the manner in which the money shall be paid.
     5    § 16. Subdivision 1 of section 2411 of the uniform district court act,
     6  as  amended  by  chapter  570 of the laws of 1963, is amended to read as
     7  follows:
     8    1. The board of judges shall have power to provide, by  resolution,  a
     9  procedure  to  govern  the  payment  of  fines  by any person accused of
    10  violating any provision of any law, ordinance, rule or regulation relat-
    11  ing to vehicular or pedestrian traffic,  without  appearing  in  person,
    12  except in cases of speeding, [reckless] dangerous driving, leaving scene
    13  of  an  accident  or any charge of a misdemeanor or felony or any charge
    14  which may for reasons of public policy require the  personal  appearance
    15  of the accused, for such period of time as shall be deemed in the public
    16  interest;  to  fix  the fine to be paid in each class of case within the
    17  minimum and maximum amount set by law, ordinance, rule or regulation; to
    18  designate the place or places where such fines may be paid; to prescribe
    19  the form of the summonses to be used and the manner in which the plea of
    20  guilty shall be made; and the manner in which the money shall be paid.
    21    § 17. Subdivision l of section 19-506 of the  administrative  code  of
    22  the  city  of  New  York,  as added by chapter 9 of the laws of 2012, is
    23  amended to read as follows:
    24    l. A person is guilty of unlawful fleeing a New  York  city  taxi  and
    25  limousine enforcement officer or police officer when, knowing that he or
    26  she  has  been  directed  to  remain stopped by a New York city taxi and
    27  limousine enforcement officer or police officer, the driver of a vehicle
    28  operating pursuant to a HAIL license who is stopped in a zone  where  he
    29  or  she  is not permitted to pick up street hails thereafter attempts to
    30  flee such officer by setting the vehicle in motion  and  either  travels
    31  over  three  hundred feet without stopping or engages in conduct consti-
    32  tuting [reckless] dangerous driving as defined in section twelve hundred
    33  twelve of the vehicle and traffic law. Unlawful fleeing a New York  city
    34  taxi  and limousine enforcement officer or police officer is a misdemea-
    35  nor punishable by a fine of not less than seven  hundred  fifty  dollars
    36  nor  more than one thousand dollars, or by imprisonment of not more than
    37  ninety days or by both such fine and imprisonment.  Notwithstanding  any
    38  contrary  provision  of  law,  any  charge  alleging a violation of this
    39  subdivision shall be returnable before a court having jurisdiction  over
    40  misdemeanors.
    41    §  18.  This act shall take effect immediately provided, however, that
    42  the amendments to section 2335 of the insurance law made by section  ten
    43  of this act shall not affect the expiration of such section and shall be
    44  deemed to expire therewith.
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